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Rescue Marilyn Monroe: Save The White Dress

Daily Fashion Juice
Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Fashion & Entertainment Celebrities Discuss Plan to Rescue Marilyn Monroe's White Dress from 'The Seven Year Itch' and Place it on Permanent Display in New York City

 NEW YORK, May 31, 2011 /PRNewswire/ --




WHO
Members and celebrity supporters of the Save-The-Dress Campaign, including:
  • Andrew Hansford, Curator of the Travilla Estate (Marilyn Monroe's costumer) & author of 'Dressing Marilyn'
  • Darlene Newman, CEO of inQuicity & Executive Director of Save-The-Dress Campaign
  • Liza St. John, Actress & Model who portrayed Marilyn Monroe on stage and in film
  • Kate Shindle, Miss America (1998) & actress from stage, television and film
  • Claire Buffie, Miss New York (current)
  • Alyse Zwick, Actress, TV host & former Miss New York (2009)

WHAT
During filming and publicity shots for The Seven Year Itch, Marilyn Monroe stood atop a NYC subway grate wearing a pleated white dress designed by the legendary William Travilla. A rush of air from a passing subway train below kicked up the dress and launched both the garment and its wearer to super-stardom. The image remains one of Hollywood's most memorable film moments.

This iconic dress is scheduled to be auctioned on June 18th. Its uncertain future and enormous historical importance has sparked widespread concern that it could be acquired by a private collector, never to be seen again.

Save-The-Dress has brought together noted personalities and organizations from the worlds of fashion, film and the arts to rescue the garment and place it on permanent display in New York City; the city in which the dress and Marilyn Monroe achieved iconic status in American popular culture.

The press conference will introduce key members and supporters of the Save-The-Dress Campaign and detail strategic components of its plan to rescue, preserve and ensure public access to the dress.

WHEN
Wednesday, June 1, 2011 at 2:00 PM

WHERE
Front of 590 Lexington Avenue, between 51st & 52nd Streets (Location is the actual site of NYC subway grate on which Marilyn Monroe stood during filming & iconic publicity shots for The Seven Year Itch.)

MEDIA INTERVIEWS
To schedule media interviews after the event, please contact Scott Trent at 212-946-1293.
Save-The-Dress is a first-of-its-kind campaign leveraging crowd-sourcing and social media to raise funds to rescue Marilyn Monroe's legendary white dress, which is scheduled to be auctioned in June 2011. If successful, the dress will become the focal point of a multi-city nationwide tour, before it is placed on permanent display in New York. Save-The-Dress is sponsored by NYC-based inQuicity. For more information, visit www.SaveTheDress.org.

Contact: Scott Trent
Telephone: 212-946-1293
E-mail: press@inquicity.com
www.SaveTheDress.org




Hats off pop-up fashion

Daily Fashion Juice
Monday, May 30, 2011

Hats off to pop-up fashion

By Emma Kennedy

Department store Harvey Nichols has launched its first pop-up shop as part of a campaign to support Irish designers.

The retailer has invited two Irish hat designers, Martha Lynn and Edel Ramberg, to show their collections at its Dundrum Town Centre outlet for two and a half weeks.

‘‘It’s our first in-store pop-up," said the retailer’s spokeswoman. ‘‘Pop-ups are a trend at the moment so we are using this as a pilot and seeing how it goes before planning any others."

As part of the project, Lynn and Ramberg will be available for personal consultations in millinery style. ‘‘They are already booked out for the first weekend, and as it’s proving popular, we’ll definitely be looking into doing some more pop-ups," said the spokeswoman.

‘‘Hats are very popular now after Philip Treacy designed for the royal wedding, and with the racing season coming up."

Dublin-based Lynn interned with leading milliners, including Treacy and Stephen Jones. Galway-born Ramberg also interned with Treacy and launched her first collection last year.

‘‘It’s a good way for us to support Irish designers," the retailer’s spokeswoman said. ‘‘We gave them a space in our accessories department as it has the highest footfall and people will see them straight away when they come in." The pop-up shop will run until Saturday, June 12.

Icon Uncovered

Daily Fashion Juice
Friday, May 27, 2011

An Icon Uncovered

Ann Bonfoey Taylor was as impressive a couture collector as she was an athlete. How then have so few people—even in the fashion world—heard of her? Charlotte Moss discovers the life and times of a glamorous maverick


Ann Bonfoey Taylor was a gifted sportswoman and had a discriminating eye when it came to fashion. She graced the pages of Town & Country, Harper's Bazaar and Vogue throughout the 1950s and '60s. Nicknamed "Nose Dive Annie," she was an alternate on the Women's Olympic ski team, a flight instructor for the Navy in WWII and an accomplished equestrian and tennis player. Ms. Bonfoey Taylor, who died in 2007 at age 96, also possessed an amazingly focused collection of couture clothing that she wore between her estate in Denver, chalet in Vail and ranch in Montana. After reading about an exhibition on her at the Phoenix Museum, I wondered how Ms. Bonfoey Taylor's name could be absent in the lineup of constantly referenced 20th-century style icons. Intent on learning more about this elegant and athletic woman, I flew to Arizona to tour the show. "Fashion Independent: The Original Style of Ann Bonfoey Taylor," which closes this Sunday, includes couture from Balenciaga, Givenchy and Charles James along with Ms. Bonfoey Taylor's own skiwear designs. Here are some snapshots that pull back the curtain on a life well lived.
Ms. Moss is an author and interior designer in New York.
[TAYLOR]
Courtesy of Library of Congress, Toni Frissell Collection
 
Belle of the Ball
Belle of the Ball
Ms. Bonfoey Taylor's son, Vernon III, remembers coming home from school to find his mother all dressed up simply because she felt like it. Wearing a chinchilla-trimmed silk-satin dress by Madame Grès, Ms. Bonfoey Taylor pauses in the hallway of her Denver home in 1967. Green was her favored palette for evening. The paint colors she selected for her house are reflected on the walls of the museum's exhibition, including an ash violet and obi lilac lifted from her ballroom.
[TAYLOR]
Courtesy the Taylor Family/Toni Frissell
 
Natural Woman
Natural Woman
Near the exhibition's entrance awaits an enormous photo of Ms. Bonfoey Taylor dressed in a Balenciaga evening coat and dress that was already 10 years old when the photo was taken by Toni Frissell. The look is classic, poised and confident—just like the woman herself.
[TAYLOR]
Courtesy of Library of Congress, Toni Frissell Collection
 
