Archive for March, 2010

Fashion News

Sarah Jessica Parker launches new fragrance just in time for Sex and The City 2

By Andrea Petrou on March 1st, 2010

SJP.jpg

The long awaited Sex and The City 2 film is nearly here (well May anyway)and if you’re like us you’ll be counting down already.

However there’s something else to get counting down for too now and that’s a new fragrance by Sarah Jessica Parker. Out on 5 May, SJP NYC is said to take influence from the bright lights of New York City.

Thankfully this is just the bright bottle as the scent itself will be based around Wild Strawberrys, florals and cream.

Well as much as we love them, we wouldn’t like to smell like a New York City cab.



Fashion News, Models

Kate Moss to star in a ballet

By Andrea Petrou on March 1st, 2010

Kate Moss bags.jpg

It seems today is a hot day for model announcements and this time it’s Kate Moss’s turn to be in the limelight.

The supermodel has apparently been signed up to star alongside Sex and the City star, Mikhail Baryshnikov in a ballet, rumoured to be named Baryshnimoss.

The ballet will be shown at a fund-raising event and then as a gallery installation. However, it’s not going to be an easy move from heels to points for Kate.

A source told the Daily Mail: “Kate has to be fit, healthy and looking good, so her late nights and heavy partying have to be reduced.

“I know that she is very happy to do that and has talked about wanting to get fit and healthy herself. It will be a movie made for them so she doesn’t have to be a prima ballerina, even though she is having classes.”



Fashion News

Agyness Deyn creates clothing line and online magazine

By Andrea Petrou on March 1st, 2010

Agy.jpg

It’s going to be a busy few months for model du jour Agyness Deyn.

The starlet has signed up to design for the Japanese branch of Barneys where she has helped to produce a capsule collection of 11 items. And Agy hasn’t forgotten her green morals, a percentage of all the dresses, scarves and t-shirts from this will go to Go Green Go, which plants trees in inner Mongolia.

However, it doesn’t end there. The model has also announced she’ll be setting up an online fashion mag with former NME editor Fiona Byrne, who will act as editor-in-chief.

Naag.com will feature original photo and video content of Agyness, as well as articles on fashion, culture and travel written by their journalist friends.

[Images Flashburst /WENN.com]



Features, Opinion, plus size

Fashion’s learning curves

By Andrea Petrou on March 1st, 2010

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Lauren Bravo Writes:
Thank God for Mark Fast. By putting plus-sized models on the mainstream catwalk for the second season running, the much-acclaimed knitwear designer has set some ripples stirring on the sea of planet fashion. He’s proved that a) it wasn’t just a gimmick the first time round, and b) that women with a bit of meat on them can still rock high fashion looks. We can have our cake, eat our cake, and still wear a sweater dress without Anna Wintour jumping out of nowhere and locking us in a cupboard.

Hurrah! Oh, joyful day! Fashion has a new form, and it’s Crystal Renn-shaped! I could spend the rest of the article waxing lyrical on the plus-sized supermodel; the size of her thighs, the power of her curves, the voluptuous va-va-voom that her presence brings to a runwazy or magazine cover. But that would be boring, and a lapse into hypocrisy – after all, where magazines have failed women so enormously in the last 100 years (though they’ve tried to compensate with a million free canvas shopping bags) is with their tireless focus on perfection.

Instead we should discuss how silly it is that we use the term ‘plus-sized’ for models no bigger than a 12. Or how ‘curvy’ is a compliment when discussing Beyonce, but becomes a velvet-cloaked insult when used about Natalie Cassidy. The battle is far from over. Like fashion itself, it seems that plus-sized acceptance must follow the traditional path of catwalk-to-glossy-magazine-to-boutique-to-less-glossy-magazine-to-high-street-to-us. So while Mark Fast’s contribution should be applauded and appreciated, it is only the first domino in a long line to be toppled.

