Archive for the ‘Features’ Category

Features, Opinion

Why we should all believe in fashion fate

By Andrea Petrou on February 8th, 2010

Clothes rail.jpg

Lauren Bravo writes:

I am not a superstitious person. I will walk under ladders. I take great delight in opening umbrellas indoors. I will put shoes on tables, open crisp packets upside down and gleefully skip around safe in the belief that a piano won’t suddenly fall from the sky and crush me under the weight of cosmic misfortune. I stopped believing horoscopes after Shelley Von Strunkel told me I was going to fail my A-levels, causing me a week of panic and the initial moves towards an alternative career as a welder.

No, I am not superstitious. Except, that is, for in one crucial area of life. Shopping.

As anyone who has recently ventured up a British high street will be aware, shopping isn’t the easy, breezy experience it used to be (in, say, the 1830s). For one thing, there’s the eternal sizing debate, which Andrea’s been exploring this past week with her denim inbetweener campaign (click here to complete our ShinyStyle size survey). When you have to make time in your schedule for winching yourself out of clothes you’ve managed to get stuck in (not to mention the inevitable newspaper interviews after the firemen have left the changing room with their cutting equipment), it does limit the potential to source perfect garments. And, y’know, sleep and things.

Then there’s the competitive element. As a general rule, the cheaper you go on the high street, the more aggressive and ruthless the shopping becomes. This is a result of what I like to term the “Treasure Theory”; that nagging feeling, as you stand and look round a crowded store full of discarded sweatpants and unseasonable kaftan tops, that somewhere in there exists a garment which could change your life.

It’s the logic that lies behind shops like TK Maxx and Matalan, convincing us that if we rummage for long enough, and use enough handbag force to elbow other shoppers out of our way, we will find the bargainous Chanel-alike among the sea of lamé prom dresses and pvc jackets. The only thing separating us from that item of dreams is a healthy dose of fashion fate.

Yes, one should never underestimate the role of destiny in shopping. I can’t be the only one who, when debating a purchase, hears the voice of Doris Day drift under the changing room door… “Que Sera, Sera… whatever will be, will be…”. How many times have you seen your perfect skirt being carried by somebody else, and followed them around the shop like a dog, hissing ‘drop it! Drop IT!’? How many times have you justified a pricey purchase with the fact that it is still there in your size, and so it is Meant to Be? How many times have you very nearly worn a dress, then changed on instinct at the last minute, only to turn up at an event finding your ex’s new girlfriend in the dress you nearly wore? That, my friends, is fashion fate.

I’ve suffered my fair share of blows, but last week, shopping destiny dealt me a good hand. Back in December I had seen a studded black jacket in H&M. I had picked it up, gone ‘ooh’, been told by my friend that it felt like lizard scales and was therefore creepy, and put it back on the rail. I thought no more of it. But then, as the days passed, I started to find this jacket suddenly entering my thoughts. It would pop into my mind as I stood in front of the wardrobe every morning. I would think “if I had that studded jacket, I could wear it with that. If I had that studded jacket, it would look perfect with this”, and so on, until I had pretty much convinced myself that the studded jacket was the key to my future happiness.

So then began a mad pursuit of the studded jacket across every H&M in London. Oxford Circus had sold out, Marble Arch had sold out, Regent Street only had it in a size 8. Everywhere I enquired, I got sad, pitying head-shakes, as though the shop assistants knew they were denying me outfit perfection. I trudged the streets for days, from store to store. I started hallucinating studded jackets, seeing them in mirrors and window reflections and draped over small children on buses. Eventually, I gave up and resigned myself to that fact that the studded jacket was not meant to be in my life.

THEN, several weeks later, thoughts of studded jackets entirely out of my head, I was doing a quick after-work shop dash and decided to pop into H&M to buy some earrings. I very nearly didn’t, as I was late, but something in my gut told me to go in (either fate, or a Prêt meatball wrap). So I did, and there, glinting at me across the store, I saw it. It wasn’t even on a hanger, it was just flung across the top of a rail, looking lonely. As I ran towards it, arms outstretched, I convinced myself it wouldn’t be my size. “It will be the ruddy size 8, don’t get your hopes up”, I thought. So imagine my joy when I got there, clutched it in my sweaty palms and discovered it WAS my size! Fashion fate was on my side for once, and the key to styling happiness was finally mine! Oh, wondrous kismet!

