London’s Selfridges To Launch Drive-Thru Service.

Original article published in Time Magazine.

Fashion might be many things, but one thing it’s typically not is convenient.

Shopping for fashion, however, is about to get a lot easier for Londoners. The British luxury retail giant Selfridges has announced that they’re developing a new drive-thru service for their flagship store. Known as click and collect, the service will allow customers to order products online and pick them up at their convenience. The company is outfitting their famous Oxford Street location with a drive-thru lane at the back of the shop where customers will be able to pull in and have their pre-selected Prada or Pucci handed to them without ever having to leave the car.

While the new service isn’t up and running yet – Simon Forster, Selfridges’ multi-channel director tells the London Evening Standard that they’re hoping to launch early next year – customers can pre-order their items and collect them in-store in the meantime. Of course, the company already offers home delivery for items purchased at selridges.com and online shopping has gone a long way in upping the ease factor of filling your closet. Yet even the savviest e-shopper knows that there are times when home delivery just won’t do. Think waiting around for the delivery person or paying extra for express shipping.

The buy and collect option aims to streamline the process, allowing customers to peruse products at their leisure online and pick-up their selections when it fits their schedule. And according to Forster, customers can expect the same level of service they’re already accustomed to inside Selfridges’ walls. “It will not just be the first drive-through service, it will be the best.”

Your move, Barneys.

 

Shazam For Fashion! Who’s Excited?

original article published on The Huffington Post.

Shazam, the app that identifies a song by listening to it, has become an essential app in our arsenal — not only for the knowledge it offers, but for the song sales it encourages. More often than not, we look after a song credit because we intend to track it down for purchase. Can you imagine the kind of revenue Shazam would spark if we had this for fashion items?

The company is working hard to up engagement with users, including this awesome feature: Shazam can now help you ID the clothing seen on television, The Guardian reports. Here’s how it’d work: Your smartphone would capture an outfit on your screen and direct you to a site to purchase it.

The merchandising feature is part of the current “television tag,” which gives viewers information about a show’s cast, music and more. Shazam is working to innovate around the feature so that viewers can get more fashion information than ever.

“We have the ability to identify the product in a TV show so that when somebody Shazams it, they could find out where a presenter’s dress is from in one click,” explained CEO Andrew Fisher. In an era where celebrity style has become more andmore accessible (read: affordable), we’d certainly be interested in making it our own.

Can you imagine what would happen if Shazam figures out a way to go beyond television and we could find out what people on the street are wearing? That would save us the trouble of awkwardly approaching strangers in cute clothes. Surely retailers will jump at the chance to plug their content across yet another screen.

Would you use Shazam for fashion?

Model Scouts Recruit Girls Outside Eating Disorder Clinics.

Original article can be found on The Huffington Post.

Modeling agencies in Sweden have come under fire this week following claims thatscouts solicited young girls outside specialized eating disorder clinics.

According to Sweden’s The Local, staff at the Stockholm Center for Eating Disorderstold Swedish-language media that agents have approached teenage patients outside the clinic, presumably to recruit new models.

“We think this is repugnant. People have stood outside our clinic and tried to pick up our girls because they know they are very thin,” Anna-Maria af Sandeberg, the center’s director and chief physician, told Metro newspaper (according to a translation by The Local). “It sends the wrong signals when the girls are being treated for eating disorders.”

Though the incidents occurred last year, news of the controversial practice only recently came to light after employees who witnessed the scouts approaching girls contacted local media.

As the Agence France-Presse notes, the center has since changed its schedule to head off potential run-ins.

While the names of the scouts and their associations are unknown, Fredo Kazemi, director of Elite Model Management in Stockholmcondemned the “unethical” scouting method to Swedish wire service TT, adding that he does not believe the large, reputable model agencies work that way.

However, Madeleine Lithander, the head of a smaller agency in Sweden called Mady Models, told Radio Sweden that she is not surprised by the practice, even though she has not heard of any specific cases.

It’s well known that eating disorders plague fashion models in disproportionate numbers. According to an industry survey conducted by Model Alliance in 2012, 64.1 percent of models said they have been asked by their agencies to lose weight, while 31.2 percent admitted to suffering from an eating disorder.

