Tuesday, December 29, 2009
The NY Times Discovers Fashion Blogs, Oh My!
Oh my gosh, y'all, did you hear about these newfangled things called fashion blogs? Well, they're, like, everywhere, the Times Styles section said, and it's getting fashion editors at magazines all up in a tizzy! The venerable Gray Lady tried her damnedest this weekend to stir up some controversy by pointing out that editors like Anna Wintour and the Vogue crew don't much care for sitting next to bloggers. (Oh, the horror.) Apparently, as Tavi swanned in, decked out in her adorable outfits, not everyone was thinking she was quite so cute. And Bryan Boy scored a spot two seats away from Anna at the spring D&G show in Milan. Oh, what will become of fashion?
Apparently, this seismic shift (which, let's point out, has been happening for years) has become so grand that designers are actually paying attention to bloggers. "Marc Jacobs named one of his bag designs after Bryan Boy," Eric Wilson dutifully points out in his article. To which we say, "Yes, but what has he done for us lately?" This is old news. Apparently, the speed at which blogs can gather photos, post both them and commentary, and hit publish is a big threat to the majors of the front row. But, if we may reassure our Vogue-ettes for a second: We do need you. Without your spreads, your market editors, your photographers, whom and what would we write about? We need fashion magazines just as much as we need blogs. So there, everyone can stop popping Xanax now. When blogs start shooting the latest clothes with the style and substance that magazines do, and readers turn to them in droves, then editors can worry. Enough with the whole fashion print is dead thing. That story is so 2009.
Loose Threads
• Riccardo Tisci chose only models for his spring 2010 Givenchy campaign. Mert Alas and Marcus Piggott shot Natalia Vodianova and Mariacarla Boscono alongside male models Simon Nessman, Emil Dostovic, and Edward. Do you like it?
• Lindsay Lohan is reportedly dating Adam Senn, a Dolce & Gabbana model who formerly starred on The City as Allie Crandell's naughty boyfriend. He met her family over the weekend and they supposedly like him.
• The Martin Margiela suite at Les Sources de Caudalie hotel and spa near Bordeaux, France costs 650 euros and up per night (or $936 at current exchange), and includes a gift signed by the designer.
• Teens aren't spending as much money as they used to. Abercrombie and Hollister are secretly crying right now.
• Christy Turlington stars in the Bally spring 2010 campaign, shot by Raymond Meier, for the second season in a row.
• Kohl's is still looking for a location in Manhattan, but it might not be 1775 Broadway, as previously anticipated by the retailer.
• Vivienne Westwood's collection of wallpaper for Cole & Son launched this month and ranges from $87 to $298 per roll.
• The company English Laundry is launching a collection inspired by how John Lennon dressed in the sixties. It will also feature the musician's artwork and imagery, and Macy's picked it up for spring.
• Mulberry released a bag in its spring collection named after Alexa Chung.
• People are still talking about this: Demi Moore's lawyers wrote a letter to photographer Anthony Citrano demanding an apology after he made comments that her cover for W was Photoshopped. He refuses to apologize.
• The lingerie-inspired trend we saw on the spring runways is moving into swimwear with companies like Eres and Anna Maria La Bianca creating swimsuits that look like undergarments.
PRAISE THE LORD: Sex and City 2!!
Last week the trailer for the second Sex and the City movie came out. While it was clear they were wearing a lot of stuff that wasn't recession-friendly, the eagle-eyed bloggers over at Madison Avenue Spy have put labels and prices to much of it:
We already know that in the the opening clip Carrie is wearing limited edition Mykita & Bernhard Willhelm sunglasses ($525 @ Patricia Field.) Her white dress is Halston and the necklace is Solange Azagury-Partridge, and costs almost $200k. The shoes are Louboutin and the clutch is Chanel. Big is treating Carrie very well!
In the clip taking place in front of Bergdorf Goodman, we have Samantha with a VBH bag ($1300) and black Ray Bans. Miranda is wearing YSL Tribute heels. Charlotte is in head-to-toe pink Dior (including the bag) but not the shoes. Those are Loubs.