Ski Bunny
Ski Bunny
The stylish sporting life was the only one Ms. Bonfoey Taylor knew. Here, at Vail in the '60s, she accessorized her skiwear with Courrèges-like sunglasses and a coordinating fur hat and mittens. She preferred to wear black and white on the mountain because of the beautiful contrast it created—so modern, then and now.
[TAYLOR]
Courtesy of Library of Congress, Toni Frissell Collection


Style Soldier
Style Soldier
Ms. Bonfoey Taylor in a custom Brooks-Van Horn military costume. She skied in uniforms from the Civil War (from both sides) as well as in her own tailor-made creations, including a matador cape and hat.
Annie Get Your Gun
[TAYLOR]
Courtesy of Library of Congress, Toni Frissell Collection

Annie Get Your Gun
Ms. Bonfoey Taylor was a skilled hunter. Here, she wears an Hermès ensemble with a Gucci satchel in Denver, 1967.
[TAYLOR]
Courtesy of Library of Congress, Toni Frissell Collection
 
Hostess with the Most
Hostess with the Most
Ms. Bonfoey Taylor was an enthusiastic and flawless hostess. Before throwing a dinner party, she would read up on her guests' interests. For china, she used a range of styles, from Royal Copenhagen's classic blue-and-white pattern to Dodie Thayer's iconic leaf ware—also a favorite of the Duchess of Windsor and C.Z. Guest. For her arrangements, Ms. Bonfoey Taylor favored yellow and white flowers. She also had an entire room dedicated to arranging, and almost exclusively preferred simple blooms like geraniums, marigolds and Colorado carnations.
[TAYLOR]
Courtesy the Taylor Family/Toni Frissell
 
Saddle Up!
Saddle Up!
Wherever Ms. Bonfoey Taylor traveled, sports were part of her daily routine. Pictured here at Box Elder Ranch, the Taylors's Montana spread, she adopted classic Western attire for riding. She was authentic, original and she always dressed to suit her lifestyle. One of her guiding principles, as her granddaughter Ashley recalls: "Your look isn't complete unless your hair is done."
[TAYLOR]
Courtesy of Library of Congress, Toni Frissell Collection
 
Foxy Lady
Foxy Lady
Photographed here by Toni Frissell for Vogue in 1967, Ms. Bonfoey Taylor enjoys a post-fox-hunt drink in the library of her Denver home. A Marc Chagall painting hangs over the mantel in a room lined with 18th-century pine paneling from a country house in England. The wing chair is upholstered in yellow damask and trimmed with moss fringe. A pair of white porcelain ducks bracket the mantel edges and an English peat bucket holds extra logs—charming details she painstakingly attended to.

Fashion fuels a cause

Daily Fashion Juice
Thursday, May 26, 2011

Fashion fuels a cause


Director - Events, Kasturi & Sons Limited, Lakshmi Srinath, presents a cheque to CanCare Foundation trustee Akhila Srinivasan (left) at the launch party of The Hindu MetroPlus Lifestyle Show in Chennai on Thursday. Teerath Doshi of Helvetica and Sooraj Parameswaran (right), regional marketing in-charge (Tamil Nadu) of Joyalukkas, are in the picture. Photo: R. Ragu
The Hindu Director - Events, Kasturi & Sons Limited, Lakshmi Srinath, presents a cheque to CanCare Foundation trustee Akhila Srinivasan (left) at the launch party of The Hindu MetroPlus Lifestyle Show in Chennai on Thursday. Teerath Doshi of Helvetica and Sooraj Parameswaran (right), regional marketing in-charge (Tamil Nadu) of Joyalukkas, are in the picture. Photo: R. Ragu

As a prelude to The Hindu MetroPlus Lifestyle Show 2011 to be held in the city from June 2, a launch party was held at Hotel Taj Coromandel on Thursday. One of the highlights of the event was Rs.1.25 lakh donation made to non-governmental organisation CanCare Foundation, which works to improve the quality of life of cancer patients and their families.

Akhila Srinivasan, trustee, CanCare Foundation, received the cheque from Lakshmi Srinath, director-events, Kasturi & Sons Limited. The amount was donated by designers Chaitanya Rao and Sidney Sladen, iads & events, The Helvetica, Joyalukkas and The Hindu

It was an evening of fashion, with models walking the ramp showcasing the works of designers Chaitanya Rao and Sidney Sladen. 

The event was interspersed with performances by artistes. 

An Indian contemporary and western style dance performances, including salsa and hip hop, added colour to the evening. 

First Lady of Fashion

Daily Fashion Juice
Wednesday, May 25, 2011

First Lady of Fashion Michelle Obama Storms the U.K.

by Ella Stewart
Michelle Obama
Chris Jackson - WPA Pool/Getty Images; Daily Express/ZUMAPRESS.com; Irish Government - Pool /Getty Images; Crispin Rodwell/The Sun/Sipa Press; Felipe Trueba/UPPA/ZUMAPRESS.com; UPPA/ZUMAPRESS.com
Whether you're a fan of Michelle Obama's style or not, you've got to admit, the FLOTUS causes a fashion sensation wherever she goes.

And this week she's been rocking a lot of couture eye candy as she tours the United Kingdon with President Barack Obama.

At a state dinner hosted by Queen Elizabeth II, the first lady looked effortlessly elegant in an off-white crisscross gown by Tom Ford with matching gloves, metallic clutch and updo. (Sure, she wore an American designer instead of British one, but she already rocked a highly controversial Alexander McQueen gown to another state dinner this year, remember?)

Obama chose a bright purple Preen suit with teal pumps when she landed in England, and a black and white printed Peter Som sheath with green belt and black jacket when she touched down in Ireland.
Touring Offaly, Ireland, Michelle donned a Marc Jacobs' polka-dot dress (Leighton Meester wore another version of this dress last year). She paired it with a tan coat, gold necklace and red patent ballet flats.

And her last two looks are a plum Roksanda Ilincic belted dress with Narciso Rodriguez coat and black flats—for a meeting with Prime Minister David Cameron—and a light-blue Barbara Tfank dress with pink coat and gray heels at Buckingham Palace.

Dayum, that's a helluva lot of wardrobe changes!

Of course, nothing beats the fabulous Ford gown. But Michelle's day outfits are bright and chic, too. Well, except for the pink-and-blue dress, which is the only fail.

What's your favorite look from Michelle's whirlwind trip across the pond so far? Weigh in below!


Duchess fashion frenzy

Daily Fashion Juice
Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Duchess triggers another fashion frenzy

Duchess triggers another fashion frenzyReuters © Enlarge photo
The Duchess of Cambridge has once again set off a fashion frenzy.

But unlike her wedding day, where designers were quick to replicate her gown, this time her appearance in a Reiss dress crashed the retailer's website as demand for the item soared.

