Dec 7, 2010

Fall fashion 2010 collection’s Chanel at Paris fashion shows

Fall fashion 2010 collection’s Chanel at Paris fashion shows: Freja Beha Erichsen and three bears on an ice floe. This was the arctic scene at Chanel, where giant chunks of bona fide iceberg, specially transported from Scandinavia, formed the frozen landscape around which models solemnly splashed through a sea of ‘berg-melt in shaggy snow boots with ice-block heels.
The Karl conceit of the season, no surprises, was an in-every-way extravagant play on Coco in cold weather. Using more fur than he’d even flung at Fendi—the twist being that here the fur was fake—Lagerfeld steered this collection nearer to couture than ready-to-wear than ever. Fur was woven into brown tweeds; formed deep pelmets on the lower half of leather jackets; became almost igloo-shaped capes, bonnets, even—for goodness’ sake—furry trousers. Meanwhile, the suit and coat combinations also had a level of lavish elaboration usually reserved for haute eveningwear. Fur-fringed embroideries and ice jewelry conspired to create intensely worked ruffled and beaded silhouettes that glinted with rock-crystal neckpieces and fistfuls of rings. Somewhere in there, a flash of translucent silver seemed to be a clutch in which the quilting of the CC classic bag had been frozen into the likeness of a refrigerator ice cube tray.
It was a lucky stroke that the weather outside had kindly assisted Chanel in whipping subzero winds around the Grand Palais while this display was going on. Since humans are suggestible, it took only the merest suspension of disbelief to imagine this collection hitting the mark next fall, despite the fact that it will start to be delivered in July—and who knows in which century we’ll have another winter like this one? Nevertheless, putting global warming and the melting of ice caps both center stage and on the back burner (as it were), this show swept the audience along as they were treated to such amusements as seeing Karl Lagerfeld’s favorite, Baptiste Giabiconi, swagger out of an ice cave in a full-length polar bear coat.
It wasn’t all played for laughs. Within the context of a season of innovative knitwear, Chanel’s was some of the most outstanding. A group of three short angora sweater dresses, tinted iceberg blue in the center, was an amazing follow-up from something Lagerfeld did with dégradé pastel embroidery in couture. One gray and black cardigan coat was knitted in a bubbly grid to mimic a down-filled puffer. And the finale was given to a wedding dress knitted in silk tulle ribbon to resemble Chanel’s bouclé tweed, forming a tight-fitting sweater in the body and then sweeping away in flounces in back. The bride—Freja, again—dangled an ice-block purse on a fur-woven Chanel chain.
Photos of  Fall fashion 2010 collection’s Chanel at Paris fashion shows

source:womenfashiontrends.com

Coupled Fashion of The Kooples 2010

Coupled Fashion of The Kooples 2010: His-and-hers hipster style rocks up in Britain, thanks to the French brand The Kooples.
If I was 10 years younger and a good stone and a half lighter there’s one place I’d be shopping quite a lot of right now: The Kooples, a French brand that has just opened its first three stand-alone stores in Britain (with more on the way, I’m told).
It is a young label in more ways than one. A massive hit across the Channel with snake-hipped rock ‘n’ roll types, and their groovy girl/boyfriends/civil partners/whatever, it has been going all of two years. Not that you’d necessarily know it, going by its confident swagger and the sheer number of branches and concessions in Paris and other French cities these days.
This Kooples mini explosion has much to do with the fact that the founders – three brothers called Alexander, Laurent and Raphael – are the sons of the people behind the Comptoir des Cotonniers womenswear chain, which female friends of mine rave about, and so have retail in their blood. It also owes a lot to a very clever advertising campaign, which you might have spotted on the sides of taxis and buses if you happen to live in London, featuring real-life couples looking drop-dead cool in their Kooples gear.
But the overriding reason, I think, for its success is what concerns us customers most – those clothes: skinny trousers and jeans, sharp blazers with narrow revers, pointy boots, and lots of dandyish little details. I am loving it all and, as I say, just wishing I was 28 (years and waist size).
As for prices: think high-end high street. Scroll through the images above and you’ll get a much better idea of the whole aesthetic.
Photos of Coupled Fashion of The Kooples 2010
source:womenfashiontrends.com

Irina Shayk Modeling Luli Fama 2011 Swimwear

Irina Shayk Modeling Luli Fama 2011 Swimwear: Irina Shayk looks absolutely fabulous wearing a number of Luli Fama 2011 swimsuits. Some pieces look pretty ordinary but there are ones that are cute or chic, or incredibly sexy. You can choose the effect you like!
It’s snowing behind my window and my mood is getting worse and worse. Just to make me feel better I looked through Luli Fama 2011 Swimwear collection modeled by gorgeous Irina Shayk (who is currently suing GQ for publishing her nude retouched photos). And you know, those brightly colored swimsuits reminded me of a sunny summer day! I Am feeling better now!!!
Photos of Irina Shayk Modeling Luli Fama 2011 Swimwear

Lauren Conrad Is Serious… Or Is She?

Reality-star-turned-fashion-icon Lauren Conrad appeared in Teen Vogue this month to discuss her upcoming clothing line (not the one she made specially for Kohl’s), and to say that that she’s worked really hard to get where she is. Normally I wouldn’t be inclined to believe her, but since she never turns up on the gossip mill for anything but looking fierce — despite being a reality TV star — she must be doing something to keep herself busy. Plus she released a pretty hilarious PSA today, about the dangers of dressing poorly.
Pretty dead-on, in my opinion, though I wish she’d mentioned what I consider the Antichrist of fashion: The drop-crotch pants.
Remember these? So do I, unfortunately. If I never see another pair of these things it will be too soon. Worst. Ever.

Source:fashionus.com