Well well, maybe they should have set the track to "Louboutins" by Jennifer Lopez because that's a lot of Loubs for 80 Sex and the City seconds. Sure, the ladies have worn Loubs before, but the entire first movie was based on the power of Manolo Blahniks, Carrie's true one and only. Without those damn shoes Carrie and Big never would have wound up together. That's the message this franchise sends — when life gets you down, you'll always have your stuff! If you don't love your boyfriend and want to cheat on him, go shopping! Troubles disappear! Got a problem? Buy overpriced stuff! Preferably Manolos, because they solve life's worst problems! Anyway, if you can spot other labels, let me know.
Kanye is Back, Well Sort Of
It's been a rough year for Kanye West. After that little fiasco at the VMAs, followed by the groveling and getting his head kicked off by Jacob Taylor Lautner on SNL, he essentially went into hiding. But a man can only stay down for so long. Like a phoenix rising from the ash, so doth Kanye — or at least, photos of him. West modeled for Bathing Ape's spring 2010 look book. How'd he do as a model? His poses ranged from befuddled Kanye, to top-dog Kanye, to I'm-trying-to-look-serious-and-dangerous-as-I-wear-a-hoodie-with-cute-faces-on-it Kanye. Aw, adorable!
Kanye offered up his thoughts on the shoot and the Bathing Ape brand in general:
THIS SHOOT WAS MAD FUN. THIS COLLECTION USES REALLY GREAT FABRICS, EASY TO WEAR CUTS AND STILL THE OCCASIONAL SUPER EXPRESSIVE DECADENT PRINTS. BAPE RAN THE LAST DECADE AND THEY'RE READY FOR THE NEXT ONE!
Hmmm, well we guess Santa didn't bring him a new laptop with a caps-lock key that isn't broken. That's what happens when you're naughty, Kanye. So, as our last public service for 2009, I'd like to give Kanye this resolution: Dude, you were kind of a jerk last year. If you stop typing like you're yelling, people might like you more. Just a thought. Take it one day at a time, starting right now. Love ya!
Wednesday, December 23, 2009
Loose Threads
• Lifestyle brand Le Tigre erected a billboard on the West Side Highway today that reads "Golf Needs a Tiger: Let’s Get Back on Course." Now that's funny!
• OMG, YOU GUYS: There are some Balenciaga shoes at the Union Square DSW for under $100. Multiple styles are available, including those futuristic ones Loehmann's used to have a lot of.
• Gareth Pugh dressed Julia Stegner for a Mercedes ad shot by Nick Knight. It's a recession — why not?
• Twelve Macy's stores, including the Manhattan Herald Square location, will stay open 'round the clock until 6 p.m. on Thursday. Nothing beats being at Macy's at 4 a.m.!
• British Vogue's website named recently unemployed Alexa Chung the most stylish person of 2009.
• If you need a conversation starter for your holiday dinner table, why not begin with something Tom Ford once said? "When I was asked as a child what I wanted to be, I'd say, 'I want to be rich, I want to be famous, I want to live in the big city, I want to have a fabulous life'. All I've done my entire life is fulfill my destiny." I love me some Tom!
Patrick McDonald Is a Hit With Construction Workers
I bumped into Launch My Line contestant Patrick McDonald, this morning in SoHo. He gave me this gem. "Last week I left my apartment in the East Village and four construction workers walked towards me. I thought, oh my God, I'm in riding boots and patent leather and plaid and a red hat. What are they thinking? They said, 'You're the guy from TV. Can I take a picture on my cell phone to give to my wife? She loves you.' It's so nice."Gotta love New York City.
Monday, December 21, 2009
Celebrity Styling: A Dream Job?
Styling is the dream job of the naughties for little girls, according to the London Times. They could be right. Dream jobs usually aren't dream jobs unless it's basically impossible to make a decent living off them and only an infinitesimal number of pursuers make it far enough to make that living. The core task of a dream job must also be theoretically fun, and picking out outfits for people is a theoretically fun thing to do for many women. Dream jobs also usually come with fame potentia, and with Rachel Zoe going from dressing red-carpet walkers to walking among them herself, albeit on an inherently lower level, styling certainly falls into the "dream career" category.
