Props to Ms Miumiu for seeing the fashion gentleman that is Gary Oldman!
(Gary closes the show, so cut to the end to see him)
A rocking good show even without the celebrities- I'm very impressed with Prada's creative vision because she works very hard to conceive and maintain a consistent image with each new season; something that I think very few other people (Marc Jacobs, Nicholas Ghesquiere) manage to do.
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
Sunday, December 25, 2011
A Few Good Men
I’ve decided that for my first new post in half a year, I’m not going to talk about school and I’m not going to tell you how amazingly well my shorts turned out (project for my Intro to Sewing & Drafting). I’m not going to complain about Fashion Students and I’m not going to list the courses that I have next semester or how excited I am for them to begin. No, instead I’m going to post photos and inane commentary on stylish male celebrities.
I was inspired to make this post after seeing photos of Christopher Walken at LAX wearing a suit and black Uggs. Uggs! I once saw a businessman in the Pearson Air Canada First Class Lounge wearing a beautiful grey suit, paired with camel coloured Uggs and I wanted to hug his feet. I happen to be of the opinion that Uggs make feet look like little bears and are therefore undyingly cute. At this point in time the Ugg boot on women is pretty suburban, having saturated itself as a trend, therefore it’s reasonable for the Ugg-wearing trend to be passed on to the men. What I love about Christopher Walken wearing Uggs is the fact that he’s being honest with himself- it’s not masculine and it’s not particularly ‘cool’ to wear them, but damnit, he knows they’re comfortable and the perfect plane footwear!
Black Bears! |
So basically, I like men with the humour and the courage to wear things for themselves. I wouldn't say that my taste is revolutionary (definitely a Sartorialist bent in there), but I like when men have fun and wear colour! When I was working at American Eagle, a very chic Dutch woman and I were chatting as she picked out a polo shirt for her husband; I was very happy to see her choosing between the Royal Purple, the Orange or the Salmon Pink. They were, she told me, in their 70's but that didn't mean that they couldn't wear colour. In fact, she laughed, it was the exact opposite- old people had a duty to wear colour and brighten up their life! I liked the freedom and happiness she found in her approach to clothing- I mean, who doesn't smile at a fuschia pocket square or a forest-green pair of pants?
Super rad accessories! |
He looks like a boxer at his first fancy dinner party and yet still totally wears the suit- Lapo's clothing never wears him. |
In my opinion, Gary Oldman has a similar approach to dressing in that there is nothing that is off-limits to him. Re-appropriation is the name of the game, and accessories are the main players:
Of course you wear a silk scarf from which to hang your sunglasses! |
Artfully tousled hair |
And of course, you can't write anything about men's style without including Mr. Jude Law. You just can't. He does the slouchy, insouciant thing too well.
Men look really great in scarves- Jude knows this |
Labels:
Christopher Walken,
Gary Oldman,
Jude Law,
Lapo Elkann,
Men's Style,
Uggs
Sunday, August 21, 2011
A Blog, Some Blogs, Many Blogs
There are many blogs out there that comment on/photograph/dissect/wax poetic about fashion, and some are terrible and some aren't. I really enjoy reading blogs because I think that there is more honesty and more personality that comes through- I like blogs where the writing is unpretentious and the photography is intimate.
http://www.thestylerookie.com/
http://seaofshoes.typepad.com/
http://karlascloset.blogspot.com/
http://luxirare.com/
http://www.pneumoniawhite.com/
At the moment, I'm finding Style.com a great read with their 'Future of Fashion' section. Every so often they post an interview with a member of the fashion community- the interview is long, the questions are great and the responses thoughtful. I really enjoy taking a closer look at the industry from a variety of different viewpoints, and I like that the text takes priority over images. If you're looking for something a little less frothy, more insightful, follow this link:
http://www.style.com/stylefile/category/the-future-of-fashion/
http://www.thestylerookie.com/
http://seaofshoes.typepad.com/
http://karlascloset.blogspot.com/
http://luxirare.com/
http://www.pneumoniawhite.com/
At the moment, I'm finding Style.com a great read with their 'Future of Fashion' section. Every so often they post an interview with a member of the fashion community- the interview is long, the questions are great and the responses thoughtful. I really enjoy taking a closer look at the industry from a variety of different viewpoints, and I like that the text takes priority over images. If you're looking for something a little less frothy, more insightful, follow this link:
http://www.style.com/stylefile/category/the-future-of-fashion/
Labels:
blogs,
Karla's Closet,
Pneumonia White,
Sea of Shoes,
Style.com,
Tavi
Saturday, July 23, 2011
An Anthropologie Wishlist
Wednesday, June 29, 2011
Mmmm
Thursday, June 2, 2011
An Asian Thing that is Both Luxurious & Cultish, part I
In Asia the hunger for luxury items is gluttonous, and growing. East Asian countries have been happily chomping at the (Hermes) bit
According to Radha Chadha and Paul Husband in The Cult of the Luxury Brand; Inside Asia's Love Affair With Luxury, there are definite winners in the hearts and wallets of the Asian people; companies that score the highest both in terms of annual sales and in brand image scores. In Tokyo, Seoul or Shanghai you may be able to find just about every luxury brand imaginable (and their diffusion line and their design collaborations and their super rare/high visibility/highly unique/SUPER COOL pop-up stores), but there are a handful of brands that hold unwavering dominance and likability over all else. And I'm not kidding about the hordes of competitors that these 10 brands face within Asia- literally, there is not a luxury brand on earth that does not make some kind of appearance and, more often than not, have at least one store somewhere.
