Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Tommy Hilfiger Scores a Field Goal for Fall

Tommy Hilfiger Scores a Field Goal for Fall:

The finale of Tommy Hilfiger. Photo: Imaxtree
The finale of Tommy Hilfiger. Photo: Imaxtree
For his fall 2015 show, Tommy Hilfiger turned the Park Avenue Armory into an actual football stadium, opening up the field (oh I am just getting started) for sports puns.

Hilfiger's All Star team of models hit the "runway" in a lot of old school collegiate looks, letterman jackets and preppy plaids included. Knit and leather tops alike featured football-inspired lace-up side details at the sleeves.  Hilfiger went long for the accessories, kitting out the models with pigskin-inspired leather wedges, which turned out surprisingly cute if not a touch too on-the-nose.

And though a few too-literal looks could have been left on the sidelines — Liu Wen and Jourdan Dunn's jersey dresses and Gigi Hadid's leather poncho to name a couple — fans of the preppy brand will flip for the cheerleader-inspired dresses shown at the end of the show.

So while Hilfiger got to fourth and one by the end, he was ultimately forced to punt, putting points on the board with a field goal but falling just short of a touchdown.

Sports!



A look from Tommy Hilfiger's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree
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A look from Tommy Hilfiger's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree



The finale at Tommy Hilfiger's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree
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The finale at Tommy Hilfiger's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree



Tommy Hilfiger. Photo: Imaxtree
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Tommy Hilfiger. Photo: Imaxtree



A look from Tommy Hilfiger's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree
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A look from Tommy Hilfiger's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree



A look from Tommy Hilfiger's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree
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A look from Tommy Hilfiger's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree



A look from Tommy Hilfiger's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree
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A look from Tommy Hilfiger's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree



A look from Tommy Hilfiger's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree
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A look from Tommy Hilfiger's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree

10 Things Everyone's Talking About at Fashion Week

10 Things Everyone's Talking About at Fashion Week:

Photo: Fernanda Calfat/Getty Images
Photo: Fernanda Calfat/Getty Images
Over the course of fashion week, we spend a lot of time sitting on very crowded benches with our industry pals, waiting for shows to start. This provides plenty of opportunity for small talk — or, if you're more of an introvert, some great eavesdropping.

This season, a few key themes have emerged. From social media woes to the street style circus, read on for our cheat seat on the hot topics of conversation so far this season. Don't worry, we'll be keeping our ears open for more all month long.

Kanye West. Yes, West is still the no. 1 topic of discussion at New York Fashion Week, even though his presentation for Adidas was one of the first shows on the schedule. This might be due to the fact that he's consistently been in the public eye since: Not only did he attend a number of shows over the weekend (Alexander Wang's most notably), but he also gave two lengthy, very quotable interviews — one to Complex, the other to Style.com — that have been passed around the web like wildfire. He was also a special guest on "Saturday Night Live"'s 40th anniversary special, debuting his new track "Wolves" with a highly conceptual performance. In one of her dispatches for The Cut this week, Cathy Horyn stated, in so many words, that West has Stockholm syndrome'd the fashion industry, leaving us hanging on his every move — whether or not it's any good. We're inclined to agree.

...and rappers in general. In other hip-hop news, Drake released a mixtape over the weekend that has become the unofficial soundtrack to New York Fashion Week. (I don't even think I can count how many screenshots of the "If You're Reading This It's Too Late" album art I've seen on Twitter over the past three days.) Jay Z, YG, ILoveMakonnen and Nicki Minaj have all been spotted at the shows thus far — even Drake was at Desigual! — and thanks to NBA All-Star Weekend, there was a free concert in Madison Square Park (the first annual Roc City Classic) that featured some of the genre's biggest talents last Thursday. Meanwhile, the big-name DJs we saw making the rounds last fashion week, like Diplo, Skrillex and Tiesto, are nowhere to be found this season.

The weather. Yep, it's cold out there. Even the most high-powered editors, bloggers and buyers who are #blessed with a car service to drop them off/pick them up just feet from a venue's entrance can't help but gripe about the frigid weather conditions. On Sunday, we dared to walk 10+ blocks on the West Side Highway between shows, and aside from arriving with tears streaming down our faces, it took the entire length of the show (including the 25 minutes we sat waiting for it to start) for us to regain feeling in our frozen toes. It's brutal.

How the street style set is willing to risk frostbite to get their pictures taken. Despite the single-digit temperatures, there are some people (who shall remain nameless) that still think it's a good idea to walk outside with no tights on or wearing an open knit because — let's be real — getting snapped by Phil Oh or Tommy Ton before entering a show is so worth it. However, we suppose seasonally inappropriate dressing is a pretty good indication of where you fall on the fashion food chain: If there's a sliver of a chance that you might have to wait for a taxi or in a line to enter a venue, there's no way you wouldn't be bundled up in your warmest parka — even if that means sacrificing your street style cred.

