Metaverse Fashion Week attracts big brands and startups

Brands like Forever 21, DKNY and Estée Lauder have joined the first ever Metaverse Fashion Week, which starts Thursday and ends Sunday in the virtual world called Decentraland.

Digital-only fashion shows have taken place in the past, but the four-day event is one of the highest-profile efforts to bring together major brands around, or within, the concept of the metaverse, a virtual world where people they can interact, work and shop

Luxury fashion brands and smaller startups are using the virtual event to host fashion shows and open stores in Decentraland, selling physical items that can be delivered in the real world and digital products accompanied by non-fungible tokens, the assets known as NFTs.

“It sends a signal that virtual fashion is here to stay and will continue to be something of interest to brands,” said Cathy Hackl, president of Metaverse Fashion Week and head of metaverse at Futures Intelligence Group, a consultancy.

The concept of the metaverse and the companies trying to build it have attracted millions of dollars in funding, high-powered executives and a lot of curiosity over the past year, particularly since Facebook’s parent company pledged to spend heavily on building the metaverse and changed its Name Meta Platforms Inc.

The rise of play-to-win video games, in which players exchange NFTs, offers a glimpse of how the metaverse could lure users with monetary rewards and what setbacks may come with it. Illustrative photo: Josephine Chu

Robert Iger, former CEO of Walt Disney Co.

recently joined the board of directors of Genies Inc., a startup that offers tools to create virtual characters, clothing and accessories backed by NFT.

Marketers have been exploring the potential of Decentraland and other virtual world platforms like Sandbox.

For Metaverse Fashion Week, Estée Lauder is giving away 10,000 NFT-backed digital wearables that it says will give avatars a glowing aura.

“When people discover Estée Lauder in the metaverse, it is a gateway to interact with Estée Lauder online and in the physical world,” said Stéphane de La Faverie, Estée Lauder Global President and Estée Lauder Cos Group President.

The Forever 21 virtual store includes digital avatars to guide visitors through the store and 10 NFTs to purchase.


Photo:

Authentic Brands Group LLC

Authentic Brands Group LLC’s Forever 21 has leased the equivalent of 450,000 square feet of space in the Decentraland fashion district to open a virtual store with digital avatars acting as sales associates and 10 NFTs for sale. Those NFTs offer outfits for avatars to wear or collect.

“We have embraced the growth of the Metaverse as it continues to clash with culture,” said Winnie Park, CEO of the fashion retailer.

Cider Holding Ltd., a clothing retailer, sells NFTs through its digital store.

Metaverse Fashion Week is an opportunity to give consumers a new kind of experience with the company and potentially build relationships with them, said Yu Oppel, co-founder of Cider.

“Anything you do in the metaverse can also [lead to] a new membership with the brand,” said Ms. Oppel.

Some event participants do not sell physical items at all.

NFT digital fashion company XRCouture PVT Ltd., whose website urges people to “Wear Clothes That Don’t Exist,” sold 18 NFT-backed virtual outfits ahead of Metaverse Fashion Week and is opening a “headquarters” in Decentraland.

The opportunity to launch digital wearables alongside well-known luxury brands isn’t often available during traditional fashion weeks in the physical world, said Subham Jain, founder and director of XR Couture.

“Not only luxury brands stand out, but also individual creators,” said Jain.

Metaverse Fashion Week is organized by the Decentraland Foundation, the non-profit organization that creates tools for the platform and handles its merchandising.

Companies are using the event in part to figure out how a potential new wave of customers will want to shop in digital environments, said Andrew Kiguel, CEO and founder of Tokens.com and CEO of Metaverse Group, a metaverse developer that is enabling Decentraland. will use your land during the event.

“This is the next way the internet is going to be used, and in two or three years no one will be talking about the metaverse, it will just be part of their everyday lives,” Kiguel said.

Decentraland has around 562,000 monthly active users as of February, according to the company.

There is a possibility that Metaverse Fashion Week will also occur on other virtual platforms, said Giovanna Casimiro, director of Metaverse Fashion Week and director of community and events for the Decentraland Foundation.

“Our desire is not to centralize, but to collaborate with other initiatives in a big event and adjust as we go,” said Ms. Casimiro.

write to Ann-Marie Alcantara at [email protected]

Corrections and Extensions
An earlier version of this article misrepresented the name of Authentic Brands Group LLC as Authentic Brands Group Inc. (corrected March 25).

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