Samedi 20 mars 2010 6 20 /03 /Mars /2010 06:33

Jan. 19--"I thought it would be fun to kick off the new year with a party," said stylist and fashion journalist Jess James, Wilmington's "Style Girl."

The celebration is a launch party for the re-branding of The Fashion Fix, a weekly e-mail newsletter that spotlights emerging designers and talks about style trends on a national level while bringing them into local focus.

At the party, the new look of The Fashion Fix, created tiffany earrings on sale B Branded, will be revealed and guests can sip champagne, taste treats courtesy of the Dessert Divas, get their pictures snapped in a photo booth set up by Full Sail Photography and witness a live performance by emerging local singer Bibis Ellison.

"It'll be a fun fashion celebration," James said.

Plus, the party participant deemed "best choose tiffany earrings" will win a $50 gift card from the Hallelu boutique.

About 5,000 people get The Fashion Fix each week, James said, most of them in Wilmington but about 300 in Raleigh and 500 in Charleston. (To sign up, go to www.StyleGirlJessJames.com.)

One of her goals with the new version is to bring the three cities tiffany for sale together, at least in a style sense, by introducing readers to designers, stores and style-related events in each market.

Earlier this year, for example, the owner of the Revolver boutique in Raleigh saw earrings by Wilmington designer Lucia Silver in a video James shot. Because of that, Silver's earrings wound up in Revolver.

James said she's looking to increase those types of happenings with the new Fashion Fix, as well as continuing to focus on fashion, beauty and home and spotlighting style within the artistic community.

Par bzdqsm
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Vendredi 19 mars 2010 5 19 /03 /Mars /2010 06:56

NEW YORK, Jan. 20 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- The YMA Fashion Scholarship Fund (FSF) raised over $1.4 million Wednesday, January 13th at the 2010 FSF Geoffrey Beene Fashion Scholarship Awards Dinner. One hundred and ten of the nation's top fashion students were awarded $670,000 in scholarships. The 110 students, comprised of the FSF Class of 2009 and 2010, were given $5,000 each. Eight of the premiere students from the FSF Class of 2009 walked away with $120,000 graciously provided by the Geoffrey Beene Gives Back(R) Foundation.

Hosted by style expert and fashion personality, Mary Alice Stephenson, 110 fashion students from across the country were introduced before a sold out crowd at Cipriani Forty Second Street, New York City. These students made their grand cheap earrings to Jay Z's "Empire State of Mind", much to the delight of 790+ leading executives in attendance from the fashion and beauty industries.

"It was the Superbowl of the fashion industry," proclaimed President of the FSF Ken Wyse. "So many of the key players were there from retail, wholesale, menswear, womenswear and children's wear, as well as the fragrance and cosmetics industries. Clearly, the energy and excitement was stimulated by an extraordinary group of 110 young scholars who will provide the fuel, energy and vision for the future. It was inspirational, elegant and most importantly made all of us feel good about the future of our industry."

Honored at this year's FSF Dinner Gala were three leaders of industry chosen for their commitment to education and positive impact and influence on the business of fashion, beauty retail, wholesale and design. The 2010 FSF Honorees included Margarita Arriagada, Senior Vice President of Merchandising at Sephora, Thomas A. Kingsbury, President & CEO of Burlington Coat Factory and Robert L. Mettler, former Chairman & tiffany Macy's West. Mettler, a noted philanthropist, was the FSF's second ever Lifetime Achievement Award Recipient. Arriagada, Kingsbury and Mettler were each presented their honors by David Sultineau (President & CEO, Sephora USA), W. Paul Jones (CEO, Shopko), and Jeff Gennette (Chief Merchandising Officer, Macy's Inc.) respectively.