So no longer are the stylists insignificant creatures crouched on floors in photo studios picking up pins and unpacking garment bags and helping models put their shoes on; they are real people — with names. And ... Bravo reality shows. However, stylists are not safe from residing in the underbelly of the high-fashion world. In the entertainment industry you have soap stars and Oscar-nominated actresses. 10 magazine editor Sophia Neophitou, also the creative and fashion director of British Harper’s Bazaar, notes that in the styling industry, you have celebrity stylists and high-fashion magazine stylists.
Neophitou says it is the likes of Zoe who encourage young girls to hanker after a career as a stylist: “They see it as glamorous, working with celebrities,” she says, although she is at pains to point out that dressing celebs is not the same thing as directing a photoshoot. “In terms of credibility, that’s something you just don’t want to become. Celebrity stylists seem to ride on the coat-tails of that celebrity.”
Well, in Zoe's defense, she rides on the coattails of many celebrities and has done that well enough to have people riding on her coattails, too (or at least Brad Goreski — we're not sure if Roger counts but we're leaning toward no).
But celebrity style is becoming increasingly less boring in the age of Lady Gaga, when every diva except Taylor Swift seemingly feels like they have to wear hooves and stuffed animals and garbage pails just to keep up. Maybe in the next decade finding crazy outfits for celebrities will be the new finding crazy outfits for models for avant-garde European magazines. As Gaga's main stylist, Nichola Formichetti, the creative director of Dazed & Confused and fashion director of Japanese Men's Vogue, tells the Times, dressing Gaga is like creating "a living fashion magazine." If she's the walking Dazed, Rihanna must be the walking Flare-Purple hybrid.
Designers' Christmas Wish Lists
Designers want more than peace, love, and happiness this holiday season. Like material things! So I asked several designers: If you could receive one item this Christmas, what would it be?
Francisco Costa, women's creative director, Calvin Klein: "A painting by artist Christopher Brooks, a first edition of Robert Mapplethorpe's Flowers book, a Calvin Klein Collection black wool and cashmere slash pocket overcoat, and black super-soft cashmere scarf."
Rodarte's Kate Mulleavy: "Antique red and white glass mushroom tree ornaments." And Laura Mulleavy: "A velveteen rabbit."
Michael Kors: "A large Jackson Pollack painting, my own island, and a diary free of appointments."
Jason Wu: "I have always been a huge fan of Rene Gruau. In fact, when I was young I first aspired to be an illustrator. To this day, his use of bold colors and dramatic strokes inspire many of my collections. It would be amazing to locate an original print!"
Donna Karan: "TIME OFF ... "
Alexander Wang: "A really big bathroom in my new apartment!"
Maria Cornejo: "A George Sherlock sofa for the living room."
Christian Louboutin: "Barry Diller’s plane."
Narciso Rodriguez: "A set of small and large bronze egg vases and lanterns from Ted Muehling."
Tim Hamilton: "I would love a vacation to somewhere remote like the Maldives or the Caribbean."
Saturday, December 19, 2009
Heat by B
Beyoncé — oh, just what glorious gift has she brought us this cold, hung-over Friday? Her very own fragrance, of course. The singer is joining the ranks of other celeb perfumers (Brit Brit, J.Lo, Mariah Carey, Avril Lavigne, and Tim McGraw, to name but a handful) and is releasing Heat at the end of January. “A lot of my performances have had fire involved, so we thought ‘Heat,’" she told WWD. As for the red-and-gold bottle: "Also, red is one of my favorite colors, as is gold."
The scent has notes of red vanilla, orchid, magnolia, neroli, and blush peach, which sounds light and pretty in contrast to the overtly sexy campaign Beyoncé has planned for the rollout. “It’s called Heat, so we wanted the ads to be really steamy and dewy,” she said. “My sexiest moments are when I’m just getting out of the tub or the shower and I’m clean, so I wanted to incorporate that in the ads. The dress was this liquid-y satin." We're going to let you sit with that image in your head for a while, though you may as well get used to it — you're going to be inundated with sexy, liquid Beyoncé everywhere you turn.
Coty, which is licensing the fragrance, has plans for more in the works, so can we expect, say, Sweat to be next? Hey, the woman can make anything sexy, so why not?