Last year, in a health initiative launched across all of its editions, Vogue pledged that it would not “knowingly work with models under the age of 16 or who appear to have an eating disorder.” But as any fashion insider knows, the pledge was just one small step in a rather arduous battle.

Currently Craving

Ladies and Gentlemen this is NO JOKE. Polaroid recently announced that it will be launching an “Instagram Camera” by 2014. What this camera will do is that it will take pictures, let you select your filter (as you already do through the app on your smartphone) and then it develops your picture instantly with the selected filter. Its a modern twist to your old-school polaroid camera.

instagram cameraToo bad it’s not coming out this year because this would absolutely be the graduation present I would want.

And on that note, as of today I am officially 30 days away from being an Emerson Alumni. But I mean who’s counting?

A Fashion Crisis

An economic crisis is something that affects every spectrum of life, and this includes the fashion industry. There are several examples that show us what happens in the fashion world during a time of crisis. There are even theories related to our attitudes towards clothing when the economy takes a bad direction, such as the “hemline theory” where the length of the skirts women wear are used as predictors of the direction of the stock market. In the past year, the world has experienced and economic climate as unstable as a pre-pubescent girl’s temperament, and this climate has been reflected in the trends we have spotted both on the runways and on the streets.

The recent economic crisis divided fashion lovers in two very evident groups: those who resorted to minimalism as a way to appear modest, and those who resorted to opulence to protect their status. The latter group is the one responsible for our generation’s obsession with brands and logos and the importance placed upon luxury products, services and experiences. They can easily be identified because of their “Balmania” and overall obsession with “bling.” I use Balmain as an example because it is a brand that is well-known for its opulent designs and excessively ornamented or “blinged-out” garments. Therefore it is appropriate to associate this brand with people who in a time of crisis decide to be flashy in order to affirm their status. These people are easily spotted because they dress in more high-end brands than high-street ones and make sure that the garments they choose have visible and well-known logos, as if to say: “What crisis? I can still afford this.” To them we could also attribute the world’s fascination with “it-girls” and over-the-top lifestyles.

fashion crisis

The epitome of these aforementioned Balmaniacs (people who are obsessed with demonstrating that they have money) are The Kardashians, who have become a pop-culture phenomenon among the world’s youth because they portray a lifestyle to which most people in the world can only aspire to.  The Kardashian girls as well as other “celebrities” like Paris Hilton have become a household brand simply for sporting their last names. They are not the conventional celebrity who is glorified for fictitious roles in award-wining movies or platinum selling music albums. They are more famous for being than actually doing, feeling they are entitled to this fame because of who their parents or grandparents are. The worst part is that their fans choose forget that in order for them to have these extravagant lifestyles they admire so much, their ancestors had to work really hard.

This trend of being a celebrity simply because you have the right look or name, has also become popular in the fashion industry with the large amount of street-style stars and personal style blogs. These blogs have become as important as the top selling fashion publications due to their large readership. Those who read them do so because they are sold the illusion that these writers are just like them, only with the great fortune of owning expensive wardrobes. In reality, most of these bloggers are endorsed by the brands they wear and promote. The clothes they wear are sent to them by designers, who use these girls as a guerilla-marketing tactic. This defeats the purpose of a personal style blog, since just like a model these girl’s outfits are styled by professionals rather than themselves.

feathers

When these celebrities and street-style stars get a hold of social media, a thirst is created to not only strive for status but also a need to document it. This group can no longer do things just for the sake of it; but they have to show the world they did it as well. It’s a group of people so hedonistic, self-involved, self-obsessed and shallow that they consider themselves celebrities simply because they have hundreds of followers on Instagram and “this many” likes in their picture with their Celine luggage tote. Social media has also been responsible for our generation’s thirst for attention, which is achieved by posting pictures of your most glorious moments for the world to see and declaring yourself and “Social-Media celebrity” and living with a heightened sense of self-importance.

