Sitch Magazine

Sitch Magazine

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Through fashion, food, entertainment and culture, Sitch Mag seeks to bridge the gap between the high-

06/06/2026

Y’all call everybody a fashion icon, but we still don’t talk enough about what Nene Leakes did for Atlanta glamour.

Welcome to Housewives Hall of Glam: The Peach List Edition series. 🍑

We’re starting with Nene because she understood what fashion always needs: personality. The hair, the shades, the bags, the fur, the attitude — all of it helped make Atlanta glamour impossible to ignore.

Who should be next: Marlo, Cynthia, Porsha, Shereé, or Phaedra?

Follow The Sitch for more Southern fashion history, culture, and style stories people don’t always treat like fashion history.

Photos from Sitch Magazine's post 06/04/2026

Julian Horton is not waiting on Hollywood.

Known for playing Roy on Tyler Perry’s Beauty in Black, the Atlanta-raised actor, musician, and producer is thinking beyond a single breakout role toward ownership, originality, and building his own table.

The Sitch sat down with Julian to talk about Roy’s freedom, the Atlanta influence that shaped him, how he defines originality, and why ownership has become essential to the future he’s building.

Read the full story at the link in bio.

Photos from Sitch Magazine's post 06/03/2026

Happy Pride Month! BE WHO YOU ARE FOR YOUR PRIDE! 🏳️‍🌈🗣️

For Pride Month, we’re looking at Atlanta as a birthplace, stage, and sanctuary for LGBTQ+ brilliance across the American South.

From drag and nightlife to fashion, beauty, music, politics, and public performance, these eight Atlanta icons helped shape the city’s cultural imagination, and in some cases, the world’s.
Mr. Charlie Brown gave Atlanta drag one of its most beloved and enduring figures. RuPaul helped carry Southern drag brilliance into global pop culture. Baton Bob turned the city’s streets into a stage of joy and visibility. Miss Lawrence and Derek J defined Atlanta glamour across beauty, fashion, and television. Bill Smith, Lil Nas X, and Cathy Woolard each represent a different kind of cultural effect—from creative influence to political visibility to expanding what Southern q***r possibility can look like.

This list is a starting point, a love letter, and a reminder that Atlanta’s LGBTQ+ history is not separate from the city’s culture; rather, it is central to it.

Who would you add? 🏳️‍🌈

***r

06/02/2026

A Ma Maniére exemplifies how Atlanta’s fashion worlds collide in the best way possible.

The brand’s new Edgewood flagship recently hosted an event celebrating A$AP Rocky’s Ray-Ban collaboration, and we got an inside look at one of the city’s most ambitious new fashion spaces.

With luxury labels, streetwear favorites, dining, and community gathering space all under one roof, it feels like an investment in Atlanta’s fashion future.

If you’re a fashion lover living in or visiting Atlanta, add this one to your list.

Photos from Sitch Magazine's post 05/27/2026

When Archie Clay III set out to create Brain Love, he had mental health, style, and community in mind.

Now stocked at Bloomingdale’s and reportedly one of the top-performing SKUs at the retailer’s Lenox Square location in Atlanta, the brand is proving what can happen when clothing is designed to move people and not serve as a distraction.

Read the full conversation at thesitchmag.com.

Link in bio.

Photos from Sitch Magazine's post 05/14/2026

didn’t build Ellaé Lisqué by waiting for fashion’s approval.

She built it by knowing her customer, controlling her production, learning from expensive mistakes, and understanding that the women who actually buy the clothes are the real influencers.

With Ellaé Lisqué’s summer CEO capsule collection in mind, we spoke with the founder about what it really takes to build a brand: fit, infrastructure, customer loyalty, direct-to-consumer power, and doing it on your own terms.

Read the full Q&A now at The Sitch. Link in bio.

05/05/2026

The 2026 Met Gala theme, “Fashion Is Art,” asked celebrities to do more than look good.

The strongest looks understood the body as part of the artwork.

Black dominated the carpet. Sheer dressing was everywhere. And Robert Wun quietly became one of the night’s clearest designer signals.

I broke down the biggest patterns of the night — plus the best and weakest looks — now on The Sitch.

Read the full review at thesitchmag.com.

04/30/2026

Styling isn’t about clothes anymore. It’s about identity.

What Sam Woolf is doing with Doechii in Runway with Lady Gaga isn’t just fashion. It’s authorship.

Every look feels exaggerated, theatrical, almost unreal. And that’s the point.

These aren’t outfits you wear.
They’re outfits you perform in.

And honestly, most people don’t even realize that’s where fashion is right now.

Follow if you’re paying attention to fashion like this.

04/28/2026

Everyone’s watching Cardi.

But the real story might be her stylist.

Kollin Carter doesn’t just put looks together—he builds a world around them.

Every outfit feels dramatic, intentional, and completely aligned with who Cardi is.

That’s the difference between styling and identity.

Who really shaped this era?

04/23/2026

Why are designers suddenly working with Zara, Old Navy, and Gap?

It’s not random.

As luxury slows, something is shifting—and designers are responding.

Not by raising their prices, but by expanding their target demographic.

Smart move… or does it dilute the brand?

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