How the on-off fashion-tech love affair is once again picking up steam


By AGENCY
A customer tries on a pair of smart glasses at the Meta Lab flagship store on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan. Get ready for the return of wearables and a new stage in the fashion-tech relationship. Photo: The New York Times

Smack in the middle of the Fifth Avenue shopping promenade that stretches from the Bergdorf Goodman-Louis Vuitton-Tiffany nexus to Saks Fifth Avenue, past Prada and Dolce & Gabbana and next door to Harry Winston, lies a new 15,000-square-foot emporium.

Bright blue on the outside, multiple stories high and featuring a wall of 40 different sunglasses at the entrance, a number of full-length mirrors and even a mini-cafe on the second floor, it is a flagship store like many of the nearby flagship stores.

Except for one thing: The name on the door is not a clothing brand or a jewellery brand or a watch brand.

It’s Meta (yes, as in the parent company of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp).

A mere month after Mark Zuckerberg made waves by sitting in the front row at the Prada fashion show, the company announced that it had signed a 10-year lease for the space, turning its holiday pop-up shop into a Fifth Avenue fixture.

The on-off fashion-tech love affair, which has been percolating in some form or another since 2015, is once again picking up steam.

Think of it as the third wave.

“As tech has become mainstream, it has realised it is integrating into pop culture,” said Venky Ganesan, a partner at the investment firm Menlo Ventures.

“And there is nothing more popular than high fashion.”

Read more: Why functional fashion is redefining style, inclusion and everyday design

Scott Galloway, the tech pundit, podcaster and venture capitalist, called it “an exchange of value”.

“Tech has too much money and too little cool,” he said. “Fashion has too much cool and too little money.”

They are effectively making a trade, of sorts.

It includes the return of wearables in the form of smart glasses, led by Meta’s partnership with EssilorLuxottica, in which various tech features have been incorporated into classic Oakley and Ray-Ban styles, and which have been an unexpected hit (unlike the company’s aborted foray into the Metaverse).

According to EssilorLuxottica, the parent company of Ray-Ban and Oakley, more than seven million pairs were sold last year, triple the sales of 2023 and 2024 combined.

McKinsey’s 2025 State Of Fashion report predicts that smart frames will “redefine the wearables landscape in 2026”, with analysts expecting overall sales of smart glasses to quadruple.

Meta, which may also introduce Prada frames, isn’t alone in teaming up with existing fashion brands to leverage their design skills when it comes to glasses.

Google has invested in partnerships with Kering (the parent company of Saint Laurent, Gucci and Balenciaga), Gentle Monster and Warby Parker, all of which are planning to introduce smart glasses this year.

Elsewhere in the fashion world, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and his wife, Lauren Sanchez Bezos, are honorary co-chairs of the Met Gala.

And OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has teamed up with former Apple design guru Jony Ive, himself a Met Gala regular and former co-host, to create the first OpenAI product, reportedly being unveiled this year.

Though the whatever-it-is is being kept tightly under wraps, its creators have begun to drop some hints about its... well, vibe.

“Peace”, “calm” and “joy” are all words they have used, tapping into the emotions they hope to evoke rather than any functional or utilitarian purpose, a strategic approach to stuff taken straight from the fashion world.

It all goes with the makeovers so many of the Silicon Valley execs seem to be experiencing, tossing their Tevas and hoodies in favour of Brunello Cucinelli and Loro Piana, which Ganesan called “the new go-to stores of the tech elite”.

The Meta store also serves to humanise a company at a moment when it has been making headlines for laying off 700 employees, not to mention being sued for allegations about the addictive nature of its mysterious social media algorithms.

A store, after all, with products you can try on, a service that will customise your glasses case and a cafe where you can simply hang out, offers a seductively, maybe deceptively, human sort of experience.

Read more: Fashion is wired: Designers are continuing their foray into the tech segment

On a recent Tuesday afternoon, the Meta Lab was humming with casual browsers.

Two couples came in toting small orange Louis Vuitton shopping bags from the luxury boutique up the street.

A pair of students at the Fashion Institute Of Technology, one from Wisconsin, one from South Korea, were testing out the Oakleys; an older man trying the Ray-Bans was asking the Meta AI assistant how the Dow had performed that day.

Upstairs in the cafe, a family from Mexico was having coffee and waiting for the cases of their new glasses to be customised.

“At the end of the day, fashion is about aesthetics and beauty, but also about signals,” Ganesan said.

“And right now, the glasses, the store on Fifth, showing up at the Met Gala, these signal to the wider world: We are here. We are making an effort to meet you where you are.” – ©2026 The New York Times Company

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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fashion , trends , wearables , Meta , accessories , sunglasses

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