Showing posts with label fashion careers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fashion careers. Show all posts

Monday, 30 December 2013

Fashion news

Friends Ebonnie Masini-Thomson and Natasha Chernov Homann were shopping together for pyjamas when the idea for a business was born.

"There was a lot out there that was sexy or with cute ducks, teddy bears and clouds, but we didn't want that," said Masini-Thomson. "We wanted something sophisticated and fashion-forward, so we decided to do it ourselves."
A Kris Van Assche running shoe available at Sneakerboy.


Launched four weeks ago, luxury sleepwear brand Masini & Chern produces traditional pyjamas for men and women that can be worn on the streets as well as between the sheets.
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The PJs, priced from $175 to $230 a pair, are already attracting significant interest. Actress Phoebe Tonkin received more than 50,000 likes when she posted a picture of herself in a striped pair on Instagram, and the Beverly Hills Hotel in Los Angeles has requested palm print pairs for its VIP clients that will come with monogrammed cuffs.

"The reaction has been really great, so we're planning a trip to Los Angeles in the new year and we'll start wholesaling to various fashion and lifestyle boutiques," said Masini-Thomson.

Wednesday, 18 December 2013

Supremebeing Menswear: AW13 Collection

British streetwear label Supremebeing has released their AW13 collection of vibrant and colourful casual basics with an edge. The label formed back in 1999 with a goal to fuse together the passions of street culture, art, music and fashion – and this latest collection certainly does that.

The collection has a vintage Americana vibe, with references to the current varsity/collegiate trend throughout. Pieces fuse together 1950s style with 1960s utility and military influences to create clothes that look good and actually serve a purpose. Pattern and texture is a prominent feature of the collection, ensuring it remains seasonally-appropriate and adding a welcome touch of character to the overall aesthetic.

Though colour features heavily, including bold colour pops that you wouldn’t traditionally associate with autumn/winter, Supremebeing have not forgotten Britain’s notorious weather, with a wide selection of outerwear in the form of parkas, hunting gilets & jacket liners taking centre stage.

A collection highlight is the ‘Guru’ olive nylon jacket, which features a new take on the camo trend. The brand’s Pine Camo print is based on the 1965 Strichmuster (Dash Print) used by the SWAPO, South West Africa People’s Organisation, in their fight against South African Apartheid. Reworked by the label, the graphic dashes have been super-sized in tonal colours. The jacket is also available in a navy/yellow two-tone colour way that offers more of a varsity appeal – a nice alternative if camo/military isn’t for you.

Another favourite, and a great way to inject some colour into our dreary winter months, is the ‘Billet’ short. The button-up long sleeve shirt makes use of colour-blocking to great effect, incorporating blocks of red, yellow and navy, along with contrasting collar and pocket details, within the design. It’s a piece that cannot fail to make a statement.

Overall, the collection is a strong mix of everyday pieces with a down to earth, youthful edge, in a vibrant colour palette that is versatile enough to integrate with existing wardrobe staples.

Friday, 13 December 2013

Screw Factory offers Last Minute Market for all of you procrastinators

CLEVELAND, Ohio - Are you a last-minute holiday shopper? Do you find the best treasures when Santa's deadline looms? The Last Minute Market and Screw Factory Open Studio event was created with procrastinators in mind.

The Screw Factory, also known as the Lake Erie Building at Templar Industrial Park (13000 Athens Ave., Lakewood) will be brimming with holiday shoppers and art enthusiasts from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m Saturday, Dec. 21.

There will be fine crafts, fine art, funky art, high-end jewelry and fun gifts, when some of the 30 or so permanent artists open their studios and more than 100 jury-selected crafts people and artists set up shop on the building's second and third floors.

The show is organized by Cleveland Handmade Markets. Market organizer Kathy Patton says that the event began in 2008 in a borrowed Westlake warehouse as a year-end party for about 25 artists who knew each other from Etsy and from the Cleveland Handmade group. They all brought their leftover stock and shopped each other's crafts during the party.

They moved the party to the Screw Factory the following year, opened it to the public and invited the artists with studios in the building to participate. That year, there were about 60 exhibitors, and it has grown every year since.

An eight-person selection committee chooses the 100 invited artists out of more than 200 applicants. This has become one of the more a competitive shows around, Patton says, so there's great work around every corner.

The market will offer paintings, drawings, woodwork, ceramics, beauty items, bags, leather goods, clothing, photography, edible treats, hand-blended tea, jewelry, candles, home decor, glasswork, stationery, and even honey wine mead that is produced in the building. The Umami Moto food truck will be parked outside.

Templar Motor Cars made automobiles in the building from 1917 to 1924. Check out the Templar Room on the third floor for a look at Dave Buehler's collection of beautiful Templar cars. They were built in that room almost 100 years ago.

With all the offerings, you just might discover that Last Minute is really the best time and place to shop.

Thursday, 12 December 2013

How Alyssa Milano Created a Fan-Gear Fashion Empire for Women

Alyssa Milano isn’t crazy about pink. “I was in Dodger Stadium, and I was freezing—it was the beginning of the season, before the poop smell sets in,” says the star of TV’s Who’s the Boss? and Charmed, recalling a baseball game she attended eight years ago. “I went into the store to get something warm to wear. And I was offended.” The only color available in women’s clothing was pink. “Their answer for female sports apparel back then was ‘pink it and shrink it.’ It was either that or buy something from the kids’ section. Which I did. I got a kid’s hoodie.” In Dodger blue.


Milano, 40, figured she could do better than the mini Pepto-Bismol tees. So in 2007 she paid a fashion illustrator to draw some less boxy, team-color-appropriate clothing. Her agent happened to be friends with someone at Major League Baseball’s marketing division and got her a meeting with some execs. They liked her idea enough to set her up with former New York Giant Carl Banks, who runs the sports clothing collection for G-III Apparel Group, the $1.2 billion company that has licensing deals with Levi’s, Guess? Calvin Klein and the major sports leagues. G-III Apparel agreed to manufacture and distribute her nascent line, Touch by Alyssa Milano, which had this motto: “Where the game meets the after party.”
“My idea was to make Touch fashionable enough for women to wear outside the arena,” Milano says. The line, which was launched in 2008, now includes $85 quilted jackets in team colors, $45 jeans with logos on the back pockets, and $30 pendant necklaces with the logo in a crystal-lined silver heart. Milano chose the designs and modeled every piece on her website.

