Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta inspiration. Mostrar todas as mensagens
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta inspiration. Mostrar todas as mensagens

sábado, 18 de janeiro de 2014

Fashion meets Art-part 2

Society takes peculiar measures when burdened with high taxes: Some throw tea into the harbor while others take to touring the town on horseback in the nude. The latter, of course, being the method employed by Lady Godiva, the 11th-century noblewomen whose husband would only relinquish the oppressive taxes he imposed on his people if his wife bared all on bareback. (And who could forget the brand of chocolates named in her honor?)

While the legitimacy of this fable has been questioned, it has nonetheless become the subject of countless paintings and sculptures, most notably, John Collier’s 19th-century rendition, ca. 1897. In Collier’s Pre-Raphaelite painting, a modest Lady Godiva sits atop a white horse, her brilliant red hair her only shield against possible voyeurs or a Peeping Tom — the town tailer who, as legend has it, took a peek at the clothes-less Lady Godiva.

In 2000, a fresh-faced Gisele Bündchen was photographed by Walter Chin for Vanity Fair’s January spotlight on the young model. Undoubtedly inspired by the legendary tale, Chin photographed Gisele nude and perched on a white horse for the story, “Unbridled Beauty.”

Lady Godiva by John Collier, ca. 1897. Housed at the Herbert Art Gallery and Museum

Lady Godiva by John Collier, ca. 1897. Housed at the Herbert Art Gallery and Museum

Gisele Bündchen by Walter Chin for Vanity Fair January, 2000.

Gisele Bündchen by Walter Chin for Vanity Fair January, 2000.

quarta-feira, 23 de outubro de 2013

Under The Radar In Antwerp

ANTWERP, Belgium — With a population of about half a million people, Antwerp is not a large city, nor is it a particularly cosmopolitan one. In some parts of town, Antwerp has a kind of sleepy, post-industrial feel to it, with large swooping cranes and expansive warehouse spaces in the city’s seaport, one of the largest in Northern Europe.

But in fashion terms — more than 20,000 people work in Belgium’s fashion industry, worth more than 7 billion euros a year — Antwerp is a veritable Mecca and has all of the key elements of a thriving fashion ecosystem that helps to attract, educate, and train young fashion designers and incubate their new businesses.


Walter Van Beirendonck installation made of shipping containers | Photo: BoF

First, there is the excellent fashion department at The Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Antwerp, which this year celebrates its 50th anniversary. A few months ago, the six designers who laid the foundation for Antwerp’s vibrant fashion culture, the so-called Antwerp Six — Ann Demeulemeester, Dries Van Noten, Dirk Bikkembergs, Walter Van Beirendonck, Dirk Van Saene and Marina Yee — came together to say “Happy Birthday Dear Academie.”

And then there is also the Flanders Fashion Institute (FFI), an organisation that enables and promotes the Flanders fashion industry and which, last week, invited me to speak at Fashion Talks, a conference bringing together fashion experts and commentators — from Style.com’s Tim Blanks and BoF columnist Pierre Mallevays to former LVMH executive Concetta Lanciaux — to discuss and debate the current state of the fashion industry in Belgium and beyond.

My last visit to Antwerp was back in June 2009, a trip which left me incredibly inspired. So, Fashion Talks seemed like the perfect reason to return. And right upon my arrival, I was immersed in all that makes Antwerp such an interesting place for any follower of fashion.

Veerle Windels, one of the country’s most respected fashion journalists, who kindly took me on a whistle-stop tour of the city, said that one of the reasons the “Antwerp Six” were able to create clothing that was so different to what was happening in the world’s primary fashion capitals was because they weren’t weighed down by heritage. They could create genuinely new things because they were starting from zero.

It shows in the variety of aesthetics that have come to define each of their brands. From Walter van Bierendonck’s colourful and playful point of view to Dries Van Noten’s signature prints and embellishments to Ann Demeulemeester’s monochromatic, slim silhouettes, the designers may have come from the same fashion school, but their signatures were miles apart.

Today, this sense of originality has also seeped into the city’s retail scene, which is especially varied and interesting for a city of this size, and everywhere you look, there is creativity, reflected in subtle but sophisticated ways. In a world where the same identi-kit products are found in identi-kit stores, from Sydney to São Paulo, Antwerp is refreshingly different; a place where you can discover genuinely new things and where the rules are different.