Kate, who looked elegant, slim and tanned as she met President Barack Obama and his wife, Michelle, gave the label such a boost that it was unable to cope with the shopping surge and it was two-and-a-half hours before the site was back up and running.

A spokesman for the brand said "unprecedented traffic" had caused the technical glitch.

Kate, 29, has been photographed wearing Reiss on other occasions and has become something of an ambassador for the high-street label.

For her first official royal engagement as a newlywed, she donned a sophisticated knee-length camel-coloured shift dress which she teamed with an Anya Hindmarch clutch.

But it was the 175 "Shola bandage" dress which sparked an online shopping meltdown.

Later a post appeared on Twitter reading: "Due to unprecedented demand, Shola mania has crashed our website! We are endeavouring to bring the Reiss brand back to you ASAP! (sic)"

The Duchess wore the brand in her official engagement portrait by Mario Testino. She has also been photographed wearing a Reiss coat while out with William.

On the first day of the Obamas' state visit to the UK, the First Lady has so far made two outfit changes.

In the morning at Buckingham Palace, Michelle Obama donned a knee-length turquoise dress with embroidered flowers accompanied by a pink bolero.

The Queen picked a dress and coat ensemble by Peter Enrione.

When Mrs Obama left the palace to visit Westminster Abbey she wore a fuchsia 1950s-inspired dress with a blue overcoat and matching kitten heels.

She was wearing the outfit when she and her husband made a courtesy call to the Prime Minister David Cameron and his wife Samantha at Number 10.

Mrs Cameron, who has been heralded as a fashion icon in the past, was wearing a Peter Pilotto embroidered floral silk dress with a pair of Jimmy Choo shoes.

Who Best Wore the Dress


Daily Fashion Juice
Monay, May 23, 2011

Who Best Wore the Dress From the Roberto Cavalli’s Boutique


By René Rivers

The “Who Wore it Best” is one of my favorite articles to do.  Here I spotlight two high-profile models arriving at the same event wearing the same exact dress.

In today’s iconic fashion industry it’s not uncommon for women to attend events wearing the same dress or outfit.  How could they know in advance to avoid it?  When it’s two high-profile models, one can only imagine what went through their heads when they looked at each other in shock wearing the same exact dress.   I’ve been in similar situations where someone was wearing the same shoes as me at an event, but it was fine, in fact I was more curious with where she purchased her shoes from.

So, as we have it, Bar Refaeli and Victoria Silvstedt arrived at the opening of Roberto Cavalli’s Cannes boutique, surprisingly enough, both fashioned in the stunning dress, remarkably designed.  They are both beautiful women who managed to get caught in the “who wore it best” saga.



Sources say Victoria Silvstedt purchased her dress in Paris a week prior to the May 18 event, whereas Bar Refaeli’s dress was loaned to her by the Roberto Cavalli press office.  Ironic, isn’t it?



They both bring their own uniqueness and style to the dress, yet my personal choice would have to be Bar Refaeli who wore it best.  She looks amazing and the dress suits her beautifully.  She embraces the camera with her gorgeous smile and subtle sexiness, making her shine overall.  She doesn’t have to try too hard to look beautiful because the picture speaks volumes.  Victoria Silvstedt?  Well, I’m reserving my overall opinion, but I will say she does look good in the dress, but Bar Refaeli looks fabulous.

The Next Lady Gaga?

Daily Fashion Juice
Friday, May 20, 2011

How to take a Vogue fashion shower

Could Anna Dello Russo, editor-at-large for Japanese Vogue, be the next Lady Gaga?
Lauren Cochrane
guardian.co.uk
    Anna Dello Russo
    Anna Dello Russo in her Zoolander-style Fashion Shower.
    You wouldn't catch the legendarily aloof US Vogue editor-in-chief, Anna Wintour, or her chic new French equivalent, Emmanuelle Alt, doing it, but Anna Dello Russo is different. The editor-at-large for Japanese Vogue – known for sporting a Little Bo Peep-style frock on daytime TV, neon eveningwear at 8am and an egg-shaped hat for the Met Ball – has turned her increasingly influential instructions on what to wear into a 75-second fashion song. And the 49-year-old Italian has done it in full Zoolander style. The track, Fashion Shower, is a collaboration with Milan's Radio Deejay (on which Dello Russo regularly broadcasts her fashion tips). In it, she strikes yoga poses in a Mark Fast cocktail dress, Eurohouse booming in the background, and performs a curious kind of fashion rap. "Fashion should never be comfortable," purrs Dello Russo, while Mr DJ spins into another voguing move and she tries to look enigmatic in lotus position and evening dress. "When you get comfortable, you never get the look." To get that look, what do you need, Anna? "You need a fashion shower." A dance with her DJ friend follows – part locomotion, part robot, with lots of pointing to her face. Deadly serious about having fun with fashion – Helmut Newton once called her a "fashion maniac" – this is no joke. Instead, it is ADR – as she has been dubbed by the fashion press – at her wacky best. While "fashion shower" is sure to become a cult catchphrase, the video is also more fuel for Dello Russo's rise to the top – with more than 20,000 views on YouTube, it has been extensively covered on fashion blogs from Bryanboy to Fashionforlunch and Vice Style. A favourite with street style bloggers since she appeared on the Sartorialist in 2006, Dello Russo is becoming a bit of a celeb in her own right. The first ever fashion editor to boast her own fragrance, she has also recently had a Barbie made in her likeness (wearing Dolce & Gabbana, no less). Now with a pop video under her sample-size belt, Gaga-style megastardom can only be a matter of time.

Jennifer Lopez Admits Fashion Failure

Daily Fashion Juice
Thursday, May 19, 2011

Jennifer Lopez Admits Fashion Line Is Her Biggest Failure



Jennifer Lopez admits first fashion collection is her biggest failure to date
Enlarge picture
Singer and now style icon Jennifer Lopez wasn’t always as fashion-savvy as she is today. In fact, her 2001 attempt at launching a fashion collection fared miserably – so miserably that she considers it her biggest failure to date.

In a new interview cited by the Daily Mail, Lopez admits that she has had several missteps in her career, her Sweetface fashion line included.

Launched in 2001, the line came precisely at a time when Lopez was everywhere, one of the most famous women in the world and a popular pop star as well.

Seeing it come to nothing was quite a shock, but Lopez believes now that Sweetface flopped because the time was not right for her to go into fashion.

Not only did she not have enough experience, but she wasn’t allowed either more creative control for the line, which means that, by the end, it represented very little of who she truly was.

“I just felt like I never got a fair chance to do it right. And on top of it, I felt like I was trapped in a situation I couldn’t get out of, and my name was stamped on things that I didn’t believe in,” she said of her first foray into fashion, with the help of Andy Hilfiger.

