Archive for April, 2010

Fashion News

Burberry to launch make-up range this July!

By Andrea Petrou on April 26th, 2010

Thumbnail image for burb.JPG
There’s nothing not to love about Burberry this season. From floaty florals to socks and sandals the design house is at the top of it’s game and judging by it’s AW2010 show, which gave us a range of aviation trends, we know we’ll be loving it all the way through to Christmas too.

However, if it’s clothing range isn’t enough to get you drooling then the news that the iconic British brand is launching its first ever make-up range most definitely will.

Burberry’s creative director, Christopher Bailey, told WWD he wanted to launch the line after being frustrated with caked-on makeup in the wrong colours for his fashion shows. He said in order to solve this problem he had created a new range, which will contain 96 pieces inspired by the iconic Burberry trenchcoat, which is currently modelled by Emma Watson.

“Like the trenchcoat, it can be worn anywhere and at any time,” he told WWD.

We can’t wait to get our hands on the collection.

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Features, Festivals

Festival style: what to wear to the best-dressed fests around

By laurenbravo on April 25th, 2010

wenn2575502.jpg
Festival season is upon us again, and there’s a whole new wardrobe to be assembled before we descend on the fields. Here’s our ShinyStyle guide to the most fashionable fests around…

Secret Garden Party – Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire

Best for:
Tea drinkers who still like to party.

The lowdown: If there’s one thing guaranteed to make your cooler-than-thou festival/party/event one iota cooler, it’s putting ‘secret’ in front of its name. The not-for-profit festival is a bubbly melting pot of creativity, with kids running amok and a fun, electro-tinged musical line-up. This year’s theme is ‘Fact or Fiction’, which apparently translates as an exploration of mythology, fantasy and illusion. Don’t expect it to be much like its Frances Hodgson Burnett namesake, but it does all take place in a gorgeous landscaped garden with a lake and an enchanted forest. Meet you by the big toadstool.

The look: Fantastical hippie heaven. Go for lurid colours, natty accessories and a healthy dose of fictional fun. This floral number from Urban Outfitters ought to do the job.

Spotted: Acts this year will include the very gorgeous Eliza Doolittle and Marina and the Diamonds – definitely ones to watch for style tips.

Bestival - The Isle of Wight (Above left)

Best for: Fancy dress fans.

The lowdown:
The last shindig of the season, The September event takes festival dressing to another level with its annual, all-encompassing themes. Last year it was Space, this year it’s Fairy Tale, so expect frogs, princes and petticoats ahoy. And if you get bored dousing the mud out of your rented Repunzel wig, there’s always the music – this year’s lineup includes Roxy Music and Soft Cell’s Marc Almond, the perfect excuse to work some New Romantic flounces into your costume.

The look: This is no time to play the “I came as myself” card. Go fantastical, but avoid those awful slutty off-the-peg costumes by compiling your own. Check out Beyond Retro for enormous net underskirts to give that Snow White skirt some swoosh.

Spotted: Lily Allen, VV Brown, various others you might not recognise behind the disguises.

Exit – Serbia

Best for: the music, man.

The lowdown: Founded in 2000 by a group of students, Exit grew like wildfire throughout the noughties and in 2007 was named Best European Festival. Attracting a mishmash crowd of indie kids, drum and bass fans and ravers, the mood is laidback and the aesthetic more so.

The look: Think Shoreditch pub, transported to the banks of the Danube. Kick back in denim, checked shirts (pick your plaid at American Apparel) and slouchy jersey separates, and add a neon bra for impromptu rave stripping.

Spotted: It’s not a celeb haven yet, and all the better for it. This year’s lineup includes Chemical Brothers, Crystal Castles and Royksopp – less about the outfits, more about the block rockin’ beats.

Daisy+Lowe+Will+Cameron+Coachella+GjsY97vcg9pl.jpgCoachella – California

Best for: Shiny, happy people

The lowdown: The Californian desert fest has become big news in the last few years, attracting hundreds of thousands of sunseekers, hip kids and glitterati. This year’s event, which took place last weekend, saw performances from Jay-Z, Vampire Weekend and La Roux, and was just as star-studded offstage as on.

