Thursday, 27 February 2014

One Direction to Launch 'That Moment' Fragrance

The second One Direction fragrance is on its way, Harry Styles announced yesterday! The band's first fragrance 'Our Moment' became one of the fastest selling fragrance of 2013, so the boys decided to surprise fans with a new flanker. The new fragrance is titled 'That Moment' and it's very similar to the original scent, both in terms of presentation and smell. After all, the fans' overwhelming response was the catalyst for the new project according to the teen heartthrob who presented some of the key aspects about the new scent in a short Youtube video.

"Your reaction to Our Moment has been absolutely amazing... people have already been asking what is next. So we've come up with a new version.... with some of the original notes but with some new stuff. It's a special edition, and it's called That Moment. We hope you like it as much as we do and we will see you very soon."

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How exactly will the new scent be different from the uber successful original perfume? Well, according to the singer, it will smell as good as it looks and apparently it will feature a couple of fresh floral and fruity notes: ''It's taking things like pink grapefruit and Jasmine, and mixing them with scents like green apple and violet... in a swanky new bottle!"

Another great thing about the new One Direction That Moment fragrance is that the band isn't planning on keeping fans waiting for too long. The special edition fragrance is said to arrive in stores starting with early April, though no details have been disclosed yet regarding the price. However, given the striking similarities between the two scents, the price range will probably be the same as with the first scent. If the popularity of the first scent is to be taken into account, this too will sell like hotcakes, so procrastinating is definitely not recommended if you plan on adding the scent to your personal beauty collection.

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Monday, 24 February 2014

Lea Michele Poses In A Bra & Swimsuit For Sexy ‘V’ Magazine Shoot

Lea Michele is gearing up for the highly-anticipated release of her debut album, Louder, on Mar. 4 — and what better way to celebrate than with a seriously sexy shoot? The 27-year-old was captured by famed photog Terry Richardson for a high-fashion shoot in V magazine’s music issue, where she showed off more skin than ever before. Inside, the interview proved to be just as telling as she discussed her album and how music became her therapy after Cory Monteith‘s untimely death.

Lea Michele — Stevie Nicks Is My Role Model & Helped Me After Cory Monteith’s Death:

lea-michele-v-magazine-2

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Lea met Stevie on the set of Glee, and kept in touch with the talented musician — in fact, she even calls her her role model! “There were people who were like, I am not f*cking leaving your side, and that, for me, was Stevie”, she says. “She’s like a fairy. She’s given me so many gifts along the way, and when I say gifts, I mean tools and advice and support. She told me from the beginning that music is going to be your therapy, and at the time I was like, What the f*ck are you talking about, Stevie Nicks? I don’t want to listen to music. I can’t do anything. But once you get out a little but of the tunnel, when you slowly start to feel like you can be yourself a little bit, it does help. It’s so cool I have her number.”

Lea Michele Rather Stay Home Than Go Clubbing:

lea-michele-v-magazine-3

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While the star loves spending time with her friends, don’t expect to see her falling out of a club at 4AM. “I don’t like things that other people like. I don’t like clubs or crazy, loud music. I don’t drink a lot, and maybe that makes me boring, but I’d rather be in bed watching Homeland with my cat, Sheila, eating a sandwich,” she admits to the magazine.

Along with keeping a low-profile, she admits that she doesn’t mind being a “goody two-shoes” — even if her pals have nicknamed her grandma! “My friends call me Grandma, but like, Grandma’s killing it right now. I’m pretty sure Grandma nailed it in a half-naked Terry Richardson shoot, okay? So I’m fine with it. I just do my thing. I do what’s best for me. That’s it.”