For Lopez, hopefully, second time is a charm: she and husband Marc Anthony are about to do more than just fashion, since they’ve helped design an entire lifestyle line at Kohl’s.

In the same interview, the singer and American Idol judge also says that she’s had some hit and misses in movies as well – but it was never as bad as it got with her first fashion collection.

“I don’t know anyone who bats a thousand in the movie business. I’ve made some great movies, and I’ve made some not-so-great movies,” she says.

“Would I have wanted more opportunities to work on even greater films, consistently? Sure. Everyone wants to work on the great movie and have the great role and get nominated for an Oscar every time. Life is not like that,” Lopez adds.

Fashion Week Orange County-style

Daily Fashion Juice
Wednesday, May 18, 2011

OC Fashion Week



OC Fashion Week
May 18-May 22, 2011
Downtown Santa Ana
:: ocfashionassociation.com
New York, Paris, Milan, and now Orange County.

Get ready for Fashion Week Orange County-style in Downtown Santa Ana. From May 18-22, you’ll find some of the county’s best designer collections, student design competitions and even a fashion lecture series.

It all starts May 18 with lecture “Producing Fashion” with Bobbi Lee of Beach Bunny and Bonnie Kim of Freedom & Fashion from 5:30-9 p.m. at DGWB Advertising & Communications (217 N. Main St.; tickets $20, $10 for students). The lecture series continues May 19 with “Entering the Fashion Business” with Aileen Holmes, independent artist, graphic designer and textile designer, from 5:30-9 p.m. at DGWB Advertising & Communications (tickets $20, $10 for students). On May 20, head over to The Yost Theater at 307 N. Spurgeon St. for the Student Design Competition Fashion Show – “The OC Fashion House” – with 10 local fashion students from all over the county competing. The show runs from 8-10 p.m. ($12).

Visit The Yost Theater on May 21 for the Cheri Wilson Corset Design exhibit. That day's lecture will be "Style Pro," with Erin Bianchi of Bloomindale's and trend reporter Caroline Letieri discussing style and trend predictions. It all leads up “OC Born,” a fashion show on the 2nd Street Promenade showcasing the fall and winter collections of designer lines birthed right here in Orange County. The show is from 7:30-9 p.m. and is followed by a free after-party, though you must RSVP.

The week closes out May 22 with a children’s wear informal fashion show from 12-2 p.m. and a sustainable-fashion show at 2:30 p.m. at The Yost Theater.

The Twin Win

Daily Fashion Juice
Tuesday, May 17, 2011

The twins who took on the fashion world... and won

The style pack respects the Olsens for their fashion sense rather than their fame ? and that's the key to their success
Rex Features
The style pack respects the Olsens for their fashion sense rather than their fame ? and that's the key to their success

Kate Moss is out, Victoria Beckham's in – fashion just can't seem to decide its stance on celebrity designers, whether they're cool and cult or brash and bling. There is a third way, however, as former child stars Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen have demonstrated.
The 24-year-old twins have secured a nomination from the Council of Fashion Designers of America (CFDA) in the womenswear category, for their ultra-luxurious – and rather pricey – womenswear label The Row. It comes only weeks after Michelle Obama, that trusted barometer of marketing success, wore one of their skirts for an appearance on television show The View.
The Olsen twins originally played one child in television comedy Full House, before launching their own series and several spin-off films. They had a clothing range in Walmart by the age of 10, alongside dozens of DVDs, books, dolls and other merchandise branded with their names and faces. In 2007, they launched their first fashion venture, a label called Elizabeth & James, named after two of their siblings.
The Row, a more luxurious line with higher price tags, also launched that year, with the aim of creating the perfect white T-shirt. What began as a range of basics has now grown to a full womenswear collection, known for its minimalist elegance, sharp tailoring and sumptuous furs.
"We exclusively launched The Row with a dinner for the Olsens back in 2007," remembers Averyl Oates, buying director at Harvey Nichols. "Even though it was a new brand, it was an immediate hit. And even then, the girls were not new to the commercial aspects of business."
The twins were given membership to the CFDA in 2009 in an unexpected move by president Diane von Fürstenberg; the CFDA usually takes a dim view of celebrity designers. But the Olsens do not fit easily into this category, which is perhaps why they are doing so well in the field.
The Row is distinctively targeted at older customers, which is an unusual marketing choice in an industry obsessed by youth. It's equally unusual, given the reputation of the Olsens as photogenic young scenesters, not to create clothes for their contemporaries, re-enforcing the brand's sense of credibility and professionalism.
Their main customer is between 35 and 45, and is not short of disposable income: a jersey T-shirt costs £175, while a cashmere and mink sweater is almost £4,000. "The label carries timeless generational appeal," Averyl Oates says, "while still remaining directional. Mary-Kate and Ashley recently achieved their ambition of dressing Michelle Obama. Lauren Hutton has also modelled for the brand, and I think the ageless appeal lies with the fact that the collection has a crystal-clear DNA."
The Olsens have pitched themselves right at the top of the luxury-goods market – with prices in the same league as Chanel, Louis Vuitton, Céline and Bottega Veneta. It's a plucky move for ones so young, but The Row's sales are estimated at between £6m and £8m a year, according to Newsweek.
"Mary-Kate and Ashley have great personal style," says online fashion store Net-a-Porter's buying director, Holli Rogers, "and their über-cool ready-to-wear collections reflect this. They offer beautifully made pieces with an emphasis on clean lines and refined cuts, and have become one of the must-have labels for those in the know."
And the cognoscenti respect the Olsens for their fashion sense rather than their fame, which is key to their success as "celebrity designers". Since they grew up and away from their milk-and-cookies reputation, they have become edgy young women, educated at New York University and known for their daring at red-carpet events. Their statement style often lands them on the mainstream "badly dressed" lists, but this is more likely only to endear them to a more sartorially minded crowd. They are, in short, taken seriously – which is crucial in the bearpit of the New York fashion industry.
The CFDA nomination underlines this. The Olsen twins are up against designers Joseph Altuzarra, who used to work at the house of Givenchy, and Prabal Gurung, who until recently was design director at Bill Blass – two up-and-coming designers given much credence in the industry.
Another factor is the twins' fervent patriotism and commitment to the American fashion industry, which they have spoken out about in recent interviews. "Whether it's cars or clothes, I believe in manufacturing as close to home as possible," Ashley Olsen told Newsweek last month.
As such, their label has become a byword for luxury but also American steadfastness – hence Michelle Obama's choice of a silk pleated skirt from the range. And hence the nomination for a prestigious fashion award. Next month, as the twins turn 25 and wait to hear if they have won, they will launch their eyewear label. Celebrities they may be, but the Olsens are quite the entrepreneurs too, and at the moment, everything they touch turns to gold.