The look: High-end hippie, with plenty of flowing fabric, gladiator sandals and artfully mussed up hair. Katy Perry rocked a Native American-inspired get-up, while Alexa Chung and Agyness Deyn gave a lesson in effortless festival finery with their cotton dresses, playsuits and shirts. Try this little number from Boohoo on for size.

Spotted: Kelly Osbourne, Daisy Lowe, Alexa Chung, Agyness Deyn, Pixie Geldof. The usual suspects.


Latitude – Suffolk

Best for: culture vultures

The lowdown: A festival that’s as much about the other attractions as it is about the music, Latitude is packed with comedy, theatre, dance, literary events and other artsy diversions, and attracts a crowd of creatives, yummy mummies and wannabe woodland elves.

The look: Grown-up and dressed down, with a bohemian intellectual vibe (or as much of one as you can manage with a portaloo for a salon). Time to whip out the maxi dress, stick a flower behind your ear and chat to someone with a beard about Balzac. Head to Whistles for this gorgeous paint-effect dress, and team it with Hunter wellies.

Spotted: Regina Spektor, Paloma Faith, Vivienne Westwood.

wenn5316839.jpgGlastonbury – Somerset

Best for: Getting down and dirty

The lowdown:
It’s the Big Daddy of them all – five days of frolicking in fields, anthemic music and mud. With something for everyone and their aunt, Glasto has earned its crown as the king of festivals.

The look: Pretty much anything goes, but Kate Moss cemented the official uniform with her hotpants-vest-wellies-and-waistcoat ensemble. This year, the shorts still stand but they want to be teamed with a statement top, like this military-inspired vest from New Look, and topped off with a parka to brace the evening chill.

Spotted: Pixie Lott, Florence Welch, Alexa Chung, Daisy Lowe… well, y’know, everyone.



Features, Gallery, Trend Alert

Gallery: glorious gingham

By laurenbravo on April 24th, 2010

Hands up who wore a checked summer dress at school? Yeah, me too. And the rule tends to go, any clothes that bear resemblance to your school uniform will be automatically repellent to you in later life (my school uniform was a calf-length pleated skirt with a red beret, so thankfully the rule isn’t too limiting).

But this season there’s good reason to overcome the school association and rediscover gingham as a grown-up. With Andrew Lloyd Webber whittling down Dorothys on the telly and a parade of countryfied cowgirls strutting down the catwalk, the fabric has never looked so right.

The trick to escaping the Lolita look is steering clear of frills and keeping the lines clean and shapely. Oh, and no ruby slippers please. Toto, I don’t think we’re in Topshop anymore…

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Features

How fashion and food became friends again

By laurenbravo on April 24th, 2010

117602.jpgFashion and food. Fashion… and food. It’s one of the most notoriously tempestuous relationships in history, worse than Cathy and Heathcliffe, Tristan and Isolde, Kerry Katona and Mark Whatchamacallit. Both creative, both symbols of indulgence, they seem so compatible in so many ways, yet a lot of the time they just can’t seem to make it work.

But every so often, whether it’s after the conceptual equivalent of a Relate counselling session or because curves are meant to be back in, the two fall in love again. Fashion stops counting calories for a wee while, and food stops being quite so homely, puts on a new frock and looks good. We’re currently riding the wave of one of these reconciliations, in what I believe history textbooks of the future will term the ‘Great Cupcake Commotion of the Noughties’.

At some point in the last few years, cake became acceptable again. After a decade of being force-fed tofu/wheatgrass/goji/ginseng/yoga/Gwyneth Paltrow to extreme levels, the industry rebelled and gave into its cravings. Suddenly sugar, spice and all things nice were back on the menu – and more than snacks, they became accessories. When Carrie and Miranda dissected their love lives while eating cupcakes outside New York’s famous Magnolia Bakery, it sent the fashion world into a frosting-induced frenzy that we still haven’t seen the back of.