This year's FSF Geoffrey Beene National Scholarship Award winners included: Alexandra Dumas (Washington University in St. Louis), Ashly Juskus (Fashion Institute of Technology), Kasia Wisniewsky (Pratt Institute) and Lisa Cohen (University of Pennsylvania, Wharton School) each winning $25,000. The 4 remaining finalists including: Alana Abisdris (Syracuse University), Becca Murrow (Indiana University), Kiara Walker (Parsons the New School for Design) and Michael Lin (Otis College of Art and Design) each won an additional $5,000. All 8 finalists were featured in a Madwood Studios produced video presentation created cheap key rings Flip Video UltraHD(TM) cameras.

Event highlights included: the highest recorded attendance rate for a charity event in Cipriani history, performances by Young Arts' Ernest Felton Baker II and Grace Weber and Cipriani Forty Second Street's first ever music video entertainment ensemble featuring artists like: Frank Sinatra, Diana Ross, George Michael, Barbara Streisand and The Jackson 5, created by Michael Flutie and Madwood Studios for dinner and dessert entertainment.

The 2010 FSF Geoffrey Beene Fashion Scholarship Awards Dinner was the second highest revenue-generating event in the FSF's seventy-three year history and was graciously underwritten by Geoffrey Beene Gives Back(R).

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Jeudi 18 mars 2010 4 18 /03 /Mars /2010 04:51

Q: I've seen fingerless gloves in music videos, on [Chanel designer] Karl Lagerfeld and a lot of cool club kids. I am 38 and I am slim and youthful. I wear short black dresses and tights and everybody agrees I look good in them. But when I wore fingerless gloves on New Year's Eve, a couple told me this was a style for teenagers and for MTV. I love the fingerless gloves. What do you think?

W.F., New York City

A: Nowadays there are no longer hard-and-fast rules on age-appropriate dressing. If you've maintained a fit figure and a hip attitude, you'll be able to rock many youthful styles well into your 40s, including two-piece swimsuits, stiletto heels, silver cufflinks jeans, short skirts and strapless dresses.

Ah, but where to draw the line? Take a hard look in a three-way mirror and make an honest assessment. Factor in outside opinions, preferably from other secure fashionistas around your age. If you feel the least bit like an "old fool" in something you're wearing, take it off.

Fingerless gloves have emerged as a downtown fashion accessory, taking the style beyond its utilitarian use--to keep your sweaty palms dry when you're gripping handlebars or gym equipment. The fingerless trend began as an edgy rocker look, popularized by Madonna in the mid-1980s. More silver key rings, the fingerless style icon is none other than septuagenarian Karl Lagerfeld, with his fingerless gloves, skinny black jeans and white-haired ponytail. Fashion aside, if you're outdoors in cold weather, texting away on your cellphone, fingerless gloves are the height of practicality.

I believe that only certain people--far from the majority--have a "glove personality," that is, a real flair and comfort level when it comes to wearing gloves. But even if you don't, you can find a look that suits you. Experiment with all kinds of tiffanys gloves--with or without fingers--including short and elbow lengths, styles with gauntlets (cuffs that flare out), lacy fabrics and leathers in every shade.

Par bzdqsm
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Mercredi 17 mars 2010 3 17 /03 /Mars /2010 04:40

A clutch is one of those things that will be around for a while. They're tiffany so classic, really -- I've got clutches from the '30s, in that envelope style that's really simple and not too overdone. This one is part of the silver bracelets that I just designed for Longchamp, and you can actually stuff a load of things in it and bash it around. The leather is textured to look like shagreen, which I love. Most bags are too heavy to carry things in, and so many of them are stiff, and you know it's going to take years to mess them up. I like things that are already worn in, something tactile that's going to be comfortable on your skin. When I was working on the cheap rings, I showed it to my daughter, but she's a bit -- you know. She just said, "Yeah, it's all right." She prefers bling and Hello Kitty. She says she doesn't like Hello Kitty anymore, but I know she really does. I mean, I love it, too. I just nabbed her Hello Kitty makeup bag, in fact. What can I say? I like a mismatch. Kate Moss, as told to Alexandra Marshall

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Mardi 16 mars 2010 2 16 /03 /Mars /2010 04:51

You flew all the way down here from New York just to come to this place?" says the guy behind the counter at the Marni outlet in Orlando, Fla., incredulous that two women of seemingly reasonable intelligence -- this would be me and my friend tiffanys -- would travel a thousand miles to chase a bargain on a saggy sack dress or a cashmere sweater with elbow patches.