No gloves, no socks, no problem? Photo: Angela Datre/Fashionista
No gloves, no socks, no problem? Photo: Angela Datre/Fashionista
Snapchat. This one might be our favorite. It seems that every media outlet (Fashionista included. Follow us @fashionista_com!) has forced its editors to join Snapchat this season, and many of them are not having it. Whether they're chalking it up to being "too old" to get a grasp on yet another form of social media or they're bemoaning the subpar user experience, many fashion folks are straight-up protesting the platform. Remember last year when everyone tried to make Hyperlapse happen? Well, it didn't catch on, and we're wondering if dear ol' Snapchat will suffer the same fate.

An overall sense of social media fatigue. Even among the most active of social media-ing showgoers, there's a looming feeling of ennui in the front row this season — specifically when it comes to getting that perfect shot for Instagram. With an unspoken stigma attached to posting blurry runway images and shots from the back rows that mostly depict the tops of people's heads, it's beginning to feel a bit déclassé to have your iPhone out during an entire fashion show. Plus, very few of said posts actually add anything constructive to the conversation, other than serving as proof that you were, in fact, present. Personally, I've experienced some judge-y side eye while trying to shoot at the shows, and I have a feeling we're going to start moving in a less-is-more direction when it comes to capturing key moments during Fashion Week.

Fur making one hell of a comeback. We'd be hard pressed to name a major show so far this season that hasn't showed an excess of fur. In a time when our industry is more fitness-conscious than ever and veganism is becoming commonplace, it's interesting that fur is being embraced so fervently right now. According to a great piece by Racked on the topic, furriers often cut deals with designers in order to sway them into using the controversial material. Plus, the use of giant fur coats as statement pieces in a collection also seems like an easy way for designer to add a "wow" factor without actually doing anything innovative. But judging by all of the fuzzy street style looks we've seen this week, they're only going to grow in popularity.

Cathy Horyn's return to fashion week. Horyn, the former New York Times chief fashion critic, is back in action, writing daily dispatches from the front row for The Cut. No one serves up the truth bombs quite like she does, and we're beyond happy she's making the rounds this season. And, from the sounds of it (and chatter on Twitter), you guys are, too.

The rise of the famous kid sisters. As you probably heard, Kylie Jenner made her modeling debut at Kanye West's Adidas presentation (although, rumor has it that she was a last minute fill-in for her sister Kendall, who wasn't able to walk any shows prior to Alexander Wang's on Saturday, as per her contract). Plus, Gigi Hadid's younger sister, Bella, is making the NYFW rounds, although she's watching the action from the front rows with the rest of the current crop of "It" girls. But, the week isn't over yet, and we wouldn't be surprised if the new Hadid on the block makes an appearance on a runway before it's through. (Our money's on a show like Marc Jacobs.)

...and kids in the front row. Well, two children in particular — a long-haired Harper Beckham, who quietly sat on her father's lap during her mum's runway show, and Kim Kardashian's most adorable accessory, one-year-old North, who doesn't seem to like going to the shows as much as her parents enjoy dressing her up for them. Is there really a place for toddlers — who are often fussy and can be distracting to those in attendance who are just trying to do their jobs — at fashion week? That's a much bigger discussion for another day.

3.1 Phillip Lim Revisits Its 'Core Values' for 10th Anniversary Collection

3.1 Phillip Lim Revisits Its 'Core Values' for 10th Anniversary Collection:

A look from 3.1 Phillip Lim's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree
A look from 3.1 Phillip Lim's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree
Monday marked the 10th anniversary of 3.1 Phillip Lim's womenswear line, which the designer used as an occasion to revisit his "core values," to "re-address the systems and structures that we have built along the way." He also pushed them a bit.

Lim used many of his favorite materials (black leather, wool, lace), shapes (straight-leg pants, biker and bomber jackets, sleeveless dresses, ankle boots) and motifs (plaid, pattern and texture-blocking). Absent was shearling (Lim has used shearling in nearly every womenswear collection for the past half decade) and the bright colors he has favored for the past several seasons; the palette for fall 2015 was dark and moody: black, burgundy, ivory, army green. And though the materials were luxe, the collection overall was more casual — it was downtown, tougher, cooler. The best styled looks juxtaposed those more casual elements with dressier ones: a blonde fur stole over a navy nylon flight vest with lace-up mules, a floral shell top over a plaid flannel shirt with an asymmetrical apron skirt and lace-up ankle boots. It was a collection with familiar elements, but a different attitude.