(Actually it turns out the jacket doesn’t go with as many things as I thought it would. It’s also a bit too long, and really does feel like lizard skin. But hey, I wouldn’t have swapped that moment for anything).



campaign, denim, Department Stores, Features

ShinyStyle campaign: We need your help to get retailers to sort out their sizes

By Andrea Petrou on February 3rd, 2010

Denim.jpg

My fun jeans Inbetweener and research articles have taken a serious turn.

After they were published I received many emails from you telling me about all the trouble you’ve been having finding that perfect size.

I didn’t realise this was that much of a problem and affected people so badly, so I called up Asda, who already stock inbetween sizes to see if there was really a demand for these measurements.

Joanne Newbold, a representative for the supermarket told me: “This range is popular. We trailed it just under a year ago and the popularity has led us to expand the range to include different styles and colours.”

This confirmation, plus your comments, has lead us to start a campaign. We want to badger retailers to either stock sizes with an industry wide universal measurement system or to follow Asda’s lead and introduce inbetween sizes.

However, to really make it work we need your help. So we’ve started the campaign off with a small survey, which we can take to retailers to show them that we mean business.

Click on the link below to fill in the questionaire and please spread the word.



Features, Gallery

why men should indulge the facial hair trend

By Andrea Petrou on January 29th, 2010

Brad.jpg

Lauren Bravo writes:
It is a truth universally acknowledged that men’s style just isn’t as exciting as women’s. Naturally this only goes a small way toward making up for periods, childbirth, Nuts Magazine and centuries of oppression, but we can still celebrate it as a small victory. Men’s fashion, far more so than women’s, tends to divide itself into two distinct categories: dull things they will actually wear, and trendy things that they definitely shouldn’t.

The latter exists on the catwalks, in endless parades of leather sandles, jodphurs and McQueen mankinis, while the former exists in M&S, with occasional forays into Topman and Uniqlo. Of course there are concessions – indoor scarves, deck shoes and cardigans have all found their way quietly into the wardrobes of the Average British Male this year without prompting any kind of mass panic, while the Hoxton/Shoreditch contingent of East London have created their own concession commonwealth, impervious to the fashion judgements of the rest of the male population.

But on the whole, male dressing remains a bleak landscape. If female fashion is a treacherous jungle, full of beauty and drama and potential pitfalls, then the male fashion equivalent is probably Bognor Regis. And nor do they have the creative playground of hair and make up to mess around in. Which one could easily argue is a blessing, of course, but I’d wager there isn’t a man alive who hasn’t looked in the mirror the morning after the night before and thought “a bit of concealer would sort this right out”.

So it’s lucky, then, that they have beards. In the desert of men’s style, facial hair is a rare oasis (or just a big bush, if we’re doing analogy accuracy). It is, the more I think about it, a much better version of the female hairdo. It is free to grow and free to maintain. It can be altered day to day with only minimal effort. It requires no straightening, curling, spraying or highlighting. They aren’t made to feel inadequate by celebs with ‘beard extensions’. And, as far as I’m aware, no man is afraid to go out in the rain in case his beard goes fluffy.

Facial hair is having a particular renaissance right now. Where designer stubble reigned for most of the noughties (we’ll call it the ‘Beckham years’), recently we’ve seen a shift toward proper, full beards. The kind that suggest rugged, manly pursuits like chopping down trees and grouting bathroom tiles, and slaughtering livestock with their own bare hands. George Clooney’s has got fuller and embraced his grey, Brad Pitt is working a loo brush/sporran hybrid and even Robert Pattinson was spotted last week sporting whiskers that wouldn’t look out of place on an island castaway.

Sadly though, like most male fashion moments, women have been quick to condemn the bushy beard. Personally, I’ve found it hard to overcome the memory of Roald Dahl’s Mr Twit, who kept morsels of food in his beard to enjoy later on. But overcome it I have, because the bush is the lesser of two evils, the other one being nasty, overshaped, Craig David-style facial topiary. How soon we forget, ladies, that only a few short years ago, men’s grooming was inspired by Zoolander and cultivated by set squares and stencils, like a border freize on Changing Rooms. We should be grateful for the return to caveman chic, and understand that, like the perfect LBD or cover-up jacket, its job is to hide a multitude of sins.