Still, her pitch meetings were a bust. She had trouble convincing team buyers that she even knew enough about sports to understand what she was selling. “It was a lot of work to validate my passion and knowledge. It’s probably what every woman goes through when she’s a sports fan. Except I was trying to validate it to Jim Rome,” she says of being interviewed by the loudmouthed sports talk show host. Milano grew up in Brooklyn, where she bonded with her dad and brother over New York Giants and L.A. Dodgers games. (Her dad stayed loyal even when the Dodgers did not.) She’s dated several professional athletes, such as hockey player Wayne McBean and pitchers Carl Pavano, Barry Zito, and Brad Penny. She’s also had L.A. Kings season tickets since she was 15 and Dodgers season tickets for the past 10 years. Milano blogs for MLB.com; hosts segments on the TBS network called Hot Corner; and wrote a book in 2009 called Safe at Home: Confessions of a Baseball Fanatic. Her Australian shepherd is named Dodger Dog.

Tuesday, 10 December 2013

Dice Kayek: Architects of Style

Architecture and clothes - one way or another, they're both dressing the human body, the former on a grand scale, the latter far more intimately.

Even so, it's a brave designer who bases a line of clothes around famous national landmarks. But Ece (pronounced Eecchay) and Ayse (Eyesha) Ege (Edgay), the two Turkish sisters behind Dice (Deechay) Kayek, have done just that with their Istanbul Contrast Collection. The results are spectacular, not least because they couldn't be further from those half-hearted attempts to incorporate some decorative drawings of buildings into dress fabrics that some labels pass off as "architectural".

Preview to the V&A's Glamour of Italian Fashion exhibition

On the contrary, this is a full-blown deployment of some of Turkey's most stunning structures. There's the ravishing white organdy cocktail dress composed of diagonal folds that replicates Istanbul's famous Blue Mosque, for instance, and the weighs-a-ton, but exquisite, angel-winged evening coat, hand embroidered with antique blown glass beads and clearly inspired by Istanbul's Hagia Sophia Mosque.

Impressive, they're probably not primarily intended for wearing, since they're part of the sisters' victorious submission for the Jameel Prize, an international award presented bi-annually to an artist or designer inspired by Islamic tradition.

This year's judging panel includes Zaha Hadid, Thomas Heatherwick (designer of the new Routemaster bus and the Olympic cauldron) and Martin Roth, director of the V&A. The Ege sisters, who were named as winners last night, are the first fashion designers ever to be nominated.

In some ways this is a natural evolution for them. When I visited their labyrinthine studio in Paris in October, I saw at first hand how sculptural the clothes for their Dice Kayek label are - full of sumptuous A-line silhouettes in beautiful duchesse satins and silks. Matchka, a less expensive label they design and sell only in Turkey, is more of an everyday collection, with floaty, fluid pieces in lovely fabrics. I wish it were sold here.

Dividing their time between Istanbul and Paris, the sisters are, as you'd expect, great observers of architecture, if somewhat wounded ones - their fabulously modern apartment in downtown Istanbul is about to have its sea-view obscured by a newer, taller block. Such is the way with planning regs in Istanbul, they told me philosophically.

Perhaps the exacting task of interpreting some of their country's most dazzling architecture into another medium has been a soothing distraction.

Not all white: wedding dresses at the V&A

Then again, architects and designers have found one another fascinating for years. Each discipline, at its best, represents a perfect fusion of form and function that should make us look and feel sleeker and more powerful than might be the case.

The most significant difference is that a building can take years to come to fruition - while fashion collections sometimes materialise within a week. Perhaps that's why so many architects end up adopting a distinctive style of dressing. From Corbusier's trademark specs (still inspiring wannabe modernist architects) and Walter Gropius's bowties and check jackets (the origins of smart-casual?) to Daniel Libeskind's beloved cowboy boots and Zaha Hadid's collection of voluminous Japanese silhouettes, architects understood the power of a Signature Look long before Anna Wintour decreed it a necessity. Maybe architects like a uniform because it's something over which they can exercise direct and absolute control.

It's no coincidence that numerous designers began their careers by studying architecture. Rifat Özbek, Romeo Gigli, Gianfranco Ferré, Tom Ford, Roksanda Ilincic…. Plenty more succumb to architectural ambition. One of the few titles Christopher Bailey, son of a carpenter and creative director and CEO of Burberry, cannot lay claim to is that of fully trained architect. That didn't stop him overseeing the transformation of the company's imposing 44,000 sq ft flagship on Regent's Street or designing the slick HQ in London's Victoria. Increasingly, all designers are expected to have fully formed visions of how their brand's retail presence should look, before an architect is approached.

The Eges don't have their own shops, and Dice Kayek should be better known. Perhaps this victory will help.

Monday, 9 December 2013

Sali Hughes on beauty: Christmas wishlist

No one buys me beauty presents, assuming, understandably, that gifting me a lipstick would be like buying a film critic a cinema pass. But each year, as the Christmas collections emerge, I still compile a mental wish list, if only for my own amusement. Top of this year's is Japonesque. I've been using their professional tools for 20 years (they also secretly manufacture brushes for some of the best luxury brands, such as Tom Ford, though you didn't hear it from me), and now they're selling makeup exclusively at John Lewis (from £12). The unique packaging is beautiful, and the eye shadows are superb. Equally flattering are makeup artist Charlotte Tilbury's eye quads, perfectly compiled at £38.




No Christmas is complete without new scent, and currently nothing compares to Frederic Malle's L'Eau d'Hiver, the most elegant (and, at £130, prohibitively expensive) perfume I've found. I unfailingly want a Diptyque Baies candle (£40) and Laura Mercier Crème de Pistache Honey Bath (£31). Finally, I'd like APC for Aesop's Post-Poo Drops (£20) for my bathroom, in the hope that my sons will be kind enough to use them. These look stylish, smell great and make me smile, as all beauty products should.

Sunday, 8 December 2013

It's all in the mix: the best fashion show music


"When you play something for a designer and you see their eyes light up, that's when you know it's going to work," says Rene Arsenault, the maestro behind Tom Ford's show music.

If you thought compiling the soundtrack for a top fashion show simply involves hooking up the designer in question's iPod to the venue's speakers and hitting 'play' you'd be seriously underestimating the process. According to Frédéric Sanchez, responsible for last month's Prada show pumping out Britney Spears's Work Bitch , "the whole process, which often ends hours, if not minutes, before the show - takes about 40 hours in total," he told Business of Fashion.