Thursday, 20 February 2014

Suki Waterhouse is a Star to Watch, and These Five Looks Will Show You Why

From the outside looking in, it doesn’t seem like English model Suki Waterhouse’s life could be any better right now. She’s dating one of the hottest and most sought-after actors in the world; she just ruled London Fashion Week by walking in shows like Burberry and Hunter Original; and she was recently named ELLE magazine’s Model of the Year. And at just 22 years old, the English beauty has years ahead of her to continue capturing designers’ campaigns and the public’s heart with her bold bangs and beautiful brows.

But perhaps the most intriguing thing about Waterhouse — we know, it seems impossible that anything could be more intriguing than dating Bradley Cooper — is her varied (but still consistent) sense of personal style. From sleek, polished dresses and mod suits to flowing, boho-chic gowns, Waterhouse seems to show up from one event to the next channeling a completely different (but always chic) style. So which of the star’s style is the best? That’s for you to decide. Here are five looks that capture each facet of the rising star’s style personality:

1. The Classy English Rose

It’s hard to believe that such a young lady can have such sophisticated fashion tastes, but Waterhouse has proven polished again and again in ladylike, feminine dresses and perfectly tailored pantsuits on the red carpet and in everyday life.

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2. The Sexy Siren

Just because Waterhouse knows how to keep it clean-cut and classy doesn’t mean she always sports polished, covered-up pieces. The rising superstar also loves to sport sheer, low-cut, and just plain sexy gowns on the red carpet, and we’re sure that’s something her famous boyfriend doesn’t mind too much.

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3. The Mod Maven

Showing off her English roots seems to be second nature to the up-and-coming model, who loves to sport ensembles full of graphic prints, pastel shades, and boxy cuts that even mod icon Twiggy would approve of.

4. The Boho Beauty

Even with an affinity for high fashion and sexy ensembles, it’s not uncommon to see the model channeling her inner hippie in flowing, floral maxi dresses, cross-body bags, and loose side braids.

5. The Laid-Back Lady

Looking just as amazing dressed down as she does dressed to the nines, the blonde beauty loves to take her style down a notch every now and then with simple ensembles full of sporty coats, well-fitting denim, and cool-girl biker boots.

Monday, 17 February 2014

Unpaid intern takes on British fashion house Alexander McQueen

The fashion house founded by the late designer Alexander McQueen is being sued by a former intern who worked unpaid for four months.

Rachel Watson – not her real name but the one her lawyers want used – is claiming up to £6,415 in "lost wages" and says the fashion house broke the law by not paying her the national minimum wage.

Watson's internship in 2009-10 included drawing artwork for embroidery, repairing embellished clothing, and dyeing large quantities of fabric.

Watson's lawyer, Wessen Jazrawi, from Hausfeld & Co LLP, says that when interns do "real work under a contract", they should be entitled to be paid at least the national minimum wage.

Watson says she accepted the internship because she saw "almost no other way into the fashion industry". In a statement through her lawyers, she says: "I quickly realised I was being exploited. How could I confront my employer at the time when they held all the cards to my future in the industry?"

Watson eventually decided to approach the campaign group Intern Aware, which has in the past helped interns secure payments from Sony, the Arcadia group and X Factor.

Alexander McQueen ready to wear spring/summer 2013

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Last year Alexander McQueen's fashion house was forced publicly to apologise about an unpaid internship, after University of the Arts London student union president Shelly Asquith brought attention to its advert for a "talented knitwear student" to work five days a week for up to 11 months, without a wage.

McQueen said the advert was "issued in error and was not in accordance with our HR policy".

About the Watson case, a spokesperson at Alexander McQueen says: "We understand this relates to an intern who was with us four years ago. We had no idea until now that she had any concern about the time she spent at Alexander McQueen.

"We've paid close attention to the debate in this area and we now pay all our interns."

The case was filed on Friday, the first day of London Fashion Week, as King's College London students protested at Somerset House against the use of unpaid interns in the fashion industry.

Chris Hares, campaigns manager at Intern Aware, says: "Fashion is a competitive industry with high profits, and the idea that one of the most profitable companies in the world could have people working for free is shameful."

