
At Marsa Boulevard, a walkable, pop-up-led promenade in Dubai, Shreya noticed a Fenty Beauty x FOAM pop-up sitting in the middle of a lively set-up, doing what good pop-ups do – blending into the evening effortlessly, yet impossible to ignore.“It was like a part coffee party, part beauty playground, with makeup stations, casual seating, and life-sized product installations that felt immersive,” shares Shreya MW, 23, from Mumbai, who stumbled upon the pop-up in February.“You could move through it freely, without ever feeling pushed into purchasing. Pricing sat comfortably within the global premium to luxury beauty range, but the format made the brand much more approachable than usual.”Like Fenty Beauty, many other luxury brands are crafting equally sensory, immersive worlds of their own. Burberry recently turned a humble newsstand into a celebration of 170 years of its iconic trench coat. Prada Beauty launched a two-day immersive experience across the US to mark the debut of its first-ever blush.
Burberry transformed a London newsstand into a pop-up featuring trench coats, signature scarves, bags, and bespoke magazines, on view until April 6
Such moments, engineered, ephemeral, and entirely intentional, are exactly what luxury houses are now betting on.
What a pop-up offers that a store won’t
“A pop-up has this fleeting, fun energy – it feels more intimate, more experience-led,” says Disha Batra, 26, from Delhi, who visited Chanel Beauty’s pop-up in London during Christmas 2025.“At the pop-up, the brand went all out – the creativity, storytelling, limited-edition drops… things you simply will not find at the store in any other month,” she shares.In Shanghai, Valentino Beauty transformed a historic villa into a blue-lit immersive world built around its Lucky Blue Aqua Cushion complexion product launch – luminous installations, interactive experiences, and spaces designed for social sharing and product discovery.
In Shanghai, Valentino Beauty replaced counters with “Ciel Baroque,” a multisensory studio blending Roman heritage and the city’s hyper digital energy
Loewe erected a walk-through garden at Madrid Design Festival, built entirely from recyclable paper, its honeycomb panels infused with the brand’s perfumes – part art installation, part sensory experience.
Loewe’s garden pop-up across multiple locations is built entirely from recyclable paper, with honeycomb panels infused with its perfumes
YSL Beauty’s pink-drenched pop-up in Hangzhou, China, was an open invitation to touch, try, and explore every shade and texture in the brand’s range – a hands-on playground that allowed for product discovery.
Pop-ups reinforce exclusivity – they’re not about democratising luxury, but creating desire. Through selective locations, curated audiences, and high-quality execution, brands retain their aspirational value without overexposing themselves
Kashyap Gadodia, brand marketing expert
Why pop-ups?
Pop-ups have been deliberately reborn as one of the most sophisticated tools in the luxury playbook. The reasons are more calculated than they appear.“Consumers today are not just buying products, but the feeling associated with the brand,” says Kashyap Gadodia, a brand marketing expert. “Experiential pop-ups turn retail into content, drive deeper emotional connection, and with creator amplification, extend impact far beyond the store.”Additionally, “Luxury purchases,” as luxury marketing expert Rajan Narayan points out, “are considered decisions that need to be seeded and nurtured over time. Pop-ups act as that first seed.”What makes them work, both experts agree, is the shift in how brands are choosing to communicate inside these spaces. The hard sell has given way to something far more subtle.“Salespeople are not selling the traditional way – they are narrating stories,” says Narayan. At Cartier, that might mean speaking about the panther as a symbol of women’s empowerment. At Louis Vuitton, it could be the story of a suitcase designed for the Maharaja of Kapurthala. At pop-ups, this is how commerce and storytelling are blending seamlessly.