These groups of people are those who only watch TV shows like “Gossip Girl” or “Downton Abbey” because they tell the stories of a very thin upper layer of society rather than regular people living regular lives. Coincidentally these two shows have some of the most expensive wardrobes in the history of television. Gossip Girl, the show about Manhattan’s elite, has influenced our desire for wealth and brands because the kids who watched it are now young adults who have become obsessed with owning the products they see on the show, even thought they may not have the acquisitive power to buy them. These characters can be found mostly in the 25-and-under age group, since they are a generation that didn’t experience war and grew up in abundance, with access to luxuries unknown by their ancestors.

serena

It would be and over-generalization, however, to say that this has been the entire world’s reaction to our economic climate. This analysis only refers to a sector of the population who have either come across their wealth very recently and feel the need to buy anything that equates to status, or have been affected by the crisis but wish to hide their struggle. However since they are the ones who are flashier and “noisier” because of their opulence, they are the ones who are more easily identified. The stronger trend we have witnessed in past years is a collective effort from high-end brands to improve the quality of their products in order to avoid disposability and justify the high prices customers pay for their brand.

In such fashion, Celine’s Creative Director Phoebe Philo has made it her mission to rid the brand of disposable products by resorting to minimalism in recent collections, so the clothes don’t go out of style so quickly. By designing functional clothing, Philo has not only boosted sales at the once-forgotten Celine, but has made it the brand of choice for the “power woman.” Her choice of cuts and colors in the past collections are to thank for the success, since Celine clothing is appropriate for both the office and everyday life, making buyers feel that it is a good investment when money is scarce.

celine

Taking a different perspective, Louis Vuitton saw the economic crisis as an opportunity to revive trends from other decades, such as the 60’s and the 70’s, in its “Voyage Dans Les Temps” collection. This was an effective move because even if you can no longer afford to buy Louis Vuitton, you can find similar garments in vintage shops or even your mother’s closet. This creates the illusion that even if you can’t buy a new garment, you can still be trendy. Another way to sell the illusion of luxury to those affected by the crisis has been the ubiquitous designer collaborations with high-street brands like H&M and Target. These collaborations provide people who normally couldn’t afford designer goods the opportunity to own the dream. However this all goes back to our generation’s obsession with looking expensive, which is the same reason why Herve Leger’s body-con wrap dress has been replicated by multiple high-street brands. People want to feel they own designers even if they are only designer collaborations.

Like a lot of people who resorted to wearing their money during this crisis, a lot of people decided it would be better to hide their wealth. The BOBO trend (Boheme Bourgeois) is the epitome of wealthy people who dress like they don’t have money while wearing very expensive clothes. The leaders of this movement are Vanessa Bruno and Isabel Marant, who design derelict chic clothing that make one look homeless even thought one probably lives in a very expensive home. Marant has been an especially influential designer in the past few years not only because she incorporated military prints into her collections, which is characteristic of the fashion industry when the economy is bad, but also because she took a regular product and transformed into a luxury one.

sexyback

Marant’s luxury wedge sneaker served as a domino effect for transforming regular everyday products like sneakers and T-shirts into luxury items. Most people can no longer afford to drop thousands of dollars on a formal gown they will probably wear once, but they are willing to spend hundreds of dollars on a luxury sneaker that they will be able to wear multiple times. In their mind this represents a good investment since the utility justifies the cost. This creation has also influenced Stella McCartney’s “sport-fashion” and multiple collaborations with Adidas since people would now rather have expensive sportswear and casual clothing that they can wear more often.

This crisis has made a lot of big fashion houses re-structure and re-strategize to retain profit, because they really need the money. They have been forced to make their couture lines more wearable because people stopped buying them. Dior was hit especially hard during the crisis, since it’s former creative director, John Galliano, created a reputation for the brand, of making only costume-esque clothing that was not fit to be worn in real life. After Galliano’s departure from the brand due to anti-Semitic remarks, Dior was forced to hire a new creative director to design more wearable clothes and give the brand a makeover.

simple beauty

Just as Phoebe Philo revived Celine through minimalism, Raf Simmons revived Dior by creating neater silhouettes and paying more attention to the quality of the fabrics to avoid disposability. He also introduced a new gamma of colors such as brights, neons and pastels onto the Dior runways, an uncharacteristic move for the brand but one that helped increase Dior’s sales by 24 percent in 2012. This group of designers- Marant, McCartney, Philo and Simmons- were perhaps the main power players in the fashion scene over the past year. They influenced their surrounding fashion houses and high-street brands to utilize functional fabrics, implement visible seams, and pay attention to the garment’s cut, fit and proportion.