I Love ... Canali
Italian menswear company Canali has been making some of the world's best suits for 75 years. After three generations, the Canali family is still devoted to creating the finest in Italian clothing and accessories, and investing in quality is the smart way to dress now. Here are five reasons we love this classic house.
1. The tailoring is superior.
2. The textiles are outstanding, and most are exclusive to them.
3. Love that they make 1,400 suits and 1,600 pairs of trousers a day. Clearly, practice makes perfect.
4. Because everything is done in their own factories in Italy, the quality is assured.
5. Although expensive, these suits are built to last
Friday, December 18, 2009
Twilight’s Fashion Invasion Reaches Calvin Klein, Vogue
Twilight stud muffin Kellan Lutz is Calvin Klein's "new Mark Wahlberg," according to Fox News. "Kellan has been signed to Calvin Klein for a huge campaign that will feature him in his skivvies all over billboards and in magazines," a source tells them. The label reportedly wants to re-create Wahlberg's ads, and thinks Lutz is the best person to fill out the manties. Calvin Klein underwear is a mighty campaign to land, a coup for Lutz, his personal trainer, and the Twilight empire. And so as 2009 draws to a close, there could be no better time to reflect on Twilight's fashion journey, from its humble beginnings to ridiculously glamorous future.
The saga has had quite a mystic fashion adventure over the past year. Landing most noticeably first in Hot Topic stores, Twi merch bolstered the retailer's sales in the third quarter of '08, one of the worst economic periods in decades, keeping the chain not only from going under but also astoundingly profitable. The rest of the industry drooled over those financial returns, and companies quickly began scheming for their own fashion-derived pot of Twilight gold. Nordstrom was quick to launch its own Twilight line of Team Edward T-shirts, jewelry, and other nonsense. Increasingly ridiculous Twilight product launches followed, including makeup (more than one line), "Edward's smile" necklaces, and vampire-fang veneers, which cost from $250 for a dentist to apply.
The power of Twilight did not escape the notice of the fashion media, which also fell on incredibly hard times in 2009. Desperate to recover and, like too many of us, unable to ignore the psychodom of the Twilight empire any longer, fashion editors let loose their fangs and sank them into the vulnerable horde of teens and their parents, now hungry to know themselves what all this fuss was about. Hedi Slimane shot Robert Pattinson — an ex-model, in fact — for the September issue of AnOther Man. Next came Harper's Bazaar, the December cover of which starred Kristen Stewart and R-Pattz, further fueling relationship rumors with a dark, romantic spread inside the issue. Before the Lutz news broke, rumors surfaced about shirtless star Taylor Lautner signing on as the new face of Armani.
After all that, where are these stars to go? They've sparkled, vamped, and muscled their way from the dredges of Hot Topic to high fashion. They can have only one final destination: Vogue. E! Online reports that Robert Pattinson was shot for the magazine at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art along with his Remember Me co-star Emilie de Ravin.
Photographer Norman Jean Roy is said to have shot them in several spots throughout the museum, including interior and exterior setups. "It's kind of edgy in a Vogue way," the source says. "Emilie is wearing high fashion but it's like sort of tattered-looking. Rob is mainly in suits."
Sure, Vogue will publish the photos under the pretense of Remember Me coming out. But that's only because they missed the Twilight train in the heat of New Moon. They may have been wishing it to disappear like the rest of us, but with the rest of the industry hooked and profiting, the mighty beast can go ignored no longer. And if that magazine came around to Lady Gaga, they can come around to anything.
Loose Threads
• Former Obedient Sons & Daughters designers Swaim and Christina Hutson are working together again. Last season Swaim started designing Generra; this season Christina will help him do that.
• The British department store House of Fraser acquired the rights to Biba and is planning to revive the label for the fall 2010 season under the name Biba Collection for House of Fraser.
• Domenico Dolce and Stefano Gabbana make cameos as priests in the new movie Nine.
• Speaking of, Dolce & Gabbana's new face, Madonna, wore the label, as did her daughter Lourdes, to the premiere of Nine last night in New York.
• Teen Vogue editor-in-chief Amy Astley filmed a cameo for Gossip Girl.
• Mert Alas and Marcus Piggott shot Dree Hemingway for the spring 2010 Valentino campaign.
