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Hi, and welcome to Line Sheet. Happy Mother’s Day to those who celebrated yesterday. If you
didn’t, I understand. You may also live in a country where Mother’s Day falls on another Sunday in May. In France, it does not take place until Sunday, May 31. Can we just make this a global holiday once and for all?
Today’s issue is about a quintessentially French brand, A.P.C., which I’ve been thinking about a lot since spending more time here. Like many fashion labels, A.P.C. plays an outsize role in pop culture relative to its size. Founder Jean Touitou might
not love this comparison, but I think of it almost like the Brooks Brothers of France—a national mainstay, at least for the generation who grew up in the 1990s. Will it last as long as Brooks Brothers, though? I’ve got the scoop on private equity owner L Catterton’s struggle to win back relevance.
Up top, we’re off to the races as Dior and Gucci stage resort shows this week, and I’ve got an update on the future of Armani. Plus, a second look at Kith, which is, somehow, still
popular.
Tomorrow on Fashion People, my guest is Sophia Rivka Rossi, co-founder of Hello Giggles and author of the great Substack Between Friends. We discuss the upcoming resort show calendar, whether we will ever shop at A.P.C. again, Hailey Bieber’s Alaïa campaign, the return of the Rockstud, frozen yogurt, and plenty more. Listen
here and here.
Also mentioned in this issue: Ludivine Poiblanc, Stephanie Phair, Scarlett Johansson, Peter Cowgill, Ronnie Fieg, Lost in
Translation, Judith Touitou, Petit Standards, Sherri McMullen, Vanessa Seward, Nadège Vanhee, Jessica Ogden, Mike Ashley, Old Céline, Gabriella Khalil, Chloë Sevigny, Luca de Meo, and more…
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Three Things You Should Know…
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Resort war games: Jonathan Anderson’s first Cruise show for Dior is this Wednesday, May 13, in Los Angeles, followed by Demna’s first for Gucci on May 16 in New York, and, finally, Nicolas Ghesquière’s Louis Vuitton show on May 20, also in New York. Oh, wait, there’s also Nadège Vanhee’s Hermès show in L.A. on June 4, and Alessandro Sartori’s Zegna men’s show in L.A. on June 5. Anyway, on top
of Chanel in Biarritz a couple of weeks ago, it’s a lot of travel for the editors whose jobs require attending these things.
But as I’ve mentioned before, the shows are also becoming a bit of a news moment, too. Obviously, Anderson is under the most pressure after Matthieu Blazy’s Cruise show once again boosted sales for current-season Chanel. (I hear people are traveling to places like Montecito in the hopes that there will be more stuff available than at the flagships.)
But this is also a big moment for Demna, who needs to show everyone what Luca de Meo was trying to tell them about Kering’s go-forward strategy at the group’s investor day back in April. I’m staying on the other side of the Atlantic until early June (see you at Hermès and Zegna). If you’re attending, please send your analysis, because I want to hear about the vibe on the ground.
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A MESSAGE FROM OUR SPONSOR
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Should EssilorLuxottica acquire Kith?: Apparently the reopened Kith store in Los Angeles is attracting long lines, even in an era when queuing for clothes is a bit passé. Kith and its founder, Ronnie Fieg, might be super cheesy (even cheesier than Aimé Leon Dore), but sometimes trying very hard, as Fieg does, pays off. After all, he made streetwear masstige—building the culture of the line not around music or skateboarding, but the act of buying clothes itself. It’s
very clear and straightforward, which is what is hitting in fashion right now. (Just look at Chanel.)
You have to wonder if it makes sense for EssilorLuxottica to buy Kith and make a little streetwear portfolio. The French-Italian conglomerate is starting to look like the platonic ideal acquirer: They have the DNA of a licensing firm because their business is in eyewear, but also the understanding that you have to leave the creative people alone for a while in order to make more money in
the long run. - Armani likely outcomes: Reuters confirmed what I’ve been writing for some time: The 15 percent stake in Armani that’s up for grabs could be split among more than one investor, according to the late Giorgio Armani’s will. Reuters suggested that the three companies named in the will—L’Oréal, EssilorLuxottica, and LVMH—could divvy up the stake, and that Armani’s current C.E.O. is drawing up a business plan to present to the
trio of potential investors. The board has until next spring to make a deal to sell the stake.