Take Hong Kong as an example; See By Chloe? Popular, well represented. Tsumori Chisato? Ditto. The RVCA x Opening Ceremony collaboration? Had it's launch party at Lane Crawford! And the same for the Jill Stuart line of cosmetics, Armani Fiori, The Row, Just Cavalli, Nicholas Kirkwood, A.P.C, Yohji Yamamoto x Propaganda eyewear and Tom Ford women's r2w. With such abundance one would think that sales would be more evenly spread across the brands, but "while Asia is a competitive market...consumers are more interested in the winners".
WHO ARE THESE 'WINNERS'?
Asia has LV FEVER and the only cure is MORE VUITTON COWBELL.
Hong Kong has 7 stores, China has 34 stores across 29 different cities, Japan has a whopping 54 stores, Tokyo alone has 11 Vuitton stores, Seoul has the grand number of 13.
There is serious money to be made, in my opinion, because these societies can be directed and told what to buy. Asian consumers are diligent, thorough and feel deeply legitimized by brand name goods. This is, obviously, a huge generalization and may come off as derogatory, which is not my intention. I only mean to suggest that there is much more of a collective culture in fashion; acting on trends is an inclination that is natural and good. In general, Asians demand quality and they expect high brand visibility (monograms, gleaming hardwear, a highly recognizable print or signature colour), as well as a strong brand history.
According to Radha Chadha and Paul Husband in The Cult of the Luxury Brand; Inside Asia's Love Affair With Luxury, there are definite winners in the hearts and wallets of the Asian people; companies that score the highest both in terms of annual sales and in brand image scores. In Tokyo, Seoul or Shanghai you may be able to find just about every luxury brand imaginable (and their diffusion line and their design collaborations and their super rare/high visibility/highly unique/SUPER COOL pop-up stores), but there are a handful of brands that hold unwavering dominance and likability over all else. And I'm not kidding about the hordes of competitors that these 10 brands face within Asia- literally, there is not a luxury brand on earth that does not make some kind of appearance and, more often than not, have at least one store somewhere.
Take Hong Kong as an example; See By Chloe? Popular, well represented. Tsumori Chisato? Ditto. The RVCA x Opening Ceremony collaboration? Had it's launch party at Lane Crawford! And the same for the Jill Stuart line of cosmetics, Armani Fiori, The Row, Just Cavalli, Nicholas Kirkwood, A.P.C, Yohji Yamamoto x Propaganda eyewear and Tom Ford women's r2w. With such abundance one would think that sales would be more evenly spread across the brands, but "while Asia is a competitive market...consumers are more interested in the winners".
WHO ARE THESE 'WINNERS'?
Asia has LV FEVER and the only cure is MORE VUITTON COWBELL.
Hong Kong has 7 stores, China has 34 stores across 29 different cities, Japan has a whopping 54 stores, Tokyo alone has 11 Vuitton stores, Seoul has the grand number of 13.
There is serious money to be made, in my opinion, because these societies can be directed and told what to buy. Asian consumers are diligent, thorough and feel deeply legitimized by brand name goods. This is, obviously, a huge generalization and may come off as derogatory, which is not my intention. I only mean to suggest that there is much more of a collective culture in fashion; acting on trends is an inclination that is natural and good. In general, Asians demand quality and they expect high brand visibility (monograms, gleaming hardwear, a highly recognizable print or signature colour), as well as a strong brand history.
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