Showing posts with label France. Show all posts
Showing posts with label France. Show all posts

Monday, September 21, 2020

Thomas Cook brand relaunches as online travel agency

The Chinese-owned Thomas Cook brand relaunched Wednesday as an online travel agency following the British group's collapse last year.

"The new 'COVID-ready' travel company will initially sell holidays to destinations on the government's safe travel corridor list," said Thomas Cook, which is owned by Fosun Tourism Group.

"Thomas Cook has a proud heritage and after acquiring the brand last year we wanted to quickly return it to its home in the UK," said Fosun's chairman and chief executive, Jim Qian.
 

 "Supporting the growth of the brand in China and its relaunch in the UK is a big step in our plan to turn Thomas Cook into a global success story and a key milestone in the development of the Fosun Tourism Group's strategy," he said.

Fosun, which also owns France-based resort giant Club Med, acquired the brand and online assets of Thomas Cook in November.  

Thomas Cook's demise one year ago sparked 22,000 job losses worldwide and triggered Britain's biggest repatriation since World War II, with the government paying to fly home 140,000 stranded tourists.

The 178-year-old British company had declared bankruptcy after an attempt to secure $250 million from private investors fell through.

Thomas Cook's stores across the UK had struggled against fierce online competition, while the company had blamed Brexit uncertainty for a drop in bookings before its collapse.

Source - TheJakartaPost


Sunday, September 24, 2017

#Paris once again the world's undisputed fashion capital.


When Paris fashion week begins on Monday, it will do so in a city that is once again the undisputed fashion capital of the world.

New York, Milan and London have all tried to take its crown, but more than ever Paris remains fashion's reference point, analysts insist.

An exodus of American designers to Paris left New York fashion week earlier this month a withered shadow of its former self.
The loss of Rodarte, Proenza Schouler, Thom Browne and Altuzarra to Paris prompted a bout of soul-searching in the US fashion industry which had felt that momentum was on its side.

"Three is a trend, but now there's four," said US Vogue's Nicole Phelps. "And it's not just any four; it's four of the best regarded, most influential labels on the calendar. New York has lost a good-sized chunk of its new guard."

The iconic New York brand Tommy Hilfiger also decamped to London, with sportswear giant Lacoste following the rush to Paris. And on Friday the ever so British Mulberry also said it was quitting its traditional London berth for Paris.

While New York fashion week's slimmed down line-up now lasts six days like Milan, and London is all over in four, Paris is a whirlwind of nine mostly madly packed days.

 
- New York's bid to rewrite rules -

The turnaround in fortunes is all the more startling given that 18 months ago New York looked like it was going to turn the whole fashion calendar on its head.

Its big commercial brands were pushing a shift to the "see now, buy now" model, where clothes go straight on sale after shows.

Paris resisted ending the traditional four- to six-month lag from runway to retail, warning of the environmental impact of unsold clothes no one liked and claiming it would steamroll creativity and younger labels who need to try out ideas on the catwalk.

With many designers already questioning the need for fashion shows in an age of Instagram launches, Paris looked like it might be caught on the wrong side of history.

But things have worked out quite differently, French analyst Nicolas Boulanger of L&CPG consultants told AFP.

Paris has only become more dominant, he said.

"There is a density of luxury brands (in Paris) that you do not find elsewhere, and the fact that it is the home city of large groups like Kering and LVMH, who dominate luxury brands, only reinforces its historic hold," Boulanger said.

He argued that Paris has a "greater legitimacy in some respects over other fashion capitals" because of the "holy unction" imparted by haute couture, the elite shows of handmade creations that are only held in the French capital.

Boulanger said part of the reason that Paris has been "shining even more" in recent seasons was because haute couture opened its doors to younger talent.

 - Tom Ford's return -

Steven Kolb, head of the Council of Fashion Designers of America, which runs the New York shows, remains bullish, citing how New York poached pop star Rihanna's Fenty Puma show back after two years in Paris.

The council is also making the best of a bad lot by showcasing 13 American designers' work in Paris.

Kolb told reporters that the US brands who defected to Paris had done so for personal or strategic reasons, mostly to prolong the time their collections stay in the shops.

"If you were to ask any one of them, I think they would confirm that it's not a negative statement on New York," he said. 

And Boulanger agrees that talk of New York fashion week's demise is off the mark. "Tom Ford's return to show in New York... means he sees his future there and it would be foolish to write it off in an industry where everything moves so fast," he said.

As if to prove the point the Global Language Monitor, which measures the online and media impact of major events, this month named New York on top of its annual "global fashion capitals" list, toppling Paris.

Boulanger insisted that having a few fashion capitals rather than just one was "important in a truly global business... so having different capitals with different personalities is a strength," he added.

Source - TheJakartaPost

Thursday, September 7, 2017

Hurricane Irma destroys '95 percent' of French part of St Martin


The French part of the Caribbean island St Martin is "95 percent destroyed" after Hurricane Irma tore through the region, top local official Daniel Gibbs said late Wednesday.

"It's an enormous catastrophe. Ninety-five percent of the island is destroyed. I'm in shock. It's frightening," said Gibbs, a former French lawmaker, speaking on Radio Caribbean International.

The island is in need of emergency assistance, he said. "I have sick people to evacuate, I have a population to evacuate because I don't know where I can shelter them," he said.

At least six people have been killed in the French part of St Martin, Guadeloupe prefect Eric Maire said.


Hurricane Irma, one of the most powerful Atlantic storms on record, cut a deadly swath through a string of small Caribbean islands on Wednesday.

The French minister for overseas affairs, Annick Girardin, was to fly to Guadeloupe late Wednesday with emergency teams and supplies to assess the situation, the ministry said.

 "It's too soon for casualty figures (but) I can already tell you the toll will be harsh and cruel," French President Macron said, adding that he expected damage on St Barts and St Martin to be "considerable".

St Martin ("Sint Maarten" in Dutch), located south of the island of Anguilla, is divided between the Netherlands and France.

St Barts ("Saint Barthelemy" in French), which lies to the southeast of St Martin, is administered with the status of a French collectivity, as is the French part of St Martin.

Source - TheJakartaPost