Showing posts with label google images. Show all posts
Showing posts with label google images. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 08, 2014

The 7 Biggest Street Style Trends From Fashion Month

The 7 Biggest Street Style Trends From Fashion Month:

Linda Tol in Isabel Marant sweater and skirt at Milan Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree  Linda Tol in Isabel Marant sweater and skirt at Milan Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree 
Street style during Fashion Month is always an exaggerated, hyped-up version of the norm. It’s the real-live, grown-up (unless you’re North West) version of dress-up, where editors and showgoers are expected to look their best -- and capture the attention (and lenses) of photographers outside the shows.

From coordinated separates to colored fur, check out all our favorite street style trends from Fashion Month below. You can browse the rest of our coverage from New York, London, Milan and Paris right here.

Ruffles

The 7 Biggest Street Style Trends From Fashion Month



Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree4 of 6


Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree



Milan Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree5 of 6


Milan Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree



Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree1 of 6


Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree



Anna Dello Russo. Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree2 of 6


Anna Dello Russo. Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree



Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree3 of 6


Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree



Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree4 of 6


Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree

Flatforms

The 7 Biggest Street Style Trends From Fashion Month



Milan Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree7 of 9


Milan Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree



London Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree8 of 9


London Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree



Natalie Joos. Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree1 of 9


Natalie Joos. Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree



Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree2 of 9


Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree



Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree3 of 9


Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree



Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree4 of 9


Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree

Wide-Brimmed Hats

The 7 Biggest Street Style Trends From Fashion Month



Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree1 of 16


Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree



Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree2 of 16


Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree



Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree3 of 16


Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree



Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree4 of 16


Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree

Look-at-Me Bags

The 7 Biggest Street Style Trends From Fashion Month



Eva Chen. Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree1 of 21


Eva Chen. Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree



Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree2 of 21


Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree



Charlotte Dellal. Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree3 of 21


Charlotte Dellal. Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree



Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree4 of 21


Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree

Coordinating Separates 

The 7 Biggest Street Style Trends From Fashion Month



Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree1 of 22


Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree



Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree2 of 22


Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree



3 of 22



Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree4 of 22


Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree

Capes and Blanket Coats

The 7 Biggest Street Style Trends From Fashion Month



London Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree10 of 12


London Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree



Milan Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree11 of 12


Milan Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree



Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree1 of 12


Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree



Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree2 of 12


Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree



Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree3 of 12


Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree



Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree4 of 12


Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree

Colored Fur

The 7 Biggest Street Style Trends From Fashion Month



Karlito with Chiara Ferragni. New York Fashion Week. Photo: @ashleyjahncke14 of 16


Karlito with Chiara Ferragni. New York Fashion Week. Photo: @ashleyjahncke



Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree1 of 16


Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree



Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree2 of 16


Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree



Eva Chen. Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree3 of 16


Eva Chen. Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree



Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree4 of 16


Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Imaxtree

Amal Alamuddin Weds George Clooney in Oscar de la Renta, The Karl Lagerfeld Barbie Was a Big Hit

Amal Alamuddin Weds George Clooney in Oscar de la Renta, The Karl Lagerfeld Barbie Was a Big Hit:

Seriously, how did Clooney bag this lady? Photo: Andrew Goodman/Getty Images Seriously, how did Clooney bag this lady? Photo: Andrew Goodman/Getty Images
Something New: Amal Alamuddin married George Clooney in a traditional French lace wedding dress by Oscar de le Renta, proving that badass lawyers can also have great taste.

Twinsies: Kim Kardashian and baby North West wore matching outfits to the Givenchy show at Paris Fashion Week. Like mother, like daughter.

Star-Studded: Givenchy's Riccardo Tisci knows how to fill a room with famous faces, including the Kardashians, Kendall Jenner (on the runway, of course), Cara Delevingne and Joan Smalls. Also, there were clothes.

