Must Read: 'GQ' Profiles Emily Bode, Tiffany Unveils High-Priced 'Blue Book' Collection

<p>Photo: Noam Galai/Getty Images</p>

Photo: Noam Galai/Getty Images

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These are the stories making headlines in fashion on Tuesday.

GQ profiles Emily Bode
Designer Emily Bode has been dubbed America's next great designer by some and has made waves in fashion. In a profile by Samuel Hine and photographed by Amy Troot for GQ, the designer discusses her plans for the future of the Bode brand, her craft, the family history that inspires her work and more. "At the end of the day, I wanted to change the way in which people get dressed," Bode told the publication. "The goal was to encourage people to get back into wanting to repair and alter and make clothes and appreciate them and preserve them." {GQ}

Tiffany unveils high-priced 'Blue Book' collection
Since its $16 billion acquisition by LVMH, Tiffany & Co. has aimed to reinvent itself with steps like redesigning its New York City flagship and tapping Beyoncé for campaigns. The brand is also leaning into the high-end jewelry market and appealing to prestigious clientele via its new "Blue Book" collection, reports Robert Williams for Business of Fashion. These more intricate pieces are priced at $100,000 and beyond, and are inspired by the archives of marine-obsessed, former Tiffany designer Jean Schlumberger. {Business of Fashion}

Can the influencer economy thrive outside of Instagram and TikTok?
Social media has always been an intrinsic part of the influencer economy, but on Bond, a new social commerce platform, storytelling takes the role of apps like Instagram and TikTok. Bond's goal, as reported by Madeleine Schulz for Vogue Business, is to seamlessly bring about social commerce without the transactional nature of traditional social shopping. Rather than frame purchase as the main priority, Bond aims to focus on "content, discovery and curation first," with shopping as an eventual byproduct. {Vogue Business/paywalled}

Lord Jones shutters U.S. operations
CBD lifestyle brand Lord Jones is exiting the American market and taking its business up north. Cronos Group, the Toronto-based company behind the brand, announced via social media that it would be closing all U.S. operations and moving business to Canada, where it hopes to "improve its cash flow in the near term." The news comes after a disappointing first quarter for the Cronos Group, in which net revenues were down nearly $5 million since the previous year, reports Claire McCormack in Beauty Independent. The CBD brand plans to enter the Canadian cannabis market by Q4 of the year. {Beauty Independent}

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