No surprise then, that the relationship between a top producer and a designer is an exceptionally close one, on par, perhaps with that of a woman and her hairdresser. Michel Gaubert, who made the inspired choice of Jay-Z's Picasso Baby for Karl Lagerfeld's art-themed show, has been working with the Chanel creative director for some 20 years and similarly, Simone Rocha turned to her brother, Max, to curate her own playlist which included the brilliant Atmosphere by Joy Division.

Gaubert was also charged with the music for Céline - a specially produced mix of Soul II Soul's Back to Life to match Philo's street style inflected collection. And when it came to the Sister by Sibling show, the designers turned to French producer Jerry Bouthier. They opened to You've Got Good Taste by The Cramps: "We though oh how brilliant to open a show with the line 'this one is dedicated to all you Gucci bag carriers out there,'" laughed Cozette McCreery.

As for the question 'what makes a playlist great?' the answer isn't cut and dried. "Anyone can play the newest sound in a show," continued Arsenault, but, "a good fashion soundtrack must feel unique." It's all in the mix - a mercurial one combining zeitgeist with taste and a certain je ne sais quoi…

Friday, 6 December 2013

Fashion’s Purest Visionary

Rei Kawakubo is about to redefine shopping in New York City. Her latest

collection for Comme des Garçons is strange, beautiful, singular and, for most

of us, unwearable. Yet fashion’s most powerful provocateur is also one of its

savviest commercial minds. While she is silent about her own creative process,

Kawakubo is a keen nurturer of young talent, bringing unknown artists and

designers into her fold. With the opening this month of Dover Street Market New

York, the sleepy neighborhood of Kips Bay is poised to become the epicenter of

the city’s fashion map.

Three pillars — fantastically decorated by three different artists — run

vertically through six floors of a vast former school building in Manhattan’s

Kips Bay neighborhood. Surrounded by curry and sari shops, it will be the

unlikely new home of New York’s first Dover Street Market, the multibrand store

from Comme des Garçons.

But this noble old building on Lexington Avenue has two other metaphoric

pillars, and these are names that lie at the heart of the current fashion

establishment. Miuccia Prada is building a permanent space on the top floor,

while Louis Vuitton is creating a three-month pop-up store in the main entrance

area.

“Prada have been amazing, and have created a special collection just for us,

with their iconic shapes in new materials and classic prints from 20 years

ago,” says Adrian Joffe, chief executive officer of Comme des Garçons

International and the husband of Rei Kawakubo, who, for once, has broken her

inscrutable silence.

The lauded Japanese designer, who recently turned 71, has a great deal to say

about this new Manhattan project as well as about the design transformation of

her existing flagship Comme des Garçons store in Chelsea.

“For Dover Street Market New York, I wanted to keep the no-rule, beautiful

chaos feeling of the first two Dover Street Markets,” the designer says in

Japanese as Joffe translates. She is referring to the existing stores, one in

London’s Mayfair section, which opened in 2004 on its namesake Dover Street,

and another that opened in Tokyo’s Ginza district in 2012. (They also have a

franchise in Beijing.)

“But in contrast to New York itself, I wanted to design it with extreme

simplicity, unsophisticated, almost primitive and with naïve artlessness,”

Kawakubo says.

The designer, who came onto the international fashion scene in the 1980s with

distressed black clothes that served as a counterpoint to the era’s thrusting,

androgynous outfits, has always led her own counterculture movement. It hasn’t

been so much a political as a visual challenge to clothes based on cut, stitch

and shape and definitions of current society. Kawakubo still thinks along those

lines and avoids pigeonholing or developing one particular style in her stores

as much as on the runway.

“In conceiving seven floors and the interior design of each space, I took no

notice of the traditional need to separate by category, by sex, by lifestyle or

by age,” the designer explains. “And by designing a transparent elevator that

pierces all seven floors through the middle of the store, I have tried to make

the whole shop as if it is one shop — one total experience.”
SLIDE SHOW

The sheer bravado of taking on this massive 18,000-square-foot building is

breathtaking. It once housed the New York School of Applied Design for Women,

which was for a time associated with Columbia University and helped young women

to pursue careers in arts and crafts. On the worn boards and plain walls you

can imagine the spirit of female endeavor. The pillared structure dates back to

1909 and is classified as a New York City landmark building. But none of that

was likely to put off a designer who never compromises her aesthetic vision and

continues to push the boundaries of what “fashion” is and whether that word

even has to translate into wearable clothing.

Her recent spring 2014 collection used elaborate workmanship to created

curvilinear designs that seemed more like body architecture than clothing. Like

her poetic 2012 “White Drama” collection and her 2005 “Broken Bride”

collection, these designs appear to be outside commercial conventions. Yet the

“hyper-imaginative” collection clothes are always on sale right alongside the

more commercial Comme des Garçons lines, like Play and Black, that provide a

sturdy base for the sales pyramid. The clothing that seems most unlikely to end

up in customer closets — like the now infamous “lumps and bumps” collection of

1997 — is similar to any other modern art form designed to stir the mind and

surprise the eye.

Kawakubo’s conception of the new Dover Street Market store as “beautiful chaos”

thus has a method to its apparent madness. The idea is of a magical coalition

of fashion, art and commerce. While the store will feature all 15 Comme des

Garçons brands (Homme Plus, Shirt, Junya Watanabe, to name a few), the list of

other designers who will be showcased in their own individual spaces reads like

a who’s who of inventive fashion today, and includes Prada, Saint Laurent,

Azzedine Alaïa, Thom Browne, Rick Owens, Sacai and Undercover.

The main floor is where Louis Vuitton is setting up its pop-up shop; and Rose

Bakery, the cult French bakery that is also in the London and Tokyo stores,

will be on the first floor and mezzanine. But just in case that might seem too

“establishment,” Joffe has installed an “experimental” sound system from the

Brooklyn-based musical artist Calx Vive, which will play from various

sculptures throughout the building.

Always ready to support new talent, Joffe and Kawakubo have made space for

burgeoning British talent like Simone Rocha and J. W. Anderson, and a fourth

floor “incubation” area with small customized spaces for young designers like

the Russian Gosha Rubchinskiy, known for his skate-inspired fashion, and Max

Vanderwoude Gross, the 27-year-old behind the up-and-coming New York label

Proper Gang. Other designers on the floor, which will be called the “Energy

Showroom,” include Lou Dalton, Phoebe English, Craig Green, Lee Roach and

Sibling.

“Dover Street Market’s core value is to share a space with people with vision,

people who have something to say,” Joffe says.

But what about this unconventional, out-of-left-field location, so uncool and

far from any stylish shopping zone?