Then Heidi Klum bought Victoria Beckham a year’s supply of cupcakes for her 34th birthday back in 2008, and the sugar craze grew. Aside from the obvious question (who was eating those things in the Beckham household?), everyone was excited because it spelled the end for publicly virtuous eating. No longer were we expected to wave away the dessert menu with a bony hand – instead, indulgence was in. And not just a little indulgence, but a LOT. £1000-worth of indulgence, if you’re Ms Klum. Not that we’re complaining, of course. If touting sparkly confectionary can equal carrying the latest Mulberry, then somebody pass us that spatula.

In London, the cupcake scene has been ruled by a few main contenders. There’s the Primrose Bakery, frequented by celeb crowd of North London locals including Kate Moss and famed for their creamy vanilla frosting. Then there’s the New York-inspired Hummingbird Bakery, who have branches in Notting Hill, Kensington and Soho and a bestselling cookbook. Lily Vanilli specialises in decadent cakes topped with cherries, strawberries and nuts, Lola’s Kitchen offer adorable oreo and peanut butter variations, while Candy Cakes are vivid, iced muffins that have been bought by the likes of Madonna and Kate Moss.

macarons.jpgBut all good things come to an end, and now the cupcake craze is giving way to a new hoard of stylish treats to spend our pocket money on. The magic question remains of course – how compatible can food and fashion ever be, while we’re still expected to fit into sample sizes? But for now, let’s pretend we’ll do some stomach crunches later, and work up an appetite with 2010′s menu:

Macarons

Marie Antionette may have let the peasants eat cake, but we reckon she kept all the macarons for herself. The cupcake’s lighter, far more elegant cousin, macarons are the fash pack’s new favourite – and they’re as pretty as a picture, with colourful flavours like pistachio, rose, salted caramel and mandarin to co-ordinate with your spring florals (or just dress in black and eat them all). Parisian brands Ladurée and Pierre Hermé are the go-to macaron masters, with the former selling in Harrods and the latter having opened up a wildly successful Selfridges concession in February.

What to wear: The fanciest French fancies around, these delectable darlings deserve an outfit that befits them. Go for candy colours and frou-frou shapes – this is one time that chic doesn’t have to mean understated.

Tea and scones

Everything’s bigger in America – and in the case of cake, that also means sweeter, heavier and more loaded with dentistry-defying frosting. But now the humble English tea is fighting back, as scones and dainty sandwiches have a trendy renaissance and everyone from Victoria Beckham to Kate Moss and Madonna (them again) have been spied ‘taking tea’.

From the oh-so-elegant afternoon tea at Claridges to the quirky parlour at celeb favourite Sketch, the WI standard has had a makeover. Juri’s in Winchcombe is a Cotswolds classic, Betty’s tea rooms in Harrogate, York, Ilkley & Northallerton are Yorkshire institutions, while Brighton’s Mock Turtle café is charmingly outfitted like your Granny’s dining room, and a popular hangout for trendsters and OAPs alike. The Fashionista’s Afternoon Tea at The Berkley in London makes biscuits to look like that season’s catwalk must-haves, inspired by designs from Luella, Stella McCartney, Lanvin and Vikor and Rolf. Meanwhile, Afternoon Tease at Volupté is a burlesque extravaganza, with cabaret acts to watch as you chow down on cake and champagne – all served with gentleman’s relish, we’d imagine…

What to wear: Afternoon tea calls from some old school English elegance. Go for chintzy florals, cardigans and corsages – or anything that won’t show the jam stains.

Milkshakes 001-thumb-200x299.jpgMilkshakes

The cupcake claw may be loosening, but that hasn’t stopped another American eating trend working its way over to our shores. Fifties-style diners have made a huge comeback in the past couple of years, with their shiny décor and menus of burgers, curly fries and milkshakes reminding us all of a time when teenagers were being born, rock and roll ruled the world, and nobody knew what saturated fats did to your arteries. In London, Ed’s Easy Diner is a pre-club favourite, with branches in Soho and Picadilly complete with mini jukeboxes on the tables so you can eat to your favourite rockabilly blues. Then there’s the recent speight of retro bowling alleys, such as the Bloomsbury Bowling Lanes, which regularly hosts club nights, and the All Star Bowling Lanes, where Princess Eugenie held her 50s-themed 20th birthday last month.

