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It was a weekend of air kisses, heels and of course fashion as celebs turned up for numerous shows at London Fashion Week.
Black dresses and tights were the chosen outfits for Agy Deyn and Lily Allen who turned up to support Henry Holland’s show, while Pixie Geldof went for her trademark stripe dress and tights for the same event.
Paloma Faith also opted for a rather toned down black frock and tights (we’re seeing a trend here) for the PPQ show, while Pamela Anderson went all out in a multicoloured sheer frock for the Vivienne Westwood show.
Matthew Williamson also, as expected, attracted a few celebrities with Cat Deeley (who opted for thigh high boots and a tasselled top) and Sienna Miller (who went for black jeans and beige shoes) and Julain Macdonald was supported by the likes of Elle Macpherson – in trademark black and Rachel Stevens who showed off her baby bump in a cute leopard print frock.
See the gallery below for all the star style and keep reading for our catwalk highlights.
It’s been a while since we did a round-up all the celebrities we’ve spotted out and about in London town. However, we’re pleased to say the series is back.
And we’re also really pleased that we’ve kicked started it with some great celebrity spots.
First on our list is the gorgeous Kate Winslet who we spied coming out of her hotel looking casual in skinny jeans, silver ballet pumps and a black blazer. Nicola Roberts also wowed us earlier today in casual wear at the Harrods launch of her new make-up range Dainty Doll, where she opted for a cute grey tee tucked into a gorgeous pale pink maxi dress.
However we think the “most casual” award goes to one Billie Piper who was snapped in a lime green dressing gown. Although we’d like to say that this was because she was channelling a new trend (we wish we could go out in our PJs) we feel we should point out that she was actually on set of Secret Diary of a Call Girl.
But it wasn’t all casual in the world of celebrity. Last night the Sugababes jazzed it up stepping out in Nobu looking great in bodycon dresses, while Holly Valance vamped up the animal print trend in leopard print leggings, knee high boots and a blazer. However, we’re not quite sure if we like this oufit or not.
Pale has become the new “tanned” with many of us shunning the orange streaky look in favour for our natural glow. Previous icons such as orangutan Katie Price and streaky Paris Hilton have been replaced with pale natural beauties including Nicola Roberts, who today launched her new make-up range, Dainty Doll, for girls with fair complexions at Harrods today.
The Girls Aloud starlet, looked gorgeous in a cute “Doll” motif tee, which she tucked into a pink satin maxi skirt. She finished her look with striking red lips and and eye make-up.
‘The reason behind me doing this is because I had a point of difference and that was because of the pale skin and it was something I obviously felt really passionate about,’ the Girls Aloud singer told Grazia.
‘I was aware that there weren’t many make up brands that catered for women for extra pale skin so I feel proud that I’ve been the person to do it.’
Last night celebs were once again out in force enjoying the summer weather and it seems the girl bands were out in force. The Saturdays singers Frankie Sanford and Mollie King stepped out of the Mayfair Hotel – Frankie in jeans and a white tassel top and Mollie in a cute lace top with shorts and skyscraper heels – to enjoy a night out in London. They were followed by Sugababe singer Amelle Barrabah who, like Frankie opted for skinny jeans, which she teamed up with a short white off the shoulder top.
Also going for the skinny jeans look was a teeny tiny Nicola Roberts from Girls Aloud who teamed tup her denim with cute ballet shoes and a short sleeved jacket.
Across the other side of London Bollywood star Aishwarya Rai Bachchan went for a traditional sari for the London premier of Raavan, while Sophie Anderton went for a mish mash of a bright cowel neck dress, fishnet tights and boots, which worked perfectly.
As 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.
Nicola Roberts has hit back at people who claim she’s been starving herself and is too thin.
The Girls Aloud singer said her size 6 frame was natural and not because of her diet.
She told Closer magazine: “Everyone keeps talking about my weight, which I find so ridiculous.
“I’m a size 6 and I’m not ashamed of that – I have a naturally small frame and it’s the way I’ve always been. I’ve not been starving myself or exercising every day.”
We’re not sure what to beleive when it comes to stars claiming their tiny figures, afterall Nicole Ritchie claimed for years she was “healthy”. However a source close to the group claimed “all the girls do eat.” We’ll just have to wait and see.
Lauren Bravo writes: Auburn. Copper. Flame-haired. Carrot-top. Titian. Marmalade. Or just plain ginger. Whatever you call it, there’s no escaping it right now. Red hair is having a moment.
Such is the audacious nature of the fashion industry that it can commandeer a naturally-occurring ratio involving high levels of pigment pheomelanin and low levels of pigment eumelanin (thanks Wikipedia) and make it a ‘trend’ – it’s sort of weirdly akin to making massive noses fashionable, or declaring that this season, it’s all about people who can roll their tongues. Yar boo sucks to you, non-rollers! But then, as I’ve been hammering home for a few weeks now, fashion is mental. So we must accept and celebrate; and boy, do the redheads deserve it.