Seven Rooms | Photo: BoF

One of the newest places on Antwerp’s fashion map, Seven Rooms, is actually built on the site of Walter Van Beirendonck’s old concept store. The airy and beautiful space, stocks a cool edit of creative young designer brands — including Prabal Gurung from New York, Ostwald Helgason and JW Anderson from London, and Bouchra Jarrar from Paris — with a lifestyle slant, merchandising contemporary fashion with modern furniture and jewellery, making this store a must visit. (Sadly, the store’s website leaves a little to be desired and does a disservice to what is a great retail experience).

In the meantime, Mr Van Beirendonck and his partner and fellow “Antwerp Six” designer Dirk Van Saene have now opened another store, aptly named DVS, which offers an intimate, personal and beautiful contrast to Seven Rooms. While the store, of course, carries both Van Beirendonck and Van Saene’s lines, it also stock some excellent under-the-radar names including Sofie d’Hoore and Monsieur Maison. A tight and focused edit means you don’t have to search for a gem because every piece is special.

Just downstairs is the women’s branch of Coccodrillo, one of the finest curations of luxury footwear I have seen anywhere. Opened almost thirty years ago by Geert Brulot and Eddy Michiels, Coccodrillo stocks everyone from Gianvito Rossi and Giuseppe Zanotti to Saint Laurent and Raf Simons. Across the street in the men’s store was my favourite new discovery: Weberholderfeder, a label that marries old-school brogues with sporty velcro closures in great colours.

But apart from all the interesting retail spaces, there are also scores of designer brands who choose to base their businesses in Antwerp, many of whom can even open their own small retail stores, because of Antwerp’s relatively affordable rents. But so many of these designers seem to work away in relative anonymity, quietly honing their craft and creating some of the most interesting, well-made fashion you can find anywhere, but lacking exposure outside Belgium.

For example, the designer Stephan Schneider has a great little store in Antwerp with excellent knitwear. And Vera and Olivera Capara, the twin sisters behind the brand Capara who previously worked at Dries Van Noten and Maison Martin Margiela, have an interesting brand with real potential. But both of these labels are scarcely known beyond Belgium’s borders.

Indeed, this was a topic that dominated the conversations at Fashion Talks and an intimate conversation with Queen Mathilde of Belgium, who has taken a special interest in the local fashion industry.

Christian Wijnants, a talented young Belgian designer and graduate of the Academy, who first rose to prominence as the winner of the prestigious Festival d’Hyères fashion prize in 2001, explained that he struggled at first to grow his own business. But winning the International Woolmark Prize, last year, has helped him to regain global visibility and he has seized on that to gain new sales momentum. This year, he has also managed to secured investment — and this combination of capital and broader visibility beyond the Benelux countries seems to be a promising approach.

While a Belgian fashion investment fund is currently being mooted, it’s clear that this alone wont be enough. Again and again, I heard comments like: “but she doesn’t do presentations” or “he doesn’t like attention” or “I don’t have any press support.”

A successful and sustainable designer business needs to target a global market opportunity, and this means connecting with international buyers and press, who rarely visit Belgium, according to many of the people I spoke to.

While I certainly encourage all of the fashion buyers and media to visit Antwerp to experience its unique fashion culture first-hand, the current generation of Belgian fashion brands must also go abroad to spread awareness of what they do, and why it is so special, just as the “Antwerp Six” did when they drove in a van to London Fashion Week in 1986 and captured the fashion world’s imagination.

quinta-feira, 17 de outubro de 2013

No-Code Campaign

 

tods no code4 Tod’s Gets Artful for No Code Fall 2013 Campaign

Color Theory – Continuing its collaboration with London magazine editor Jefferson Hack, Italian shoe label Tod’s releases the fall 2013 campaign for “No_Code”. This season, LA-based photographer and artist Sam Falls captured the images and added a unique touch with painting and digital manipulation in post-production. The line has four styles for women based off of classic shoe styles like the Oxford shoe, desert boot and Chelsea boot. The No_Code collection is available in Tod’s boutiques, mytheresa.com and on Net-a-Porter now.

tods no code1 Tod’s Gets Artful for No Code Fall 2013 Campaign

tods no code2 Tod’s Gets Artful for No Code Fall 2013 Campaign

tods no code3 Tod’s Gets Artful for No Code Fall 2013 Campaign

tods no code5 Tod’s Gets Artful for No Code Fall 2013 Campaign

Inspiration Colors for 2014 summer!