Yes, there is always an air of mystery surrounding a beard; that is both their appeal and their downfall. We want to know what’s beneath it. On an average-looking man, we wonder if he might be ravishingly handsome without the beard, while on a ravishingly handsome man we wonder if under the hair lurks the face of a gawky 12-year-old. Beards are an illusion, like spanx or Peaches Geldof’s ‘career’. They work hard for their status, without appearing to work at all.

So I bid men to enjoy the hirsute trend and really let rip with some A-grade chin forestry. They deserve it, they so rarely get to have fun with fashion. And I’ll leave you with this interesting proposal: if they get to forgo the razor, does that mean we can too?



Features, Gallery, Opinion

My Denim Inbetweener research and a gallery of the best fitting jeans on the highstreet

By Andrea Petrou on January 29th, 2010

After my rant about being a denim inbetweener I thought I’d take some time out and really go and do some research. So I packed my fan, put my friend’s number on standby and hit the highstreet to see if there really was a perfect fitting jean.

To make the test fair I picked three different styles in each shop and took in the two sizes I always try.

First stop was H&M and I have to admit I was hopeful, but when I found that familiar tug at the thighs with all three pairs of the 8s, I knew it just wasn’t going to happen, and I felt it was far too early in my challenge to begin the denim workout.

And the 10s, proved to be even more of a surprise. One of the pairs turned out to be smaller than the 8, and fitting my toe through the tiny hole was as far as I got. However the other two were as baggy and ill fitting as usual.

So I continued. Topshop fared no better than H&M and although I’d gone into those changing rooms looking groomed, the tugging and sweating got the better of me. The outcome? I came out sporting a hairstyle that would only work on Jamie Afro (think Monica’s hair in the Barbados episode of Friends.)

This trend continued into Oasis, French Connection, Mango, Gap and Zara and as my frustrations grew so did the hair.

So I took myself, and the hair to Marks and Spencer. And guess what? I found a near perfect match (well we’ll forgive a tiny muffin top). However, once again the bigger size was just too big.

Dorothy Perkins also faired well in my denim test as did Miss Selfridge, Wallis (which all form part of the Arcadia group with Topshop) and River Island.

Now I want to get the low down from retailers on how they measure their sizes and I’m hoping I’ll be able to come back with some answers next week. I also want to conduct the same test with designer jeans to see if spending that little bit more ensures a perfect fit. And of course I want to hear about your experiences with this problem too (leave your comments below or email me at Andrea@shinymedia.com.)

Until then I’ve put together a gallery of some of the best fitting jeans out there. I know they won’t suit everyone but I hope it helps some of you.

You can also check out our Fashion Tips of Timeless jean styles, which I hope will go some way to helping you find that perfect fitting denim.

Click on the picture below to begin the gallery.



Features, Opinion

Why I hate being a denim Inbetweener

By Andrea Petrou on January 27th, 2010

Jeans.jpgI really enjoy shopping, strike that, who am I kidding? I love it.

I spend hours thinking about what I want and justify why it deserves a place in my wardrobe and a mark on my bank statement.

Vintage, bags, shoes, tops and dresses, you name it, I want it.

However one thing that keeps me up all night, and not in a good “If I buy that top it’ll go with that skirt” kind of way, is that dreaded pair of jeans. Because I’m one of those Inbetweeners.

Unlike it’s Channel 4 comedy namesake this isn’t a laughing matter. In fact I’m sure those who know what I’m talking about, and according to Asda who launched a mid sized jeans range last year that’s about two thirds of women, will back me up when I say it’s really quite horrible.

For those lucky enough to be feeling confused at this point, let me explain.
A denim Inbetweener is really what it says on the tin, it’s someone who’s, well, inbetween jean sizes.

You can spot an Inbetweener in a range of ways.

She’ll be the girl who comes out of the changing room dripping with the sweaty challenge of having tried to wriggle into those size 10s, 12s or 14s.
Or girl who’s legs and feet are sticking out of the changing room door, a la the wicked witch of the East in the Wizard of Oz but without the perks of those pretty red glittery shoes, while she lies down struggling to get that zip past the crotch area.

And finally it’s that lady you’ll hear frantically whispering on the phone, which translates as “SOS,quick, help, I’m stuck in this pair of jeans”. She’ll also be the girl covering that little tiny hole she made in the bottom area of the denim when she breathed out too quickly with the relief on getting them on before realising the muffin top was too big to disguise. Yes I hold my hands up to that one, and have tried on many occasions to hide that ripping sound with a cough.