What to wear: Pure ’50s Americana, with turned-up jeans, letterman jackets and be-ribboned ponytails. Watch Grease for some inspiration – but avoid the spray-on trousers if you want to tuck away that second helping of apple pie.

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Celebrity Style

The alter ego of Nicola Roberts

By alanamcverry on April 23rd, 2010

NicolaRob22.jpgAs far as my opinion of Nicola Roberts goes, she’s not someone I give too much thought to. I think she’s a reasonably stylish gal, despite her unfortunate beginnings in a television created bubble pop band. Big fan of the red hair and the pale skin, yet something has gone very wrong here. So lets learn a lesson, if you are slapping on the suncream to keep your skin pasty white this summer (as I will be), you have to be more careful with what you wear. Particularly if you’re quite slim too, showing off too much skin can just make you look like a bit ill. Combining a fragile pasty frame with a very small outfit and nothing to fill it reminds me of ladies of the night funding some kind of habit thats emaciated their frames. If you subscribe to the petite and pasty club, all showing dresses never look right. Even dita von teese tends to only show off one asset at a time at most, otherwise there’s just too much glaring white skin on show. So cover it up a bit, and tone down the colour if you want to avoid looking like your biggest fashion influence was the older side of the red light district. I’m not suggesting she’s all the way there with this outfit, but she’s definitely buying her ticket.

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Fashion Tips

Get your shorts ready for summer

By alanamcverry on April 23rd, 2010

It’s only April, but I’ve already seen a few daring souls bare their pins in celebration of the coming summer months. Shorts are an item of clothing that can be done really well, or really horrendously. So check out these tips on this seasons best short buys for every budget.

S1 Khaki .jpg(1) Renewal Military Shorts £35

Turn up shorts are the most flattering way to get away with bearing 90% of your pins. As long as you don’t buy them too tight, where they dig into your flesh. That’s really not attractive. These military style shorts are part of Urban outfitters urban renewal collection. So you can feel eco-friendly and stylishly summery at the same time.

S2 Denim.jpg(2) Cheap Monday Short Denim Belted Short £36

A pair of denim shorts is pretty much a wardrobe essential. Combining it with a high waist and turn ups gives a real fifties feel and will glam up your dressing down.

S6 topshop swirl print.jpeg(4) Topshop swirl print shorts £38

Culottes are always great for summer, breezy, easy and much more feminine than their short counterpart. They also seem to be highly favoured by designers this season, with numerous styles on offer. For an affordable high street version,
head to your nearest topshop for these swirl print culottes.

S6 Cycling shorts.jpeg(5) Topshop Lace trim cycling shorts £10

So, these maybe an item of clothing that only Alexa Chung can get away with. However, under a very short dress or skirt I think these would be a a great addition to an outfit, whilst also protecting your modesty when sitting in the various parks you’ll be touring this summer.

S4 See by chloe.jpeg(6) See by Chloé bow print high waisted shorts £110

These are just adorable grey cotton jersey shorts covered in black bows. High waisted again for a flattering look. Note however, unless you are blessed with a smaller than average rear end, patterns on the bottom half might not do you any favours. So maybe ask an honest friend along before you pass your credit card over.

S3 Richard Nicholl.jpeg(7) Richard Nicoll Striped high-waisted cotton shorts £249

Carrying on the high waisted feel, but with a longer and more flattering cut. Plus with stripes going the ‘right’ way you will feel instantly transformed into the more sylphlike you that you always thought you were inside.

Also check out Alannah’s Tailored Twill shorts, for a more city chic version of this look.

(8) Uniqlo boyfriend colour shorts £15

Cheap and cheerful in a range of colours, these low rise, loose fitting shorts are a must for the summer.