Pointy mutant boots create a fashion craze

Daily Fashion Juice
Monday, May 16, 2011

Pointy mutant boots create a fashion craze

8:20 AM Tuesday May 17, 2011
A young man creates his own pointy boots to wear at a dance competition in Matehuala, Mexico. Photo / AP

A young man creates his own pointy boots to wear at a dance competition in Matehuala, Mexico. Photo / AP


The customer known only as "Cesar of Huizache" had an odd request for shoemaker Dario Calderon: He showed him a cell-phone photo of a sequinned cowboy boot with pointy toes so long, they curled up toward the knees. He wanted a pair, but with longer toes. 
"I thought 'What's up with this dude?'" Calderon said at his shop in Matehuala, a northeastern Mexican city of farmers and cattle ranchers accustomed to a more stoic cowboy look. The boot in the photo measured 60 centimetres (23 inches) "but we made him a pair that were 90 centimetres (35 inches) long."

The mystery man from Huizache, a nearby village, wore his new boots to Mesquit Rodeo nightclub, where he danced bandido style with a handkerchief hiding his mouth and nose.

"He was dancing and having a good time and he didn't care what people were saying about him," said Fernando Lopez, the master of ceremonies at the rodeo-themed disco.

Then he disappeared.

The next thing Calderon knew, it seemed like everyone wanted the bizarre, half-Aladdin, all-Vegas pointy boots, from little boys attending church ceremonies to teenagers at the discos.

Calderon fashioned the elongated toes from plastic foam and charged 400 pesos ($34) for the extensions. The competition began charging 350 pesos ($30) per 15 centimetres (6 inches) of new toe.

Boys who couldn't afford that used garden hoses to make their own. When one added glittery butterflies, another made 5-foot-long toes and added multicolour glitter stripes. When one added stars to the tips, others added flashing lights and disco balls, strutting them on the dance floor to attract the girls, like peacocks spreading their feathers.

"At the beginning I didn't like them very much, but the girls wouldn't dance with you if you weren't wearing pointy boots," said university student Pascual Escobedo, 20, his own covered with hot pink satin and glittery stars.

Nobody knows where Cesar's photo or the fad came from, since he was known to cross back and forth between Mexico and the U.S. But once it hit the sedate city of 90,000 people and auto-part and clothing factories about 18 months ago, it spread to nearby villages and showed up as far away as Mississippi and Texas, where some DJs at rodeo-themed nightclubs say it peaked a year ago and now has gone out of style.

"They would put all kinds of things on them, strobe lights, belt buckles, and those red lights that flash when you step on the shoes," said Manuel Colim, a DJ at the Far West Corral in Dallas, Texas, where a lot of Matehualan migrants live.

The pointy-boot fad coincided with a new dance craze of gyrating, drawer-dropping troupes dressed in matching western shirts and skinny jeans to accentuate their footwear.

They dance to "tribal" music, a mixture of Pre-Columbian and African sounds mixed with fast cumbia bass and electro-house beats. In Matehuala, all-male teams compete in weekly danceoffs at four nightclubs that offer prizes of $100 to $500, and often a bottle of whiskey.

The troupes are so popular, they're hired to dance at weddings, for quinceaneras, celebrations of the Virgin of Guadalupe, bachelorette parties and even rosary ceremonies for the dead. One group, Los Parranderos, or The Partiers, filmed a wedding scene for Triunfo del Amor, or Love's Triumph, a prime-time soap opera on the Televisa network.

"At the beginning there were people who would criticize us and would say, 'How tacky that you are wearing that. I wouldn't wear them,'" said Miguel Hernandez, 20, of Los Parranderos. "But we feel good dancing with the pointy boots."

One recent Matehuala competition drew about 800 people, who came to watch the dancers jump from side to side, spin and wave their arms or sensually shake their hips as their boots sparkled in the disco light and their toe extensions bounced from side to side.

Dancing tribal in pointy boots is "like going crazy," said Jorge Chavez, 16, whose group, Los Aliados, or The Allies, competed for the $100 prize. "We dance it as if we were chasing chickens. It's all about goofing off."
Housewife Laura Soto, 36, who watched the competition, convinced her husband to buy a pair of blue and silver pointy boots decorated with stars.

"The boots makes them look more sexy because you can tell they are daring," she said.

Soto's husband, Mario Fuentes, said he gave them to his 23-year-old son.

"I don't think I would look good in them," Fuentes, 45, said. "But I do like to come see them because they make everything more cheerful."

But as with every youthful fad, the pointy boots already are being replaced by low-rise Roper style boots, which also have lower heels.

"There are some steps where you have to cross your feet and throw yourself to the ground and you can't do that with the pointy boots," said Francisco Garcia, 18, of Los Primos dance crew, or The Cousins. "With the Roper boots it's easier."

At the Mesquit Rodeo competition, the Socios, or the Partners, took first prize for their energetic choreography. Dozens of teenage girls screamed when one of the dancers pulled his pants low enough to reveal a leopard print-thong.