But hey, did anyone question Jack Kerouac and Neal Cassady when they crossed the country in search of hot chicks and enlightenment? They may have trekked in service of the dharma, but Laura and I -- and thousands of other women just like us -- are members of another powerful cult, one that worships the oddly charming Italian clothes, sort of a cross between Raggedy Ann on a bender and Sophia Loren in "Two Women," that bear the Marni label.

I've never been to Orlando before, but I like what I see as soon as I alight from the plane: lots of people are wearing mouse ears, which (1) are kind of cute and (2) suggest that the wearers are in most cases not in Orlando planning to spend $900 on a muslin Marni blouse.

By the time we rent a car at the airport (cheap key rings has many good points -- the glorious weather and the Marni outlet, to name two -- but a comprehensive public transportation system is not among them), check into our rooms at the Marriott (four times as big as the hugest rooms in Europe, but no room service) and cross the four-lane highway to the mall, it is 2 p.m. and we are quivering with anticipation. Not for us the humongous Dressbarn. No time for the kiosks selling twirling metal things called wind spinners. (Don't get me one for my birthday, O.K.?) Finally, in the distance, we spy the pristine sign cheap money clips the five little letters we are seeking.

Who would believe that nine hours and thousands of dollars could evaporate so quickly? By 11 p.m., when Marni shuts its doors, we have between us accumulated two vast pleated smock dresses, a coat that looks as if its sleeves were chopped off in a horrible accident, a cashmere sweater thick enough for Wasilla (maybe not the most useful item for Orlando), a green leather jacket with a gray lining borrowed from a sweatshirt, a yellow skirt with a curious flared back and, well, some other stuff, all at least 50 percent off the list price. (So what if fancy New York department stores offer Marni at similar end-of-season discounts? Does Bergdorf's have a food court? Can you get a wind spinner at Barneys?)

The next morning, over a repast of croissants and Tater Tots -- two basic food groups! -- in the Marriott breakfast room, Laura and I both experience that hideous affliction known as buyer's remorse. To paraphrase Sandra Bullock when she takes the football kid shopping in "The Blind Side," "You will never like something as much as you like it in the store." (Yes, I saw it. It was Thanksgiving night. Don't give me a hard time.)

Seems that Laura and I were both up at 4 a.m. in our respective rooms, trying on our new clothes and thinking that perhaps a little judicious editing, a soupcon of restraint, might have been in order. But wait, what's this? Another reason to love Orlando! I happen to glance at my rather extensive receipt and note this magical message on the bottom: "Seven days. Exchanges only." Suddenly the idea of swapping a marigold skirt for a purse that looks as if it's made from porch-furniture upholstery is glowing as brightly as the tip of Neal Cassady's reefer.

The staff at the still-empty Marni shop greets us like long-lost relatives, and five minutes later we're half-naked in the familiar dressing rooms. Desperately confused and with time running short -- my plane leaves in six hours -- I cast around for guidance. Should I add a few thousand more and buy a fur jacket that looks as if it had been stitched together by a second grader in a sewing class run by Tracey Emin?

In the end, I pretty much stick with my original stash: after a certain point -- say, 14 hours of unrelieved shopping -- all faux-naif embroidered sweaters begin to look alike. Which is not to say I'm unhappy with my purchases. So why is it that, cramming my huge white Marni shopping bags in the overhead compartment on the flight home,

I am momentarily jealous of my fellow travelers, light as air and with only a pair of mouse ears and a wind spinner to remind them of their sojourn south?

Par bzdqsm
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