But we’re not doing this just so we can say we fit into a smaller size, after all we’re not like Kerry Katona and in denial about what those endless take-away are doing to our waistlines, we’re doing it because the next size up is too frigging big.

It’s the GM Goliath equivalent of the size below, and while there’s no problem getting this size up, it’s keeping it there that’s the problem.

Talking to my friends I know I’m not alone and they too have a story to tell about their own Inbetweener scenario (one had to resort to asking a shop assistant to help her pull her too tight jeans off during one very bad emergency). We’ve also pinpointed some of the worst offending shops, which although I won’t name, I’m sure you know who they are.

And I’ve come to conclude that online jeans shopping is the worst. Yes they may have size charts but honestly who has a tape measure handy and time to measure that waist and hips, especially when it’s peak shopping time and there’s only one pair of those jeans in your (hopefully right) size left?

And when that package arrives and you squeeze yourself into them (there’s so much more time to do this in the comfort of your own home) you end up walking around like a penguin because there’s no one on SOS size duty. Not even that smug assistant.

So I’ve decided that until other retailers sort out their sizes or follow Asda’s mid size lead there’s two options into fitting into those jeans.

1. Follow Renee Zellweger’s lead when she needed to beef up for her Bridget Jones role, and eat as much fast and fatty food as possible to fit snugly into the next size up.

2. Work out at the gym for a good few weeks to slim into the smaller size.

Hmm now where did I spot that Krispy Creme drive thru? And I wonder if they do loyalty points?



Celebrity Style, Fashion News, Features, Gallery

Get the look: Kim Kardashian’s biker style

By Andrea Petrou on January 26th, 2010

It’s not often we get excited by a retail site, afterall there are so many about. However, one that’s got us reaching for our purses is Yogo Ego.

The fashion and beauty site, which was launched late last year (yes we know we’re a bit behind, but better late than never), has a range of designer brands including Disney Jewelley, Firetrap, Benefit and Lipsy as well as its own range, at some great prices.

And to celebrate our new find we’ve put together a gallery, with the the help of the company, showing you how to get reality star Kim Kardashian’s on-trend biker style.

Someone hide our credit cards now.

Click on the picture below to begin the gallery.



Designer collaborations, designer pick of the week, Fashion News, Features, Gallery

Jonathan Saunders range for Topshop hits stores today

By Andrea Petrou on January 22nd, 2010

It may be that time in January when “pay day” seems like a historic word but with news that Jonathan Saunders collection is out today it’s time to scramble those pennies together and hot foot it down to Topshop.

The long awaited 5 piece range, consists a skinny black dress and matching white T-shirt, and a panelled denim pencil skirt, as well as a denim cropped top, which will show off those newly toned gym figures some of you may be working hard at.

Jonathan said: “My collection for Topshop this season has been inspired by sportswear and workwear, as well as the bold and graphic shapes of the Memphis movement. It’s perfect for urban city dewellers”.

And if you don’t want to brave the rain then you can also pick up pieces of the range online. We think living on potatoes and soup for the next week is definitely worth it for this collection, and we’ll probably even be able to fit into the denim cropped top as a result.

Click on the picture below to view some of the range.



Features, Opinion

Why occasional dressing doesn’t suit everyone

By Andrea Petrou on January 21st, 2010

chloe.jpg
Lauren Bravo writes: Poor Chloe Sevigny. She turns out at the Golden Globes in a cascade of silk ruffles, looking every inch the fashion-forward Hollywood star. She wins Best Actress in a TV Drama for her role in Big Love.

She makes her way to the stage, full of poise and old-world glamour, in front of an admiring audience of industry names. And then, at the last vital moment, Rrrrriiiiiiiiiip! Some git tears half her dress off. Thus we learn the first rule of occasion dressing: whatever can go wrong, will go wrong. Especially if you’re on camera.

I felt for Chloe, particularly as I’ve experienced her wardrobe malfunction myself. Admittedly mine occurred at my high school prom, not in front of the Hollywood Foreign Press and a million television viewers, but it was still traumatic.

