Quiet luxury: why understated wealth speaks fluently here
No logos, no noise, just good fabric you almost have to guess at. We unpack why quiet luxury fits a country wired to never overdo it.
No logos, no noise, just good fabric you almost have to guess at. We unpack why quiet luxury fits a country wired to never overdo it.
Thrifting is no longer a budget constraint, it's become a flex. We unpack how secondhand went from fallback to a marker of good taste.
Structured blazer, white sneakers, crisp shirt, soft knit. We unpack how the office dress code loosened up without ever losing its seriousness.
Cottagecore, cybercore, and a thousand others: why the web now files our moods and memories into moodboards labelled "-core".
Bold fur and dark glasses on one side, hushed sobriety on the other. Why these two opposite aesthetics blow up at once, and what it says about us.
No more loud logos: the understated-luxury trend fits the Grand Duchy's DNA perfectly. We break it down.
No logos, just fabric and fit. We decode quiet luxury and what it signals to young people.
Cottagecore, gorpcore, balletcore… We decode the aesthetics machine and why Gen-Z collects them.
From skatepark to runway, streetwear changed everything. We decode its roots and its grip on your wardrobe.
Low-rise jeans, sparkle, shiny gadgets: we decode the Y2K revival and the mechanics of fashion nostalgia.
Personas, covers, looks: we decode how David Bowie turned reinvention into a method pop still copies.
Little black dress, clean line, effortless-looking elegance: we decode why her public style became a timeless reference.
Oversized fur-look coat, dark glasses and quiet-but-expensive vibes: two opposite aesthetics are merging on Luxembourg's streets.
"Like you're not wearing any" makeup is everywhere — and in Luxembourg it has a genuine morning purpose.
Smart-casual-with-sneakers is no longer a transgression: it's become the country's unofficial uniform.
Halfway between tennis and squash, padel has become the most Instagrammable after-work activity, and Luxembourg books its slots at lightning speed.
From mirror "chrome" to "jelly" nails, nail art now thinks it's contemporary art, and Luxembourg loves to pose.
After the era of giant hauls, the trend flips: fewer products, more common sense, and Luxembourg follows.
Between overflowing wardrobes and a craving for second-hand, Vinted culture has quietly become a national sport in Luxembourg.
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.
Flexing a €4 thrift find harder than a brand-new bag: welcome to the era where the receipt is cringe and the second-hand rack is the flex.