But according to my reporting, not all three are seriously interested. I’ve always envisioned L’Oréal or EssilorLuxottica going in on Armani, either together or with a third, yet-to-be-named partner. The likelihood of LVMH getting involved seems very low. There would have to be a strong business argument—supply chain, category, or otherwise—for this to make sense for the conglomerate. Then
again, Armani is one of the best name brands in the world, and LVMH is in the business of managing name brands.
The more likely scenario is that a new entity, with names we know attached, swoops in to create some sort of strategic alliance. Armani is important to Italian fashion, and the country’s executives will want to make sure it can succeed in any new structure.
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And now for some A.P.C. economics…
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At one point, A.P.C. was as important as Levi’s to a generation of urbanites who wanted to
look cool without trying. Can LVMH-linked P.E. firm L Catterton figure out how to recapture the magic of the Touitou era?
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Last week’s announcement naming Ludivine Poiblanc as artistic director of A.P.C., the French
denim brand that helped define the wardrobes of Gen X and Elder Millennials the world over, was at once intriguing and a nonevent. Poiblanc, a renowned stylist and consultant who became something of a street-style star in the era of Old Céline, is just the right kind of polished-but-not-too-polished French woman to add the correct fashion edge to a brand that seemed radical when founder Jean Touitou first rebelled against the industry, in 1987, by selling raw denim in
an acid wash world. (Ultimately, like most cool things, it transformed into the epitome of bobo after years of normie adoption.) The truth, though, is that no one really thinks much about A.P.C. anymore—especially if you’re not French.
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A MESSAGE FROM OUR SPONSOR
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It’s a shame, because at one point, A.P.C. was as important as Levi’s to a generation of urbanites who wanted
to look cool without trying. When I first moved to New York, during the summer of 2001, the newly wealthy city was awash in the horror of Seven for All Mankind swirls on the rear—a sign that the Neanderthals from Long Island and New Jersey had invaded Wall Street and were trying to remake Bloomberg-era Manhattan in their image. But I favored the look—then growing out of the music and art scene in Williamsburg (long before it looked like Denver)—of A.P.C. jeans and Clarks
Wallabees.
You weren’t supposed to wash A.P.C. jeans, but instead put them in the freezer if they started to smell funny. Or run into the ocean and let the salt water do the work. Perhaps the greatest testament to Touitou’s marketing prowess is that people actually did this. Eventually, he started selling preworn jeans, which evolved into the Butler program: Those who donated a pair would receive a 50 percent discount on their next raw denim purchase. In Lost in Translation, a
2003 time capsule that still holds up, Scarlett Johansson’s whole damn wardrobe was A.P.C. (Other than the Araks underwear, of course.) The brand may not have created the French preppy uniform of a navy sweater, raw denim jeans, and white sneakers, but it sure reinforced it.
Over the years, Touitou and his artistic-director wife, Judith, built the business with a sort of anti-conglomerate ethos. They would stage small presentations in their Left Bank
showroom, where Touitou would philosophize about the state of fashion. (Once, at the height of the designer handbag craze, he handed out cheap leather dust bags, gold-foiled with the word “douche.”) There were collaborations with the truly famous (Kanye) and less so (Vanessa Seward). Remember the Jessica Ogden quilts? Or the “post-poo drops” made with Aesop? A.P.C. perpetuated French girl style stereotypes while turning its nose up at such a
reductive concept.
While the brand felt inescapable at times, it also wasn’t a surprise when the Touitous sold a majority stake to LVMH-adjacent private equity firm L Catterton in 2023. After 30 years, the business was still generating in the vicinity of $100 million in annual revenue. The Touitous had never attempted to blitz-scale in order to attract a potential buyer. Instead, they bragged about their company culture—establishing working hours suited to people with kids, rather than
the 11 a.m.-to-midnight preferred by many of the big fashion houses. They offered an anti-fashion stance on fashion, and had ridden it all the way to generational wealth—a seemingly only-in-America story set in France.
