Posts Tagged ‘summer’

Features, Festivals, Gallery, Trend Alert

ShinyStyle loves: Fringed fashion

By emilyborrett on August 23rd, 2011

Jessie J wore a quirky lilac-fringed bodysuit for her performance at V Festival

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If you’re sad that summer is pretty much over now and you’d like to cling on to your louche, festival-style outfits as much longer as possible, it’s worth taking note of the summer’s fringing trend which will happily still be wearable when winter comes. We spotted more than a couple of artists rocking the trend at V Festival over the weekend, as Jessie J wore a quirky eighties-inspired bodysuit with purple fringed sleeves for a dramatic take on dancewear and Katy B teamed black skinny jeans and a band T-shirt with her fringed black cardigan for a 70s hard rock look.

Wild West-influenced styles are huge for this Autumn/Winter, a look that fringing and tasselled pieces will fit into nicely. For wrapping up warm you could try Urban Outfitter’s amazing plaid hooded cape with tassels (checks and tartan are massive this season too) and team with a little dress and opaque tights for a snug and chic back-to-school look. Or if you want to go a bit more down the evening-wear route try a showgirl-style fringed dress like the amazingly sexy dip-dyed red one that we found at Rare – big earrings and some simple high-heeled sandals will make you look like a glamorous heiress.

Of course, if you’re tentative when it comes to the idea of head-to-toe fringing and can’t get the image of Dolly Parton out of your head, a simple fringed bag or accessory can add a touch of laidback bohemian cool to an outfit. We love ASOS’ black fringed hoop earrings – so Edie Sedgwick.

Check out the gallery for our favourite fringed pieces on the high street.



Celebrity Style

Nicole Richie owns over 200 pairs of sunglasses

By Andrea Petrou on April 19th, 2011

Nicole Richie owns over 200 pairs of sunglasses.

The reality TV star-turned-designer – whose House of Harlow accessories line carries the eyewear – is often voted one of the world’s most stylish women and admits she has a huge number of shades to help accessorise her fashionable outfits.

She told Teen Vogue magazine: “I view them as fun masks to accessorise your face. In my defence, I make sunglasses, so I have to research-shop, and I own every pair I’ve ever designed.”

Nicole is well known for her signature bohemian look and says she relies on extras to transform her wardrobe staples of jeans and a T-shirt into something special.

She explained: “You change the look with accessories. And by accessories, I mean sunglasses, head scarves, shoes, bed jackets.

“I’m always missing that in-between layer. On the West Coast, you don’t need a full jacket, but you want something more than just a tank.”

The designer also creates footwear but says because she is only 5ft 2in she is more interested in comfort than style.

She said: “Comfort takes precedence for me. These are super-high, but because they have a built-in platform, they don’t feel like it.

“I am not that girl who can do super-arched heels. All the shoes I design have a cushion and a platform.”



Affordable Fashions, Gallery

One to watch: Alice Nightingale on Etsy.com

By emilyborrett on July 8th, 2010

I’ve recently been introduced to the joyous world of Etsy.com, an online community for those with a knack for making and selling their own creations. Being an arts and crafts nut myself (I’m so old before my time) I was in heaven looking at what the site had to offer. You can buy almost anything on Etsy, from bespoke artwork to kitchenware to home-made dresses for your dogs – there’ll be a “how to dress your pets” feature soon if I get my way – but the one seller that really stood out to me today was Australian fashion graduate Alice Nightingale, who describes her work as “inspired by everything glamorous about yesteryear, from dames and dandies to mods and stars of the silver screen”.

Despite the clear vintage inspirations behind the clothes, they’re anything but old fashioned – the use of ice cream colours and sweet gingham prints are very similar to those seen on the Christopher Kane runways at the moment. Very much like the cute little sundresses that you see celebrities such as Fearne Cotton and Daisy Lowe stepping out in, they’re perfect for a British summer of cream teas, pub gardens and picnics in the sunshine. If you see something you like, get it quick as they tend be one-offs or made in very limited numbers. To snap up an Alice Nightingale original, visit her shop on Etsy here or her official website here.

Click below for some of my favourite Alice Nightingale pieces.



Fashion Tips, Features

How to wear: the New Boho

By laurenbravo on April 11th, 2010

RiverIsland2.jpgLauren Bravo writes:

When I was 14, dressing, as it is wont to do at that age, fell into two camps. You were a Townie or a Grunger. That was the choice. Trackie top or a Nirvana hoodie. End of.

My friends decided, as right-on, proactive kind of women, that we deserved more choice. So we invented a third option (I’d like to think Emmeline Pankhurst would have been proud). That option was Boho. We put teeny plaits in our hair, we wore floral-sprigged gypsy tops and corduroy loon pants, we made each other necklaces out of beads. We were the revolutionaries of Davison High School for Girls. Peace.

But the result of our bout of fashion adventurousness is that, like a lot of things you overdo when you’re 14, any mention of boho since has made me shudder. When Sienna Miller did her bit for the cause, with her floaty skirts and Uggs, I looked the other way. When maxi dresses returned with a swishy vengeance in 2007, I bought them and hacked the skirts back to a vampish length.

But when Marni’s models took to the Milan catwalk for S/S 2010 in their floaty dresses with mismatched cardigans, leggings and flat sandals, I felt something. A twinge, deep inside, that seemed to say ‘you’re ready again’.

It should be easier this time round. For starters, there won’t be a bully to follow me round on non-uniform days shouting ‘freak’ until I cry in the hockey cupboard. And this time round, the clothes are so much more enticing. This isn’t the same old boho; this is the new boho.

