Daily Signals 23.04.2020

Signals

Ancient solutions for modern haircare, London’s digital fashion future and employees hope for more control over how they work.

Fable & Mane brings Indian rituals to haircare

Fable & Mane, United Kingdom and United States Fable & Mane, United Kingdom and United States
Fable & Mane, United Kingdom and United States Fable & Mane, United Kingdom and United States
Fable & Mane, United Kingdom and United States Fable & Mane, United Kingdom and United States

UK and US – Fable & Mane is a new haircare brand bringing plant-based ingredients and ancient rituals to modern consumers.

Its HoliRoots product range – a portmanteau of ‘holistic’ and ‘roots’ – combines herbs, spices, Ayurvedic roots and aromatherapy-led fragrances. With a focus on the ritualistic aspect of haircare, the debut range includes hair oil, shampoo, conditioner and hair mask, informed by the ancient practice of hair oiling in India.

Launched at a time when consumers are particularly conscious of their daily health and wellbeing routines, Fable & Mane is focusing on native practices as part of a holistic approach to wellness. Akash Mehta, co-founder, says: ‘We are healthy when we are connected yet the beauty industry has come so far away from its roots, leaving us in a rat race to do everything to live longer but not live better.’

Globally, brands like Fable & Mane are increasingly taking ownership of heritage through the revival of ancestral beauty rituals and native ingredients.

The Fabricant gives access to digital couture

Fluid collection on Leela by The Fabricant, Amsterdam Fluid collection on Leela by The Fabricant, Amsterdam
Fluid collection on Leela by The Fabricant, Amsterdam Fluid collection on Leela by The Fabricant, Amsterdam

Amsterdam – The Fabricant is trialling a new digital platform, Leela, that allows users to create a photo-real avatar to test out digital couture.

Leela, which means ‘play’ in Hindi, encourages users to experiment with bold digital garments for their avatars to wear, picking designs from Fluid – a specially created digital-only couture collection. Using 3D technology, the platform enables users to capture images of their digitally dressed avatar from multiple perspectives.

Conceptualised as a ‘self-expression playground’, Leela has been created at a time when brands are exploring digital fashion and virtual runways. With physical stores remaining closed owing to Covid-19, digital solutions such as Leela can fuel new business and marketing models for brands. ‘In Leela, people are not passive consumers but creative agents crafting their self-expression and curating their visual identity through digital clothing,’ explains Amber Jae Slooten, creative director at The Fabricant.

In our interview with The Fabricant, Slooten discusses the potential for artificial intelligence (AI) in fashion and how it can be used to creatively push the boundaries of design.

London Fashion Week’s gender-neutral, digital future

London – The British Fashion Council has announced that, for the next 12 months, London Fashion Week will adopt a new digital format, merging womenswear and menswear shows.

Beginning in June 2020, the digital event will be open to the global public and trade audiences – functioning as a meeting point offering interviews, podcasts, webinars and digital showrooms. The platform will enable designers to generate sales of existing collections to the public, as well as retail orders for next season’s products.

Caroline Rush, CEO of the British Fashion Council, says: ‘By creating a cultural Fashion Week platform, we are adapting digital innovation to best fit our needs today and something to build on as a global showcase for the future.’ While the current pandemic has propelled the fashion world into digital innovation, London Fashion Week’s gender-neutral and off-season event could set the blueprint for other cities.

Elsewhere, Covid-19 is driving demand for virtual showrooms and live-streams of shows, as recently seen in Paris and Shanghai.

London Fashion Week by the British Fashion Council London Fashion Week by the British Fashion Council

Stat: Employees want more control over where they work

A new global survey by WKspace offers insight into workplace behaviours in response to the experience of working from home in recent months.

It reveals that 46% of employees believe they will have more control over how and where they work in the next few years, and 53% think that work and the workplace will change significantly. While the pandemic has forced many companies to adapt swiftly to home-based working, 42% of employees say they want more virtual meetings rather than a physical presence.

As companies become increasingly aware of employees’ health and wellbeing, the lockdown period has offered a glimpse into the potential future of the workplace, from reduced working hours to technology-enhanced ambience.

Previous Daily Signals Articles
Great Western Railway revives legend-led travel storytelling

Daily Signals

Great Western Railway revives legend-led travel storytelling

British train company Great Western Railway (GWR) has launched a new chapter of its long-running Famous Five campaign, drawing on myths and legends...
Travel : Marketing : Brand Heritage
Peanut and Tommee Tippee launch global campaign to put ‘matrescence’ in dictionaries

Daily Signals

Peanut and Tommee Tippee launch global campaign to put ‘matrescence’ in dictionaries

Peanut and Tommee Tippee have launched a global campaign to add the term ‘matrescence’ to dictionaries, arguing that the transition into motherhoo...
Health : Motherhood : Matrescence
Stat: British retail faces generational divide

Daily Signals

Stat: British retail faces generational divide

Some 40% of Gen Z in the UK say they have never bought from a bricks-and-mortar store, according to new research from Adobe Express.
Retail : Generations : Statistic
Niod’s anti-facial disrupts beauty’s clean narrative

Daily Signals

Niod’s anti-facial disrupts beauty’s clean narrative

Deciem’s science-led skincare brand Niod has launched a new campaign video subverting the polished conventions of beauty marketing by replacing ser...
Beauty : Advertising : Environment
Singapore moves to regulate blind boxes over gambling risks

Daily Signals

Singapore moves to regulate blind boxes over gambling risks

Singapore is set to become the first market to require blind box products to disclose the probability of obtaining specific items, as authorities a...
Retail : Toys : Blind Boxes
Stat: ‘My employer’ emerges as the most trusted institution

Daily Signals

Stat: ‘My employer’ emerges as the most trusted institution

The 2026 Edelman Trust Barometer, based on a survey of nearly 34,000 respondents across 28 countries, shows insularity reshaping how people re...
Work : Trust : Employers
The Salvation Army launches world’s first digital thrift store on Roblox

Daily Signals

The Salvation Army launches world’s first digital thrift store on Roblox

The Salvation Army is extending its resale model into gaming with the launch of Thrift Score, translating the charity’s bricks-and-mortar thrift fo...
Fashion : Retail : Digital
Lyma builds an integrated operating system for skincare

Daily Signals

Lyma builds an integrated operating system for skincare

British medtech company Lyma has launched an AI-powered wellness app that extends its skincare proposition into a fully connected digital ecosystem.
Beauty : Wellness : Medtech
Stat: How Chinese and Indian travellers are driving Asia-Pacific outbound travel

Daily Signals

Stat: How Chinese and Indian travellers are driving Asia-Pacific outbound travel

Outbound travel from Asia-Pacific is accelerating, but not all markets are growing at the same pace, according to new research from MMGY.
Travel : Hospitality : Tourism
Nothing turns retail into a community engine in Bengaluru

Daily Signals

Nothing turns retail into a community engine in Bengaluru

Consumer electronics brand Nothing has opened its first Indian retail space in Bengaluru, drawing more than 2,000 people to queue on 14 February 2026.
Retail : Technology : Design
You have 1 free Daily Signals remaining. Sign up to LS:N Global to get unlimited access to all articles.
BECOME A MEMBER
SIGN IN