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Selling out comes with its own trade-offs: not just loss of control, but also submission to the primacy of
investor returns above all else. But there’s no guarantee that new ownership will deliver higher growth, either. In fact, L Catterton management has struggled to figure out how to scale A.P.C. without spending down its cultural equity. The brand’s handbags are still ubiquitous on the Paris metro, but A.P.C. has felt terribly lifeless since the Touitous took a step back. Meanwhile, cheesier, more commercially minded French brands like Sézane and Soeur have capitalized on the easy-to-digest
concept of French girl style while savvier consumers started thrifting Levi’s—or, sometimes, old A.P.C.s—rather than stopping by one of their shops for a pair of fresh Petit Standards.
In France, sales have been on the decline in the three years since the business was bought by L Catterton—from €91 million in 2022 to €85 million just a year later. The most recent public filing lists 2024 revenue at €74 million. To be fair, like many figures filed in a public court by a private company,
these only represent revenues generated in France, so they don’t account for potential growth in other regions. (Fun fact: The shop in Silver Lake on the Eastside of Los Angeles is the least productive A.P.C. store in the world, according to people who work there. A source close to the company said that all the underperforming stores have been closed, so it must be doing okay.)
The Touitous, who have settled into a post-A.P.C. life—Jean making wine and staging impromptu music gigs; Judith
acting as art curator—are allegedly not entirely happy with how it’s been going. And not only because the thing that made A.P.C. so special has been flattened by private equity. The Touitous also remain shareholders in the business, with a more than 20 percent stake. Even artists and designers—especially artists and designers—come to love money once they’ve made some, and they still care about the company.
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L Catterton, which manages $40 billion in assets, is in a similar pickle with many of its apparel
investments, from Ganni to Everlane. In the end, few of these businesses were as easy to scale as anticipated. Also, as the industry works through a collective belt-tightening and correction, there simply aren’t many acquirers in the market—especially those willing to buy a dip. Which strategic group would want a company like A.P.C. at this point? EssilorLuxottica seems to be
doing a good job managing Supreme, a brand with a small retail footprint and huge licensing opportunity. But Supreme is a tighter business, and A.P.C. might be beyond its core and lucrative strengths.
In December 2025, L Catterton installed one of its operating partners, the former Farfetch executive Stephanie Phair, as A.P.C.’s president. While there is speculation that Phair is only a transitional leader—typically, a new executive would be brought in to manage a
turnaround—she recruited and hired Poiblanc, who has been heralded as the “savior” of A.P.C. by some in the French press. Of course, Touitou, who is still pretty involved in the business, is friendly with Poiblanc, and also respects her. The consummate straight shooter, I doubt Touitou would have bothered offering a quote in the press release—and such a kind one at that—if he didn’t actually support the decision to bring her on.
In order for L Catterton to sell A.P.C. to someone other
than A.B.G., they are going to have to ensure the Touitous have some input on strategy. As French as the Touitous may be, they are still founders, and founder-led businesses only work post-acquisition if the people running them understand how to scale that specialness that allowed them to break through in the first place. There’s nothing cool about A.P.C. anymore—but it can still be good. After all, raw denim is back.
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What I’m Reading… and
Listening To…
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Over the years, there have been different television shows and films in the works about Alexander
McQueen and Isabella Blow (and their friendship). Now Andrew Haigh, the director of one of my favorite films, All of Us Strangers, is in production with Wild Bird, a short film starring Russell Tovey as McQueen and Olivia Colman as Blow. Interestingly, it was paid for by WeTransfer via its “arts platform,” WePresent. [Inbox]
Sports Direct founder Mike Ashley, better known in our
world as the founder of Matches Fashion-killer Frasers Group, has admitted that he orchestrated the downfall of his rival, JD Sports head Peter Cowgill. It’s a wild interview. [Financial Times]
Lacoste did a rebrand. I don’t mind it? [Instagram]
Sherri
McMullen is set to open a new flagship store on Maiden Lane in San Francisco this fall. It’ll be 6,342 square feet, two floors, and designed by Gabriella Khalil. Congrats to her. [Inbox]
Keith McNally won the Gotham Book Prize. [New
York Times]
Chloë Sevigny is the best. [The Good Buy]
Paul Smith has a new boss. [WWD]
Sounds like we are not going to get to see all the texts Richard Baker
sent to Marc Metrick while they were running Saks Global. (Which, as you may remember, is suing Puck over our coverage of its debt management.) [WWD]
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Until tomorrow, Lauren
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a couple bucks off them.
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