FASHION Magazine
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Best of NYFW: Standout beauty
By Lesa Hannah and Sarah Daniel
With only New York done, it’s a little premature to pinpoint the key beauty trends for fall. That said, we’re definitely putting our money on metallics, thanks to some backstage intel from makeup artist Tom Pecheux who predicts they’ll be a major trend come fall. While we wait for the dispatches from London, Paris and Milan, we’ve picked some of the standouts from the city that kicked it all off.
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Best of NYFW: Top ten tweets of the week
As the fashion crowd (and our very own Sarah Nicole Prickett!) settles into London, we take a look back at an explosively informative and entertaining 8 days of #nyfw tweets! Here are our top ten favourites:
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NYFW trend alert: Shoulder-duster earrings at Oscar de la Renta
Judging from the swinging, statement-making earrings at Oscar de la Renta’s fall 2011 show, jewellery is back in a big way (cue the Hallelujah chorus). From Karlie’s ‘40s-inspired beaded tassels to Carmen’s gunmetal and ruby crystals, shoulder duster earrings have swept back onto the style scene this season. Watch for these movers-and-shakers to make a red-carpet appearance at the upcoming Academy Awards.
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NYFW diary: Happy 30th, Michael Kors!
How do you get Hollywood royalty like Michael Douglas, wife Catherine Zeta-Jones, Bette Midler and Angelica Huston to be up and at ‘em, bright and early on a Wednesday morning? Well, let’s just say it helps if your first name is Michael, and your last name is Kors. Celebrating 30 years of American luxury, Kors created 64 fall looks that nodded to his design aesthetic over the years: seventies disco glitter, eighties athleticism and nineties minimalism. Skin tones of nude, suntan and cocoa mixed with dusty shades of blush, plum and mauve (the colour of the week). Throw in a few graphic splashes of crimson, long, lean lines and a dream team of models (Carmen! Jourdan! Daria! Karolina! Frankie!) and you’ve got the hottest ticket in town. Even Kors’s show invitation (bearing a vintage shot of the designer himself) seems to say let the good times roll. Here’s to the next 30!
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NYFW diary: Marchesa meets Great Expectations
Only Marchesa designers Georgina Chapman and Karen Craig could make Miss Havisham look haute (oh to be a wealthy spinster living in a dilapidated mansion). For fall, the duo drew inspiration from David Leon’s 1946 film version of Charles Dickens’s Great Expectations. Amidst all of the usual tulle, light-as-air layers and long pooling silhouettes, they created a fresh spin using exaggerated Victorian shapes, dusty, antique accents and unexpected new pieces (snakeskin print leggings).
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NYFW muse moment: Anna Dello Russo
I spotted Anna Dello Russo, editor-at-large and creative consultant for Vogue Japan, at the Michael Kors show. An avid collector of the quirky and cutting edge, Dello Russo is best known for her picnic-worthy headpieces. From bejewelled watermelons to metallic cherries, the produce aisle is the coolest new place to find your fashion inspiration. Carmen Miranda would approve.
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NYFW diary: Breaking bread at Vera, Herve, Marc and more
Having trouble making runway reservations at the New York fashion week hot spots? Have no fear… you’ve got connections. From breakfast at Vera Wang to dinner with Narciso Rodriguez, virtual dining is the best way to stay in the know without having to pick up the tab. Bon Appetit!
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NYFW diary: Lust be a lady at Marc Jacobs
Attending a Marc Jacobs show is like going to the theatre. There’s THE SET (for fall 2011, it was French boudoir with white patent padded columns, mirrored floors and soft red lighting), THE MUSIC (Marilyn Manson’s “Beautiful People” on repeat), THE AUDIENCE (Black Eyed Peas singer Fergie and her hot hubby Josh Duhamel, kitchen queen Martha Stewart, Gossip Girl’s (and our February cover girl) Leighton Meester and Jacobs’s BFF Sofia Coppola). And then there’s that little thing called THE COSTUMES. Jacobs sent 63 looks down the runway, all of which showed very little skin but still managed to look subversively sexy with their body-skimming silhouettes⎯a major departure from his flowing spring lines.
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NYFW diary: Praying at the alter of Thom Browne, professorial prep at Brooks Brothers
After climbing 3 sets of Jack-and-the-Beanstalk sized stairs at the New York Public Library, I reach my destination along with 50 other huffing/puffing journos: Thom Browne’s womenswear presentation. Two alter boys (dressed like Thom Browne twins in matching shrunken blazers and walking shorts) kneel and pray, while haunting choral music fills the large room. No one speaks. It feels very Eyes Wide Shut. Then the magic begins. Models dressed in pure-as-the-driven-snow nun habits flutter their mile-long faux lashes to Browne’s soundtrack of choice, The Sound of Music’s “How do you solve a problem like Maria?”
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NYFW diary: The new must-haves
Call it an occupational hazard, but I am ready to start shopping for fall. Spring, schming! For those of you equally obsessed fashion folks out there (yes, I’m talking to YOU), here’s your first look at what you will be drooling over in about six months:
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NYFW diary: Classic couture charm at Victoria Beckham
Half way through narrating her fall 2011 fashion presentation, former Spice Girl-turned-legitimate designer, Victoria Beckham, said, with a cheeky grin, “this feels like a proper fashion show”. Indeed it was. Beckham’s fifth collection to date was unveiled early Sunday morning with an intimate gathering at a town house on 63rd Street, which also doubles as a studio space when she’s in New York. Dressed in a sand-coloured sack dress (“This is the only thing in the new collection that fits me. I designed all of this before I knew I was pregnant”), Beckham sat in the front row—directly in front of me!—speaking at length about each look as it came out. Cocoons and wraps were introduced from the most luxurious cashmere silhouettes for day dresses to voluminous cotton and silk eveningwear.
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