• Kendall Jenner, the 14-year-old half-sister of Kim, Kourtney, and Khloe Kardashian, stars in the new campaign for Forever 21. Sounds so right and yet so wrong.
André Leon Talley Is Judging the Next Season of America’s Next Top Model
Tyra "Smize" Banks is currently filming the next season of America's Next Top Model in New Zealand. Rumor had it she recruited Kimora Lee Simmons and Vogue's André Leon Talley to judge with her. However, New Zealand's celebrity-hungry press are watching Banks and her crew's every move, and they have unearthed that, contrary to what we suspected, André Leon Talley is a new full-time judge on the season. Kimora Lee Simmons is merely a guest judge. New Zealand–based Cassius blog reports:
Tyra, Nigel, Jay M., Jay A., and new judge, Vogue Editor-at-Large, André Leon Talley, have been in Auckland since the first week of December, and we're not kidding when we say, everyone is obsessed with spotting or stalking them like an endangered species lol, which they are as New Zealand rarely hosts many Hollywood celebrities.
TVNZ even has video of the crew fetching their bags in the airport, which mostly consists of people holding cardboard over the camera lens and a cloud of black umbrellas hiding someone who must be famous. But there's a flash of Miss J (Miss J, people!) going through customs or something.
With Talley on every episode, all you people who could never get into the show and only watched it on Oxygen those weekends Bravo was playing marathons of Shear Genius now have a reason to tune in every week — for at least the last twenty minutes. Cassius reports that they shot the CoverGirl challenge yesterday. We're curious whether they'll engage in any bungee jumping, canyon swinging, or other "miscellaneous madness" New Zealand is known for. I will definitely tune in to watch Tyra tell some poor 19-year-old she has to go home because she failed to smile with her eyes while swinging across a canyon at 150 kilometers per hour suspended only by a rope. If she puts blackface makeup on a terribly sunburned white girl, I wouldn't put it past her.
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
Designer Accessories Remain Versatile for Spring, Emphasize Multipurpose Trends
A mix of sparkle, tribal, neutral tones, lucite and denim will be just some of the major trends seen in accessories next spring, said the Neiman Marcus accessory team in their latest presentation in New York a few weeks ago.
When it comes to tribal, think looks that would pair well with Yves Saint Laurent's safari classics, like arms covered with stacks of bangles by Lee Angel, or a floral fabric covered wooden heel from Baldan. Or take Balmain's status gladiator sandals, which come in a woven tribal print version in spring, while the lace up buckle boot will come in a safari-ready olive green.
This new earthier mood will also get some play in the form of fringed sandals and classic wedges and platforms in brown leathers from must-have designer brands like YSL and Prada. Also on the neutral end of the spectrum, for the second season in a row at Neiman Marcus, pale beiges and pinks continue to be a strong look.
"Nude is the new black for us," said Roopal Patel, Neiman Marcus' women's fashion accessory senior market editor.
Denim also gets an haute facelift in the form of quilted bags by Lanvin, denim-covered ballet flats by Chanel and a denim version of YSL's Tribute platform sandal, which "goes great will all these safari looks we're seeing," said Patel.
But fans of more elaborate embellishments will still have plenty of options, too.
"Sequins and shine and sparkle have become almost a classic," said Patel. "You can wear it for day now. Miu Miu and Prada always has sparkle. It's fun and different from what she already owns."
For Spring 2010, Prada will lead the way with clear crystal looks, from PVC inserts in sandals to Lucite claps on metallic handbags, while jewelry by Lee Angel, a Neiman Marcus go-to for sparkle around the wrist or neck, offers many ways to shine, though it's the wrist in particular, said Patel, that will be focus for Spring.
"We're moving away from the statement necklaces and putting more focus on the wrist," said Patel, also pointing to bangles by John Hardy and Alexis Bittar. The look with bracelets, she said, is to stack them up.
And the studded motorcycle look, for those with less glitzy yet still statement-making tastes, can get their fill with the unofficial reigning champion of the look, Balmain - a studded black leather purse is sure to make waves.
A Minute With Jason Wu
Business is booming for Jason Wu, the young New York-based designer whose name became a household name when first lady Michelle Obama wore his one-shouldered white gown to President Obama's inaugural ball in January earlier this year.
