Fashion

Haider Ackermann is named creative director of Tom Ford

By Luke Leitch

Photo: Ethan James Green

Haider Ackermann has been named as creative director of Tom Ford following Peter Hawkings' fleeting time at the helm

Haider Ackermann is the new creative director of Tom Ford, effective today. “It is with tremendous pride that I will seek to honour the legacy of Tom Ford, a man I have long admired and have the utmost respect for,” said Ackermann in a statement released this morning as he was named in the role by Ford’s owner, The Estée Lauder Companies Inc (ELC).

Advertisement

“We are thrilled to welcome Haider Ackermann to Tom Ford,” William P. Lauder, executive chairman of ELC, said in a statement to Vogue Business: “Haider’s appointment strengthens our ambitions for this enormously successful brand. His unique and insightful vision will further enhance the house’s global impact on fashion and culture.” Ford, who founded his eponymous brand in 2005, stepped down in 2023 following its $2.8 billion sale to ELC the previous year.

One person already requesting his ticket for that show is Tom Ford himself, who greeted today’s news warmly. He said: “I have long been a great fan of Haider’s work. I find both his womenswear and menswear equally compelling. He is an incredible colourist, his tailoring is sharp, and above all, he is modern. We share many of the same historical references, and I could not be more excited to see what he does with the brand. I suspect that I will be the first on my feet to applaud after his show in March.”

I have long been a great fan of Haider’s work. I find both his womenswear and menswear equally compelling. He is an incredible colourist, his tailoring is sharp, and above all, he is modern.

Tom Ford

Following Ford’s graceful exit, the brand was initially helmed by Peter Hawkings – a company veteran who had worked under the founder for nearly 25 years. He exited suddenly this past July.

In Ackermann, the brand has pivoted to a designer who is deeply au fait with fashion’s limelight. A seasoned creative leader, he operated his eponymous label for nearly two decades until 2020. Karl Lagerfeld famously once nominated Ackermann as a possible future candidate to replace him at Chanel. That didn’t happen – or at least it hasn’t yet – although Ackermann was appointed by Antoine Arnault to a critically acclaimed stint at the helm of the LVMH-owned masculine maison Berluti.

Photo: Ethan James Green

So what will Ackermann, as an established star designer in his own right, bring to Tom Ford? The merging of his design with the codes of its founder represents an intriguing fashion prospect: both designers have respectively developed their own aesthetic dialects that, while highly distinct, also overlap in their blending of profound sensuality with strict rigour. Furthermore, Ackermann’s chief métier has always been womenswear, a category which the brand’s fashion licensee, Ermenegildo Zegna Group, is especially keen to grow. Another Ackermann attribute that overlaps with Ford is their adjacency to Hollywood – the designer is especially close to Tilda Swinton and Timothée Chalamet.

In April 2023, the sale of the Tom Ford brand was completed in a deal that saw his existing partners in beauty, eyewear and ready-to-wear assume control. Tom Ford International, the company formerly responsible for the Tom Ford fashion business, was fully acquired by the Milan-based Ermenegildo Zegna Group. The acquisition was part of a joint operation led by ELC, Tom Ford’s existing beauty partner, and Marcolin, its eyewear partner.

In a statement shared with Vogue Business, Ermenegildo ‘Gildo’ Zegna, chairman and CEO of Ermenegildo Zegna Group, said: “The Tom Ford fashion business has long had tremendous growth potential. The appointment of Haider as the brand’s new creative director will further strengthen the team we are building and makes me even more confident in the future of Tom Ford Fashion.” It is understood that Zegna’s prime ambition for Tom Ford ready-to-wear is to expand its womenswear sales, which, in 2023, accounted for 30 per cent of Tom Ford Fashion revenues.

Ackermann appears powerfully qualified both to navigate and drive that growth. His own much-lamented eponymous line came to a sudden and surprising halt in 2020. Since then, the designer – who, as a child, lived with his family in countries including Ethiopia, Chad, Algeria and The Netherlands – has been in a second phase of creative wandering.Recent employment has included roles at Maison Ullens, Fila and an ongoing partnership with Canada Goose, where Ackermann's first capsule as creative director will launch this year. There was also a deservedly lauded cameo season at Jean Paul Gaultier couture.

Now from Paris, Ackermann will enjoy a newly stable environment in which to develop his aesthetic around the foundations established by Tom Ford. Reflecting the structure of the brand, he will report to both Guillaume Jesel, president and CEO of Tom Ford and luxury business development at ELC, as well as Lelio Gavazza, CEO of Tom Ford Fashion at Ermenegildo Zegna Group.

Today, Jesel hailed Ackermann as “one of the world’s most visionary and inspiring talents in fashion”, adding: “He draws on his deep affinity for global culture and the arts to create arresting fashion and memorable emotional connections.” Gavazza added of Ackermann: “His renowned experience in luxury will be instrumental in driving the fashion business forward during its next important phase of expansion.”

Originally published on Vogue Business