Bad economies make us idolize anyone who is not affected by it, or who can sell us an illusion of better days. One can consider this a parallel between those who are spending a lot of money on labels to look rich, and those who still spend large amounts of money on clothes that don’t look expensive in order to appear low key. Either way, the economic climate and designer efforts to become more budget conscious have not prevented people from spending a lot of money. The economy marks an evident divide between those who wish to flaunt their wealth through a baroque, blinged out style of excess and flashiness, and those who have become more fiscally conscious. For the latter group, it is no longer about owning massive amounts of seasonal clothing that will go out of style in the blink of an eye, but rather about owning a carefully curated selection of high quality items. There are justified reasons behind the trend revolution we saw in 2012, it’s just a matter of choosing which “side” with which you most identify.

Perspective.

Perspective.

Anna Wintour gets a MAJOR promotion

Original article retrieved from Fashionista.com

Anna Wintour

Anna Wintour

So about those nagging rumors that Anna Wintour is up for an ambassadorship in the Obama administration–or even those rumors that she’ll retire soon: This latest bit of news should put them to rest once and for all.

Condé Nast has promoted Anna Wintour to the newly created role of artistic director. She will stay on in her role as the editor in chief of Vogue and editorial director ofTeen Vogue.

Anna Wintour and Karl Lagerfeld

Anna Wintour and Karl Lagerfeld

“The establishment of an Artistic Director is a reflection of our commitment to preserve and champion all that exists ‘Only at Condé Nast,’” Charles H. Townsend, the chief executive of Condé Nast, said in a release. “This is the ideal time to leverage Anna’s extraordinary vision and leadership to amplify and elevate the profile of Condé Nast U.S. both domestically and abroad. Anna is an icon in the worlds of fashion, business and the arts, she has the foresight and wisdom to influence the major trends of our society and is respected globally as an accomplished businesswoman.”

Finally speaking out on those ambassadorship rumors, Wintour told the New York Times, “It was an honor to work for President Obama… but there was never a long-term discussion about anything.”

Townsend admitted to the Times that he would “go to great distances to avoid losing Anna, particularly in the prime of her career.” This promotion is meant to ensure that Wintour, who is now 63 and coming up on 25 years at Vogue, stays with Condé Nast.

Marion Cotillard covering French Vogue (ok so this is unrelated but I just love Marion so much!!)

Marion Cotillard covering French Vogue (ok so this is unrelated but I just love Marion so much!!)

So what does Wintour’s new role entail?

According to a release, she will “curate and cultivate the creative vision for the Company, working with the extraordinary editorial talent at Condé Nast to shape its artistic inspiration and innovation across all platforms.” What that really means is that Wintour will function as a “one-person consulting firm” (her words to the Times) for the publishing giant, meeting with the editors of Condé’s various titles to weigh in and offer advice. That doesn’t mean she’ll be involved in nitty gritty editorial decisions at other titles–as The New Yorker editor David Remnick so succinctly put it, “I don’t expect Anna to be picking the cartoons or directing our war coverage.” Think more big picture. Additionally, Wintour will reportedly be involved in Condé Nast’s “expanding portfolio of platforms,” like those recently announced branded web TV series.

If you’ve ever watched The September Issue (and we’re betting you have) you’ll know that consulting is part of what Wintour does already. In her role as editor of Vogue she essentially serves as consultant to designers, retailers, and even the Mayor on matters concerning the fashion industry (see: Fashion’s Night Out).

Lara my love covering another Vogue that's not American Vogue.

Lara my love covering another Vogue that’s not American Vogue.

Taking on these new responsibilities, it’s likely that Wintour will not be able to devote as much time to Vogue (she is, we’re pretty sure, only human). Our money’s on Sally Singer taking on a bigger role. But don’t expect any reshuffling of the masthead. A Voguespokesperson confirmed to us that there will be no major masthead changes as Wintour’s role at the magazine “isn’t any different.”