Thursday, April 27, 2023

She Called Truths Out to Us All’: Lily Cole Remembers Her Friend Vivienne Westwood

Scene: a hotel room in New York, one spring morning in 2013. I’m staring at a photograph of a young soldier with the word TRUTH emblazoned underneath her tentative smile in white font and a red box like a Barbara Kruger, pinned to Vivienne Westwood’s “Climate Revolution” DIY top.

“It’s incredible no one knows who this is. You don’t know who she is?” Vivienne asks me in her soft Derbyshire lilt. She audibly gasps as I shake my head. “It’s amazing. Amazing. I’m here to try and do something about her.” The photograph, I quickly learn, is of whistleblower Chelsea Manning.

Thursday, April 20, 2023

UNIQUE PERSONAL STYLE

 When we begin with a new customer, our first task is to build a framework for their unique sense of personal style. We do this by working with them the to develop an image that feels both authentic to who they are on the inside, as well as representitive of the message they want to convey. This is a very thorough process, and one most commonly used by customers who want to perform at a higher level in their personal and professional lives and recognize the important role that clothing plays in that equation.

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Even if you’re not working with a Personal Stylist, 

our method is one you can most certainly implement on your own. 

Follow the steps below to begin developing your unique sense of 

personal style.

THE CLOTHING WE WEAR IS MORE IMPORTANT THAN WE REALIZE

If you took a survey, most people wouldn’t really be able to tell you 

why they wear what they wear. More often than not, items and styles 

we consider favorable are usually just subconscious choices we’ve 

been making for as long as we can remember. We like them because 

they’re familiar and have become our go-to options, not necessarily 

because they portray an image we intentionally developed. 

improving-professional-image

But whether we have an interest in fashion or not, the clothing we 

wear sends a very loud message about who we are, well before 

we ever open our mouths to speak. Not just to others, but also to 

ourselves, and it’s up to us to decide whether or not we’re going to 

control that narrative. Our personal style doesn’t define our ability 

or what we’re capable of, but it influences how we feel and how 

we’re perceived. Best of all, it’s something that’s completely 

within our control!

HOW OUR IMAGE IMPACTS OUR PERFORMACE

An image that commands authority will look different amongst different 

industries, and will vary between personal preferences. So the notion of 

creating a standard set of dress code rules, or wardrobe must-haves, is a 

pointless exercise. It is the desired outcome that always remains the same: 

how confident we feel optimizing for how successfully we perform.

When it comes to inner confidence, often the right clothing can work like a 

suit of armor to give the extra boost we need to not just look the part, but to 

feel it too, and carry ourselves accordingly. Putting on formal clothing makes 

us feel powerful, and that changes the basic way we see the world and the role 

we play in it.

Our image is one of many tools available to help us succeed in our careers. 

When used correctly, it fosters the ability for us to feel empowered, comfortable 

in our own skin, and above all else – confident.

HOW OUR IMAGE CORRELATES TO PERCEPTION

What we wear may seem like a trivial factor in the bigger picture of our careers, but it’s far more important than we think. Human beings make judgments based on our first impression of a person within 7 seconds of meeting them. This means that whether we’re on a job interview, at a networking event, or in a business meeting, we have just a few seconds to establish ourselves as the successful person we want other people to view us as. 

We all know that the way a person looks and carries themselves matters, becuase it is the first thing other people see. What we don’t pay as much attention to however, is how much it matters. People form strong impressions of us; they do this very quickly and instinctively and with minimal information – all based off of the information WE provide them. How much of that do you think is based on the image we present them with?


Jessica Hart Nails the Front Row Beauty Quick-Change at London Fashion Week

 jessica hart

jessica hart

 
Photo: (From left) Splash News; Getty Images

The sartorial quick-changes backstage at a fashion show may seemingly defy the space-time continuum, but the front row darlings’ transformations are shrouded in even greater mystery. Just look at Jessica Hart, who not only switched outfits between presentations at London Fashion Week today—a trip to the loo housing a stealth glam squad?—but served up a new makeup look to boot.