The Socios had abandoned the pointy boots for Ropers.
- AP

Michael Kors Went From Selling Tie-Dye Jeans to Heading a Fashion Megabrand

Daily Fashion Juice
Friday, May 13, 2011

How Michael Kors Went From Selling Tie-Dye Jeans to Heading a Fashion Megabrand

Photo: Courtesy of Michael Kors


Whether he's making clothes or talking about making clothes, Michael Kors is an unfailing crowd-pleaser. A room full of what looked like some of his best New York customers gathered at the Doubles Club on the Upper East Side this week to hear him chat with F.I.T.'s Valerie Steele at a lunch held by the school's Couture Council. When the picked-at crab salad was whisked away, and many of the subsequent sorbet cups declined, Michael took the microphone. "Oh, now I have to be amusing!" he quipped, to laughter. The designer, who is celebrating his 30th year in business and just opened a store at 133 Fifth Avenue, discussed everything from dropping out of F.I.T., to his teenage penchant for leg warmers, to the daunting task of overseeing the megabusiness his name has become, to Project Runway. Read highlights of his talk below, and see some of Michael’s personal career highlights chosen exclusively for the Cut from the past 30 years in the slideshow.
When Michael attended F.I.T., he wanted a job working in a clothing store. Bergdorf Goodman and Henri Bendel wouldn't hire him, but the eccentric Lothar's did.
I think both [Bergdorf and Bendel] at the time said no, we're not hiring freelance, part-time, 18-year-old kids in leg warmers. (Yes, I wore leg warmers, yes, long hair, looked like Peter Frampton, signed autographs, "love, Peter Frampton"). There was a store on 57th Street and Fifth Avenue called Lothar's. And Lothar's sold tie-dye, French, skintight, very Brigitte Bardot, Saint Tropez jeans that I think at the time were $130 for a pair of jeans, which everyone thought was insane. I walked into the store actually thinking, You know, I didn’t get a job, but maybe I could buy some pants. Of course, when I was in the store I realized they were $130 and I don’t have $130 and I started talking to one of the sales girls and she said, we're actually looking for part-time help. And she looked at me and said, you know you get a discount in the store and you get a free outfit, so I was like, I'M HERE.
Eventually, Lothar's asked Michael to start designing clothes, which jump-started his namesake line.
Tie-dye jeans stopped being chic or desirable, no one wanted them, and we had this store where we had no customers and the owners of the store said to me, "You have such a feeling for the women who shop in this store and you have such a point of view, if we set up an atelier would you like to design the clothes for the store?" At 19: "Yes!" I didn’t design a collection, I designed whatever I thought was right for that minute. If the weather was rainy in New York, I made raincoats, if it was really hot out, we made linen dresses.
His big break came when Bergdorf Goodman noticed what he was doing at Lothar's. One day Dawn Mello, the store's president at the time, came in when Michael was doing the store windows.
She said to me, "We've been watching from across the street, and if you decide to ever put together your own collection, call." And she walked out of the store and I was like, I gotta get going! We went to Bergdorf's, I brought my one model and I forced them to sit through a fashion show of eighteen looks with one model. We were about halfway through and Dawn said to me, "Can you excuse us?" And I said sure, and I came back a few minutes later and she said, "We think the clothes are wonderful, they're perfect for Bergdorf's. What can we do for you?" And, what does that mean? I realized now I had to figure out how I was going to finance this, make the clothes, and she said, "What's the situation?" I said, "I need money, I can't pay for this myself," and I said, "I want windows on Fifth Avenue and a trunk show and I want to have an ad in the New York Times." And she was like, "Okay."
Michael didn't put on his first fashion show until three years later.
There was a part of me that didn’t even want to do a show, quite honestly, because I thought a fashion show meant it had to be a SHOW, and I thought it would take away from the clothes, and I thought what I was about was seeing the clothes up close, seeing the way they were finished, seeing the way they were made, the cut. The first fashion show — at the time everyone thought it was such an exotic neighborhood, we were on Sixth Avenue and 18th Street, where Bed Bath & Beyond is now, in an art gallery upstairs, and I was amazed that anyone came. I walked out at the end and the place was packed and by that point we had a very solid following in the stores and people were excited to see what we would do with a show.
Michael has had to encourage guest judges on Project Runway to be totally blunt with contestants.
We had one actress who, as the show started, a garment came out that I thought was just ridiculous, Nina thought was ridiculous, and Heidi thought was ridiculous. Then we got to the actress and she was like, "Well, it’s a dress, and it has a fabric." And she was really being very, very lovely. And we broke for a minute I said to her, "You know, you have people who admire what you do and they're going to watch you on the show and they're going to know you think that dress is ridiculous." And she said, "I feel bad being critical." And I said, "Well, has every movie you've ever made had great reviews?" And she said, "Certainly not." And I said, "Unfortunately, when you're in the public eye it's part of it, and what these kids might experience right here is mild compared to what a life of fashion might bring." And suddenly we went back and she totally changed: "Well, I would never wear that dress, I think it's too short, and I think if you made it a little more fitted —" and I was like, whoa, I unleashed her.
Dressing advice Part 1: mirrors.
I really think the craziest thing is how can you get dressed without a three-way mirror. Because the reality is, especially in New York, we live in a city of street theater. I mean, everywhere we go we are assessing each other.
Dressing advice Part 2: color.
I think women get bored and they say, "Oh, well, I don’t have anything in that color." Well, maybe there's a reason why you don’t have anything in that color.
Dressing advice Part 3: wardrobe staples.
I think there's no price tag on black pants that you don’t need to wear with a tunic, that you don’t need to wear with a long jacket, that the crotch is flattering, that the ass looks great, that you're happy in, number one.
Number two, I think no one knows what to put over clothes at night, so buy a fabulous raincoat that is spare and clean enough that you can wear over a gown, that you can wear over jeans, let it be black silk, let it be khaki poplin, tailored, narrow, fitted — everyone has to have one.
I think big glasses — and it's all relative, big glasses depending on your face — but big glasses are instantaneously going to make you look younger, refreshed, glamorous. Aviators make everyone look dangerous and sexy.
And white jeans, I'm not just saying it, white jeans are an automatic glamour piece. They can be dressed up, they can be dressed down. Women have been taught this weird rule that you have to wear black on bottom and all the light on top; I think when you wear black on top sometimes or navy on top and go white on bottom it's very slimming, very glamorous. And I like white in winter because it proves you don’t have to deal with the elements.
Vintage shops are not the best place to buy Michael Kors.
We never find any Michael Kors in vintage stores. I'm like, Where is it? A woman in L.A. says to me it's in people's closets, she said vintage stores are full of mistakes. And now vintage in Hollywood is ridiculous — the dress is last season and it's like, oh, she's wearing vintage. No, that's last season's dress.
Keeping up with the fashion cycle is more than a full-time job.
The cycle is crazy. Before we did Céline, I'd be like, "God I'm so busy." And I've realized I wasn’t busy at all! Starting to go to Paris, and having to do the two shows each season, it's like an athlete going into training. As designer, you have to have endurance. It's also no longer American designers design for America, and French designers design for the French market. I do four collections on Michael Kors collection, on Michael Michael Kors we ship something new every month, we have three shoe collections, two handbag collections, men's which is monthly, watches four times a year, and I'm doing all of it and I'm on top of it.

Lady Gaga Writes Fashion Column for ‘V’ Magazine

Daily Fashion Juice
Thursday, May 12, 2011

Lady Gaga Styles Three Heads & Writes Fashion Column for ‘V’ Magazine


Lady Gaga knows fashion. Just look at the cover of V Magazine! The singer sports three heads for the new “Asian issue” that features her first style column for the magazine.
“Glam culture is ultimately rooted in obsession, and those of us who are truly devoted and loyal to the lifestyle of glamour are masters of its history,” Lady Gaga writes in her first style column for V Magazine (via Huffington Post). “Or, to put it more elegantly, we are librarians.”
“I myself can look at almost any hemline, silhouette, beadwork, or heel architecture and tell you very precisely who designed it first, what French painter they stole it from, how many designers reinvented it after them, and what cultural and musical movement parented the birth, death, and resurrection of that particular trend,” she says.
Now Gaga means business!
“So dear critics and bullies: get your library cards out, because I’m about to do a reading.”
For more of Gaga’s column pick up the new issue of V Magazine!

