The pieces are extraordinary, and they change a lot of things about the way you want to live. On a plane, you need three seats! You are grounded by your clothes, but at the same time, when you put them on, it’s like they make you travel in space and in time and into the future, the unknown. | | Au Bon Marché, Paris, Jan. 1930. (Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone/Getty Images) | | | | “The pieces are extraordinary, and they change a lot of things about the way you want to live. On a plane, you need three seats! You are grounded by your clothes, but at the same time, when you put them on, it’s like they make you travel in space and in time and into the future, the unknown.” |
| |
| rantnrave:// Expectations are high for LVMH's site and mobile app for LE BON MARCHÉ. Great interview with IAN ROGERS, who says intuition about the next frontier of retail is what brought him to LVMH. Respect to Rogers for public comments he's made about fashion and the internet so far. The bar isn't set all that high, which is exactly why there's so much opportunity. Luxury e-commerce is saturated and has settled into predictable and self-affirming patterns in terms of experience and design. The company seems well aware that there's no burning need for another e-commerce storefront selling designer goods, so let's hope it's big. The site address is parked at 24SEVRES.COM, which is a cool way to bring spatial sensibility to the site—it's the PARIS street address of the department store. Packaging looks good. Ready, set, go—the site goes live next month... PAUL SURRIDGE is the new creative director at ROBERTO CAVALLI. Please, for the love of leopard print and (last time I checked, excellent quality) stretch silk, pump some life into this house... SEARS CEO EDWARD LAMPERT gave an interview and it's clear he's tired of the company being upheld as a symbol of retail decline. Sears has an incredible history as a catalog business and department store. Would love to see a company like Sears unite with some of the American brands that aim to change the game, like AMERICAN GIANT, OUTLIER, MIZZEN + MAIN, etc. It could help Sears reclaim a sense of identity and own up to its heritage, which it was closely connected to in better days. Also, companies need to have a solid plan in place for pension funds. Not exactly an unexpected expense. It's hard when the bottom falls out... THE FACE is coming back as an online-only publication. It's unclear how a 2017 platform relying on digital ads can capture the reactionary spirit of a publication as beloved as The Face, but hey, no one can take TUMBLR scans away from the fanz. Don't disappoint them... Headline of the day goes to i-D... Shoes to sushi and sushi to INSTAGRAM. Just going to leave this here: hypebeast onigiri. (!) | | - HK Mindy Meissen, curator |
|
| The inside story of how a former roadie for the Beastie Boys is helping the company take on Amazon. | |
|
Best known for his dramatic hair sculptures for Comme des Garçons, Julien d'Ys was the first to purposefully make hair look dirty, using potions of grease, vodka, clay or powder. | |
|
From Kendall Jenner to the Fyre Festival, the risks of being a tastemaker have been exposed. | |
|
Persian women are quietly reshaping online shopping models from the ground up. | |
|
Alexander Fury explores the way in which Miuccia Prada celebrated the foundations of Modernism in the lightness and purity of her Resort collection. | |
|
Photographer Chen Man is often described as China’s Annie Leibovitz. But her personal hero is Michael Jackson, and she is just as hard to define. | |
|
LVMH is raising the stakes in luxury e-commerce, setting up its first multi-brand site in eight years that puts brands like Louis Vuitton alongside those of rivals such as Gucci and Prada. | |
|
A look at two fast fashion labels' responses to the increasing demand for environment- and labor-friendly practices. | |
|
A class at Parsons School of Design creates products for clients who have disabilities, like a lack of arm mobility or lower-body paralysis. | |
|
StockX, the marketplace for limited-edition goods, has just announced they are expanding beyond sneakers. | |
| Within the past two years or so, Condé Nast shuttered "Self," "Details," and "Lucky" magazines. "Penthouse" did away with its print edition, and "More" magazine folded entirely. So, why -- in the age of rather regular magazine deaths -- are both Hearst and Condé Nast working on brand new print publications? | |
|
In a wide-ranging new interview with "W," the first celebutante opens up about her 2000s heyday, the Kardashians, growing a personal brand, and where the future is headed. Two words: Virtual Reality. | |
|
The cycle of compulsive shopping-excitement, then an emotional letdown, and ultimately emptiness or guilt-is especially pronounced in China and Hong Kong. | |
|
Coach’s vision of modern luxury pays homage to its roots in accessible luxury. | |
|
Sears Holdings CEO Edward Lampert says he still believes his turnaround plan can work, but he says negative coverage is hampering efforts. | |
|
As many independent designers and boutiques will attest, fashion is a fickle business in which success is often dictated less by hard work and creativity than by connections, timing and the eventual backing of a major conglomerate. | |
|
Today’s romantic activist Phoebe English is finding her creative voice within a turbulent political and social landscape. | |
|
Look at any designer in China and you’ll notice a spring in their step. The centre of much attention in recent years from the upper echelons of the global industry -- owing to the rise of the Asian country as economic and political superpower -- upstart Chinese brands have acquired a rare boldness, a self-confidence as charismatic as it is surprising. | |
|
Jimmy Choo, like Kate Spade, is just a brand, heavy on the marketing, low on authenticity. And authenticity is something luxury consumers today are high on. Coach and the eventual buyer of Jimmy Choo may come to regret paying a luxury brand price for them. | |
|
10 May 1988: Increasingly, sportswear with the accent on colour and casual appearance, is merging with daywear. | |
| © Copyright 2017, The REDEF Group | | |