Editorial Standards

Wanan covers luxury fashion with the rigor of journalism and the eye of a curator. Our blog is a publication, not a catalog. This page explains how we work.

What we cover

We write about the brands, garments, and ideas that matter in the luxury and contemporary fashion landscape — from heritage houses to emerging designers. We choose topics based on three signals: relevance to the season, depth of cultural conversation, and questions our customers and readers are actually asking. We pass on stories where we cannot add a real perspective.

How we research

Our editorial team uses a range of research and writing tools to gather context efficiently — runway archives, brand documentation, market data, and the trade publications that have covered fashion since long before we existed. Every claim that touches a verifiable fact (a designer, a date, a material composition, a price point, a creative director) is checked against primary or recognized secondary sources before publication.

What our reviews look like

We do not run paid placements, sponsored “best of” lists, or affiliate-driven coverage where the angle bends to a commission. Recommendations reflect editorial judgment. When we feature a product, it is because we believe it earns its place in the conversation — for its design, its history, its craft, or its cultural moment.

Authorship

All articles are published under the byline “Wanan Editorial Team.” Our editors come from fashion buying, magazine editorial, and digital publishing backgrounds. We work as a small team, with every article reviewed before publication by a senior editor.

Corrections

When we get something wrong, we fix it. Substantive corrections are noted at the bottom of the article. If you spot an inaccuracy, write to us at info@wananluxury.com.

Independence

Wanan Luxury operates an editorial blog as a service to our customers and to the broader fashion conversation. The editorial team and the commercial team work in separate workflows. Coverage decisions are not influenced by inventory considerations, advertising relationships, or vendor incentives.

Last updated: May 2026