As flagrant and unjustified as any other form of colour prejudice, ‘gingerism’ still somehow manages to slip under the net of censorship . In November 2008, a 14-year-old boy was investigated for hate crimes after his ‘Kick a Ginger’ facebook group attracted almost 5000 members, while last December Tesco were forced to stop selling a Christmas card that read “Santa loves all kids. Even the ginger ones” after a furore of complaints from offended customers. It’s about time, then, that a ginger style resurgence tipped the scales the other way.
Of course, there’s a whole host of redheaded role models to turn to for inspiration. In music, red is rapidly becoming the go-to colour to display a bit of individuality in a sea of Pixie Lottealikes. There is no better example than Nicola Roberts, whose swanlike transformation over the last couple of years has been a fantastic tribute to the power of pussy bows and staying pale (see also: Emma Pilsbury, Glee). And for those of us who didn’t climb out of the right gene pool, there’s just as good an impetus to fake it – when Florence Welch took to the stage at the Brits on Tuesday night, she had a nation of mousy women mentally reaching for the Schwarzkopf.
Look too at all the sexy ginger cartoon characters that the world of entertainment has produced over the years. Wilma Flintstone. Daphne from Scooby Doo. Jessica Rabbit. Lois Griffin in Family Guy. Arial in The Little Mermaid. Princess Fiona in Shrek. The colour is synonymous with sass. The blonde girl gets tied to the railway tracks, the redhead is the one who cuts her free and kicks her captor in the balls. From Boudica to Elizabeth I to Anne of Green Gables, the association between flaming follicles and a fiery temperament is ingrained in cultural history. But where blondes and brunettes have for years been shoe-horned into stereotypes – one fun-loving and frivolous, the other sultry and smart – redheads provide an intriguing alternative, characterised most by a passionate unpredictability.
Meanwhile, in the world of fashion titian hair tends to denote otherworldliness – think of Lily Cole’s china doll features, or Karen Elson’s sexy alien aesthetic. Then there’s Grace Coddington, formidable Creative Director of US Vogue and the unassuming star of last year’s documentary The September Issue. As you so often find with those in the very upper echelons of the fashion industry, she dresses as though she doesn’t like clothes – next to Anna Wintour’s pin-neat tailored dresses and cardigans, Coddington’s baggy black shirts and trousers make her look like a ‘before’ on How to Look Good Naked. But her creativity is evident nonetheless; it’s in her hair. A sheet of electric auburn frizz, it is the hair of a Pre-Raphaelite model, not a runway model. And by being quite determinedly anti-fashion, it somehow manages to be the most fashionable hair out there.
You’d be forgiven for thinking that for redheads, the world of style is fraught with potential faux-pas. Don’t wear pink! Don’t wear orange! Steer clear of red lipstick! And blusher! Don’t wear anything too bold, your head is bright enough… but don’t dress all in black either, you’ll look like a secondary school drama teacher. In fact, best just stick to green. Wear as much green as you can get your hands on. But try to avoid looking too much like Christmas. Good luck!
But like any supposed style ‘rule’, these are made to be trampled on. As the former flatmate of three redheaded women, I know they can rock whatever colour they choose to (except maybe yellow – but then no one can wear yellow). As my titian friend Tara puts it, “Being ginger is great, if you’re prepared to stand out. It’s a permanent accessory, a bit like constantly wearing an outlandish hat… Of course, if you get bored you can always put an actual hat on.” Meanwhile, my Australian friend Meg claims the secret to her redhead happiness was learning to stay pale in a country full of mahogany tans. “I got second degree burns one summer when I was 10, and had to face the fact that sunblock was going to be a big part of my life. Once you accept that, you can get on with making the most of being a rarity.”
And there is nothing fashion loves more than a rarity. It’s official – this season, a recessive gene on chromosome 16 is the new black.
Nicola Roberts steps out looking demure in a simple off white dress and a cinched skinny belt, as she heads to dinner at Nobu with her boyfriend.
The Girl’s Aloud singer, who has been working with politicians and campaigning for a UK sunbed ban for under 18′s and whose TV documentary, highlighting the dangers of excessive tanning, was aired last night, looked stunning in the frock that matched her naturally pale skin tone perfectly.
Team up an off white dress with a pastel coloured belt, along with bright lipstick to add a touch of colour and style to an otherwise simple look.
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.
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Last year we told you about a proposed private members bill, which would ban under 18s in England and Wales from using sunbeds, and we’re pleased to see we’re not the only ones backing the cause.
Last night Girl’s Aloud member Nicola Roberts also put her weight behind the campaign being proposed by Cardiff North’s MP Julie Morgan.
Speaking about her personal experiences the pale red head admitting had felt pressured to have a tan when she was a youngster.
“I was once in a place where I did feel a pressure to have a tan – having a tan made me feel more attractive, it made me feel more accepted and as a young girl being very influenced by peers, by media, by everybody in society, that was just the way I felt… without having a tan I didn’t feel attractive, I just didn’t feel very good at all,” she said.
It is thought that 6 per cent of 11- to 17-year-olds in England have used sunbeds – usually coin-operated, unsupervised, and charging as little as 30p per minute. This figurerises to 20 per cent in Liverpool.
From:Pictures: 2012 British Soap Awards - Best dressed, Michelle Keegan, Jennifer Metcalf and more