Kawakubo has an exceptional sense of place. When Comme des Garçons opened in

Tokyo’s Aoyama district in 1975, the neighborhood was far from bustling, but it

eventually evolved into a fashion hot spot. Similarly, when she opened her

first Comme des Garçons store in New York in 1983, she chose SoHo, which was

mostly a place for artists, not the downtown epicenter of fashion. And since

she moved the shop to Chelsea in 1999, that area has evolved into a district of

high-end galleries.

Now it’s all changing in Chelsea, as the famous aluminum tunnel weaving through

a former automobile repair building is spun with gold. Make that GOLD! For in

order to emphasize the spirit of Comme des Garçons and redefine it for the

arrival of Dover Street Market, Kawakubo has gone on a gilt trip that starts

with golden tree sculptures designed by the Japanese artist Kohei Nawa inside

the store.

“For the renovation of Chelsea, I wanted to create an even stronger, even more

forward-looking, even more stimulating shop — to try to fulfill the hopes of

our core Comme des Garçons customers,” explains the designer, who sees the

actual Comme des Garçons stores as havens for “the fundamentalists,” as Joffe

calls the hard-core fans, the people who might have started buying the label

during the years when the Comme message was almost entirely black. But black is

now, apparently, no longer the signature color.

“I imagined this time a magical world using my third color after black and red:

gold,” the designer explains. “I know that when babies are given the choice of

colors, they often choose gold.”

“So in this spirit of gold being the most enjoyable color,” she continues, “I

have transformed the existing space and architecture to create a new intimate

and concentrated shop. And as well as Comme des Garçons, I have also chosen to

add personally, for the first time, some other brands and accessories that I

like. Everything here is 100 percent my eye.” The store will carry brands like

the Pop Art-inspired British designers Meadham Kirchhoff and the New York-based

leather designer Zana Bayne. The notion that a designer’s store expresses the

creative personality behind it is a given. But constant change is not. At Comme

des Garçons, the search for the new and the need to evolve is part of the

brand’s DNA.

Joffe says creative retail strategies embody the main pillar of Comme des

Garçons’ sense of values: the never-ending search for something new.

“We are always forward-looking, always evolving,” he says of the company’s

pioneering spirit and its essential beliefs.

Kawakubo expressed the same idea but put it more profoundly.

“Without creation,” she says, “there can be no progress and man cannot evolve.”

Thursday, 5 December 2013

Fashion news: New innovative men's lifestyle store opens in the Short North

Editor's note: You can check out Web Smith in our What Are You Wearing feature this week. We loved his new store so much, we wanted to do a little more on it. So here it is.

Although they are young (Web Smith is 30 and Kevin Lavelle, 27), the co-founders of Mizzen+Main are already shaking things up in menswear shopping.

Their lifestyle brand, which sells American-made clothing and home goods, launched in July 2012 as an online only shop. They will unveil the next stage of their business model — a brick and mortar store — this Friday, Dec. 6, when their new 1,000-square-foot Short North store opens in the former Heyman Talent space.

In addition to the whisky that's always on tap for customers (!!!), Mizzen+Main is unique because anything purchased in the store will not leave the store. Instead, the items will ship to the customer for free in two days. Instead of racks of clothing, the store will have pieced-together, curated outfits available for perusal.

"Mizzen+Main is a truly American brand. It's a form of patriotism to me," said Smith, who previously worked in marketing for Rogue Fitness. "As we younger companies source from American manufacturers, we put pressure on the larger companies to follow suit."

The brand is also forward thinking in the clothing it designs. Its men's dress shirts, for example, are a proprietary fabric that is wrinkle free, antimicrobial and stain resistant; Mizzen+Main has two tech-forward blazer designs, including one launching in January called the Perfect Blazer that is made with a material that allows the jacket to be rolled up into a suitcase without ruining the integrity of the jacket.

Other clothing and accessories brands Mizzen+Main will carry include Allen Edmonds shoes and Heritage Handcrafted, a North Carolina company that repurposes whisky barrels into furniture. In the next few weeks, Smith said, the brand will also be the exclusive seller of Ohio State bowties by Rock Avenue, New Orleans Saints' Malcolm Jenkins' line.

"Starting as an e-commerce site was the quickest way to get our brand out with your label. We've already shipped to 47 states and 12 countries in a year and nine months of being open," Smith said. "We're excited to see what we can do with the store."

The line — with its preppy charm and modern innovation — has already gotten the attention of Saks Fifth Avenue. Mizzen+Main is set for a launch of items at the renowned retailer next year, Smith said.

Appropriately Inappropriate for ‘Festive Dress’

Even in a world where nothing should be taken for granted — banks, climate, Miley Cyrus — one may persuasively argue that most people are pleased to receive a party invitation. The old joke still holds: What are the two saddest words in the English language? “What party?”
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But while most people may enjoy festivities, a party invitation can turn a mood ring to black with the inclusion of just one little modern-day directive: festive dress.

Perhaps you, too, are familiar with the stab of anxiety this edict produces? That little voice that cries out, “What do I wear that won’t make me look like the Joker, the Penguin or some other gleeful archenemy?” What, exactly, does festive dress mean?

“I agree, it’s pretty confusing,” said Zachary Sacks, an investment analyst in Manhattan. “I’ve read that it could mean black tie, or it could mean a tweed sport coat.”

The fashion designer Michael Bastian is more acerbic. “You need new friends, that’s what it means,” he said, laughing. “It’s so vague and confusing.”

Keep one thing in mind: Your potential host is not trying to torture you. A mood-killer for any party is bad décor, and like it or not, you are part of it. Nothing kills the fun faster than a bunch of guys who look as if they just finished moving stuff into storage, or just punched out at Dewey, Cheatem & Howe. There isn’t enough bourbon in the world to cut that ice. A good party requires a festive atmosphere, which requires guests who, however festive they really are, appear to have made an effort to look it.

One of the merits of a black-tie affair is that it offers a simple set of instructions — all you need worry about is whether your tux shirt is clean and pressed and the pants still fit. Festive dress, on the other hand, incites its own brand of fashion panic, its innocent-sounding premise being simply that you wear something special you wouldn’t ordinarily wear.

The trick comes in not under- or overshooting the mark. This requires, among other things, gauging both the setting and the host. Is the party in Lenox Hill or Vinegar Hill? At an apartment or an embassy? Is your hostess more Sally Quinn or Sally Bowles?