S5 Chloe khaki.jpg(9) Chloé Roll up shorts £634
If price is no question, then these are definitely my favourite shorts available for purchase this season. And as a bonus, they’re pretty timeless. I can see them being taken out year after year, and still looking good. Really flattering cut, with turn ups and great complementary brown and beige shades. To not do my credit card any more damage I’ll be waiting for the sale on these, and wearing them in October, despite the cold, because I like them so much.

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Celebrity Style

Get The Look: Chloe Sevigny’s all in one black jumpsuit

By alanamcverry on April 23rd, 2010

chloe1.jpgIn trawling through the numerous responses to Chloe Sevigny’s style in cyber space, I have come to the conclusion that she is marmite, epitomizing the love it or hate it dichotomy. I personally, think she is great. But then my style appreciation swings more in favour of the gwen’s and the chloe’s, over the bling Wag style of posh and Cheryl Cole. This month, I think she looked particularly striking in an all in one black jumpsuit with black gloves and a simple gold medallion. So simple, yet so chic, teemed with minimal make up and swept back hair, I think this look is a winner. chloe2.jpg

To do this look for less I came across this amazing Kimichi and Blue all in one black jumpsuit at just £60. The cut of the front is potentially more flattering than Chloe’s daring piece, as it shows off some shape rather than skimming the waist. So you can pull off the look even if u haven’t been lucky enough to inherit supermodel genes, or the desire to live off cucumber and lettuce.

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Celebrity Style

No Make-up and mismatched Mischa Barton

By alanamcverry on April 23rd, 2010

mischa1.jpgI often find it quite daunting how preened some people seem to look every time they leave the house. Living in London, time is precious, and so even painting my nails is a huge deal for me that happens on special occasions only. So as if to to say, it’s OK we’re all the same, Mischa Barton stepped out yesterday without the glossy finish we’re used to seeing. Whilst walking to her car she looked a little tired, a little washed out and a little like she got dressed in the dark. But not even a hat or a pair of sunglasses to hide herself from the paparrazi predators. She appears smiling, looking at the camera and showing that she just doesn’t care. But wait, look at the vintage electric blue rolls royce she’s getting into. When you have a car like that, who needs make-up, I’d be smiling too. mischa2.jpg



Features

Shopping: the unsung heroes of the high street

By laurenbravo on April 23rd, 2010

wenn2294353.jpgEveryone has a few guilty shopping pleasures. You know, those secret shopping destinations that you thought nobody else knew about. The ones with bad lighting and a few too many diamantes, where you forage for fashionable pieces amid the lycra shockers. They’re hard work, but it just makes bagging that bargain all the sweeter in the end…


Peacocks

Cast your mind back, if you will, to a time long, long ago… around 2002, perhaps. Remember how Primark was then? Before it upped its style game and started churning our catwalk copies faster than you can say ‘sweatshop’, Primark was a well-kept style secret. A diamond in the rough. At least 85 per cent tat, you had to wade through scores of housewives wrestling over velour tracksuit bottoms to stumble over hidden treasures – cute pyjamas for pocket change, accidentally trendy shoes and dresses that weren’t designed to be hip but somehow managed to be.

Fast forward eight years and now this is Peacocks; a trashy, brashy and occasionally fabulous haven for bargain shoppers. My personal theory is that among their team of jaded designers, there is one bright young spark who hasn’t quite lost their Central St Martin’s ambition and is determined to channel it into outfitting the nation’s undeserving tweens. Which explains the startlingly on-trend shoes and jewellery pieces that crop up among the standard cheap and cheery fare.

Great for: shoes, and not being seen in the same Primark dress as eleventy million other people.

Not great for: classy investment pieces. But then you probably knew that.