"The inauguration really helped in terms of awareness outside of America, being a young brand," said Wu on Tuesday afternoon, Dec. 8, in New York. "I was just in Beijing, and people recognize the brand there and people recognize the brand in London, in Dubai, and it's known all over the world."
Wu will be moving to this new, bigger space in a few weeks, something he never imagined he'd have to do when he established his company in his current studio three years ago.
"When I first moved in there I painted the walls myself, it was very personal, I was like 'this place is so big, I'm never going to outgrow it'. Then we outgrew it," marveled Wu.
Wu's output has also grown exponentially - for instance, the 2010 season marks the first time he's done a Pre-Fall collection.
"Business is at the stage where we need four seasons a year to keep the store stocked," said Wu. "We shipped Resort three weeks ago and it's already sold out of the store."
Wu was sitting at a long table in front of a portfolio of lookbook photos from his Pre-Fall 2010 collection, while the actual clothing lined racks on either side of the table in the unfinished showroom space.
"I thought Pre-fall was really interesting to do because it's sort of like a laboratory where I got to resolve ideas, from Spring, and explore new ideas for Fall," said Wu. "It's a really good interim season."
A house model wandered in and out, showing off the delicate details of Wu's latest effort, best appreciated in person - chiffon covered sequins that looked like delicate feathers, a silver laser cut leather dress with an architectural sweep that reminded one of Eero Saarinen's New York airline terminal for TWA.
Accordingly, airline travel was theme of this collection.
"I was looking up the '60s and '70s Pan Am stewardesses and I thought it was such a glamorous career," said Wu. "I thought, that's a great way to bring glamour into a uniform, and explore that concept, the uniform, and also travel. Where Spring was this exuberant burst of colors, Pre-Fall I wanted to have this sophisticated austerity to it that a uniform brings."
Wu pointed out his trompe-l'oeil concept for one piece garments that looked like two pieces: Short dresses featured flight attendant-like ascot ties, a tweed dress came sewn with a black leather bib and a sequined sleeve was attached to another top.
"There's a lot of duality to these pieces," explained Wu. "And you know, in terms of practicality, Pre-Fall ships in mid-May, so really it's about buy-now wear-now clothes, and the way weather and climate is, people don't want to wear overly heavy clothing and so this creates the look of layering without actually having to layer. There's that sense of lightness in Pre-Fall that I thought was really important to have."
In the end, it's that kind of business savvy that is enabling Wu to take full advantage of the extra publicity he's seen over the last year or so to really push the creative limits of his collections. The result has been precisely rendered, increasingly complex and quite simply, stunning designs.
"It's great just to be able to spread my wings, and to do different things," said Wu. "And our collection's growing, business is growing. It's been a really good year in terms of growth."
Monday, December 14, 2009
The Sartorialist Might Get His Own TV Show, But He Doesn't Want to Star in It
Scott Schuman is not a spotlight-hungry blogger. Au contraire, his work may have helped start the personal-style craze with his street-style blog The Sartorialist, but he has always fixated on the style of others, rather than himself. One might argue that his blog is successful because it distills style according to his personal tastes, and therefore is all about him. Quandary: Should I dress like I'm homeless today? Solution: The Sartorialist is into it! Quandary: Should I iron my jeans? The Sartorialist enjoys a crisp crease in a denim pant leg. Schumann doesn't see it this way. And that is why, as he negotiates for his own TV show and clothing line, he's keen to make sure he's not the focal point, directly. He told the Pedestrian at an event he attended to promote his book:
“There’s maybe a TV show coming up, maybe a clothing collection coming up. There's a lot of negotiating going on right now ... I was offered a lot of shows before, and I don't think the companies were right that were asking me. But this company I think is right. It's a very well known Director and all, they're a company. But I finally realized that the success of the blog, is the fact that it's not about me it's about the people that I talk to and the people I choose to talk to and shoot and all that ... So I would be in the show but definitely not the focus just like there's one picture of me in this book. So I've become well known not by promoting myself but by talking and shooting other people. So maybe there's a TV show maybe there's an accessories collection that might lead into a full clothing collection."