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The model was spotted at Mary Katrantzou with bright red lips that looked like she popped backstage for a quick makeup job to match the girls on the runway before taking her seat—only to reemerge at Topshop Unique with a ruddy wash of in-from-the-cold blush and nearly-nude lips that were enough to make any endless summer fanatic look forward to sweater weather. But perhaps it was her recently supercharged shade of baby blonde that made all the difference—because once the ideal seasonally defiant shade is achieved, makeup becomes that much more fun.

Nina Khosla during New York Fashion Week

 Forget what’s in and what’s out. Fashion in 2023 isn’t about being on trend so much as it is about having a deeply original sense of personal style. And so, rising designers today go their own way, offering unique looks that suit every individual fashion personality.

fforme spring 2023Love fresh takes on tailoring? Check out Sukeina’s origami folds or Interior’s special buttons. Want something softer? FFORME has your full knitwear wardrobe covered. Feeling sporty? Saul Nash and Private Policy blend performance wear and ready-to-wear into something that transcends both categories. Obsessed with denim? Conner Ives’s laser-printed eco denim and Who Decides War’s embroidered and hand-distressed jeans offer some of the season’s freshest “washes.”

On the subject of handcraft, Diotima does its intricate crochet work with artisan partners in Jamaica, while Palmier makes one-of-a-kind hand-painted skirts in the New York Garment District. Jawara Alleyne and Dauphinette turn deadstock fabric—and a few thrifted china plates—into treasure.

Searching for the perfect unconventional LBD? Look no further than the daring cutouts and delicate strap details at Nensi Dojaka. Or try some of the other excellent body-con options at Theophilio and Ahluwalia.

And, of course, no look is complete without the accessories—like the season’s must-have Cookie Bag from Puppets and Puppets. Whoever you are—and whoever you imagine yourself to be in spring 2023—shop 15 labels we can’t get enough of right now below.

MEL BLES

FFORME

“It’s not fashion but foundations,” FFORME creative director Paul Helbers told BAZAAR of the new architecture-inspired label he launched with industry vet Laura Vazquez and tech entrepreneur Nina Khosla during New York Fashion Week. Helbers—an alum of Louis Vuitton, Maison Margiela, and The Row—has created a perfect capsule wardrobe of modular layering pieces, like elongated oversize T-shirt dresses, ankle pants, sheer ribbed turtlenecks, and knit corsets, in a mostly black-and-white color palette, with subtle washes of pastels. “You could also say the FF stands for ‘female form,’” Helbers said, “because that’s really what we celebrate.”

SHOP FFORME

Vera Sheer Rib Cap Sleeve Top

FFORME Vera Sheer Rib Cap Sleeve Top

new york, new york september 14 a model walks the runway at the theophilio fashion show during september 2022 new york fashion week the shows on september 14, 2022 in new york city photo by arturo holmesgetty images for nyfw the shows
ARTURO HOLMES

Theophilio

Kingston, Jamaica-born, New York–based designer Edvin Thompson is using the runway to tell more personal stories. His spring 2023 Theophilio collection featured several slinky, shimmery Y2K-inspired looks shown with towering feathered headpieces like those worn during Carnival. “It’s like an extension of myself and Carnival and just the overall vibrancy of my cultural heritage,” the 2021 CFDA Emerging Designer of the Year winner told BAZAAR of sharing his homages to the Caribbean festival with his audience. A racer-back rhinestone fishnet tank is your ticket to the party.

SHOP THEOPHILIO

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Racerback Rhinestone Fishnet Tank

Theophilio Racerback Rhinestone Fishnet Tank

palmier spring 2023
COURTESY PALMIER

Palmier

Palmier designer Ling Arnold doesn’t do pants. After working for a decade in the testosterone-fueled world of finance, she was ready for a career change—and a vibe shift. And so, she began her foray into fashion in 2020 with a tightly edited selection of skirts and dresses in delicate fabrics like fil-coupé and silk crepe, all made by women in the New York Garment District. Many of the pieces feature abstract prints or Arnold’s own hand-painted designs.

SHOP PALMIER

Abstract Brushwork A-Line Skirt

Monday, April 10, 2023

fashion industry still need trend forecasters..