Twisty Fashion

Daily Fashion Juice
Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Fashion With a Twist | Orly Genger at VPL

When Victoria Bartlett, the designer behind the Visible Panty Line label, opened her first boutique in New York late last year, she intended it to be more than just a showcase for her clothes — it would also be a gallery, where the artistic collaborations that are a regular feature of her work could be put on display. She put the plan into action for the first time on Monday night, when the Mercer Street shop was the site of an installation by the artist Orly Genger, who’s known for knotting thick nylon climbing rope into massive, room-filling shapes and who has collaborated with Bartlett on installations for her runway shows and also on accessories. “Squat,” as the new piece is called, has an unusual twist: For the duration of the event, it incorporated two live models, both clad in VPL underwear. “The idea was to have it look like something had blown through like a tornado and swept up against the window, engulfing the girls,” Bartlett explained as she surveyed the scene. “It’s this enormous muscle of rope that’s come crashing through the store.”

The models, half-buried under sheets of heavy, white-painted rope, looked surprisingly comfortable. “That’s part of the contradiction of my work,” Genger said. “It’s about masculinity and femininity, hard and soft, entrapment and ease. They look like they’re tacked in, but they’re also reclining. Though I did tell them that if they got uncomfortable or needed the bathroom they should just raise a hand.”

Most of “Squat” has already been disassembled, and the models have gone home, but a portion of it will remain in the boutique’s window for the next month. You can also check out the artist Peter Sutherland’s film of the creation of “Squat,” with a score by Ben Brunnemer — a clip from which you can see here.

MassArt Fashion Show

Daily Fashion Juice
Monday, May 9, 2011

MassArt Senior Fashion Show scenes

Crowds filed into the Power Station Saturday night for Voltage 2011, the MassArt Senior Fashion Show. More than 35 budding designers showed off their collections at the open-air South End building.

Globe photographer Erik Jacobs shot the backstage action and fashion show festivities:
blogmassart.jpg
[Arielle Kase did Sherlyn Louissaint's makeup backstage / Erik Jacobs]


Khloe Kardashian's Denim Look

Daily Fashion Juice
Friday, May 13, 2011

Khloe Kardashian's Denim Look: Fashion Hit or Miss

Khloe Kardashian
Move over Kim Kardashian, it's little sister Khloe taking New York with Kourtney this time!

The reality star sisters landed at New York City's JFK airport yesterday, and wasted no time getting to work. They were up and out early this morning in their usual glamorous fashion.

Khloe showed off her very long legs in this denim romper and sky high heels as the pair made their way to Times Square. She tweeted, "up and getting glammed with @KourtneyKardash for The John Frieda event in Times Square. Who's coming??"

The Kardashian ladies are never ones to stray away from a bold fashion statement. Is Khloe's choice a fashion hit or miss?



Stepping Out in Style: The Little Black Dress

Daily Fashion Juice
Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Stepping Out in Style:  The Little Black Dress
By René Rivers

The Little Black Dress

Stepping Out in Style:  The Little Black Dress

For as long as I can remember the little black dress has been famed for its elegant look, style and design.  It is its own discussion piece that spans several decades.

Today little black dresses are highly represented at various events, special occasions, and some social gatherings.  My favorite is the after five cocktail hour.

Cocktail parties tend to be where high class glamor, elegance, and beauty go hand-in-hand, a transformation from the 9 to 5 working woman to the woman of chic and grand splendor.  Women are delivered into a whirlwind of high self-confidence when all eyes are on them, and they know they are beyond feeling and  looking better than their best.
Style:  The Little Black Dress

The little black dress is the classic garment of the iconic fashion industry.  No woman should be without investing in an assorted collection.  It makes good, valuable fashion sense, and they add excitement to any woman’s wardrobe.

They offer sophistication, sex appeal, and sheer class to the modern day woman.  “Some looks are just timeless. Whether you go to the expense of buying a lavish designer dress or simply choose a high street imitation, you know they are going to look good,” from Fashionstyleme.com. 

Photo from http://www.fashionstyleme.com/scheherazade-is-easy-the-little-black-dress-is-hard.

The 1950’s Audrey Hepburn Style Black Dress is one of many dresses from that time period where we can truly appreciate how designers captured the grace and beauty of women who dressed in the best of fashion, remaining true to their taste, look and style.

Audrey Hepburn Style Black Dress
That time era continues to leave a positive mark on the fashion industry of today and resonates heavily on my mind of just how far we’ve come to elegantly dress generations in new styles and styles reborn, of the little black dress. 



Step out in style wearing your little black dress with a celebrity white smile.

UsTrendy sews up

Daily Fashion Juice
Friday, May 6, 2011

Fashion site UsTrendy sews up ~$1M from Draper Boston Business Journal

- by Galen Moore


It's safe to say the fashion industry does not see Sam Sisakhti coming. But the 28-year-old Brandeis graduate has about $1 million from a Sand Hill VC, and a plan to get egg all over someone’s Dolce & Gabbana glasses.

Us Trendy Inc. (UsTrendy), a 10-person startup based in Cambridge, is like Kickstarter for fashion. The company has an e-commerce platform that lets the adventurous fashionista shop indie designers - the ones people are buying and liking. Want to know what a clothes horse wears to the club in Prague? In Bangalore? In Jakarta? UsTrendy has that, as well as the clever kid toiling in a cramped Union Square loft, Sisakhti said.

The company was founded in 2008 as a fashion-centric social media service. The e-commerce piece came last spring, and soon after it drew venture capital interest. UsTrendy has just closed a round near $1 million with Draper Associates, the affiliate fund led by DFJ’s Tim Draper.

The site brings to the surface designers who otherwise might not have a chance at getting into the high-fashion club, Sisakhti said. Instead, they’ll end up working for big-name designers, who tell the shopping public what we want. The startup plans to turn all of that the other way around. “All these different industries are modernizing, and the fashion industry seemed sort of medieval,” he said. “We’re trying to remove all the filters.”

In addition to discovery and online marketing, UsTrendy provides designers with logistical support - group buying power in shipping and warehousing, for example, Sisakhti said. The young company has already run into a couple of cases where designer members have been unable to keep up with the demand it has generated.

Now, CEO Sisakhti is looking to hire a CTO and a CMO in Boston, and add engineers. The site is coded in PHP, he said. “We’re not doing rocket science, but we are constantly adding features” - including a Facebook app and photo sharing, for example. Investors, he wants to get to know you, so be in touch - but UsTrendy won’t likely raise funds for another one and a half years, Sisakhti said.