Sounds like our friend Scott here is a little bashful about promoting himself. He may as well go balls out, because this is the digital age, where everything is about self-promotion. From Fashion Toast and Sea of Shoes to Twitter to Facebook to commenting on blogs to writing one's own blog to reality TV. So he shouldn't worry about being the focus of a clothing line or television program. It's an admirable attempt at modesty — but be real, Scott. Let your inner fame whore loose! All of us internet people have one. And if you start thrusting yourself before the photographer pit, fine by us. We won't stop you. We might judge you, but isn't that what it's all about?
Naomi Campbell in Talks to Do X Factor–Style Modeling Show
Naomi Campbell's rep confirmed that the supermodel is in talks to host an X Factor–style competition reality show for aspiring models. Though the rep says "nothing is set in stone yet," British Vogue reports the program would make Campbell the Tyra Banks–esque mother hen of the operation, shepherding a flock of aspiring models while whittling them down to a winner. This sounds like a wonderful idea because aspiring models need a better reality competition show than America's Next Top Model, the success of which now merely rides on Tyra's antics, such as her made-up superhero Smize and other publicity stunts like the recent blackface shoot. You know Naomi would have nothing to do with such absurdity.
Over the summer we learned that Sir Philip Green and Simon Cowell planned to work on some fashion-TV projects together under their new global entertainment company. We bet the mysterious show Campbell is in talks about is part of that venture. When I first reported on the GreenCow super-company, I suspected a model competition show would result. And I am still holding out hope for a live studio audience to make the contestants feel extra awkward. Tyra Banks would have to start going to work wearing pieces by Lucy and Bart to top that.
Barneys Said to Be Eyeing Brooklyn for New Co-Op Location
Barneys has endured a mess of financial difficulties this year. They, like every other high-end department store, lost a bunch of money. They weren't paying bills on time, forcing parent company Istithmar, despite its own financial woes, to pump $25 million into the chain. But last month billionaire Ron Burkle purchased a chunk of Barneys's debt, which was seen as a long-term vote of confidence in all that Barneys has to offer even though he got it for 60 cents on the dollar. Same-store sales were up 7 percent in October, and bill collectors now say things like, “Barneys is paying us beautifully." So there could be no better time to make a plan to open a new store in the city in the next five years. Sources close to the situation say Barneys has its eye on Atlantic Avenue in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn, for a new Co-Op outpost. As typically happens when someone makes the first, supposedly terrifying leap from Manhattan to Brooklyn, there are naysayers, like this guy:
“They have to be careful,” says Michael Appel, president of retail consulting firm Quest Turnaround Advisors. “I don't know if there are enough of those high-end luxury-forward customers out there.”
Yet there are also supporters! The people who know someone's social life and the World won't collapse if they make the leap to Brooklyn:
“Brooklyn is a logical move for them,” says Laura Pomerantz, a principal at PBS Realty.
She may be a commission-hungry realtor, but she's right. Because if the recession has taught us anything, it's that when times get tough those "high-end luxury-forward customers" can't be counted on. Plus as Real Housewives fashion-forward power couple Silex proved long ago, there are luxury-hungry, St. Barths–gallivanting people living in Brooklyn who happily pay full retail prices wherever they are, possibly to make up for their insecurities about living in Brooklyn.
Turquoise Is the Color of 2010
Pantone, which tracks colors in the fashion and home-décor industries, has named turquoise the color of 2010. Pantone's executive director said it was the obvious choice because it's soothing and makes people think of being on vacation, which we all need after the tough year of 2009. We could also use a vacation from last year's color, the far less universally flattering mimosa. However, Tommy Hilfiger cautions, "I love it for women and I strongly dislike it for men. ... If men are to wear blue, they should wear light blue or dark blue." What — hummmmm.
NYPD Cracks Down on 31 Canal Street Knockoff Shops
For now, your walk down Canal Street will be congested by a few less Prado bags: The NYPD raided and closed a stretch of 31 stores on the south side of Canal, starting at Church Street and going east. All merchandise suspected of being counterfeit was removed from the stores, including handbags and perfume, leaving the tiny venues looking even more ransacked than usual (see photo). The stores will not be allowed to reopen, naturally, perhaps prompting even more would-be buyers to opt for purchasing the real thing. We've put in a call to the Mayor's office for comment, but a police officer with whom we chatted told me it was "time to take back the streets of New York." Oh, we do love a cop who can use tough violent-crime talk when discussing back-alley pleather.