 

Does the fashion industry still need trend forecasters?

FASHION

Charles Jeffrey Loverboy FW23 Credit: Courtesy Charles Jeffrey Loverboy

For years trend forecasters held an unrivaled position in the fashion industry. Brands from the luxury heritage labels to global mass market giants looked to them for direction on the road ahead. Trend consultancy agencies such as Peclers Paris or Trend Union produced lavish tomes of seasonal inspiration, each page containing beautiful compositions of color palettes, fabric, concepts, often punctuated with physical print swatches, paint chips, threads and buttons, interspersed with photos of the stylish citizens of Tokyo, London, Berlin shot by the agency's roving reporters whose job was to travel the world on a healthy budget spotting trends. These books sold to brands for several thousand dollars.

But the arrival of AI-generative technology has given every designer the ability to conjure up any combination of styles, characters, and concepts on their computer screen with a few prompts while social media informs us in real time of underground movements, emerging subcultures and street styles happening anywhere in the world. This immediacy has led to a reported shortening of trend cycles, so by the time many have discovered something on social media it’s a thing of the past. Fashion thrives on looking ahead, on newness. Forecasting is its superpower. But how can mere forward-gazing humans compete with TikTok or the sheer amount of information that AI can process instantaneously? Is the job of the trend forecaster on the chopping block? To answer this FashionUnited spoke to Avihay Feld, CEO and co-founder of Browzwear, who has been a pioneer in the development of digital technologies that enable the fashion industry to thrive in an increasingly digitized world since the late 1990s, and Tessa Mansfield, Chief Creative Officer at trends and insights experts Stylus.

Feld believes that any brand still attempting to predict a trend 15 or 16 weeks ahead of time is entirely out of touch. “There used to be predictions, a prophecy that made itself truth and became a trend because many of the brands hooked into trend forecasting and were receiving the same sets of information,” he says. “These are going to be the colors, silhouettes, prints, and each brand handpicked some of it, so it was no surprise to find similar items in stores.”

It was a sort of self-fulfilling prophecy. But was it really what consumers wanted? Feld argues that with 60-70 percent of manufactured garments going unsold at the end of season, the answer has to be no. That was demonstration of a failed system. Even when those garments went on sale, a huge percentage still ended up in landfill. Says Feld, “You go to market with an order that includes millions of pieces per style and no one knows if it’s going to work." Yet the industry clung to this system. At least until technology prised loose its hold.

One answer, according to Feld, is the model used by digital native brands that “manufacture to trend.” This process involves scouring social media, particularly TikTok, and analyzing everything that users are sharing and posting, taking into consideration location, demographic, and from the data, distilling trends. “Image processing and deep learning has got to the point that it can actually understand not just silhouettes and colors but the textures of a garment down to the details,” he says. When the designers have honed in on the data, created their own version, the brand produces one physical sample to determine if the style works, after which it manufactures small quantities super quick, often using existing materials, thereby ensuring less garments are destined for landfill. “In less that 4 weeks the item is on the app, they can hit a trend in the middle of the season. If it doesn’t work, they drop it," says Feld. "The risk is small because they did few pieces. The ability to manufacture to trend differentiates them from regular fashion brands.”

Has AI placed the trend forecaster's job on the chopping block?

Mansfield doesn’t disagree that a combination of AI tools scraping social media could get quick results on trending fashion items. “While there's a place for AI generated social media-led product development, it's actually only about the ‘here and now’ and therefore limited to very immediate response fast fashion,” she says. These short-term trend seekers have the potential to cannibalize each other, fighting as they are over the same crumbs. Commonly known as “Social scraping” the process of automatically extracting data from TikTok, Instagram, Youtube, connotes the idea of removing surface particles or layers. And according to Mansfield it is exactly this inability to go deep that gives trend forecasting experts the edge over AI. ”Many nascent youth-led trends hitting that landscape aren't easily tracked through social scraping,” she says. “You might source the most mainstream ideas, but are unlikely to source the many more underground aesthetics and nuanced drivers.”

