Saturday, 13 August 2011

Chateau Dreams







Agyness Deyn as James Dean, by James Franco Leather jacket, Rebecca Minkoff, $695, visit rebeccaminkoff.com. Stretch cotton-blend T-shirt, Calvin Klein Underwear Body, $25. Jeans, Ralph Lauren. Vintage sunglasses, Oliver Peoples, $400. Alligator-skin watch, March LA.B, $935. Vintage boots, from Confederacy, L.A., $460.



This summer, the dizzyingly prolific James Franco—movie idol, soap star, author, PhD student—is making a splash in contemporary art, debuting a mixed-media bonanza of photos, videos, and installations—at the Venice Biennale, no less. Upending the role that won him a Golden Globe and ignited his film career (as James Dean in TNT’s 2001 biopic), the project mines what Franco calls the “ripples and echoes” that Rebel Without a Cause cast through the American cinemascape, youth culture, and gay iconography.
It all starts here, with gender-bending images Franco shot of model Natalia Bonifacci and model-actress hybrids Imogen Poots and Agyness Deyn. The beauties are dreaming of Dean (and Rebel costar Sal Mineo, about whom Franco will also direct an upcoming biopic) against the backdrop of L.A., in particular Bungalow 2 of the Chateau Marmont, where Rebel director Nicholas Ray lived and held rehearsals during filming in 1955.
The photos offer a taste of Franco’s Biennale show, on which he’s collaborated with a posse of art-world rabble-rousers including shock artist Paul McCarthy, pop art vet Ed Ruscha, and director-provocateur Harmony Korine (Gummo). Each tackles a facet of Rebel, from the director’s paternal and, Franco says, abstract psycho-sexual dynamic with his stars, to the film’s imagined lost scenes. The result incorporates motorcycles, nudity, and “extreme bondage…crazy stuff,” he says.
Of his foray into yet another medium, Franco says, “It’s not about mastering all of them. It’s about using each when appropriate, so that I’m not confined to a traditional approach.”

Under Cover



rihanna 
 Going from the beach to the streets can be as easy as tossing on a mini summer dress or tunic. Go for a bright bold color or something pure and white to accent that new-found summer tan. And keep it light, like Rihanna; cottons, crochet knit and lightweight jersey make ideal cover-up dress styles





Thursday, 11 August 2011

Lady Gaga, Rihanna help sell Vogue

Lady Gaga in Sydney






News flash:
Lady Gaga and Rihanna can sell magazines. Their covers appear to be part of the reason that for the first half of this year the only major U.S. fashion magazine with increased sales compared with last year was Vogue, which saw a jump of 12.7% for an average monthly circulation of 360,400. InStyle has a larger circulation (570,000), but dropped 8% compared with last year. Other women's fashion mags experienced an average decrease of 9.2 %, except for Allure, which remained flat.
Hilary Duff, Jenny McCarthy, Padma Lakshmi and Christie Brinkley are featured in new advertising for Danskin that launched Wednesday with the slogan "Move for Change." Besides the usual magazine ads and such, they are featured in videos on danskinmove.com, which will also offer monthly blogs. The four will use their own Twitter accounts to tweet about the campaign, which also involves Danskin making contributions to the celebrities' favorite charities.
More from the weight wars: British authorities ordered the e-commerce website Zazzle to remove T-shirts for children and teens emblazoned with a controversial quote from supermodel Kate Moss: "Nothing tastes as good as skinny feels." The British Advertising Standards Authority had received complaints that the slogan could encourage eating disorders.

Tuesday, 9 August 2011

Now we've really seen it ALL Lady Gaga

Lady Gaga leaves nothing to the imagination as she hits the dance floor in a sheer body suit



 

After accidentally exposing her nipples as she arrived at the CFDA Fashion Awards, Lady Gaga decided she may as well go the whole hog at the after-party.
The flamboyant singer ended up removing her custom-made Mugler gown to just the sheer bodysuit underneath, leaving nothing to the imagination.
The 25-year-old had just nipple covers and a G-string protecting what little modesty she had left as she danced at the bash at The Standard hotel in New York.
By Chris Johnson

Gaga gives thanks


It seems the fashion crowd, especially when fully decked out for the Council of Fashion Designers of America awards, can be pretty intimidating: CNN anchor Anderson Cooper said so, actress Naomi Watts said so, and even Lady Gaga said so.

On stage to accept her award as the year's top style icon, a soft-spoken, maybe even teary-eyed Gaga said she was nervous.

"All of you made me feel like a star before I was," she told the audience at Lincoln Center that boasted bold-faced names such as Marc Jacobs, Anna Wintour, Diane von Furstenberg, Donna Karan and Michael Kors.

She talked about how important fashion was in her life as a pathway to self-discovery, artistry and confidence.

As a teenager, she'd save her money to buy vintage Thierry Mugler from a neighbourhood thrift shop, checking in with the salesman regularly to make sure her favourite pieces hadn't sold while she was raising the cash.

She planned her outfits for Friday night parties as if she was going to the Oscars, she said.

"As much as this award means to me personally ... I just want you to know how much this means to young Americans," Gaga said.

But the music star and style risk-taker, wearing a corset get-up by Mugler, a label now helmed by her friend Nicola Formichetti, got her swagger back as she recalled getting the text message from Wintour that she was picked for the prize.

