There is a particular scent in the air this spring. It’s not jasmine or petrichor. It’s the smell of a VHS tape being rewound, a vintage Dior suit being let out at the seams, and a Hollywood producer saying, “What if we tried that idea again… but better?”
So this month, cancel the new. Cancel the algorithm’s recommendation. Dig through your parents’ closet, your forgotten streaming queue, your own memory. What you find there won’t be old.
In this month’s S Magazine , we are tearing up the rulebook on what “new” really means. Because from the runways of Paris to the weekend watchlist, the most exciting cultural moments aren’t originals. They are second acts. And darling, they are flawless . Let’s start on the boulevards. Tom Ford once said that style is a reissue of the best hits. This season, the archives have been ransacked—but in the most elegant way possible. handjobs magazine
The new luxury is .
Miu Miu has resurrected its fall 2009 capelet, but in a bio-engineered silk that changes color with your body heat. Meanwhile, Loewe is reprinting its cult 2014 Jonathan Anderson graphic tees—not as nostalgia, but as a statement on cyclical time. There is a particular scent in the air this spring
Welcome to 2026: The Year of the Reissue.
“The Celebrity Book Deal Bubble: Who actually reads them?” — An investigation. S Magazine | Lifestyle & Entertainment | April 2026 “For the cultured and the curious.” Cancel the algorithm’s recommendation
In fashion, film, and food, the old is feeling dangerously new again.