TK Maxx

An odd concept, where cut-price candles and patchwork denim mules nestle up against Guess jeans and Fiorelli leather bags, TK Maxx is one of the most egalitarian shopping experiences on the high street. Unlike other designer outlets, the key to shopping ‘to the Maxx’ seems not to be looking out for labels, but scouring for styles you might actually wear (then crossing your fingers and hoping it’s Chloe). Other tips include: take your time, take water, take a break and take a friend who is good at saying “I know it’s Versace, but you look like the Cookie Monster.”

Particular highlights are the underwear section, which looks like a church hall jumble sale but houses every size of bra imaginable, from egg cosies to bonafide boulder holders. I once found a beautiful balconette from Damaris’ Mimi Holliday diffusion line for about a third of the RRP. Keep that story in your head as you wrestle through the granny pants.

Great for: an enormous range of designer jeans and an eclectic, wide-ranging underwear selection.

Not great for:
statement pieces. Most tops and dresses are straight out of an Italian drag queen’s wardrobe.

Matalan

Matalan seems to exist in that exotic collective of stores that nobody seems to live anywhere near, like Ikea. And DFS. And Furniture Village. Unless of course you live in Purley Way, Croydon, which I assume means your life is a veritable carnival of furniture-buying and interest-free credit. For the rest of us, Matalan is one of those places you go on a bank holiday with your Mum while Dad is buying a new lawnmower. Hardly the makings of a devastating style adventure.

But, what do you know? The clothes are often right on the money. And hardly any money at that. The store’s Designer Collections are full of little treasures like this swirl print dress and this on-trend playsuit, all far cheaper and far less ubiquitous than their Topshop counterparts. And with such a comprehensive online store, you don’t even need to drive to that out of town retail park. Bonus.

Great for:
Fun, playful pieces that you’ll wear for a month or two.

Not great for:
Quality, or anything especially edgy. You’re with your Mum, remember… ooh, what a nice cardie.

Oxfam

We all know them – some of us fondly, some with scorn – as musty places to pick up Jilly Cooper paperbacks, beige handbags and Primark dresses costing more than they did in the shop. But ever since Mary Queen of Shops gave that Orpington branch of Save the Children a makeover, charity shops have been quietly upping their game. It’s been out with the old, moth-eaten garb and in with ranges customised by local designers, well-sourced vintage and quality high-end pieces the like of which our pennies would never stretch to new.

Oxfam shops are a great example of this development, with fashion-focused ’boutique’ branches opening across the country, a new online store recently launched with vintage from the 1950s onwards, and a new pop-up store opening in Selfridges next month. The Oxfam Curiosity Shop, running from 14-20 May, will be staffed by celebrities and stocked with donations from big fashion names, including Alexa Chung and Elle MacPherson.
Even better is the warm, fuzzy glow that comes with knowing you’ve contributed to a good cause, rather than slipping a bit more into Phillip Green’s pockets. How very Lily Cole of you.

Great for: one-of-a-kind finds, vintage rarities and quality cast-offs.

Not great for:
smelling boxfresh. Get some Fabreze in.


And the rest…

MK One

Great for: those floral t-shirt dresses that are so overpriced in so many places.

Not great for:
avoiding VPL or pregnant teenagers.

Debenhams

Great for:
great concessions and designer ranges, like H! by Henry Holland. And when the shopping’s taken the wind out of your sails, you can refuel with a nice teacake in the cafe.

Not great for:
cred.

Tesco

Great for:
picking up some decent, trend-led pieces along with your cauliflower and Coco Pops.

Not great for: an indulgent shopping experience. Who can concentrate on whether a dress is flattering with the smell of pastries wafting over from the bakery counter?