Thursday, December 3, 2009
Loose Threads
• David Yurman designed the cocktail ring and bangles worn by Michaele Salahi when she crashed the Obamas' State Dinner last week. Now you have something to talk about at your next cocktail party.
• The Japanese Cross Company bought a majority stake in Thom Browne. The label plans to open a Tokyo flagship next year. Shrunken suits for everyone!
• Marc Jacobs and Lorenzo Martone closed on a $10.4 million townhouse on Bethune Street in the Village. The 4,400-square-foot space includes a private elevator, rear terrace, yard, and roof terrace. What, no pool?
• Cyber Monday online sales were up 5 percent from last year, reaching $887 million. 52.7 percent of Monday's web shopping was conducted from work computers.
• Anthropologie is moving into the Chelsea Market.
• The group photo of plus-size models published in the November issue of Glamour will be featured in the magazine's inaugural 2010 calendar. The calendar will be given to subscribers.
• Fashion illustrator Blue Logan will be sketching socialites and collectors (or, as he calls them "strange, fickle ... sunbathers and party people, celebrities and hangers-on") as they pass through the lobby and lounge of the Standard Hotel during Art Basel in Miami Beach. His work will later be on display at the hotel.
Boobs-R-Us
Step aside, Blake Lively. Men have breasts, too, and they are whipping them out with a vengeance. Man cleavage, dubbed "heavage" by the Telegraph's Hilary Alexander, is on the rise, reports The Wall Street Journal. Now, heavage is nothing new. As early as the twenties actor Douglas Fairbanks Sr. had his upper breasts and middle chest routinely on display in his films. But the Journal argues that man cleavage hasn't been this prominent since the seventies (John Travolta, Saturday Night Fever). And man boobs — but not man nipples (mipples?) — were all over the spring 2010 runways, namely those of Yigal Azrouël and Michael Bastian.
Bastian says heavage is coming back because trendy male models have gone from waifish twigs to hulking, lumpy, manly men with breasts most deserving of a little airing out. But also, as we've noted repeatedly, designers are in love with the idea of clothes that aren't actually clothes. The spring runways were filled with models in panties instead of pants, bras instead of shirts, and low-cut tops for men — all merely an extension of gradually working our way toward a world in which a nudist way of life is the norm.
Also, hipsters and wannabe-hipsters have been buying the deep-Vs at American Apparel for years, and if any store matters to street fashion it's that one, whatever your feelings may be about it. It is possible that men are embracing heavage out of lady-cleavage envy. They don't want us to forget they have boobs, too!
Brad Wieners, editor-in-chief of Men's Journal magazine, believes that the magazine has made guys feel more comfortable about wearing more fitted clothes and styles that show that they work out. Mr. Wieners notes that for a recent cover shoot, actor Alec Baldwin donned a shirt open at the collar, subtly revealing chest hair. "He's not Burt Reynolds," says the editor. "But he's letting you know he's got a chest."
And, ladies, you could possibly learn a thing or two about putting the girls on display from the guys. Currently (and seeing how crazy men are with fashion these days, this could certainly change), women stand a greater risk of abusing their breasts and walking out of the house with them on indecent display. The fashion industry keeps making those giant waist belts that push a girl's boobs up to her eyeballs. Men don't really have that option. But they are meticulous about what they show and don't show.
The latest resurrection of man cleavage does raise a not-so insignificant issue: to wax or not? For a number of years, any male chest hair was considered a fashion don't, but very recently a thin thatch has become quite acceptable. The low-cut look "is better if you have a little chest hair," says Tyler Thoreson, a New York-based men's style consultant. "It's not about showing off chest hair, it's about it peeking out a little bit."
...Robert Caponi, a 32-year-old musician in Greensboro, N.C., isn't taking any chances. In order to get the hair-to-skin ratio just right, he shaves his chest every two weeks or so -- a regimen that helps him to feel comfortable in one of the six deep V-neck shirts he owns. Not all styles fit the bill. After purchasing a wide scoop neck recently, he declared it simply too revealing. "I looked in the mirror and I was disgusted," he says.
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