The rise of the celebrity creative director

is the pinnacle of a new trend: the celebrity creative
director. Instead of inviting celebrities to be brand ambassadors or to
help design a single collection, fashion companies are now forming
long-term partnerships with them, appointing them to roles such as
“creative partner”, “creative director”, “creative consultant” and “head of
imagination”. While their exact scope of work remains vague, the trend has
certainly inspired superstars to launch their own labels from scratch,
often with the backing of a major company, looking to establish themselves
as designers in their own right.

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    Celebrities turned fashion designers: a growing trend

    Rihanna’s career as a designer started at Puma. The sportswear brand
    appointed the singer to the role of creative director of womenswear in
    December 2014 amidst a rebranding process. The strategy paid off: her first
    branded sneakers with Puma sold out in just 35 minutes. She also helped to
    boost the sales of female leisure gear, which now account for a third of
    Puma’s business. A beauty brand (Fenty Beauty) and a lingerie brand (Savage
    x Puma) later, Rihanna’s midas touch has led the French luxury conglomerate to
    launch its first fashion house from scratch since Christian Lacroix in
    1987, .

    Two years after Puma announced its collaboration with Rihanna, it was
    time for Beyoncé to make a similar move. She launched athleisure label Ivy
    Park in partnership with Topshop (Arcadia Group). After Arcadia’s Chairman Sir Philip Green was struck by a series
    of accusations of sexual and racial abuse in 2018, the
    singer jumped ship. She bought back Arcadia’s 50 percent stake in the
    company and found a new partner, Adidas, who is more than happy to not only
    relaunch her label, but to announce Beyoncé as a as well.

    Speaking of Adidas, the German sportswear company is Kanye West’s
    partner in his Yeezy clothing and footwear line, launched in 2015 after the
    rapper parted ways with Nike for refusing to pay him royalties for the
    sneaker designs he helped to develop since 2010. Prior to working with
    Nike, West launched three sneaker styles with Louis Vuitton in 2009, the
    same year he failed at launching a clothing line called Pastelle.

    Another celebrity tapping into the athleisure trend is actress Kate
    Hudson, whose brand Fabletics has ambitious expansion plans in the United
    States. Founded in 2013 in partnership with Techstyle Fashion Group, the
    same company manufacturing Rihanna’s Savage x Fenty lingerie line,
    Fabletics offers premium activewear with new items dropping each month.
    With annual revenues exceeding 300 million US dollars, according to Forbes,
    Fabletics aims to .

    It can be said that former Spice Girl Victoria Beckham paved the way for
    Rihanna, Beyoncé, Kanye and others to aspire to become respected fashion
    designers. Beckham launched her label in 2008, six years after giving up
    her music career. Today, her eponymous label is sold in over 400 retail
    outlets across 50 countries, with offices in London and New York. . The
    company received an injection of 30 million pounds (39 million US dollars)
    from private equity firm NEO Investment Partners in 2017.

    But the trend isn’t restricted to the realm of fashion. It is also quite usual for tech companies to invite celebrities for creative roles: Lady Gaga once
    served as Creative Director of Polaroid and Alicia Keys was named Creative
    Director at Blackberry, the struggling phone maker, in 2013. Will.i.am, of
    Black Eyed Peas fame, was appointed Director of Creative Innovation at
    Intel two years prior. He even got his own company badge, pledging to show
    up in the office at least 60 days of the year. Justin Timberlake was appointed
    Creative Director of beer brand Bud Light Platinum in 2013, while cosmetics
    label Elizabeth Arden named actress Reese Witherspoon its
    “storyteller-in-chief” in 2017.

    Why?

    Why doesn’t it suffice anymore to have a celebrity as brand ambassador?
    Well, blame social media. Thanks to Facebook, Instagram and Twitter, fans
    can follow their idols much more closely, which waters down the impact of a
    single advertising campaign.

    Moreover, it’s not for nothing that musicians form the majority of
    celebrities becoming creative directors: owning a brand or establishing a
    long-term partnership with a company represents an extra source of income and
    exposure for the celebrity, at a time when most consumers no longer buy
    records.

    Pictures: Savage x Fenty Facebook, courtesy of Fabletics, Victoria Beckham
    Facebook, Ivy Park Facebook, courtesy of Intel by Bob Riha, Jr.