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Designer Fashions

Pixie Geldof And Henry Holland in cahoots for new H! Range at Debenhams

By alanamcverry on April 22nd, 2010

pix1.jpgYes, yet another designer, trendy socialite and established store in cahoots for our cash. This time round I’m talking about Henry Hollands H! Range as modeled by Pixie Geldof, who’s fashion portfolio seems to be far outstripping her older sisters truncated attempts. Often seen on the party circuit arm and arm, Henry’s choice of Pixie as a model is obvious. Especially since he has coined the 19 year old as his muse. Pixie models the clothes looking svelte, smiley and incredibly edgy in a way that is only permissible on the right side of 21. Before I enter into a diatribe of how you can only look good by looking bad with the teenage years on your side, I will steer myself back to the collection. Pix2.jpgThe elfin’s influence as a muse is quite transparent with satchels, blazers and varsity jackets on display. This is definitely a range for the edgier young folk out there, and there is something very high fashion school days about it, but with a much more punk over preppy feel. H! also succeeds in showcasing Henry’s most typical fashion formulas colour, big prints, neon florals and some sports wear cuts in there too. There are even some cycling shorts on offer for his most bravely committed fashion followers. Possibly the most unflattering item of clothing ever produced. Good luck to those who give them a shot, I may avert my gaze.



Fashion News

Gossip Girls Dresses available at Miss Selfridges April 30th

By alanamcverry on April 22nd, 2010

Gossip.jpgEver wanted to be a privileged teenager attending an elite high school on Manhattans Upper East Side in New York City? I don’t think they’re is anyone out there who wouldn’t be curious enough to make the life switch for one day at least. Well, thanks to miss Selfridges, though you may be far removed from the identity of one of NYC’s elite teens, you can at least dress like them. And at a much reduced rate.

What is it that I am getting at? Yes, Gossip Girl has released a range of 8 dresses in collaboration with Miss Selfridges, at friendly local prices. Pick your socialite, and pick up their dress, and hey presto, the new you. All the dresses are undeniably sexy, striking and very very sleek. Based on the designs from the gossip girls costume design wizard Eric Daman, choose from leopard print maxis, body-con bondage, lace and ruffles. Not for the faint hearted, all these dresses are punchy and attention grabbing. But with prices starting at £39, you can’t really go wrong.



Opinion

Designers donning all black outfits. Stereotype or colour conspiracy?

By alanamcverry on April 21st, 2010

chantal.jpgI live in East London. I see a lot of people who ‘do’ fashion stuff. I come across a lot of people who do, or who plan to, design clothes. And one thing I have noticed, no matter how much they tell us purple is the new black this season, for them black has never been, and will never be replaced by anything. I came across this photo of Chantal Thomass, Parisian designer, on a sunny day in almost May, head to toe, clad in all black. A vacuum of colour and pattern, come on Chantal, is this not just too much of a cliché? In fact many fashionista attended parties I have stumbled on accidentally have been much dominated by the same fascination with absence rather than presence of pigment. If fashion design, like any good design, is about pushing boundaries, creating something new and exciting and avoiding the obvious, then should one not practice what they preach?
Now, I wear a lot of black, in fact if I was allowed to call it a colour, it would be a favourite, but my relation to fashion is much more of a reactionary one. I do not give birth to the haute couture babies that propagate and morph into the wearable high street fashion. It is not my initial actions that fuel self imposed irrational imperatives to be on trend with these seasons shades. So, is it all just a sneaky way of making us buy more clothes? If the new black was always black, seasons could go by and no fashion updates would need to be purchased. Or maybe they simply only like colour as a concept rather than a reality. Either way, I’ve always said, I would never get my hair cut by someone with a mullet. And similarly, I aint buying colour from someone who doesn’t know how to make it look good.



Beauty

Trade in your spotty skin for a fresh face this summer

By alanamcverry on April 21st, 2010

Clinque-Anti-Blemish-Solutions-3-Step-System-luxury-skin-care-beauty-11.jpg If like me, and miss Lowe apparently, you fear the months of the year when you are told to discard your foundation, and bare your skin (and all it’s misgivings) to the world around you. It seems for those whose awkward acne years trail into their twenties, there is not much in the market for the middle ground. Left with a difficult dialectic between purging skin with alcohol based products designed for resilient teenage skin, or lathering up with mums richest age defying cream. And fearing that the day you actually manage to banish the blemishes, will be the day that the crows feet, who up till now have been waiting patiently on the side line, are tagged in to play. So what’s out there for a sensitive approach to spot free summer skin.