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Wednesday, 12 February 2014

Yohji Yamamoto: The designer still has it

Yohji Yamamoto has always done things differently - from ditching his law degree to being the first big name to marry haute couture with sportswear. Now aged 70, the masterful Japanese designer shows no signs of taking a back seat in his fashion empire.

"I started hating perfume," confides Yamamoto when we meet in London. Considering he is in town to fete the re-issue of his collection of fragrances first launched in the 90s, this seems like a contradiction in terms. But, as Yamamoto has long made clear, where he is concerned nothing is as simple as it first seems.

The Japanese designer, who may hate the term "avant-garde" but certainly not the innovation at its heart, has spent more than 35 years leading the industry from the front.

The story of Yamamoto's early days is well-documented: he was born in the Shinjuku area of Tokyo in 1943, to a seamstress mother - a war widow.

"I was born in the ruin," he says in the 2011 documentary film Yohji Yamamoto: This Is My Dream.

Japanese designer Yohji Yamamoto's collaboration with Adidas, Y-3, on the runway in Paris last month. Photo / AP.

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"I had no memory about Japanese culture because those things were all destroyed. So maybe this is my root, the ruined Tokyo."

After completing a law degree in 1966, he decided he didn't want to be a lawyer, and instead offered to help his busy mother with her dressmaking. She suggested, somewhat angrily, that he should attend dressmaking school.

Yamamoto says that it wasn't until midway through his course, at Bunka Fashion College, that he was actually made aware of the business of fashion design.

In 1972, after a period working in his mother's shop, Yamamoto started his own womenswear label, Y's, in Tokyo. After five years, he presented the brand as a ready-to-wear collection in Tokyo before being invited to show an eponymous line in Paris for the first time in 1981.

That collection set the fashion world on edge - Yamamoto's designs were called the "crow look" and "Hiroshima chic" by press aghast at the oversized black garments that were such a stark contrast to the fashion of the time.

They soon had to take Yamamoto's proposal seriously, however; fashion folkore attests that so many buyers rushed to his office to see the collection - and crucially place orders - that the building's elevator broke.

It seems elevators in Paris are a contentious issue for the designer. He tells me: "Soon after coming to Paris, one day I was in the elevator surrounded by four or five women.

They were all wearing strong perfume and each scent was different. The mixture of strong scents was almost killing me in that elevator."

And that's how the designer started hating perfume. That unpleasant experience of olfactory overload stayed with Yamamoto until he was approached to launch his own perfume in the 90s in conjunction with Jean Patou.

"I decided that, okay, I'm going to create a very strong scent which can kill a boy!"

Neon brights from Yohji Yamamoto's spring/summer 2014 collection. Photo / AP.

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More recently, Yamamoto has worked with Olivier Pescheux - a celebrated "nose" responsible for 1 Million by Paco Rabanne, considered the most successful men's fragrance of all time with 23 million bottles sold in five years - to painstakingly recreate those scents that were lost when the initial licence expired. The pair have also created a completely original scent for good measure.

In contrast to the classics, and cloying celebrity endorsements that mostly make up today's competition, the fragrances are pure Yamamoto. That is, minimal, chic yet utterly affecting and causing something of a stampede. Selfridges reportedly sold out the first week the bottles were on the shelves.

"Every woman uses perfume too much," says the designer. "Japanese people don't smell; they use the scent on the kimono but they don't put it on the body - this tradition is still there. So scent is a memory - it stays on the chair after she [leaves]. We Japanese have a tendency to enjoy the emotion of missing, enjoying the memory [more than the event]."

In 2011, the designer celebrated the first three decades of the Yohji Yamamoto label with a retrospective at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London.

"With my eyes turned to the past, I walk backwards into the future," is how he explained his approach at the time.

But in London he tells me: "I hate to look back; I'm always looking forward to what's next. What can I do next?"

