News

Last Updated on July 21, 2025 by Matt Staff The late 1960s were a whirlwind of culture, rebellion, creativity, and change.
Vogue legend Diana Vreeland once quipped, “Irving Penn’s studio is like a cathedral; David Bailey’s studio is like a nightclub.” And V thinks this show feels like a velvet-rope invite. David Bailey’s ...
And no place did more to define that dream than Il Pellicano, the storied Tuscan hotel that came to define Mediterranean ...
The world and society has changed drastically over the past 60 years. In fact, nothing has really stayed the same at all.
Per the Fashion Institute of Technology, the British designer is often credited for inventing one of our fave teeny garments, popularised during the decade. And whether or not this has been officially ...
A new exhibition in Spain, ‘David Bailey’s Changing Fashion’, is a wide-ranging retrospective. The photographer’s son Fenton Bailey tells Wallpaper* more ...
David Bailey is not only one of the best photographers ever, with his iconic fashion and portrait images – he defined the creative and cultural revolution of the Sixties. Now, the Marta Ortega Pérez ...
Below, we cycle through just some of this era’s fashion photographers that are documenting and redefining style as we know it, from the burgeoning new wave to already-icons.
Today, he is known for his cinematic storytelling, fashion-forward compositions, and thoughtful use of AI in art, but his journey began under the fluorescents of a national science lab.
Beatlemania took the world by storm in late 1963 and into the next year and beyond. Liverpool’s own boy band was a sensation on a scale unlike anything before, but rarely has the world been allowed to ...
Her friend Lord Snowdon, the celebrated photographer and husband of Princess Margaret, once captured her in a glossy PVC raincoat, sparking royal jealousy.
David Bailey’s Eighties is a stunning new photography book release from Taschen, capturing the essence of one of fashion’s most unforgettable decades. Bailey’s photographs have long stood as a symbol ...