1. Clinique’s anti-blemish system
With any blemish prone skin, though the large red pustules are what you want to combat, the underlying blocked pores are really your problem. I asked a lady at a very expensive counter the solution to this, and she said ‘exfoliate, exfoliate, exfoliate’, and so I did. Clinque offers a gentle foaming moisturiser, with an exfoliator that is applied like a toner. And no need to fear moisturiser, it won’t give you spots if you use the right one. Clinique offers an anti-blemish moisturiser that is oil free. Solution.

environ.jpg
2. Environ
Available through www.firstforskincare.co.uk or at harvey nichols treatments counter, this is a range created by plastic surgery doctors, who we would assume would know their stuff. All the range have the clearing power of tea tree oil, and if you combine the subugel vitimin A serum into your routine, you have clinically proven spot beating power at your fingertips. Warning however, vitamin A is a kind of watch it get worse before it gets better kind of deal. So if you’re not particularly patient, stay clear.

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3. Philosophy
Use the purity face wash at night, which acts as a make up remover, cleanser and toner in one, with the microdermabrasion cleanser in the morning as a sure fire way to send your spots packing. The hope in a jar for all skin types is a great anti-ageing mosituriser that doesn’t clog up oily skin. So you can be spot free, and wrinkle free. No need to pick and choose.



Fashion News

Highstreet stores accused of “vanity sizing”

By Andrea Petrou on April 21st, 2010

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It’s been a few months since we last kicked off about clothes sizes.

Last time it was jeans that fell foul of our fashion eye after we had a rant about the different fits and sizes. And now research has found that some highstreet stores are increasing the size of their garments to convince shoppers that they wear a smaller clothing size.

According to The Times stores such as Marks & Spencer, Gap and John Lewis are creating “vanity sizes”, which means they are expanding the ideal measurements described for each clothing size, to make us feel better about ourselves.

For instance, in some stores we can easily slip into a size 10 dress, but in another we can’t even get our foot in a size 10.

Marks and Spencer of course denied the claim telling the paper it had not altered its measurements for suppliers since 2003, following a 3-D body scanning survey of women’s bodies, it has reportedly increased its ideal measurement guidelines.

“We are not sweetening the sizes or softening the blow for anyone but in 2007 we introduced a size 6 and a size 30 to our range and we tweaked the sizes on our website so they are based on an average body,” a store spokeswoman told The Times.

“We were trying to more accurately reflect what customers’ body shapes would be showing them. We did not change the size of the garments.”

Gap said that its sizes “depend on the fit and style” of the garment, while John Lewis said “emerging fashion trends and seasonal influences dictate sizing adjustments.”

We’re not sure what to make of this research, but we have been silently campaigning for shops to introduce universal measurements for a good few months now (wouldn’t it be lovely just to grab your size and leave instead of tirelessly trying on different ones?). We’ll be asking for your help with this shortly.

In the meantime we want to know what you think about this research. Should stores continue with their “vanity sizing” or are they doing more harm than good? Vote below and let us know.


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Celebrity Style

Are Lady Gaga’s outfits getting skimpier?

By Andrea Petrou on April 21st, 2010

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We would never put the words “Lady Gaga” and “sensible outfits” in the same sentence, after all, the popstar’s quirky fashion sense is one of the reasons why she stands out so much.

However, it seems her style is getting more and more skimpy as time goes on. Performing in Tokyo as part of her Monsters Ball tour, Miss G decided to show off her, erm, assets in a white lace see-through bodystocking adorned with white straps, which didn’t leave too much to the imagination.

Although this isn’t the first time this sort of outfit has made an appearance – she wore a similar red style for a Marc Jacobs after-party – her other attire this year seems to be coming more and more provocative.

She opted for fishnet stockings and no knickers in her “Telephone” video and a thong under her polar bear coat in “Bad Romance”, which leads us to question whether the star is becoming more daring as her fame rises. What will the lady think of next? Fig leaves covering her assets a la Adam and Eve?

[Images via NYMag]

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