This practice would explain why Yamamoto has been responsible for so many firsts within the industry - he was one of the first designers to cross the divide between high fashion and sportswear with his collaboration with adidas, Y-3, which has been a great success for over a decade.

"When I started with adidas for Y-3 it was very simple. At that moment, 11 years ago, people started to call me 'maestro of fashion' and 'king of cut'. I felt that I came too far from the street so I wanted to [go] back to it.

There I found sneakers jogging all over the world, so suddenly I wanted to work with sneakers as a way of getting back to the street. I made a phone call from my side to adidas: 'Why don't you collaborate?' and they said 'yes' at once. We started so-called sport couture."

Japenese fashion designer Yohji Yamamoto. Photo / AP.

He is also responsible for setting the fashion agenda alongside his compatriots Issey Miyake and Rei Kawakubo of Comme des Garcons, but he prefers not to dwell on his past successes.

"Right after I finish the fashion show, I forget everything and go forward to the next thing," he says of his survival technique. "Sometimes I get reports from my sales team: 'Mr Yamamoto, this is very strong. Last month we sold this amount'. But I don't know what's going on in the shop, or the market. In that way I forget. If I hold on to the past I can't go forward.

"[For spring/summer], especially, I wanted to announce to people that I don't want to show old Yohji, I don't want to show something deja vu. So the title was 'Meaningless Excitement'. I used strong neon colours, making a contrast with black. It was very difficult, but at the same time, very exciting to create."

Yamamoto turned 70 last year but has shown no interest in retiring from the multiple labels, collaborations and special projects that make up his enviable career.

He has, however, noticed radical changes in the industry that are far more important than simply which colour is la mode (for Yamamoto, at least, nine times out of 10 the answer is black). "In the 70s and 80s, we had very strong critics of fashion who could criticise because they had knowledge. But recently? We don't have that anymore - in magazines, fashion has become a money game."

It is true that the might of advertisers has de-fanged many a fashion critic, as magazine budgets have been slashed and burned in the wake of the recession.

"I'm not designing for journalists," says Yamamoto, although there is at least one notable exception to that rule: "Suzy Menkes' opinion is still important, because she doesn't lie and she can never be bought."

The designer finds the response of customers and buyers more relevant - "Especially buyers: they don't lie because they have to [make money to] eat, by buying clothing [that will sell]".

In 2009, Yamamoto filed for bankruptcy with debts of ¥6 billion, but was rescued by a Japanese private-equity fund, Integral Group. It backed a rehabilitation effort which, under Japan's Civil Rehabilitation Law, meant the business could continue to operate. At the time, Yamamoto told industry newspaper Women's Wear Daily that problems arose in part because he "left too much to others".

Interesting, then, that he still thinks that the money side of the industry is "not my business".

For many designers, though, their work is everyone's business. There has been a spate of highly-publicised investments in young designers over the past year: LVMH has bought stakes in JW Anderson and Nicholas Kirkwood, Kering (formerly PPR) has invested in Christopher Kane and Altuzarra.

Yamamoto deems such purchases "painful".

"They are pushed to do something toward backers' favourites. They can't create their own favourite, or their own emotional creation."

It is not only designers of luxury fashion that Yamamoto sees as cut off from the emotion of fashion - fast fashion brands are subject to his ire, too.

"The people in the poor towns of Bangladesh or Vietnam, they don't wear fashion so they don't know what they are making. So, naturally, they cannot put their spirit in the clothing, so it comes out like shit."