Colour transforms. It defines. It impacts our mood and changes the way we feel. That’s why each season’s colour trends are as influential and important as the broader fashion trends that sweep in on the change in weather.

Spring / summer 2014 brings a colour palette that’s pared back and yet optimistic, with earthy tones, ocean blues and opaque pastels shaping the mood of the season. After the break, a look at the color trends forecast for the warmer part of 2014.

Spring / summer 2014 colours: Lenzing

Forecasting agency Lenzing predicts colours for spring 2014 will take shape around 5 themes: sensual, serene, colorquake, oasis and diaphanous.

Sensual: Hot Summer

Seductive. Desire. Racy. Intense. Voluptuous. It’s words like these Lenzing uses to describe this theme of a steamy, hot summer; where tactility of textiles is slinky and sophisticated. The colour palette compliments fabrics like light-reflecting satins, jacquards, rich jerseys and open weave knits.

ss14 color trends

Serene: The Blues

Contrasting the passion of the ‘sensual’ theme is a palette of serene blues. Clear open skies and calm seas signify freshness and the simplicity of nature. Spurred on by a longing for handmade authenticity, indigo dying and traditional denim return to the spotlight.

ss14 color trends

Colourquake: This Meets That

Think clashes, contrasts, cut+paste craziness… this palette is all about a wild mix of colours and textures. Lenzing calls it a “clash between hard-core technical attitude and natural materials”, featuring “all kinds of embellishments and elaborations”.

ss14 color trends

Oasis: Pop Up Lushness

All things sun-baked and natural find their place in clay red and jungle greens. Parched earth and radiant leaves are reflected in rough surfaces and visible grain in fabric weaves, making for deliberately worn and adventured garments and accessories. Prints are “more of textures than of patterns”.

ss14 color trends

Diaphanous: Precious Opaque

Gemstones and minerals set off a sartorial alchemy in this palette of opaque pastel tones. Less the sugar sweet pastels of summer past, these are modern tones that take shape in layers of transparent fabrics, in openwork jersey and lightweight, airy smoothness.

ss14 color trends

Spring / summer 2014 colours: SPINEXPO

Forecasting at SPINEXPO centered around the evolution and change. “In todays lifestyles there is no right or wrong, we want to move along with the crowd but still stand out. Nothing is as clearly defined as it was in the past, the boundaries have blurred between cultures, communities, the sexes and what is real or virtual.”

They predicted “an evolution of colours” through the following tonal families:

spring summer 2014 colour trends

spring summer 2014 colour trends

spring summer 2014 colour trends

spring summer 2014 colour trends

spring summer 2014 colour trends

spring summer 2014 colour trends

spring summer 2014 colour trends

spring summer 2014 colour trends

quarta-feira, 4 de setembro de 2013

Mix

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Estée Lauder Has the Best-Dressed Retail Staff

FYI another big collaboration!

With their latest collaboration, Opening Ceremony follows in the footsteps of designers like Prabal Garung (who designed uniformsfor Nippon Airways ) and Vivienne Westwood (who made onesfor  Virgin Atlantic): Downtown hip kids Carol Lim and Humberto Leon teamed up with Estée Lauder to create a custom uniform for the brand's team of beauty advisors. The Opening Ceremony designers used a jacquard-print fabric inspired by vintage Estée Lauder packaging to tie the collection to the brand's heritage. The pieces — including a peplum blouse, pleated skirt, slim pant, and blazer — capture a modern take on retro uniforms (similar to these amazing retro airline uniforms). We'd gladly incorporate any of these pieces into our wardrobe. But honestly, with all the designer remakes of classic uniforms, doesn't it kind of feel like the whole world will resemble the final runway scene in Don't Tell Mom the Babysitter's Dead?


Street trend







Blazer: Versace for H&M Men | Shorts ZARA | T-Shirt: Weekday | Boots: Balenciaga | Bag: Proenza Schouler | Sunnies: Sonia Rykiel

Yes, same blazer again and ever since I re-discovered it, I kind of want to wear it a lot….I am still on the same place I was this morning and If you read the post, you will know exactly what I mean. at least the sun is shining and thats ALWAYS a bright side.