Saturday, 4th May 2024
To guardian.ng
Search

Luxury watchmakers to rely on China despite slowing demand

By Reuters
19 January 2019   |   12:22 pm
Watchmakers, industry leaders and luxury watch enthusiatsts gathered in Geneva on Monday for the 29th Salon International de la Haute Horlogerie (SIHH); among them Chinese singer, influencer and Audemars Pigeut brand representative, Lu Han.

0 Comments

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related

25 Mar
China-founded Shein uses AI and algorithms to detect the latest trends and can introduce more than 7,000 new items every day, changing buying habits and encouraging over-consumption. These clothes may be affordable for consumers, but they come at a huge environmental and social cost
24 Mar
Ijeure Ezebuike Onwadike crafts extraordinary headwear from unconventional scrap materials. Her designs crown Nigerian celebrities at prestigious events such as the Oceans 8 Met Gala in Lagos.
7 Apr
In the second part of arts24's Rwanda series, Eve Jackson meets a fashion designer taking the country's fashion scene to the next level. Once a model, now designer, Moses Turahirwa re-imagines traditional Rwandan forms and cultural motifs into contemporary pieces.
7 Apr
At the campus of the French Fashion Institute, 27 design students from 13 different countries are gearing up to present their year's work before a highly influential audience. The stakes are high: these students are poised to compete with fellow graduates from the prestigious Central Saint Martins school in London.
4 days ago
The Chinese fast-fashion online retailer is now subject to EU rules as a "very large online platform," joining tech firms including Apple, Amazon and Microsoft. The rules include measures to protect online users.
29 Apr
The Israeli media react to the news that the ICC could be preparing an arrest warrant for Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu. Also, pro-Palestinian protests continue on university campuses across the US and France. In other news, an Iraqi TikTok sensation is murdered outside her home, the third such killing in under a year. Finally, a 101-year-old woman is regularly mistaken for a baby due to a software malfunction.