Part of the problem last time, and the time before, and perhaps every time hippie fashion has emerged since its inception in the ’60s, is that it was so anti-fashion. With its wafty silhouette and high comfort factor, it quite literally lacked edge. There was no oomph, no pow, no whiff of the alpha fashion female. But this time, boho has toughened up its act. It’s about throwing a tailored jacket over the hippie-drippy florals, or teaming a peasant dress with a pair of shoes that say ‘never seen a field in my life.’

Where previous incarnations of the boho babe languished in meadows like a Flake advert, 2010′s is more active. She’s a cowgirl. She cracks a whip, she climbs hills, she milks things. And every once in a while, she tarts herself up and goes to a hoedown. Even better, this time round the look is far more applicable beyond Glastonbury. It can be transferred from the field to a Hoxton bar, to the office, to winter, even.

So what does the new boho look like? There are three key words: Stomp. Swish. And Smoosh. Firstly the stomp has to be there, and most likely in the footwear department. The softly-softly fluff of the Ugg doesn’t cut it anymore – this time the look comes with a newfound utility vibe, which means army boots, Doc Martens, clunky sandals or clogs. Something that could do some damage to a cow trough. See River Island’s Spring/Summer ’10 collection, above left.

Next there’s swish. This means, as with old boho, that there should be a fabric surplus big enough to make a ration book blush. But thankfully it doesn’t need to be in the old standards, smock tops and gypsy skirts, but instead with tiered dresses, long shirts, petticoats and layering. Maxi lengths still have their place for those who can carry them off, but for the rest of us there is a strong case for leg-bearing. The key is contrast. If one element is voluminous, the other should be fitted. Take last season’s body con dress and sit it back with a floaty top or a slouchy denim shirt, then tie a scarf round your head and go feed the chickens (or go to Tesco, whatever). wenn2704714.jpg

Lastly, there’s smoosh. Because the reason boho has such enduring appeal, season after season, is that it lets us be messy. And not artfully messy, in that choreographed, laquered-over, catwalk way, but genuinely a bit sluttish. It’s the easiest and cheapest way to boho up an old outfit; ditch the hair straighteners and load up on dry shampoo, pile on some mismatched jewellery, cart your tatty old holdall around instead of an evening clutch. Dress sharp, then smoosh it up a bit.

Forget Sienna, Nicole and the Rachel Zoe zombies – the new boho has icons of its own. Look to Zooey Deschanel and Vanessa Hudgens (right) in Hollywood, and Brit musical madames Natasha Khan (aka Bat for Lashes) and Lucinda Belle. Or even better, forget the celeb worship altogether and take your inspiration from films and TV. Mix up Katherine Ross in Butch Cassidy with Katherine Ross in The Graduate, and you’re pretty much there.

And the very best thing about the new boho? This time it comes without a side of pretension. Sienna’s sister Savannah Miller, co-designer of the sisters’ Twenty8Twelve range, once described a ‘true bohemian’ as “someone who has the ability to appreciate beauty on a deep level, is a profound romantic, doesn’t know any limits, whose world is their own creation, rather than living in a box”. I think it’s someone who can wear a tired skirt without looking like a Walton. I’ll let you decide which definition you prefer.

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Designer Fashions, Fashion News

Spring Summer 08 trends: Bright colors

By Andrea Kiliany Thatcher on March 19th, 2008

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As promised, here’s another trend report, this one from Catwalk Queen on bright colors. Or colours. Crazy Brits.

Bright colours have been on the scene for a while as part of the techno trend that’s been popular for the last few season but now there’s a cacophony of colours to mix and match.

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Celebrity Style, Designer Fashions, Fashion News, New York Fashion Week - Gossip

Nicky Hilton makes New York Fashion Week debut with collection Nicholai

By Andrea Thatcher on September 13th, 2007

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Socialite and less-annoying Hilton sister Nicky made her New York Fashion Week debut on Sunday, September 9th with her newest line Nicholai. Sitting in the front row were her beaming parents, hip-hop impresario Russel Simmons, and the ever-shrinking porn superstar Jenna Jameson. With Jameson in the front, the classiness of the line was already put into question before the lights even dimmed. When the models did finally come out, they sauntered down the runway in shiny Palm Beach-style clothing.

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Designer Fashions, Fashion News, New York Fashion Week - Gossip

Diane von Furstenberg expands beyond the wrap-dress for spring

By Andrea Thatcher on September 13th, 2007

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Diane von Furstenberg’s spring 2008 line shocked everyone last weekend in the Bryant Park tents when the wrap dress that made her famous in the 1970s barely made an appearance. Perhaps Furstenberg is learning from her history. She first made it big in the 1970s with her wrap dresses in wild prints, but the designer got too big too fast and couldn’t survive the end of the Studio 54 glitz. She virtually disappeared until 1997, after over a decade’s absence from the fashion world, when she re-launched her line to wild success, becoming the Council of Fashion Designers of America president in 2006.

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Designer Fashions, Models, New Fashions, New York Fashion Week - Gossip

Preen spring/summer ’08 dress on Agyness Deyn

By Andrea Thatcher on September 13th, 2007

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I fell in love with this Preen dress, worn by model Agyness Deyn, after I saw it on Shiny Style’s sister site Catwalkqueen.tv. Their spring/summer collection shown during New York’s fashion week was the London-based fashion house’s American debut. The silvery grey dress above was definitely a show-stopping number. Featuring an incredibly original mixture of futuristic deconstruction with a silky luxurious spin, we can only hope Preen enjoyed their trip to the States, and will set up shop this side of the pond.




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