Technology has democratized every element of the industry, often eliminating the gatekeepers or those who claim to hold the key of knowledge. But the differing views of Feld and Mansfield illustrate that trend forecasting is not a one-size-fits-all solution but depends on specifics such as brand identity, market position, and customer expectation. And rather than occupying a diminished role, Mansfield says trend forecasters have become an invaluable support to industries seeking to adapt and successfully navigate and build strategies to compete in these times of enormous change.  

The digital native brand has the ability to respond immediately to what people are wearing right now on the street. Feld estimates that such brands update their app with anywhere from 700 to 1000 pieces a day and shoppers come just to see what’s new. It’s a contemporary form of lunch-hour browsing or after-work window shopping. “It’s the fear of missing out on a daily basis,” he says. “But it’s s a completely different user experience from traditional fashion brands’ website where you get perhaps 6 updates a year.”

Fast fashion fixes versus trends with shelf life

Mansfield rejects the idea that all consumers are chasing fast fashion trends and even the idea that trend cycles are shortened. “The biggest trends are becoming ever more evolutionary, macro and longer in trajectory. At Stylus, our clients are looking to understand how to address rapidly shifting consumer demands (across work, active lifestyles, digital and IRL identity), and critically, how to respond to broader contexts, like the cost of living, the inclusivity imperative and sustainability crisis.”

Feld agrees that some brands set trends while others capitalize on them. And the digital natives that he refers to, the Sheins and Amazons of the world, have not built their reputation on sustainability. Often in the headlines for producing cheaply made garments that don’t factor in living wages or labor rights for the garment maker, they can arguably also promote a disposable culture around clothing due to the ease of their returns process. The landfill that was avoided at sampling stage might just show up later.

“It’s addictive,” he concedes. “But I’m not here to effect crowds of people not to eat sugar, I don’t know how to do that. As long as people buy it will continue.” He insists his message is not that trend forecasting is dead, only that it must evolve: “Setting a trend does not need 15 weeks. You might not be able to do it in 4 weeks, but the truth lies in between.”

Mansfield’s clients, she argues, some of the biggest global brands, have different expectations and the guidance she offers goes beyond product creation and even innovation to a view of the bigger picture and trends with shelf life. She sees the role of the forecaster as connecting the dots between emerging trends while looking at the full breadth of consumer lifestyles, and revealing opportunities for cross-industry collaboration and inspiration. 

“The forward-thinking brands and agencies we work with know that trends don’t exist in isolation," she says. "Most fashion brands still need to work 1.5/2.5 years out (especially in categories like active) and this timeframe can’t be well informed by scraping social for inspiration. Inspiration that can literally appear and disappear in a matter of weeks only tells you what's already happening.”

H&M extends size options for US market

 

H&M extends size options for US market

FASHION

Image: Tess Holliday. Credit: H&M.

H&M US has announced the extension of its size assortment on the national market. Products ranging up to 2XL will be offered in stores for women and men, while the online shop will even offer sizes up to 4XL.

With the aim to be more inclusive for the plus-size community and to offer an accurate assortment of diverse fits and sizes, the retailer decided to get Tess Holliday on board.

The founder, activist and model has been involved in the process of model castings and decision-making when it came to stylistic choices, sharing her extensive knowledge of the plus-size fashion industry and helping to advocate the values of inclusion and diversity.

The inside information and education provided by Holliday helped the brand to make decisions on different levels, from design, to product development, marketing and communication.

“H&M embraces inclusion as a business imperative. H&M's evolution and progress on extended sizing reflects our commitment and focuses on challenges faced, progress made and more progress to come," said Donna Dozier Gordon, H&M's Head of Inclusion and Diversity for Region Americas.

The newly sized styles are available on H&M’s website.

Paris fashion week 2023

 Each season, Paris is the final stop on the fashion tour and, arguably, the most important. For the upcoming fall winter season fw23, designers showing in the French capital signaled a renewed respect for traditional tailoring. The four major trends all contained elements of the haute couture, with its focus on enhancing the shape of the body.