Barbie World: Net-a-Porter sold $200,000 worth of Karl Lagerfeld Barbie dolls the morning it was released. Unfortunately, it does not come with a miniature version of Lagerfeld's cat, Choupette.

Nailed It: Finally, a YouTube video for those with short nails. Here are some pro tips for properly shaping them when you're not working with a whole lot of nail.

Young Talent: Twenty-four-year-old Eddy Anemian won this year's H&M Design Award. His 10-piece collection for the retailer will be sold worldwide starting October 23. (And yeah, we were totally that successful at 24.)

Street Style: Leave it to Paris to be the most effortlessly chic city on the Fashion Month calendar. What's in this season? Lots of volume.

Binge Watch: With "Gilmore Girls" now up on Netflix, we took at look back on the show's best fashion moments. Because nobody wears a baseball hat like Luke.

Girl Power: Chanel staged a "feminist march" for its spring 2015 runway show, with models storming the runway with handmade picket signs.

California Dreamin': Tom Ford will show his collection in Los Angeles next season instead of London, making it nearly impossible for any models, editors, etc to actually attend. Oscar nominees, though -- absolutely.

Blake Lively Sneakily Announces Pregnancy on Preserve

Blake Lively Sneakily Announces Pregnancy on Preserve:

The mother-to-be. Photo: Larry Busacca/Getty Images The mother-to-be. Photo: Larry Busacca/Getty Images
Goop may have hired an impressive new CEO, but Blake Lively's Preserve just got access to a whole new world of lifestyle products. Specifically, baby products.

Oh yes. The actress-turned-lifestyle-pundit took to her lifestyle website, Preserve, to drop her pregnancy announcement in the sneakiest of ways: With a single photo of her baby bump, way at the bottom of a post about family filled with pictures of other pregnant ladies. The text reads, "Congratulations to all the expecting mothers out there."

We see you, Blake.

The photo, taken by her brother Eric, is actually pretty sweet. And given that Lively has said that she can't wait to have a "litter of kids" with husband Ryan Reynolds, we're can't help be be excited for her. So congrats to the parents-to-be -- and prepare for the onslaught of baby products that will surely land on Preserve's pages in the coming months.

How Everlane's Petra Langerova Is Making It in Fashion

How Everlane's Petra Langerova Is Making It in Fashion:

Petra Langerova. Photo: Kat Irlin Petra Langerova. Photo: Kat Irlin
In our long-running series, "How I'm Making It," we talk to people making a living in the fashion industry about how they broke in and found success.

Petra Langerova is not afraid to take risks. In April 2013, the designer left a high-powered job at Gap to become the first head of design at Everlane, an upstart online-native retailer that specializes in contemporary basics. But Langerova's career in risk-taking started long before that, when she set eyes on New York for the first time during a study abroad trip from her native Slovakia (now the Czech Republic). She was 21 -- and never looked back.

"I was studying architecture in my third year and I came to the U.S. at 21 and made a trip to New York, and did not go back to Slovakia. I fell in love with New York, I still remember the image.

Basically I had to start over. I was very interested in costume and design, I applied to school, and it was Parsons. I did not know much about it, but I thought fashion would be the closest thing.

Everything was different in New York. English was not an issue, but I didn't know anybody, I had to support myself, working and studying, it wasn't easy. I worked over 40 hours a week waiting tables. I'd come home at 3 a.m., do homework, go to school at 7 a.m., take double shifts on the weekends. It's fair to say I didn't really sleep for four years. But it didn't bother me that much, I was so enthusiastic.

Our junior and senior years we get mentored at Parsons, and I got picked by Narcisco Rodriguez. He's a high-level designer with a very small studio, very hands-on draping and creating garments. Maybe it gave me the wrong perspective, I thought it was how all companies worked. Now, at Everlane, I see a lot of parallels with how Narcisco was thinking and sort of the reflective space he took to pause and look at things quietly and examine every single line and just chisel and really perfect. I think that sensibility, I draw a lot from it -- taking a moment to pause and think, to keep things pared down and minimal.