Desi Turn Fashion

Daily Fashion Juice
Thursday, May 5, 2011

Fashion takes a desi turn



Sari like! Gossip Girl Blake Lively looks sexy in a Chanel Couture gown. (AP)...
Hollywood is going gaga over India-inspired fashion. The recently held  Met Gala in New York — an annual fashion event — saw screen divas such as Isabel Lucas and Blake Lively make style statements that were distinctly desi.

While Gossip Girl star  Lively, 23, wore a ‘saridrape’ gown by Chanel, Lucas, 26, wore the traditional kundan maatha patti and kundan earrings. A comment on fashion site Graziadaily.co.uk read, “Blake (Lively) looks stunning. The sari-style draping looks elegant.”

Last month, actor Vanessa Hudgens, too, wore a beaded maang-tikka at the premiere of her movie Sucker Punch. Madonna’s mehendi and Gwen Stefani and Miley Cyrus’ bindi have already been a hit on the international style scene.

Indian designers say the trend will only get bigger. "This clearly shows that Indian influence is going global," says designer Neeru Kumar. Designer Jaya Rathore says, "A sari or accessories or maang-tikka get you attention instantly. That’s why they’re a hit.”

MET fashion secrets

Daily Fashion Juice
Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Taylor Swift and Ashley Greene share their MET fashion secrets

Taylor Swift and Ashley Greene chatted to People about the struggle it took to look flawless in their priceless gowns.
 

Taylor Swift and Ashley Greene chatted to People about the struggle it took to look flawless in their priceless gowns.

Photograph by: File photos, Getty Images

All that glitters isn't gold. Taylor Swift and Ashley Greene may have looked like a million bucks during last night's MET Gala, but it wasn't exactly easy to look that good. (See photos from the gala here.)

Both girls chatted to People about the struggle it took to look flawless in their priceless gowns. Greene, who wore a stunning custom Donna Karan gown, told the mag, “I had to do some strength training to wear it.”

As we all know, beauty is pain -- and it's no exception when you're an A-list star. According to People, Greene told reporters, “I saw it and was kind of like, ‘Anything is worth it to wear this dress.’”

Swift on the other hand, had to do a different kind of workout to get her gown to the gala. “I’m comfortable,” she said of her J. Mendel gown. “It’s a little difficult with the train. But I’ve experienced worse," she explained, adding, "The car ride over here was interesting. You have to lay down on the seat and take the train and crumple it up on your lap.”

We may not be traveling in chauffeured limos anytime soon but at least we'll have a good excuse for lying down in the back of a cab the next time we leave a party in the wee hours of the morning.


Social Function Fashion

Daily Fashion Juice
Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Dressing for Social Functions

by René Rivers

The fashion industry is designed to provide a wide variety of fashionable styles to the fashionably challenged when it’s time to dress for social events.  Because I like to dress up a lot, let’s talk about “dressing for social functions.”  It’s a no brainier that finding out what to wear prior to the event, to avoid being the one inappropriately dressed, only makes for good common sense.


Some social functions often have an upscale profile and call for elaborate high fashion attire, thus eliminating T-shirts, jeans, tennis shoes, caps, and your average day wear.  How do you avoid going over the top?  Ladies can get away with a elegant sleeveless dress, strappy high heel sandals or pumps, and a clutch purse.  You don’t need a whole lot of accessories to make the ensemble pop.  Tasteful jewelry and nice makeup will do just fine.

The gentlemen can go with a nice suit and tie.  If the event doesn’t call for a tuxedo don’t show up wearing one trying to upstage the crowd.  You’ll only look ridiculous.  Also, a nice crew neck sweater and slacks, a good looking pair of Steve Madden or Kenneth Cole shoes, a nice rope chain, a nice watch, and light cologne is a subtle but sexy approach.  Nothing like a well dressed man who can do very little to impress the ladies!

The common mistake we ladies tend to make preparing to attend social functions is that we sometimes don’t pay enough attention to what we look like before we leave the house.  Trust me, there is a time and place for everything we wear, it’s about how we coordinate the outfit, and knowing which functions are appropriate to wear it.  Think carefully…choose wisely…always look good.

Photo from http://www.blitzandglam.com/2011/02/super-bowl-in-style-evening-events/.

Bridal Week Fall/Winter 2011

Daily Fashion Juice
Monday, May 2, 2011

Bridal Fashion Week Fall/Winter 2011

By Lauren Salapatek

The Fall/Winter 2011 Bridal Fashion Week hair styles took a fresh approach to embrace a modern, youthful bride. Redken Session Stylist Giovanni Giuntoli created the hair styles in the Christos, Kenneth Pool, and Amsale collections, taking each in its own direction.

End of the Day Waves (seen at Christos)


Bridal Fashion Week Fall/Winter 2011

“This season the traditionally preppy Christos look evolved for the next generation, and the hair embraces this edgier attitude,” Giuntoli says. “The look is down, when it is typically up, resulting in a youthful, casual after-wedding look that’s flattering and flirty.”

To achieve the look, prep hair to add texture and extra hold with Redken wool shake 08 gel-slush texturizer and then layer on spray starch 15 versatile ironing spray. Part the hair wherever it best reflects the face shape, whether it be left, right or center. Set the curls with a 1-inch curling iron and pin in place until dry. Let the curls out and pull until you have soft waves.

“These waves are not tight, they’re fresh. We’re trying to get away from the corkscrew,” Giuntoli explained.

Cutting Edge Pleat (seen at Kenneth Pool)

Bridal Fashion Week Fall/Winter 2011

"This updo reflects the high-end Kenneth Pool look, with a luxury finish to the hair. This line is more avant-garde, more high-fashion, and so we created a striking, contemporary up-do that pushes the envelope,” Giuntoli says.

To create this look, prep the hair by blow-drying with aerate 08 bodifying cream-mousse, applying at the roots and through the ends for all-over body and texture. Then fold all of the hair except for the front section two inches from the crown into a pleat. Curl small sections of the front two inches with a one-inch barrel and pin each up in place atop the head. “The curls add a softer silhouette for height and a light, airy texture that you can almost see through.” Giuntoli says.

Statement Pony (seen at Amsale)

Bridal Fashion Week Fall/Winter 2011

This season of Amsale reflects another evolution and a new approach, with a natural, youthful ponytail with soft with volume at the crown for added glamour,” Giuntoli says.

To get this look, section off the hair at the crown, mist with forceful 23 super strength finishing spray and then back brush for height. “Play with the shape and height at the crown to keep it tailored to your face shape,” Giuntoli explained. Next gather the hair into a pony and wrap a one-inch section around the elastic. Leave a natural wave in the pony tail and mist with a shine product.