She said she thought the message was from a friend named Anna and replied with a bleep-worthy response. The text back from the Vogue editor-in-chief said, "How lovely".

That led to laughter - and so did Cooper's montage of his early days as a preteen model.

Cooper, a longtime friend of CFDA president von Furstenberg, said he decided to show his photos to prove his fashion cred since he was acting as master of ceremonies.

"There was no way you'd be critical," he joked, "or that's what Diane said, anyway."

Watts, dressed in a metallic T-shirt-style gown by Francisco Costa for Calvin Klein, presented the top womenswear honour to Jack McCollough and Lazaro Hernandez of Proenza Schouler.

But she seemed to find the awkward walk across a long stage intimidating in her high heels. "That was easy," she said as she reached the podium. "Fun doing it in a room full of supermodels."

Top models Doutzen Kroes, Karlie Kloss, Miranda Kerr, Alessandra Ambrosio and Chanel Iman were indeed in the house, on the arms of their favourite designers. Karolina Kurkova, in a striking hooded jumpsuit made of green sequins, read the names of the winners in the Swarovski emerging-talent categories: Eddie Borgo for accessories, Robert Geller for menswear and Prabal Gurung for womenswear.
Ad Feedback
Click Here!

Kurkova took a moment to sing for Gaga - "I'm your biggest fan," she said - and then Gurung asked during his speech if he could pose with Gaga. "That will make me the coolest uncle," he boasted.

But it was the nod from his fellow designers as well as retailers, stylists and editors that the rest of his family would find impressive, Gurung said. "I'm just a guy from Nepal. I will call my mother and say, 'It's okay. I turned out fine.'"

The two standing ovations of the night went to photographer Arthur Elgort and designer Marc Jacobs, who was there for his "half-lifetime achievement award," according to presenter Sofia Coppola.

"This achievement is born of love, passion, creativity ... and a hell of a lot of hard work," said Jacobs, who is 48.

He added, "I believe we all know and feel the greatest reward is the process itself."

Miranda Kerr Hits the Runway in Sexy Swimsuit


For the first time since giving birth to her son Flynn, now seven months old, Miranda Kerr returned to her native Australia for the David Jones Spring/Summer 2011 season launch at the Royal Hall of Industries in Sydney on Wednesday.

The model took to the catwalk and showcased off an impressive collection of brightly-colored trends for the season






Kardashian 2011 Collection





It is natural and usually thing that a new fashion break the previous records but this time Kardashian’s sister collection not just break the previous records but it also loved by everyone. People were waiting for this collection launch from a long time but now it is in market for sale.
Kardashian-Collection-Burn-Fire-In-Fashion-Industry
Now it is available online with a discount of 30 % on every sale. Whether there is no any need of this discount coz this collection don’t need any promitive works. These are already much hit but Kardashian sisters just want to celebrate launch of the collection before launch. Whether at 25th of August 2011, whole collection which includes outfits, footwear, jewelry and accessories will launch at 400 famous and well known stores of U.S.A.
Kardashian-Collection-Burn-Fire-In-Fashion-Industry

Lights Up Again At The Bryant Park Tents



When the lights at New York fashion week’s Bryant Park tents were set to go out in February 2010, a light in filmmaker James Belzer’s head went on. Since the Tents were pitched in 1993, they had become a launch pad for New York designers and a symbol of American fashion. They also served as the setting for some of the most memorable (some groundbreaking, some horrifying) shows the industry had ever witnessed. As the designers and editors prepared to make a bittersweet departure for Lincoln Center, Belzer went to work documenting the legacy of the Bryant Park era with the help of several prominent industry figures, including Carolina Herrera, Donna Karan, Tommy Hilfiger, Suzy Menkes, and Isaac Mizrahi.

Last month, Belzer screened his documentary The Tents for the first time at New York’s NewFest, in what he hopes will be a prequel to its debut during New York fashion week this September at Lincoln Center. (Belzer and his sales company are still searching for a backer and distributors.) “Fashion is just like any other art, and it needs to be preserved,” says the filmmaker, who is now working on another documentary, about the preservation of New York’s Garment District. “That’s what I’m trying to do with my film—tell 18 years of fashion history in just 72 minutes.” Here, he speaks with Style.com about his ode to the Tents.






From Missoni Flutters For Fall Campaign



It might pass on first look for an art-house music video, but the short debuting above is actually from Missoni’s Fall 2011 campaign. But then again, the label has a history of blurring the lines between art, music, and sound for their creative—this is a house that tapped legendary alt-filmmaker Kenneth Anger to make the last one, after all. “The main influence was the fluidity of the clothes,” explains director Mel Bles, who worked closely with Missoni in Venice to create the dance-inspired piece. “To do that, we looked at dance films from the 1920’s, featuring Martha Graham and Loie Fuller—that was really the starting point for this.”





And it’s true that the sinuous lines and exaggerated lengths that Angela Missoni sent down the runway for her Fall collection lend themselves perfectly to modern movement. Rather than using dancers, however, they enlisted “biker, True Romance girls” like models Kinga Rajzak, Valerija Kelava, Kristina Salinovic, and Katlin Aas to embrace their inner Grahams.
—Kristin Studeman