Luvanis
Private investment company
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Luvanis S.A. is a private investment company headquartered in Luxembourg and specialized in the incubation and revival of long-dormant luxury brands,[1] also coined as “sleeping beauties”.[2][3]
| Company type | Private |
|---|---|
| Industry | Luxury goods |
| Founded | February 11, 2009 |
| Headquarters | Luxembourg City, Luxembourg |
Key people |
|
| Brands | Charles James Finnigans Mainbocher Maquet Rose Bertin |
| Website | Luvanis.com |
History
In 2007, Guy de Lummen and his son Arnaud de Lummen reintroduced the first Vionnet clothing line since 1939, with Sophia Kokosalaki as creative director and Barneys New York as exclusive distributor.[4] After the initial reboot,[5] Arnaud and Guy de Lummen sold Vionnet to Italian entrepreneurs Matteo Marzotto, former CEO of Valentino, and Gianni Castiglioni, CEO and owner of Marni.[6]
After this successful experience, the father-and-son duo founded Luvanis in 2009. In 2009, Luvanis acquired rights over the luxury trunk maker Moynat[7] and drove Bernard Arnault (through his holdings Groupe Arnault) to buy Moynat.[8] Moynat reopened in Paris in December 2011.[9] Luvanis also relaunched the French trunk maker Au Départ[10] and the American leather goods company Belber.[11] Belber was then sold to the former owners of Alain Figaret and Delvaux.[12] Au Départ was retributed to Asian investors and relaunched on rue Saint Honoré in 2019.[13][14]
In the wake of a landmark exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art dedicated to the American fashion designer Charles James in 2014,[15] Luvanis joined forces and trademarks rights with the designer’s heirs in June 2016, paving the way for the revival of the couture house.[16][17] In September 2018, Luvanis revealed a new visual identity for Charles James, and put up for sale all the brands rights, which had been consolidated in the previous years.[18]
In October 2014, Luvanis put up for sale the Paul Poiret house and its archives[19] and sold it to the South Korean luxury group Shinsegae International in August 2015.[20] The sale was officially confirmed in January 2018 and the brand relaunched after a 90-year hiatus.[21]
Luvanis was the lead corporate sponsor of an exhibition on Mainbocher held at the Chicago History Museum between October 2016 and August 2017, which garnered more than 100,000 visitors. Luvanis announced plans to revive the couture house shortly after.[22]
Activities
Luvanis is a company focused on identifying and acquiring the rights to forgotten brand gems in order to reposition them and find partners or investors to fund their relaunch.[11][23] The business model attempts to strike a balance between reasserting the brands’ heritage, and updating it for the present.[24][25] Over the years, Luvanis has constituted a portfolio of long-dormant ‘sleeping beauty’ brands composed of former luxury houses in fashion, shoes, leather goods, jewelry, perfume, and champagne, which had enjoyed decades of success before closing doors.[26] Brands selected will typically have received great recognition[22] both in their prime (prizes at World's fairs, imperial or royal warrants) and later on, with for instance dedicated exhibitions (such as Paul Poiret or Charles James honored at the Metropolitan Museum of Art), or in some cases by becoming the object of a strong cult following.[27]
Notable brands
The most notable long heritage brands currently or formerly part of Luvanis portfolio include the following:
Dormant
| Brand | Description | Creation | Became Dormant | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rose Bertin | French fashion house | 1774 | early 1800s | To be relaunched as a fragrance line[28] |
| Finnigans | British trunk maker | 1830 | 1988 | |
| Maquet | French leather and stationery maker | 1841 | 1993 | |
| Grenoville | French perfume house | 1879 | early 1970s | |
| Charles James | British-American couture house | 1928 | 1958 | |
| Maggy Rouff | French fashion house | 1929 | 1965 | |
| Mainbocher | French-American couture house | 1929 | 1971 |
Reopened
| Brand | Description | Creation | Became Dormant | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Doucet | French fashion house | 1816 | 1929 | Revived in 2024 as a furniture line[29] |
| Vever | French jeweler | 1821 | 1982 | Revived in 2021 by Camille and Damien Vever[30] |
| Au Départ | French trunk maker | 1834 | 1976 | Revived in 2019 by new owners |
| Moynat | French trunk maker | 1849 | 1976 | Revived in 2011 by new owner Bernard Arnault[1] |
| Belber | American trunk maker | 1891 | 1970 | Revived in 2016 by new owners[1] |
| Paul Poiret | French couture house | 1903 | 1929 | Revived in 2018 by new owner Shinsegae International[1] |
| Vionnet | French couture house | 1912 | 1939 | Revived in 2007, now owned by ChimHaeres[31] |
| Herbert Levine | American shoe maker | 1948 | 1975 | Revived in 2025[32] |