Sunday, 9 February 2014

Dressing the part: From Ian Botham to Bez and Elvis to Cary Grant

Elvis

Quote Elvis as a style inspiration, and you’re on decidedly dodgy ground. Rhinestones? Jumpsuits? The quiff? Lobster mac-and-cheese stains? Nix all of the above. We’re not thinking of Elvis during his Las Vegas drag, but his 1961 Blue Hawaii incarnation, matinee-idol handsome and garlanded with hibiscus-print aloha shirting. It was a point of reference for Miuccia Prada’s spring collection, packed with hawaiian patterned shirting harking back to mid-century tropical holiday attire and played out against a multi-coloured backdrop of oversized cut-out post-cards style flats. Wish you were there? A few other designers went on a tropical vacation too: Hedi Slimane included the Hawaiian shirt in his hyper-hipster Saint Laurent offering, while Dries van Noten and Frida Giannini at Gucci both scrolled dark, lush florals across shorts, sweaters and singlets.

David Sylvain

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It was a toss-up between two Davids – Bowie and Sylvian – as the models for menswear’s new taste for skinny, sharp suiting and glistening tonic fabrics. It can easily tap in to Bowie’s glam, as well as his ever-influential Thin White Duke days. But the 1980s tinge to the frosted-tip pompadours and winkle-picker boots of Hedi Slimane’s spring Saint Laurent show tipped the scales in Sylvian’s favour. Besides, isn’t Bowie a “style icon” whose ubiquity is both a blessing and a curse? Look hard enough and you can see him in almost any collection. Slimane has mined him as a reference point in his prior incarnation at Dior Homme, but this time the Lurex-flecked suiting, shiny satin bombers and slender PVC trews – so bad they were great – were far too dodgy for the sartorially impeccable Bowie. Sylvian’s presence was also felt at Lanvin, and the closing tuxedo at Louis Vuitton – velvet, shot through with mother-of-pearl – could have come straight from a Japan album cover.

Bez

It’s not for me to cast aspersions on the lifestyles of certain fashion designers, but in the words of Shameless, they seem to know how to throw a party. Or at least, how to attend one. There was a clubby, ravey vein that ran through some of the best offerings of the spring shows: the uniform silhouette consisting of baggy t-shirts, short-shorts and volume-pumped trainers. The Happy Monday’s Bez (a.k.a. Mark Berry) may not have been a stated influence, but he was certainly an insidious presence. In Paris, Raf Simons and Rick Owens were the main proponents. The former offered an acieeed-bright, polyester-blended ode to nineties Belgian Gabba, while Owens enlisted an Estonian metal band to “serenade” his audience at ear-splitting volume. London based Bez-heads included Christopher Shannon, who matchy-matched neon-bright latex shirts and PVC shorts, and Craig Green, whose tie-dyed shirting offered a narcotic-free but nevertheless totally trippy psychedelic experience.

Martin von Essenbeck

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Yes, these are the men’s trends for spring/summer 2014. And if you haven’t seen Luchino Visconti’s The Damned, the picture below will need some explaining. Honestly, there weren’t a huge number of collections referencing Helmut Berger’s turn as Martin von Essenbeck, the Marlene Dietrich-impersonating scion of a German family disintegrating into decadence during the 1930s. But there was one: Thom Browne’s, packed with lipstick, high heels and military braided jackets. Okay, so occasionally it frogmarched into sartorial territory best left occupied (no pun) by Herr Otto Flick in ‘Allo Allo!, but nevertheless there’s something brewing around this feeling. Leap forward six months to the Milanese autumn/winter 2014 shows, and Prada sends out a homage to 1930s via 1970s with distinct Weimar undertones. Next season, it’ll be everywhere. Probably minus the lipstick, though.

Ian Botham

Your eyes don’t deceive you: that is former Test captain Ian Botham being cited as a style icon. Bear with me. He isn’t really a muse of the season – he’s a representative of one of the key themes thrown up by the spring/summer 2014 collections: sportswear. That is, luxed-up, tricked-out fashion sportswear, proffered with special aplomb in Italy (look back to last week’s fashion pages and you’ll see the girls got very much the same from the Italians, too). Nevertheless, there was one overtly Botham-inspired collection: the all-cricket-white paean to Lords designed by Thom Browne for Moncler Gamme Bleu, which bowled us over in Milan last June. The other key players in these sport-style stakes are the sleek and streamlined go-faster Gucci, number-splashed marathon-man inspirations at Salvatore Ferragamo and the muscle-bound, Olympicstyle outing from Donatella Versace.