Your age is also a factor. The older or younger a man is, the more fun he can get away with. Who docks an 80-year-old or a newborn for style points? But a 40-year-old in a reindeer sweater may find that his name is, as they say, not on the list.

The advanced calculus required to gauge the appropriate degree of inappropriateness vexes even style veterans, though most have developed personal workarounds.

“I kind of have a uniform for office parties and Christmas parties,” Mr. Bastian said. “What I do is put on a basic tuxedo shirt with a solid navy or black tie, a tweed jacket, a red pocket square and some sort of fancy shoe or velvet slipper. I think a tuxedo shirt worn without a tuxedo is a great way to do it. It says, ‘I got the assignment, I made a little effort, but I’m still cool.’ I’ve been to parties where I’ve seen guys mess up. They’ve been dying to bust out those crazy embroidered corduroys all year long, and it doesn’t always fly. There’s still an expectation that you don’t abandon every shred of your regular style just because it’s a holiday. It’s not Halloween.”

Indeed, according to experts in such matters, part of what festive dress seems to suggest is that you steer away from anything that smacks of costume. (That includes the ugly Christmas sweater cherished by irony-loving merrymakers.)

In other words, leave the tinsel for the tree. “I see guys with gold vests and funky bow ties,” said Ralph Auriemma, design director for Paul Stuart’s Phineas Cole line, which seems made for festivity, with old-fashioned dandyish features, like colorful tweeds, peak lapels and three-piece suits. “Personally, I’m still an old-school advocate of elegant men’s wear, something with a point of view from another period of time. I’m not talking about Sherlock Holmes, though that would be festive.”

Men who overdo it are easy to spot and wince at, but there is no excuse for the many, many more who err on the side of safe. There are plenty of easy options, like a casually dressy sport coat or an elegant cardigan or pullover that’s a little too la-di-da for walking the dog. The velvet sport jacket that has come into fashion of late is perhaps the simplest and best example.

“Provided it’s well tailored,” said Madeline Weeks, fashion director for GQ, explaining that the soft, thick pile of velvet can make precise tailoring a challenge. All a man really needs, she said, is one item that shows you tried: a sharply cut silk sport coat with a dull sheen, silver leather tie or black-and-white spectator wingtips.

But make a plan, she advised: “Sometimes guys don’t think about it till it’s too late, and then run out the door in a T-shirt and a leather jacket. You don’t want to be the guy who didn’t make an effort.”

And taking a bit of trouble is, in the end, what it comes down to.

“ ‘Festive’ demands that you make an effort,” said Euan Rellie, a senior managing director at an investment bank, listing his own festive fail-safes: smoking jacket, tartan trousers, patent leather slippers (though not all at once). “Festive and sophisticated are not mutually exclusive,” he said. “It doesn’t mean ‘Pretend you’re a Christmas ornament.’ ”

While there may well be a formula for men anxious to compute exactly how much to channel the holiday spirit, it is also worth remembering that for more-daring souls, looking festive can mean flirting with decorum.

“Some people are good at dressing inappropriately,” Mr. Rellie said. “If you are confident enough, you can be underdressed when everyone is overdressed. When I was an undergraduate at Cambridge, we had the May Ball. The dress code was white tie. Rachel Gibson wore a denim miniskirt, and I fell head over heels in love with her.”

Tuesday, 3 December 2013

British Fashion Awards 2013: Christopher Kane Wins Womenswear Designer Of The Year

Scottish wunderkind designer Christopher Kane has made all the right moves every step of the way in his career. And now he can add winning the accolade of Womenswear Designer of the Year to his heaving cabinet of achievements! Fending off a challenge from Pheobe Philo (Celine) and Sarah Burton, Kane’s success was resoundingly toasted by the audience.

This evening Christopher was presented with his award by platinum haired fashion-titan Donatella Versace and he said the experience was 'truly amazing' and had special thanks for Donatella exclaiming 'I truly love her'. So do we Mr Kane!


From catching the eye of Donatella Versace while still at Central Saint Martins to selling his hit debut collection for S/S 2007 in its entirety to Browns, he burst on to the fashion scene with about the best credentials you could hope for. In the intervening years he has solidified his reputation as an ideas machine, coming up with iconic collections which have formed an archive of highly covetable pieces. Who wouldn’t want a piece from his Carrie inspired grunge collection? Or a zappy neon number from the ‘Princess Margaret on acid’ outing?

News this year that French holdings company Kering had made a majority investment in Kane’s growing brand was greeted with pride by the whole fashion community, and the influx of cash has enabled the designer and his sister Tammy to look to open their first store (planned to open on Mount street by the end of the year) and begin working on a debut bag collection.

Sunday, 1 December 2013

It's Not Sheep Castration.. But Fashion Can Have Its Moments Too

I'm listening to Mike Rowe talk about his Aha! moment, castrating a lamb in Craig, Colo., a few hours north of my current Colorado foothills hometown, which some folks call, "The Brooklyn of Boulder."

I cannot say I've "been there, done that" on the livestock spaying front the way Rowe has.

But I relate to his eyes-wide moment of wonder as he approaches the task.

"How did I get here?" Rowe wonders. I relate to that, too.

My mind flashes back from the little lambs on that Craig, Colo. pasture to a pile of Dalmatian-print polyester on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan, to a table of live doves at a Reagan-era fundraiser. We're in the field of fashion now, as opposed to animal husbandry.

But the leap isn't as far -- or as tame -- as you might think.

With thanks to Mike Rowe for the memories, here are two of my favorite Aha! moments in the NYC fashion biz. They're not as overtly ballsy as his lamb job, and I don't include them on my LinkedIn profile, because who would hire me to do them again?

But these tasks scared me senseless and/or made my heart sing. And isn't that what the best jobs are about?

"Counting the Carnet for Jean-Paul Gaultier"

The Task:
Count a hundred dozen-ish Dalmation print fake fur hats, gloves and accessories imported by French fashion maverick Gaultier for his first U.S. fashion show, to be held in a Big Apple Circus tent in Battery Park City.

My Workspace:
Seated cross-legged on the floor of Bergdorf Goodman's atrium, seven stories above Manhattan's bustling Fifth Avenue.

How I Got This Job:
My new boss called her last version of me and asked, "Do you know anyone crazy enough to do this?"

The Aha! Moment:
The executives see my job as dirty work, the kind of task that Cinderella's stepsisters might event. But counting the carnet is Zen-tastic to me. I'm sitting in a quiet, sun-filled space, connecting with objects of pure design genius.