It seems high-end magazines still won’t use normal-sized models unless they are: 1) Famous. Designers, editors, musicians, business tycoons and the wives of world leaders are all, from time to time, allowed to grace the hallowed pages with a little extra flesh on their bones. Largely because it makes the magazine look highbrow. Or 2) A gimmick. “Look at us! We’re using fat birds! Aren’t we liberal and accepting?” the cover will scream, just to leave us in no doubt that this model is a Special Exception. But other than that, the world of the glossies remains a parallel universe, one in which Lara Stone is considered rather a hefter.

Meanwhile in the land of real women, dressing shapelier bodies is still a confusing business. I mean, we have to pay Gok Wan his dues. He’s given us all a lovely self-esteem boost, shown us how to love our wobbly bits and introduced the word ‘breasticles’ into the vernacular of a nation. But do we really want to spend the rest of our lives poured into pencil skirts and elastic waist-cincher belts, like a secretary from a 50s B-movie? Of course we don’t. We’d never be able to run up stairs. We’d be the Daleks of the style world (who are, now I come to think of it, rather pear-shaped themselves).

So we need to release Gok’s iron grip on our Spanx and reclaim our natural waistlines. And while we’re at it, a stern word needs to be had with the designers of high street plus-sized ranges. It seems grossly unfair that, while so much effort has been put into trendy maternity ranges in recent times, plus-sized wear remains on the whole a hateful mess of wafty kaftans and misshapen denim – being as women are only pregnant for nine months at a time, while some will be a size 18 their whole lives.

Plus-sized ranges, as far as I can deduce, centre around one key, and terribly misjudged, item. The t-shirt. I can only imagine that the conversations in the ivory towers must go something like this: “What do fuller figured women want to wear?” “Well, they probably want to look a bit sporty… like they might do some exercise and stop being so fuller figured.” “Yes” “And obviously they don’t want anything with any shape…” “Obviously” “So I think what they really want to wear, probably, is a great big t-shirt.” “Yes! That must be it! But hang on, isn’t that a bit boring? Plus-sized women are meant to be jolly, aren’t they?” “Hmm… ok, we’ll put some diamantés and a big jolly slogan down the front.” “Perfect.”

Other main fails in the sphere of plus-sized design include: lack of proper sleeves. This extends beyond fuller figure ranges to the vast majority of womankind, who for whatever reasons (bingo wings, chicken skin, those little pockets of flab that squeeze out under your armpits) don’t want to expose our upper arms, forcing us into little cardies that make us feel like Lorraine Kelly. Then there’s lack of shape. Wearing enormous, crushed velvet marquees does NOT make one look smaller by comparison. The only people it works on are Jenni Murray, Dawn French and Dame Judi Dench (see: ‘famous people’, above). And finally, there’s compensating for lack of shape with diamantes and mimsy floral motifs. This isn’t a primary school craft project. Give the girls a waist, for pete’s sake.

And all that hasn’t even given me time to start on the high street’s failure to accommodate us Average Amys in the 12-16 range (other than to quickly say: we have BREASTS, deal with it! Giving us acres of extra hip fabric is not going to change that; we can’t move them down there). So yes, while Mark Fast has taken a small step for woman, we still need a giant leap for womankind. But hey, at least we can eat while we’re waiting for it to happen. Cake, anybody?



Celebrity Style, Fashion News

Gallery: Lady Gaga’s London style

By Andrea Petrou on March 1st, 2010

Lady Gaga has been in London over the past few weeks, touring the country as part of her Monster Ball tour and many of her onstage outfits, designed by Armani are as wacky as we expected them to be.

However, it doesn’t seem the Lady of fantastic fashion ever tones down her everyday outfits and it seems her funky fashion sense has become bolder since she’s been staying in the UK.

She’s been spotted in a range of outfits including a silver all in one with a lobster hat, as well as a red “robot style” bodysuit. But do you think she carries them off and would you adopt her style for a night out? View the gallery and let us know by leaving your comments in the box below.

Click on the picture to begin the gallery.




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