Narcisco Rodriguez at his spring 2015 collection show in New York. Photo: JP Yim/Getty Images Narcisco Rodriguez at his spring 2015 collection show in New York. Photo: JP Yim/Getty Images
After I graduated [in 2002], I had to find a company that would give me a visa, health insurance, whatnot -- unfortunately [Rodriguez] wasn't able to do it. His company was transitioning, and so I sent my resume out. I accepted an offer from Tommy Hilfiger collection, working primarily on the runway show. That was great, understanding something small scale versus large scale, how much control a designer has in that kind of environment. The general public perceives designing something as very personal, but that's such a small part of the design industry. If you design for a company that's large, like Tommy, there's a certain demographic you design for, those averages you need to make either on color or weather or how many countries you are going to ship to. That's what dictates the design box in which you can move. I was there for five years and learned a lot about the business. I left around 2007.

After Tommy I went to J.Crew, which was fantastic, mostly because it was extremely like working for a small business again, the way the company was managed. We were one of the few companies that still worked with small Italian mills, so we were able to create all these fabulous fabrics from scratch, creating luxury goods at a democratic price. It definitely created a breeding ground for creativity, people were very excited about it, they lived and breathed it. I worked in women's wovens, handling dresses, separates, doing a capsule woven collection, all the novelty skirts and pants and all of the suiting, novelty jackets.

[J.Crew CEO] Mickey Drexler, he was one of my biggest mentors, even though he wasn't a fashion designer, he's a merchant that understands product, really the genius that made J.Crew so desirable. Overall, it was a very great experience. I think when I got there we hit the peak, but it went a little bit over the top, really a bit too exclusive and maybe not as understandable for everyone. A lot of companies caught up to J.Crew's design and started copying it; when I was leaving, there were slight shifts, trying to rebrand. J.Crew's success was its own detriment, how many people wanted to copy that success.

Then I went to Gap International for three and a half years as a design director. It was a very different job in the sense of what is the designer's role… I spent an enormous amount of time on factory relations, worked with a large team of designers, mostly supplying clothes for the French and UK markets. I was traveling constantly, understanding all the markets, what do people look like, what do people wear at what time of year. There was a lot of financial pressure, a lot of responsibility to generate revenue, always a lot of calculating. It was hard to be creative, because in my head I'm counting all the zeroes when designing. That was my role, more larger scale thinking about the entire assortment and seasonality, how much faster we should be moving a category, should we have certain things on a floor, basically what are your winners and how is the line tiered so that everything has a fair chance.

I was craving to do something more creative. I had a fair estimate of what my future would be if I should continue along my path, progressing up an imaginary ladder, becoming less and less in touch with what my passion really is or why I even started. This was not why I wanted to do fashion.

The "Petra" bag. Photo: Everlane The "Petra" bag. Photo: Everlane
I heard about the Everlane opportunity through someone who worked with me at Gap who was already working at Everlane as head of product. He almost tricked me into it, sending me emails asking what do you think about this, what would you change about this. Then they were really looking for some designers, and one thing led to another. It was a completely different challenge, a startup, you don't always know if it's going to work out. Internally I felt it was the opportunity for me at the moment, even if meant starting completely over, I wanted to look back and say I tried. The company wasn't even a year old, I hadn't heard of it. There wasn't much on the website, very few items, very pared down, but I think everyone responds to Everlane, it has a clear differentiation factor and bold message as to what it's trying to achieve. There are so many websites with so many images; somehow this managed to speak to me very clearly.

I have now been at the company for a year and a half working from New York, and only recently have we opened an office in SoHo, which is fantastic. It's been a drastic change, being a one-person design team and hands-on with all the design. I worked remotely [in Brooklyn], while the rest of the team has been in San Francisco. For the first year I worked in my brownstone in Bed-Stuy, and I got to sit down and reflect and be quiet, it was so needed, but coming to the end of it, I was going completely mad.