Tomorrow, taking on another job no one wants, I'll ride shotgun in the truck carrying the collection downtown to the circus tent. The city will stretch before me. The oddly gorgeous objects described in the carnet -- properly counted -- will follow behind me.

Color me one lucky faux fur trucker.

"Supermodel Management"

The Task:
Stop six supermodels from going AWOL from a fashion show fundraiser with clothes by Italian fashion house Jenny, attended by President Ronald Reagan and a host of mid-1980s A-Listers.

My Workspace:
An unheated hallway in the L'Enfant Plaza Hotel in DC.

How I Got This Job:
My Uncle Sidney's neighbors' friend's daughter needs an Italian-speaking American gal Friday for an event she's producing over Presidents' Day Weekend, which will feature live Italian doves on each table, and a six-pack of supermodels on the runway.

I'm studying Italian at college in Philly, so I get the job.

I won't be paid for this gig in money, I'm told. But I will get some real-world experience.

The Truth:
The models -- faces I know from the covers of Vogue, and Elle and W and Bazaar -- are threatening to fly back to New York unless I take them some place warm to wait out the hour before show.

The armed guard at the ballroom says civilians who leave a presidential event will not be readmitted.

What do I do?

I'll have to decide this on my own.

My boss is sneaking Julio Iglesias through the kitchen to avoid the paparazzi. And her boss is drinking Champagne with the Princess of Savoy. Plus, did I mention, this is 1984: there are no cell phones?

As we walk back to the ballroom, I'm sure I'm going to be arrested by the CIA. Or (even scarier) yelled at by the booking agent for Ford Models! How will that look when I apply to law school? -- Sharon Glassman

The models want cheeseburgers. They want to watch the Winter Olympics on TV.

I can make that happen, I think. I'm 19 years old. I know zip about team management. But I know a lot about cheeseburgers.

I escort the models back to my hotel room. We order room service. They watch Brian Boitano skate.

It's like a slumber party with girls in $1,000 dresses.

The Aha! Moment:
Time to lead the models backstage. But how? As we walk back to the ballroom, I'm sure I'm going to be arrested by the CIA. Or (even scarier) yelled at by the booking agent for Ford Models! How will that look when I apply to law school?

But when we get to the Scary Guard, he just nods and waves us backstage.

Why? you ask. I don't know.

Was I terrified? You betcha.

The Bonus:
But scary jobs can lead to great rewards.

Earlier that day, I delivered a Jenny dress to Mrs. Grant's room. Her husband answered the door in a dressing gown, holding a handsome hand of cards.

I was speechless.

He said, "Thank you."

And maybe this is the moral of my "how did I get here?" odd-job story:

Six supermodels may trump an armed guard. But no one will ever trump my memory of Cary Grant.

Writer/performer Sharon Glassman's new novel-with-songs is called Blame It On Hoboken. Visit http://sharonglassmanlive.com for performance dates in Northern Colorado and beyond.

Friday, 29 November 2013

Galliano allowed to move case to labor court

Designer John Galliano was recently awarded the right to have the ongoing case against former employers Christian Dior Couture SA and Galliano SA, heard in labor court over a commercial court. The Paris Court of Appeals denied the appeal filed by Dior, which requested that the case would be moved to a commercial court, and ordered that the French luxury fashion house and John Galliano SA each pay the formerly disgraced designer 2,500 euros each in addition to any court costs, according to WWD. Dior and John Galliano SA have two months to appeal the courts decision.

The Galliano allowed to move case to labor courtbeginning of the ongoing case between John Galliano and Christian Dior Couture SA and his ex eponymous brand date back to 2011. In March 2011, Gaillano was formerly discharged from Dior and his own namesake brand after he made a series of anti-semitic remarks in in public in a Paris café, just before Paris Fashion week for Fall/Winter 2011-2012 was due to take place. Galliano had worked for over fifteen years as the couturier at Christian Dior and previously was head designer at Givenchy before Bernard Arnault, founder of LVMH moved him to Dior.


Addictions Galliano coping mechanisms for work stress
Galliano claimed that the outburst of public anti-semitic insults were caused by work stress, which led to him having a number of addictions, including an drug addiction. The designer is looking for compensation of roughly 6 million euros from his previous employers.

In February this year, Dior fought against the decision made by the Labor Relations Court that states it was licensed to hear Galliano's claims against Dior and his eponymous label. Christian Dior Couture SA argued that the case should be heard in a commercial court, due to the complicated and intricate details of John Galliano previous contracts with Dior and John Galliano SA.

The luxury French fashion house believes that Galliano should be seen as an “independent contractor of the companies,” instead of a employee of Dior and his namesake label and maintains that its choice to fire Galliano “as a result of these incidents is based on fundamental principles and the rule of law.” In a statement issued by Christian Dior Couture SA, the company stated that it “reaffirms its attachment to the rules of human respect and non-discrimination, which it expects all of its collaborators, without exception, to adhere to strictly.”

However Galliano's lawyer, Chantal Giraud-van Gaver of Colblence & Associés argues that Galliano was just another name on the pay roll, and Dior's justification to fire Galliano is not justified. She hoped that with the recent court ruling, the Labor Relations court will recognize the existence of a work contract, which is supported by “a lot of evidence and assessments of situations showing that he was a subordinate.” Giraud-van Gaver added that the recent ruling now allowed her to freedom to present the integrities of the case next year in front of the Labor

Wednesday, 27 November 2013

‘Hunger Games’ designer finds high-fashion muse in Katniss Everdeen

LOS ANGELES - Katniss Everdeen not only wields the bow and arrow of hope in "Catching Fire," the second installment of "The Hunger Games" film franchise, she is also the muse of a new high-fashion line that carries the film's fictional world of the Capitol beyond the screen.

"Catching Fire" costume designer Trish Summerville's 16-piece collection was launched on Monday for luxury online retailer Net-A-Porter, aptly labeled Capitol Couture.


The collection of clothes and accessories are drawn from Summerville's designs for Katniss, the stoic heroine played by Oscar winner Jennifer Lawrence. The designer also hopes Capitol Couture will attract the website's high-fashion clientele to the series of young adult films.

"For a Net-A-Porter client that is interested in our line, it piques their interest if they don't know the film, they'll go then see the film," the designer said.

"Catching Fire," out in theaters last week, sees Katniss become a symbol of revolution against the oppressive Capitol government ruling the fictional world of Panem, and has already stormed the box office with more than $307 million worldwide.

Hollywood films have often partnered with big brands to promote new releases. "Catching Fire" distributor Lions Gate spent roughly $55 million on marketing for the film, including deals with Subway fast-food restaurants and Procter & Gamble Co's CoverGirl cosmetics.