Cary Grant

Designers push and provoke their catwalk audiences, but at the end of the day, they know suits sell. They always have – hence the fact that Cary Grant is one of a multitude of suited-and-booted cinematic icons that could be trotted out as supposed “inspiration” for the sharp suiting we saw for spring/summer 2014. We saw it for autumn/winter, and we’ll see it for the season after that, too. Because the tailored suit is an essential component of most men’s wardrobes. And if you have to do it, you should do it well. Stefano Pilati’s debut for Ermenegildo Zegna offered a new slant: subtle changes in buttoning, proportion, a softer, less basted and bombasted feel, coats as soft as dressing gowns and suits with an easy drape. This felt like truly modern menswear, all the elegance of Cary Grant but without the vintage feel. Zegna is also the tailor’s tailor, quite literally, manufacturing for everyone from Tom Ford, to Gucci, to Saint Laurent, where Pilati once held the reins. In short, they know their stuff, and know it doesn’t have to be stuffy.

Wednesday, 5 February 2014

Model Madeline Hill Speaks About Being Considered 'Plus-Sized' at Size 6

When I was a little girl, I remember thinking of 6 as the ideal dress size for an adult woman. I have no idea where this came from, whether it was something I overheard a grown woman saying or something I’d seen discussed on television. Either way, there it was in my mind: size 6. Perfect. Ideal.

I’ve since realized that there is, of course, no ‘ideal dress size.’ But when I read Madeline Hill’s account of being told she was considered plus-sized by the modeling industry at size 6, I thought back to when that very number was my own dream dress size.

In an essay penned for Fashionista, Hill recalls being 17 years old and trying to get modeling jobs in New York. She weighed 135 pounds, making her a healthy, if very slim, weight for a girl of her height.”I used to weigh less, much less,” she writes, “while working as a high-fashion model in Tokyo just a year and a half before. I was 5’11, a size two, and weighed 120 pounds. This weight was still considered “too big” by my agency who suggested that I tone-up.”

By the time she came to New York, Hill had been modeling less and keeping herself healthy (“[T]hose days of eating hard-boiled eggs and plain yogurt were behind me”). Still, she wanted to pursue modeling work and, with the permission of her mother agency, met with the top seven agencies in New York.

Hill, who is a stunning redhead, never received any calls from these agencies. It was at the final agency, one who “represents some of the most famous models” in the industry, that she was told to consider plus-sized modeling.

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Modeling a young age gave me a thick skin, which I still have to this day. But being called plus-sized before I’d even graduated from high school was something I wasn’t ready for. It felt like a was being told to tick a box marked ‘other.’

The problem with the suggestion is two-fold. One, it shows how skewed a perspective the modeling world has on the proper weight for a young woman. A size 6 should not be considered a large size for a girl who is 5’11”. If maintaining a certain weight requires a strict diet of hard-boiled eggs and yogurt, as Hill stated was true of her previous 120 pound measurement, it is not a healthy weight.

Second is the issue of the term ‘plus-sized’ in general. I would love to see the phrase totally abolished from the societal vocabulary. As Hill states, it automatically creates an idea that some sizes and shapes are abnormal or strange or just too large. That isn’t the message we should be sending to women.

Eventually, Hill did pursue a plus-sized modeling career. It turned out to be a great move for her, allowing her to continue doing what she loved without having to starve herself or worry about fitting into the sample sizes. As she brilliantly put it in her piece for Fashionista:

Plus-sized modeling has allowed me to accept my body, but I still don’t like the label. Separating models by their size is where the problem lies. I think that having one category without labeling whether models are “plus” or just traditionally thin (technically called “straight-sized”) would alleviate the pressure models face to fit into one end of the spectrum or the other.