I walked into this minimal DNA of the company and happily adopted it. I strongly believe it is the highest form of design in the sense that there is so much truth and simplicity. It also allows us to deliver great quality, really just architecture something minimal and chiseled and functional, and think about what is the actual value we are giving to customers, how long is it going to last, how many people are going to be happy with it. It needs to be essential, familiar, but also of the moment. It needs to look fresh all of a sudden. As a company, we like to keep perfecting what we already created, so once we've released a product it doesn't stop, we get a lot of feedback and just keep updating. We're also now doing seasonal color palettes, and as we move into more categories, we're thinking about the whole outfit. So now we think, what is the counterpart to the silk top that she is going to wear, how are we moving all the angles together as a lifestyle brand? One day it will be completely natural for us to have furniture or sheets or plates, sort of leveraging it from all sides, the aesthetic.

Everlane's "swing" trench. Photo: Everlane Everlane's "swing" trench. Photo: Everlane
When I start with a category, say outerwear, I always think of the classics. So we start with a trench, what are the defining elements that make it a trench, and what is everything we can live without, what's not essential, and then what would make it most desirable, what is the proportion that's relative right now that would speak to a really wide audience. That's how we recreate styles the Everlane way.

When I joined the company, it had a very male point of view. Most of the people handling the product were men, and they were creating things they were interested in wearing for themselves. But shopping is mostly done by women, that's where the biggest opportunity is, and we had to shift the mindset that comes with that, with how women shop. It's not always rational, there's not always a lot of data behind it, we can't always clearly predict it. There's a lot of impulses you have to create products for, sometimes women need to have something but they can't say why.

To me it's really beautiful how people who have never done fashion have attempted to do it from a very fresh perspective. Coming from fashion, you can bring a lot of expertise, but sometimes it becomes very formulaic. It's nice to see a smart group of people that can tackle problems very quickly, but can also innovate. You know, I was worried about the industry and its future. The industry is a dinosaur, something that's not been innovated, fashion is just kind of staying the same, primarily because we are constantly expanding into emerging markets and countries that can do cheaper and cheaper production, which forces even less innovation in machinery. There's a constant demand of general public wanting things cheaper and cheaper, and now you have to go to a country that hasn't even built a proper factory yet. The most clear way out of it is educating people about what it really takes to make things, what is the real cost behind things, the real challenges the industry is facing. There needs to be a partnership between the consumer and industry, and we need to hold hands to figure out what is good for us including the environment.

I now have one designer working under me who I worked with at Gap. I felt very strongly about hiring a senior designer, building the team from top to bottom. I don't mind taking out the trash and doing photocopies, it's about expertise and people being able to respond quickly, to know what they're doing. Hopefully very soon we'll be able to start training some great young talent.

My advice for young designers would be to get off the Internet. I feel like in fashion, we start to look at clothes, shop for clothes, when it's so much more about how clothing is a) created and b) experienced, how wind gets through it, how light gets through it. Just looking at pictures and 3-D models, you completely miss the full potential that clothing can give someone."

This interview has been edited and condensed.

Kate Moss and Naomi Campbell Will Watch TV for Charity, Here's How Many Billions Chanel Made Last Year

Kate Moss and Naomi Campbell Will Watch TV for Charity, Here's How Many Billions Chanel Made Last Year:

Kate Moss at the launch event for her Kate Moss For Topshop collection. Photo: Tim P. Whitby/Getty Images  Kate Moss at the launch event for her Kate Moss For Topshop collection. Photo: Tim P. Whitby/Getty Images 
Modeling legends and notorious partiers Kate Moss and Naomi Campbell will appear on a special charity episode of the British reality show "Gogglebox," during which we will get to watch them watch TV shows and react to the programs (so meta, right?). The episode, which also features Oasis rocker Noel Gallagher, will raise money for the network’s Stand Up To Cancer fundraiser. {Daily Mail}