But films such as "Hunger Games" that are aimed at a teen and young adult audience are not the likeliest showcases for high fashion, which generally draws an older female clientele with the additional income to spend.

Summerville hopes her collection, priced between $75 for T-shirts to $995 for a laser-cut patent leather dress inspired by Katniss' chariot outfit, will accommodate all budgets.

"It was important for me to have things that the fans could relate to and also that appealed to the Net-A-Porter clientele," Summerville said.

"This isn't particularly for the 'Catching Fire' fan base, it's just a venture we went out upon to try and exhibit some of the fashion in the film," she added.

Fans attune to high fashion

High fashion and film have enjoyed a long relationship, taken to a new level in the 1990s by HBO television series "Sex and the City," which showcased latest collections by designers on the characters. Patricia Field, the stylist of the show and its subsequent films, also designed a "Sex and the City" inspired collection for UK retailer Marks & Spencer.

Earlier this year, Baz Luhrmann's big screen adaptation of "The Great Gatsby" saw its leading actress, Carey Mulligan, channeling Daisy Buchanan in striking Prada designs created for the film by costume designer Catherine Martin, who drew straight from the Prada archives.

Summerville, who also created actress Rooney Mara's edgy transformation in 2011's "The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo," said she turned to "Hunger Games" fan sites when designing the aesthetic of the second film, and found high-fashion looks suggested for both Katniss and Effie Trinket, the film's outrageously dressed Capitol spokeswoman.

Lions Gate also created a Capitol Couture website, an online magazine set in the fictional world of Panem, that showcased the styles explored in the film, from the Districts to the Capitol.

Actress Elizabeth Banks, who plays Effie, said her character's high-fashion looks represented a bigger picture of the film's theme of revolution.

"We don't wear the clothes because they're cool-looking, we wear the clothes because they represent the excess and the power of the Capitol. It's always meant to be a juxtaposition of what's going on in the districts," Banks said.

One look that Summerville said she was proud of curating for Effie was a fitted dress adorned with hundreds of feathers painted to look like Monarch butterflies, taken straight from the Alexander McQueen spring/summer runway. Banks wore the dress with high heels and a butterfly hair piece.

"Everything is uncomfortable, everything is constricted, and that's also a really strong reminder of the society they live in. Their only freedoms come in the form of personal adornment, they don't have true freedom yet," Banks said.

Thursday, 4 July 2013

Looking after For Your Style Jeweler and Outfit Jewelry

For most women, dressed in style jeweler is an easy way to try clean new looks or to improve your current clothing collection. Keeping your jeweler looking its best will help keep you look your best too. Fashion jeweler, also known as outfit jeweler is generally created from less expensive materials and ornamented with cup, plastic or artificial rocks. Compared with superb that can be renovated to like new situation, products of style jeweler that drops into a condition of disrepair cannot always be renewed. Looking after for your components consistently and understanding what to prevent will allow you to enjoy your awesome classic item or your clean new pendant, wristbands, band or set of ear-rings longer.

Taking break once a month to proper take good care of your components will keep it in excellent shape. Basically clean with a smooth pure cotton fabric to eliminate any surface area dirt. Use an extra smooth tooth brush to eliminate any dirt or waste that might be concealing in cracks or clasps, don't forget to check between pellets if your product has them. Then, just use the fabric to enhance the areas. This may be all you need to do to keep your components fit.

If your product is more seriously dirtier use light plate detergent and a smooth cloth or sponge or fabric to properly clean it. Try to prevent dipping your jeweler completely. Wetness can cause corrosion or sets to type so the less moisture your jeweler is revealed to the better. Don't use ultra-sonic cleaning solutions with your style jeweler as they are too severe. Be sure to dry well with a smooth fabric and touch up your item by properly improving with a smooth fabric.

There is also jeweler cleaning solutions available for outfit jeweler. If you choose to use these be sure that they specifically condition that they are for use on style jeweler. Fashion jeweler cannot hold up against some of the substances used to clean superb so make sure you know what your better is created of before use. As long as you follow the guidelines given by the maker you will be able to clean your items without problems.

You can also increase the durability of your style jeweler clothing collection by understanding what to prevent. Avoid ammonia, therapy, acidity and alcohol as these will rust your jeweler quickly to a non-repairable situation. Some more common ingredients to keep away from your jeweler are fragrance, hairspray and cream as they can quickly change the complete of your style jeweler. An excellent principle is to put on your jeweler after you get yourself ready in the morning and then eliminate it as soon as you get home. If you practice this you can quickly keep contact with ingredients such as these to a lowest. To keep style jewelry in excellent shape always eliminates them before cleaning your hands and/or implementing hand cream. Keep in mind that moisture can cause corrosion or sets to type on your jeweler so make sure to never wear style jeweler during a shower or shower or while diving.

Once you have eliminated your jeweler it is also important to put it away properly. Costume jeweler can quickly be scraped or broken by holding other jeweler or hard areas. Shop your style ear-rings, wristbands, pendants and jewelry independently in smooth pockets or containers. A segmented jeweler box would also be a great place to keep them if you have enough room to keep them individual.


Fashion jeweler is not intended to last permanently. Even with the best good care, eventually the complete will start to tarnish and the shine of the rocks will begin to reduce. There are plenty of new looks for you to try and because the prices are affordable you will not have to hurt your wallet in order to do it.

Saturday, 15 June 2013

Style Guidelines - Five Guidelines on How to Outfit Well on a Budget

Every season, developers release new designs and selection. You may be puzzled about the modifying style that can create a big opening in your cost range. For this reason, you should plan well about your cost range.

Do you need a clothing selection makeover? Here are some style guidelines and techniques on how to outfit well on a cost range that provides you with an motivation.

Fashion journal technique
You can purchase a females style journal or browse the internet. Surfing around the designs and choosing the most fixed style for you. Don't stay about those shops those promoting wonderful outfits which not fit you well. Just discover a few designs that you like very much and then study them. Simultaneously, you should consider whether these clothing fit your clothing that you've already have. If not, just provide it with up no matter how wonderful they are.

Analyzing your clothing selection collection
In purchase to outfit well on a cost range, you'd better obvious about your current selections. It helps you create sensible choices. You can decide what types of clothing you should buy according to the current clothing. From this you would get the answers of what is being needed in your clothing selection.