I spent £150 on a chiffony creation from Monsoon, the kind you picture yourself being proposed to in, then promptly put my heel through the hem as I got out of the car in the school drive. To add insult to embarrassment, it was quickly revealed that three other girls had turned up in the same dress – but hey, I was the only one with a gaping hole…

Some girls thrive on occasion dressing. They’re usually, as it happens, the girls who keep it low-key the rest of the time. The jeans-and-jumpers girls. All year it’s sensible coats, denim and comfy separates, then at the whiff of an invitation, ooh, out come lithe limbs poured into something slinky, satiny and elegant. They glide around, part Audrey Hepburn, part Disney Princess, and the impact is made all the more striking by its contrast to their usual appearance.

They don’t spill, their make-up doesn’t smudge, their underwear doesn’t show, and they don’t go all scarlet and drippy after a turn on the dancefloor. They are the girls formal events are designed for. I am not one of these girls.

No, I realised many, many years ago that I can’t do occasion dressing. Other people will be watching awards season with joy, cooing at the dresses and the flawless red carpet elegance, but I will spend it shouting “HOW? How are you DOING that??” at a variety of magazine spreads. And yet, every time an occasion presents itself, I still have a brief moment of delusion. “Maybe this time”, I think, “I’ll pull it off. I’ll find something classy, and I’ll look classy in it, and I’ll still be feeling classy when they carry me out of the marquee at 4am.”

It’s not an aversion to dressing up, you understand – In fact I have a tendency to be chronically overdressed for everyday life. I will wear sequins to the pub, cocktail dresses to family barbecues and stilettos to Tesco. But give me a bonafide ooccasion, something that actually demands a bit of sartorial effort, and I go to pieces. I become a one-woman style disaster zone.

The routine generally goes something like this: I won’t be able to find/afford/fit into a suitable dress. So I will spend three weeks in a consumer frenzy, then the day before buy something a size too small, in a colour I hate, that accommodates no bra known to man. I will then attempt something radical with my hair, which will go wrong, requiring me to obliterate the whole thing with straighteners, then wet it to stop it looking too straight, then straighten it to stop it looking too wet.

After a week on grapes and green tea I will crack, eat a burrito, and not be able to do the zip up on the too-small-anyway dress. After half an hour of flatmate-assisted zip warfare I will finally be assembled, but sweaty from effort, which will then demand another hair re-straighten. I will top off the look with a pair of shoes that cripple me, a massive bag with my alternative flat shoes in it, and a coat that doesn’t go. One of my false eyelashes will come unstuck on the bus. I will appear in at least 170 photos in the act of hitching up my dress, then spill kebab juice down it on the way home. That, ladies, is how I do occasion dressing.

So I hope Ms Sevigny wasn’t too distraught after her fashion faux-pas. After all, there’s nothing like a big shiny award to distract from a dress disaster – if I can somehow get myself nominated fro a Brit, maybe that will be my next trick.



Features, Gallery, vintage

Gallery: Traditional vintage bags, scarves and shoes

By Andrea Petrou on January 20th, 2010

We love a bit of traditional vintage here at ShinyStyle. Not only does it mean we’re more than likely to be the only ones holding that handbag at a party, but we also love the buzz of hunting through stores and now online to find those perfect vintage items.

With the credit crunch still lurking we also think vintage has never been better with many gems being picked up for half their original prices.

We’ve therefore scouted the net to find you some traditional vintage bags, scarves and other items, but you’ll have to be quick off the mark with this gallery as once the one of a kind items are gone, they’re gone.

Click on the picture below to begin the gallery.



Features, Gallery, Handbags, Trend Alert

Gallery: Smaller handbags to fit in with this season’s key trends

By Andrea Petrou on January 15th, 2010

With the news that 2010 will see a smaller handbag trend, we’ve emptied our huge bags of all the old clothes, perfumes and note books and begun looking for smaller pastures new.

There is a huge range of smaller bags on the market today and if you can’t quite get over having to carry around the bare minimum you will still be able to get away with a medium sized tote.

We’ve put together a range of smaller daytime bags to help you get this season’s style with ease.

Click on the picture below to begin the gallery.



Features, Opinion

How to wear your undies in style in 2010

By Andrea Petrou on January 14th, 2010

Lady Gaga introduces pants as outerwear

Lauren Bravo writes.
Fashion folk have a great deal of influence, let’s admit it. It’s an admirable feat, the way they can get together, season after season, and persuade us our lives will be significantly enhanced if we only wear velvet pantaloons. Or clogs. Or weave our own hair into a sou’wester.