Donna Karan's fall 2015 collection was even darker than Lim's — the vast majority of looks were charcoal or black, on a glossy black runway set against a Manhattan nightscape — but the mood was entirely different. Her use of a dark palette spoke of midnight glamour and seduction, first on a series of wool flannel dresses and elongated bustier tops worn over straight-legged pants or skirts, and later on formal evening looks mixed with navy, bronze and, to finish, a striking gold. The audience was most taken with a body-hugging, semi-sheer tulle dress spattered with lava-like pieces of gold lame and black felt, and a gold wool and black velvet coat with a large black flower sketched on the back. It was a golden moment for Karan.



A look from Donna Karan's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree
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A look from Donna Karan's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree



A look from Donna Karan's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree
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A look from Donna Karan's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree



A look from Donna Karan's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree
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A look from Donna Karan's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree



A look from Donna Karan's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree
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A look from Donna Karan's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree



A look from Donna Karan's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree
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A look from Donna Karan's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree



A look from Donna Karan's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree
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A look from Donna Karan's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree



A look from Donna Karan's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree
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A look from Donna Karan's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree

For Rosie Assoulin, Daywear Is as Elegant as Eveningwear

For Rosie Assoulin, Daywear Is as Elegant as Eveningwear:

A look from Rosie Assoulin's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Rosie Assoulin
A look from Rosie Assoulin's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Rosie Assoulin
If there was one big takeaway from Rosie Assoulin's fall 2015 presentation, it was that the woman has range. The designer — now less of a "one to watch" and more of a New York Fashion Week must-see — proved her versatility with a collection that included eveningwear, loungewear and everything in between. What was most impressive, however, is that you really couldn't say that one look was stronger than another.

Yes, the eveningwear was stunning: sculptural but not overdone, it would be perfect for a stylish celebrity to wear when she wants to make a statement but still feel comfortable. The daywear was just as strong, ranging from cropped sweaters and khaki pants — some with an exaggerated flared hem — to silk and velvet sweatpants and wonderfully simple 3-button duster coats.

"We sort of treated each look as its own little thing," explained Assoulin, who didn't have any one theme or inspiration point in mind. Instead, she focused on making the collection feel cohesive in its relevance and ease. "The energy of today filters through everything and how you want to wear it and what you want to wear," she said. "There’s an ease I hope and it’s elevated, but it’s still something comfortable and knowable. If you want to, you can try something new and push yourself."

While some brands become known for one style or category that they do really, really well — which can be a smart strategy, especially for an emerging designer — Assoulin, it seems, doesn't have to. She somehow manages to inject that "ease" into her eveningwear, while making her more casual pieces feel just as elevated, to the point where there doesn't seem to be much of a difference between the two types of styles. And these days, does there need to be? The models at Monday's presentation all could have easily been guests at the same fancy cocktail party — and half of them were wearing sneakers.



A look from Rosie Assoulin's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Rosie Assoulin
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A look from Rosie Assoulin's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Rosie Assoulin



A look from Rosie Assoulin's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Rosie Assoulin
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A look from Rosie Assoulin's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Rosie Assoulin



A look from Rosie Assoulin's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Rosie Assoulin
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A look from Rosie Assoulin's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Rosie Assoulin



A look from Rosie Assoulin's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Rosie Assoulin
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A look from Rosie Assoulin's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Rosie Assoulin



A look from Rosie Assoulin's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Rosie Assoulin
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A look from Rosie Assoulin's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Rosie Assoulin



A look from Rosie Assoulin's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Rosie Assoulin
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A look from Rosie Assoulin's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Rosie Assoulin



A look from Rosie Assoulin's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Rosie Assoulin
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A look from Rosie Assoulin's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Rosie Assoulin

ADEAM Hits Its Stride for Fall 2015

ADEAM Hits Its Stride for Fall 2015:

Adeam Fall 15. Photo: Imaxtree
Hanako Maeda, ADEAM’s astute designer, has her own opinion on desirability. “As a woman, I think it’s sexier when there’s a little bit of mystery,” she declared backstage after her fall 2015 runway show. Putting that into a fashion context, her protective pullover sweaters, turtlenecks and long skirts covered up a lot of skin this season, but the improved tailoring also framed the body in more sensual ways. “I’m allured by this idea of not revealing everything,” she added. So what was that one model wearing underneath a black and navy mink jacket? A tiny gap between its hem and a pair of decadent thigh-high boots — created by recent CFDA/Vogue Fashion Fund winner Paul Andrew — offered a flash of flesh, but the real answer remains unknown.

Maeda did, however, confess to a love of oversized pieces. Of those, her most attractive was a cosseting turtleneck knit dress. In white with fraying ends, it looked simultaneously pure and peculiar. “Organic chaos,” she called it. But that disarray offered a delightful freshness. Asymmetrical lines counterbalanced the precision of her piped pocket skirts. Bustier tops were covered with a soft felt, and curly shearling was bonded to a buttery leather skirt. “I love doing that visual play where everything looks aligned but it’s slightly off,” she said.