Shopping at overstock shops
You should come to understand that the number you want may have been marketed out or there are not so many available dimensions as they wear marketed new. However, that is not always the case. And the cheap cost for fashionable and quality clothing can create up for that. Most of enough time, you can obtain the wonderful and fashionable clothing at a relatively low cost.

Add different components to the same clothing
Different components, such as brooch, soft silk headscarf, pendant, bracelets or hairpin, can change the way you look. Choosing the right components help you get a clean and fashionable look. Ensure that along with of the components enhances your outfit and pores and skin.

Apply for a membership's cards
You can discover a efficient clothing shop whose designs fit you well and implement for a account cards so as to reduce costs. Because many suppliers provide a lower price to customers as they pay for their products, especially the more you buy, the less expensive cost they will offer. So just be a part of your preferred store's subscriber list to take advantage of "insider" cost.

Therefore, putting on a costume well doesn't have to spend a lot of cash. Always keep the cost range in mind and act sensible when you are purchasing for new clothing. If you know these guidelines you will preserve much cash but still putting on a costume well. I wish these guidelines could help you.

Friday, 10 May 2013

Style Guidelines for All Forms and Sizes



Prepare to have your mind blown. You don't must be a tall, pencil-slight measure 4 to find incredible, polished apparel and look your best. Mold comes in all shapes and sizes. You can no longer utilization "But I'm short and tubby" as a reason for not upgrading your style uneducated wardrobe.

When you can begin on this excursion of patching up your whole storage room to begin resembling an angel, you possess to first figure out how to acknowledge your physique as it may be. Most ladies have an affection disdain association with their figures and are unvaryingly contrasting themselves and other ladies. Quit analyzing and begin tolerating! When you're there--or regardless headed straight toward "there"--you can begin studying how to dress stylishly in way that compliments your physique sort, and that makes you look and feel magnetic and even spellbinding.

The trap for victory here is picking extraordinary looking and brilliant garments that highlights your exceptional characteristics and camouflages you’re not-so charming ones. Tall, meager ladies ordinarily have it most straightforward, as they can wear best anything and not just escape with it however look incredible.

Yet you might have the exemplary pear shape, for instance, with wide hips, a plentiful honey, and adjust thighs. Pick attire than downplay your more level half and parade your restricted waist, slimmer upper form, and spellbinding arms and shoulders. Samples incorporate A-line skirts; contraband cut pants, and fitted stretch tees. As a general guideline, keep to darker tones on the lowest part and lighter or more vivid on top, and generally speaking, stay clear of too-shapeless or too-tight numbers.

Numerous ladies are fruit formed, with a thicker waist, softer center, a liberal cheast, and narrower hips with thin legs. Apparel that compliments the fruit molded lady highlight her legs and cleavage. Wardrobe cases incorporate V-neck, flat cut, and turtleneck best that develop well past the waistline, short skirts or shorts, and five-pocket pants or pants.

Regardless of your size or shape, provided that you sit down for a bit to get to know and like your physique and study what looks extraordinary on you, you will set out away with another style that not just makes you look attractive, and yet feel enchanting.

Friday, 19 April 2013

Women's Style Guidelines for Looking Great



FASHIONABLY CASUAL CHIC
Many younger ladies are making the move from operating in an office to perform from house; many of them are choosing to be stay-at-home mothers or to begin an online company so they can be more versatile. And many workplaces are lastly enabling females to outfit more gently at perform, not just on Fridays, but all week lengthy.

While learners have always been able to outfit as they please, more and younger ladies are now finding it possible to do the same. And suppliers are getting up to fulfill the increasing need for elegant clothing that are enjoyable to proper take good care of, but look stylish and stylish too.

Even so, it can be difficult to put together a exclusive clothing choice that is efficient and looks excellent, too. If you are new to the work-at-home landscape or a new mom, you might discover yourself with a wardrobe full of company use and inadequate sportswear. What was once enough for Saturdays and Sundays does not go very far when it becomes a everyday thing. So, besides going purchasing, how do you set up a clothing choice of casual, comfortable but stylish items you can quickly take together in the morning and still look excellent all day?

Start with what you really like. You are now free to put on whatever you want, so get clear about what that is, You should already have some idea of your preferred looks from a fast check of your play clothing. And here's a list of fundamentals that will give you style, relaxation, options and flexibility.

(1) An variety of lovely t-shirts, aquariums and covers. Buy only those you really like. You are putting on a costume to please yourself. So remember, if you don't feel much better in it, it's probably not worth a second look

(2) Denims, khakis, popped and yoga exercises trousers in fairly neutral shades that will mix well with your covers. Straight-leg trousers are best but you can toss in a few flairs or baggies for disruption. Add a few short pure cotton or khaki a-line outfits for times you want to look more feminine. You can also add a longer create dress, but make sure it's simple good care and looks excellent old and wrinkly. Native Indian create outfits are perfect for this objective. Finally, discover a few couples of bermuda with a relaxed fit.

(3) Various effective uses for chilly climate. Add a few jacket outfits to put on with stockings or stockings for a change of speed. Long knit tunic covers perform well with thin jeans and stockings, too. You'll need a few cardigans in fairly neutral or gemstone shades. Wear the neutrals over shades and the gemstone shades over dark. For relaxation and comfort, add some vibrant leg socks, like those presented in the Marc by Marc Jacobs fall choice.

(4) Sundresses that can be clothed up or down, one in primary dark. Sundresses can also be protected with a light cardigan or scarf when the elements changes awesome.

(5) One casual blazer to put on over a tee when you want to look professional. A primary dark coats coat with a stylish cut to go with everything in cool environments, or light suede or set coat for light winter seasons. In cool places, enhance the coat with an excellent knit hat, some vibrant knit neckties, and one excellent couple of safety gloves.

(6) Cheap jeweler to entertain yourself when you develop tired with your clothing. A choice of affordable dancing apartments in shades, a few couple of flip-flops and some Kids’ in a shiny shade. Don't forget an all-purpose bag. You may want to reuse your higher education back pack (great for stashing while purchasing and it enhances as a nappy bag). Add a quality neck bag that goes everywhere and a small dark clutch i465 black for nights out.

(7) Fashionable claw-clips to take your locks up and assorted ponytail groups for fast locks repairs.

(8) A checked pure cotton perform clothing (steal one from your partner, spouse or dad) to alternative for a cardigan or coat.

(9) A football cap for bad locks times and an excellent set of eyewear.

(10) Recycle any company use that can go casual. Some aquariums and t-shirts may perform as well with jeans as with office attire, and you will save yourself from feeling like they are going to spend.