They do a far better job of earning our trust and discipleship than most politicians. “You know what would look really great?” they say, “a parka covered in sequins.” “Don’t be ridiculous,” we reply. Then three months later, as if out of nowhere, we suddenly think, “Hmm. I’d really like a sequinned parka. In fact, I’d love a sequinned parka. In FACT, I’m not sure how I ever got by without one.”

But they are not infallible. Sometimes, quite regularly in fact, they fail to convince us. There are those trends that seem to resurface in the catwalk reports year, and every year we ignore them. Midi skirts are one. Crimped hair is another. Tuxedos, jodhpurs, dark purple lipstick. Wide-legged jeans have had a good stab at it, but despite the fash pack’s best efforts they’re still being suppressed by the almighty power of the skinny. And then there’s my favourite, the trend they’ve been pushing since Madonna first hoisted herself into the bullet bra: Underwear as Outerwear.

Perhaps I’ve just crossed over and joined the ranks of the optimistic style writers, but I actually think 2010 might be the year this trend sticks. It’s been gathering speed for a while – there were Sienna’s big pants, back in 2007, which didn’t win many fans but did at least keep her kidneys warm. Then Lady Gaga took the look and ran with it, realising that the key to successfully going out in your knicks is to wear something stupid on your head as a distraction.

Meanwhile, everyone from Rhianna to Taylor Momsen has been snapped with their stockings and suspenders on show. And embellished bustiers are working their way seductively onto the high street, as a stylish update on the old lacy-bra-under-a-white-shirt getup so beloved of glamour models. So far, so saucy. But, and we all know this is the acid test, can we get away with the underwear trend in the queue at Tesco? Without being shielded behind the anorak of a concerned pensioner?

I believe it boils down to three basic guidelines:

1. Make it look intentional.
The reason Sienna’s tights-and-spanx combo failed was because it didn’t look like a deliberate outfit choice. It looked like someone had stolen her skirt, potentially a bully after a PE lesson. If the pants had been sequinned, or gold, or had ‘Diva’ written across the cheeks in diamantes, we would have known she was serious and it all would have been ok.

2. Know your audience.
This trend is a rarity among high fashion crazes, in that men like it. Of course they do, you’re wearing your bra in Wetherspoons. Whether this matters to you or not is naturally dependent on your relationship status, orientation, level of strident feminism and ability to take as good as you get when walking past building sites – but still, it’s something to be considered. Personally I’d advise that on male-centric occasions (particularly those featuring Dads, uncles, bosses or bank managers) you forgo the whalebone corset for something more demure. Like a lacy slip that might be a dress or might be a nightie. Or long johns.

3. Don’t skimp.
For those of you thinking “EXCELLENT, I already own underwear! What a recession-friendly trend!” I’m afraid I have to burst your bargainous bubble. Greying M&S scanties do not fulfil the fashion brief (pun intended). The trick to this look is that while it sells itself as underwear, it isn’t really underwear like any mortal ever wears. It needs to be spangled, or showgirly or structured within an inch of its life. So unless you’re Dita Von Teese or Jessica Rabbit, you’re going to need to buy new things. Sorry.

So there we are, let me know how you get on. And if you can’t cope with flashing your undies, there’s always the woven hair hat to try. I’m off to buy a sequinned parka. Goodbye.



Beauty, Celebrity Style, Features, Gallery, Health

Gallery: Pale and proud celebrities

By Andrea Petrou on January 14th, 2010

When we first reported on the sunbed ban bill, we bought you a gallery of super tanned celebrities to show you how ridiculous many look when they over do it on radiation machines.

Therefore, with the news that pale Nicola Roberts is supporting the campaign we thought it only right to give you a gallery of pale celebs, who clearly show you don’t need a tan to be beautiful.

Click on the picture below to begin the gallery.



Features, Gallery

Gallery: Keep your fingers toasty in the snow with a pair of fashionable gloves

By Andrea Petrou on January 13th, 2010

Just as we thought the snow was retreating, we’ve been hit by another burst of the(now) pesky weather. And it’s set to continue.