In a rare insight into Chanel's finances, the French magazine Challenges is reporting that the fashion house saw roughly $1.53 billion in operating profits for 2013, with sales growing 8.5 percent to $6.61 billion. Chanel has also invested $337.9 million in real estate this year, the vast majority of which is in Paris. {WWD}

Despite more frequent inspections, a factory fire in Bangladesh on September 28 killed one person and injured three firefighters. After a major fire in 2012 that killed over 1,000 people due to the factory owner’s neglect and the Rana Plaza collapse in 2013, the issue of factory worker safety is far from resolved. {WWD}

Blake Lively wasn't the only star to announce her pregnancy online on Monday -- model Coco Rocha and husband James Conran announced on Twitter that they are expecting their first child. {Twitter}

Kanye West: Your most reliable source for fashion news? Yeezy was all over the news that John Galliano has signed on as the new creative director of Maison Martin Margiela, tweeting that he had received confirmation of the rumor and is thrilled about it. {Twitter}

5 Beauty Trends From Fashion Month to Try Now

5 Beauty Trends From Fashion Month to Try Now:

This is where the magic happens. Photo: Vivien Killilea/Getty Images This is where the magic happens. Photo: Vivien Killilea/Getty Images
Once again, Fashion Month has come and gone. While you'll have to wait until spring to get your hands on the actual goods, there's nothing stopping you from testing out the many, many beauty looks that hit the runway right this second. Plus, it will cost you approximately one thousandth of a Prada coat. Win, win, win.

Beauty looks made for the runway tend to swing wildly between amped-up glamour, total absurdity and restraint, so to say that this season threw the hair and makeup playbook out the window wouldn't entirely be true. (Does that book even really exist?) And yet we did see a tidal shift toward radical realism -- sweaty hair and no makeup whatsoever -- and pure fun, as with funky little braids and inventive uses for eyeliner. There's a lot in this world that is serious. Beauty shouldn't be one of those things.

Here's our take on the top makeup and hair trends for spring 2015. Or, you know, this Saturday night.

All Natural Everything

Probably the biggest trend that emerged from Fashion Month -- championed most heavily by New York designers -- was makeup and hair looks that were normal in the extreme. Can we pin it on Beyoncé, who so famously sang, "I woke up like this"? Is #normcore to blame? Are we just tired of striving for an impossible level of perfection?

Hair ranged from looking real and unfussy (Versus Versace and Michael Kors) to sweat-drenched at Alexander Wang, Prabal Gurung and MM6 -- an unfortunate reality of the prolonged September heat in New York. Meanwhile, Marc Jacobs shut the club down with a makeup look that included nothing but lotion.

5 Beauty Trends From Fashion Month to Try Now



The mother of all no-makeup makeup at Marc Jacobs. Photo: Getty Images7 of 9


The mother of all no-makeup makeup at Marc Jacobs. Photo: Getty Images



No makeup at Marc by Marc Jacobs. Photo: Getty Images8 of 9


No makeup at Marc by Marc Jacobs. Photo: Getty Images



Minimalism at Baja East. Photo: Getty Images9 of 9


Minimalism at Baja East. Photo: Getty Images



Flat, easy hair at Michael Kors. Photo: Getty Images1 of 9


Flat, easy hair at Michael Kors. Photo: Getty Images



Sweaty hair at Prabal Gurung. Photo: Getty Images2 of 9


Sweaty hair at Prabal Gurung. Photo: Getty Images



The post gym-class look at MM6. Photo: Getty Images3 of 9


The post gym-class look at MM6. Photo: Getty Images



Damp baby hairs at Christopher Kane. Photo: Getty Images4 of 9


Damp baby hairs at Christopher Kane. Photo: Getty Images

Doll Face

Of course, the prominence of minimalist beauty looks made anything artificial all the more eye-catching, and dolls, that most unnatural of makeup inspirations, gained a lot of traction this season. (Did it have anything to do with the resurgence of doll-faced models from the '00s on the runway? Maybe everyone was just channeling their aughts nostalgia in their own way.)

