Bowie: why a chameleon is still a style compass
Personas, covers, looks: we decode how David Bowie turned reinvention into a method pop still copies.
Personas, covers, looks: we decode how David Bowie turned reinvention into a method pop still copies.
Forests, flying machines, calm heroines: we decode what makes Studio Ghibli's world so recognisable and so copied.
Off-centre photos, slightly botched videos, bare captions: the "not too perfect" aesthetic rules. We explain this shift toward staged authenticity.
The hashtag that empties bookshop shelves is creeping onto Luxembourg's bookcases, and here's why.
Giant urban murals have become selfie magnets, and the Grand Duchy is starting to get the memo.
A chair, a lamp, a kettle: online, object design has become a niche sport Luxembourg quietly plays.
360-degree projected exhibitions are flooding feeds: we decode what the format really changes, Luxembourg edition.
From mirror "chrome" to "jelly" nails, nail art now thinks it's contemporary art, and Luxembourg loves to pose.
One mural, thousands of photos: when urban art meets the algorithm, the city goes viral.
Dance battles leave the screen to reclaim the street, turning Luxembourg's squares into improvised dancefloors.
The hunt for golden light turns old ramparts into open-air studios, and Luxembourg has everything to play along.
The "old film" look is killing it in edits, but 99% of photos go through a filter, not a roll.
Between giant murals and "Instagrammable" walls, the city is starting to pose for your feed.
Thrifting is no longer a broke plan B but a playground where the one-of-a-kind piece beats anything brand new.
Turning old jeans into a bag or handing your pieces to a consignment shop: second-hand goes creative and clever.
The narrower the niche, the more loyal the community: decoding the smartest creator strategy around.