Last week we bought you a gallery of the top wellington boots to help you get to work in the snow, and with the flakes still falling today we decided that a glove gallery was in order. After all, scraping snow off windscreens in bare hands is painfully hard, as well as throwing snowballs or waiting for delayed public transport without any protection.

We’ve therefore put together a range of fun and fashionable gloves to keep your fingers toasty wherever you are.



Features, Footwear, Gallery

Fashionable and fun slippers to keep your feet toasty this winter

By Andrea Petrou on January 12th, 2010

Don’t worry we’re not getting all granny style on you, but with the winter weather making socks and tights soggy, we all many of you want to do when you get home after the wet and long commute is slip your feet into something warm and cosy (go on admit it).

Slippers have become an essential part of the winter wardrobe for many of us, and comapnies have woken up to this with even top brands such as (dare we say it) Uggs producing a range of this comforting footwear.

We’ve put together a gallery of fashionable, quirky and novelty slippers that will have your feet sighing with delight after a hard day in the office. However, wearing them out to the local shops a la many celebs is still a fashion no no in our book.

Click on the picture below to begin the gallery.



Features, Opinion

Why leggings are slowly becoming the bane of the fashion world

By Andrea Petrou on January 8th, 2010

Kelly.jpgLauren Bravo writes:
Rules are made to be broken, that’s how the old adage goes. And so it normally is in fashion, where rules like ‘blue and green should never be seen’ and ‘steer clear of horizontal stripes’ have been broken with such regularity that they now exist only in quaint 1930s books and the occasional WI meeting. We start kicking against clothing regulations early on in life with school uniform, rolling our waistbands over and making our ties short and stubby as a low-maintenance way of sticking it to the Man.

Then later it all becomes a bit more relevant, when we stop earning house points and start earning style points. Fashion rules are thrown at us from all directions, each with the promise it will deliver that magical word, “flattering” (and those even more magical ones, “thin”, “young” and “almost a bit like Scarlett Johansson”). I say they’re thrown from all directions, but of course it’s largely whatever direction Trinny and Susannah happen to have been standing in – though they’ve fallen off the radar in recent years, to this day I still hear them shrieking “Deep Vs! Three-quarter sleeves! Put DOWN the polo neck!” every time I go shopping.

But this is all a very round-about way of bringing up a delicate topic. Which is, not to beat around the, um, bush or anything: crotches. Crotches seem suddenly to have risen to new prominence in our society, and I think they need attention. No, hang on, the ISSUE needs attention. The crotches need as little attention as possible.

The problem began about four years back, when leggings made their triumphant return to our wardrobes. It was an unlikely lycra renaissance for a generation who remember our mums in them not so long ago, but leggings managed to be one of the most dominant trends of the noughties. Their appeal was based, initially, on coverage; thicker than tights, we could wear long tops as ‘dresses’ and pelmets as ‘skirts’ without shame of reproof. They were the get-out-of-slutty-free card. And they were warm to boot.

But their service to us was part of a fashion deal – to avoid making the same mistakes our mothers did, leggings had to be worn with more caution this time round. The unspoken rule, or at least so I understood it, was this: we had to keep the crotch covered at all times. Whether with tunics, dresses, shorts or skirts, leggings had to stay layered beneath things. It just made good sense. I thought we were all agreed.

Apparently not. For all of a sudden, across the nation, hemlines are rising and crotches are emerging. People are wearing leggings with t-shirts. With blouses. With cropped tops even. Whether it’s deliberate fashion anarchy or just that everybody has forgotten the rule, I’m not sure. Or perhaps it’s because, in these times of recessionista thrift, we can now pass off three millimetres of clingy spandex as “trousers”, like they used to make birthday cakes out of hat boxes in the war. Perhaps.

Either way, I feel something needs to be said. It’s one of those rare looks that is as unappealing on short and tall, curvy and skinny alike. Not that I’m electing myself as the anti-crotch front, running around the streets handing out aprons to protect women’s dignity – if the crotch-bearing is a conscious act, I have no right to interfere. But somehow I don’t think it IS conscious. I think something has wandered off course somewhere in the grand scheme of trend development, and we need to get it back on course. So I’m going to say it once more, in a very loud, clear voice, and then sit back and hope it takes some effect. Ahem . PUT. THE CROTCHES. AWAY.

(I’d like to apologise for the number of times I’ve had to use the word ‘crotch’ in this article. But it could have been worse. At least I never said ‘cameltoe’)




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