It’s all Greek

The French couturier, Madame Gres, is often attributed with creating the first ‘Grecian’ draped jersey gowns. Draping fabric to enhance female curves has endured to this day. A number of ultra glamorous looks were on display in Paris this season.

Atlein #15

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Atlein fw23/Launchmetrics Spotlight

From Antonin Tron, an olive stretch jersey off-the shoulder top and a lilac satin floor-length draped skirt was shown with white hose and sandals.

Lanvin #41

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Image: Lanvin fw23/Launchmetrics Spotlight

Bruno Sialelli showed a teal gown with an asymmetric shoulder-line and a metal detail. It was draped at the waist and accessorized with black boots embellished with heart shaped studs.

Rokh #18

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Image: Rokh fw23/Launchmetrics Spotlight

Designer Rok Hwang showed a nude-colored floor-length ruched jersey dress. Knotting the fabric created an ultra-feminine silhouette. Gold jewelry and a brown tote completed the look.

Shoulder on

Tailored separates dominated the runways of Paris. For the most part, jackets had a masculine appeal with bold shoulder lines reminiscent of ‘eighties ‘power dressing.’

Balenciaga #11

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Image: Balenciaga fw23/Launchmetrics Spotlight

From Demna, a double-breasted broad shouldered, grey plaid blazer and knickerbockers were shown with black sock boots.

Saint Laurent #6

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Image: Saint Laurent fw23/Launchmetrics Spotlight

Anthony Vaccarello showed a broad-shouldered white jacket, over a knit top with a deep scoop neck and a straight black leather skirt. Accessories included silver hoops, black sunglasses, sheer black hose and pointy toed ankle strap shoes.

Andreas Kronthaler for Vivienne Westwood #20

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Image: Andreas Kronthaler for Vivienne Westwood/Launchmetrics Spotlight

The designer showed a broad-shouldered blouson jacket and matching mini kilt in black, grey and red plaid. The look was accessorized with yellow and red print leggings with a black overlay and classic Westwood platforms.

Distress signals

Deconstructed and distressed knitwear can be traced back to the early designs of Martin Margiela circa 1990s; and in recent seasons has made a come-back. It was a common theme this time around in Paris.

Acne #29

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Image: Acne Studio fw23/Launchmetrics Spotlight

Designer Jonny Johansson delivered a floor-length deconstructed moss green knit slip dress studded with crocheted florals and hanging threads. Matching sandals completed the look.

Off-White #24

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Image: Off-White fw23/Launchmetrics Spotlight

Ibrahim Kamara showed a three piece set including a zip front turtleneck, pants and a tunic in laddered sweater knits in shades of orange, green and brown. The look was accessorized with yellow lizard boots and a yellow bag.

Alexander McQueen #34

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Image: Alexander McQueen fw23/Launchmetrics Spotlight
From Sarah Burton, a white cable sweater dress with a deconstructed front made up of knit ropes. The shoulders were exaggerated and the waist was incised. Accessories included large silver earrings and black ankle strap sandals.

She’s a lady

Perhaps as a counterpoint to three years of casual work-from-home wardrobing, designers offered up ladylike ready-to-wear items. Inspiration seemed to partly come from the long-lasting appeal of tweed and bouclé at Chanel.

Chloe #30

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Image: Chloé fw23/Launchmetrics Spotlight

Gabriela Hearst showed a two-piece skirt suit in cream bouclé. The jacket was collarless and fastened with one gold button at the neck and the skirt was straight and mid-length. Both had a raw edge. A brown pebble leather hand held satchel and black platform boots completed the look.

Christian Dior #6

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Image: Dior fw23/Launchmetrics Spotlight

From Maria Grazia Chiuri, a two-piece suit in black and white houndstooth check, reminiscent of the house’s designs of the ‘fifties. The four-button jacket was cropped over a mid-length pencil skirt. Accessories included black mid-calf ankle socks and spectator Mary-Janes.

Giambattista Valli #5

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Image: Giambattista Valli fw23/Launchmetrics Spotlight

The designer showed a black and white short tweed oversized coat and a minidress with intricate gold embroidery. Black hose and pointed toe slingbacks completed the look.