Whatever the reason, doll-like makeup cropped up everywhere from Altuzarra and Rochas to Vivienne Westwood Gold Label and Moschino — the doll in question at that last one, of course, would be named Barbie.

5 Beauty Trends From Fashion Month to Try Now

Dark Shadows

A number of designers upped the drama on the runway with moody shaded eyes. At Vera Wang, the makeup team drew inspiration from the idea of wood nymphs who hadn't seen the sun in a while; Hood by Air's bruise-like red shadow recalls prolonged exposure to an icy wind. Alexander McQueen, forever the king of dark romanticism, showcased a tired eye accented with a pearly brightness at the brow, lid and inner corner.

On the lighter side of things, Rosie Assoulin added a shadow just below the brow bone for an aged look, while Alexander Wang's subtle brown shading gave the eye more depth and interest.

5 Beauty Trends From Fashion Month to Try Now



Windburned eyes at Hood by Air. Photo: Getty Images4 of 6


Windburned eyes at Hood by Air. Photo: Getty Images



Shadowed brows at Rosie Assoulin: Photo: Eliza Brooke5 of 6


Shadowed brows at Rosie Assoulin: Photo: Eliza Brooke



Dark nymphs at Vera Wang. Photo: Getty Images1 of 6


Dark nymphs at Vera Wang. Photo: Getty Images



A troubled look at Giles. Photo: Getty Images2 of 6


A troubled look at Giles. Photo: Getty Images



A lighter shadow at Alexander Wang. Photo: Getty Images3 of 6


A lighter shadow at Alexander Wang. Photo: Getty Images



Windburned eyes at Hood by Air. Photo: Getty Images4 of 6


Windburned eyes at Hood by Air. Photo: Getty Images

Offbeat Braids

The perfect partner to a bare face? Fun, weird braids. The looks ranged from insanely intricate, as at Bibhu Mohapatra, to face-framing baby braids you might have done during chemistry class (Jeremy Scott). Mara Hoffman and Suno went bigger than big, while Giamba mixed things up with a slightly uncomfortable-looking braids snaking down the models' center parts.

5 Beauty Trends From Fashion Month to Try Now



Difficulty level at Bibhu Mohapatra: Expert. Photo: Getty Images4 of 6


Difficulty level at Bibhu Mohapatra: Expert. Photo: Getty Images



Face framers at Jeremy Scott. Photo: Getty Images5 of 6


Face framers at Jeremy Scott. Photo: Getty Images



Big, lush locks at Mara Hoffman. Photo: Getty Images6 of 6


Big, lush locks at Mara Hoffman. Photo: Getty Images



A funky little center part braid at Giamba. Photo: Getty Images1 of 6


A funky little center part braid at Giamba. Photo: Getty Images



Beefed up braids at Suno. Photo: Getty Images2 of 6


Beefed up braids at Suno. Photo: Getty Images



A sneaky little braid at Vera Wang. Photo: Getty Images3 of 6


A sneaky little braid at Vera Wang. Photo: Getty Images



Difficulty level at Bibhu Mohapatra: Expert. Photo: Getty Images4 of 6


Difficulty level at Bibhu Mohapatra: Expert. Photo: Getty Images

Odd Lines

Forget cat eye liner. This season quite a few makeup artists got inventive with the application of liners, streaking them flat under the eye (Just Cavalli), in a swoop at the crease (Giamba) and down the lip (Dries van Noten did so in gold). At Prada, brow pencil got a rethinking; rather than rocking the filled-in brows that Cara Delevingne popularized, the beauty team traced a thin line across the top of the arch.

5 Beauty Trends From Fashion Month to Try Now