ENHYPEN’s Jungwon and Ni-Ki front Esquire Korea’s most luxurious cover of the year — and prove that the new generation wears Cartier like it was always theirs.
Some luxury that doesn’t announce itself — it simply settles into the room and waits to be recognised. That’s the energy Esquire Korea and Cartier were chasing when they handed the July 2026 cover to Yang Jungwon and Nishimura Riki. They didn’t chase the obvious. They chose the leader and the maknae of ENHYPEN: two young men who, between them, hold the emotional architecture of one of the most devoted fandoms in fourth-generation K-pop. ENGENE already knew what the rest of the world is still catching up to.

Jungwon has been carrying the word “leader” since he was a teenager — since the night I-Land’s global votes made it official and the weight of seven people’s dreams landed quietly on his shoulders.
What’s remarkable, five and a half years on, is how little that weight has bent him.
If anything, it’s sharpened something.
On the Esquire Korea cover, he holds the frame the way a leader should: not by dominating it, but by making everything around him feel considered.
The Cartier pieces — cool gold, precise geometry, centuries of intention compressed into jewellery — sit against him like they understand each other.
Ni-Ki’s story is a different kind of extraordinary. He debuted at fifteen. He was the youngest person in a room full of young people, and he was also, somehow, the most naturally commanding on stage.
Now he’s twenty, and the gap between who he was on I-Land and who he is on this cover is the kind of distance that most artists spend a decade trying to cross.
Japanese-born, trained in a Korean system, fluent in the language of movement in a way that transcends both — Ni-Ki has always been something that categories can’t quite contain.
Cartier, an institution that has spent over a century refusing to be categorised, seems to understand him.
That’s not a small thing to do. And it’s not a small thing to photograph.


The editorial is styled with the restraint that only confidence can produce. No maximalism, no excess. Esquire Korea’s team understood that the story here isn’t about the clothes or even the jewellery — it’s about two people who have genuinely grown into their own skins in public, in front of millions of ENGENEs who watched every step.

ENHYPEN has spent the past year quietly building a portfolio of moments that reposition them in the cultural conversation — not just as K-pop idols but as a genuine aesthetic and cultural force. The Coachella Sahara Stage. The Prada ambassadorship.
And now this: a cover that places them inside the heritage of one of the world’s most storied luxury houses.
Each of these things alone is significant. Together, they form an argument that the group — and their fandom — have been making for years. ENGENE didn’t wait for permission. They just kept showing up.
What makes this Esquire Korea cover resonate beyond the usual fashion editorial machinery is what it implies about where ENHYPEN stands right now.
The group is writing a new chapter — six members, post-transition, with Jungwon’s leadership more visible and essential than ever.


Ni-Ki, long beloved as the maknae with the floor-shaking stage presence, is stepping into something larger: an identity that belongs to him alone, not to the role he was assigned on debut night.
The Cartier shoot captures both of them mid-transformation. Not at the beginning. Not at the end. In the most interesting part.
Cartier’s tagline for this campaign — worn in every image, implicit in every angle — is about time. About things that last.
ENHYPEN is five and a half years old as a group, ancient by some industry standards, still young by any measure that matters. Jungwon and Ni-Ki, twenty-one and twenty years old respectively, are nowhere near the middle of their story.
But they are clearly, unmistakably, past the prologue. And that — more than the gold, more than the marble-white styling, more than the prestige of Esquire Korea’s July cover slot — is what makes this shoot worth looking at twice.
ENGENE has always known. The rest of the world is just catching up.
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Credits & Rights
Editorial Feature: “The Weight of Gold Looks Different on Them — BELi’s Jungwon & Ni-Ki for Esquire Korea × Cartier, July 2026”
Published by: Kpoppie Magazine / Velocity Entertainment Inc. Limited (Japan/New Zealand Edition)
Website: kpoppie.com
Reference: Esquire Korea × Cartier, July 2026 Issue
© 2026 Kpoppie Magazine / Velocity Entertainment Inc. Limited. All rights reserved.
This editorial is protected under the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works. No part of this publication — including text, editorial concepts, structured layouts, or social media thread content — may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of Velocity Entertainment Inc. Limited.
Artist references, photographic descriptions, and brand mentions are included for editorial and journalistic purposes only. All trademarks, brand names, and artist identities remain the property of their respective rights holders. ENHYPEN is managed by BELIFT LAB. Cartier is a trademark of Compagnie Financière Richemont SA. Esquire Korea is published under licence from Hearst Communications Inc.