The result was arguably the designer’s most clever collection to date. A deft collaboration with musical mastermind Michel Gaubert especially enhanced her story. Melodically, how do you blend the twisted with the traditional? Maeda wanted Jamie XX’s steely sounds to accompany her nuanced, energetic sportswear, then Gaubert proposed that they add Vivaldi to highlight the more elegant pieces. So when a cascading strapless dress made its way out, the tone felt exactly right.



A look from Adeam's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree
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A look from Adeam's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree



A look from Adeam's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree
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A look from Adeam's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree



A look from Adeam's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree
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A look from Adeam's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree



A look from Adeam's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree 
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A look from Adeam's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree



A look from Adeam's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree
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A look from Adeam's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree



A look from Adeam's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree
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A look from Adeam's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree



A look from Adeam's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree
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A look from Adeam's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Imaxtree

Rihanna and Naomi Campbell Steal the Show at Zac Posen

Rihanna and Naomi Campbell Steal the Show at Zac Posen:

Linda Rodin, Uzo Aduba, Katie Holmes, Taraji P. Henson, Mary J. Blige, and Rihanna front row at Zac Posen's fall 2015 runway show. Photo: Chelsea Lauren/Getty Images
Linda Rodin, Uzo Aduba, Katie Holmes, Taraji P. Henson, Mary J. Blige, and Rihanna front row at Zac Posen's fall 2015 runway show. Photo: Chelsea Lauren/Getty Images
Zac Posen's Monday evening runway presentation at Grand Central Station was such a star-sudded, glamorous event, you almost forgot that a collection was being debuted. The star power inside was even evident outside on the street under Pershing Square, where police manned barricades, holding back photographers and eager fans. A columnist with an invitation in hand was ignored as Katie Holmes was ushered in, after what must have been a frigid six foot walk from her SUV without a coat. But the true star was Rihanna, whose arrival surprised the rest of the already-seated audience as they struggled to open Snapchat fast enough to catch her power-walking down the runway to her seat next to Mary J. Blige. Other guests included Uzo Aduba from "Orange is the New Black," Christina Hendricks from "Mad Men," Judith Light, Coco Rocha, Kesha, Abigail Breslin and Maddie Ziegler.

But the true star of the night was supermodel Naomi Campbell, who closed the show to cheers and applause from the crowd that also included several cast members from and the creator of "Empire," whom she personally invited (she made an appearance on the show in January). Wearing a sculptural pink glitter ball gown, Campbell accompanied Posen down the runway as he took his bow. It was a spectacular casting finale that justified an absurdly extravagant dress.

Zac Posen and Naomi Campbell close the designer's fall 2015 runway show. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images
Zac Posen and Naomi Campbell close the designer's fall 2015 runway show. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images
The meat of the show was not without its showmanship, either. Alek Wek looked otherworldy in a saffron silk skirt and fur top. Anna Cleveland, daughter of supermodel Pat Cleveland, theatrically twirled in full circles as she preened down the runway, showing off the skirt of her navy jersey dress. And the effect of all this -- within Vanderbilt Hall's historic architecture and with a bright spotlight following the models as the walked -- was something like a Broadway show, where the clothes will never be for sale and the magic of opening night will never be repeated.

See the gallery below for all the looks from Zac Posen's fall 2015 collection.



A look from Zac Posen's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images
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A look from Zac Posen's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images



A look from Zac Posen's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images
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A look from Zac Posen's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images



A look from Zac Posen's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images
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A look from Zac Posen's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images



A look from Zac Posen's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images
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A look from Zac Posen's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images



A look from Zac Posen's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images
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A look from Zac Posen's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images



A look from Zac Posen's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images
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A look from Zac Posen's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images



A look from Zac Posen's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images
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A look from Zac Posen's fall 2015 collection. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images

Rag & Bone Ditched the Easy, Cool Girl Hair and Went Weird

Rag & Bone Ditched the Easy, Cool Girl Hair and Went Weird:

You never expect the beauty look at Rag & Bone to be anything close to wacky. Easy, cool, downtown: yes, yes and yes. But this season designers David Neville and Marcus Wainwright finally decided to mix things up. They went weird.

"They wanted something very conceptual, like really off the track for Rag & Bone," lead hairstylist Paul Hanlon said backstage. "I think they feel like they get put in this category of a really New York, cool girl, and I think they wanted to do something different this time."

Hanlon tossed out a number of references for the look he created: Milla Jovovich in "The Fifth Element," Joan of Arc, punk. His team wrapped the models' hair around their heads, flattening it down with hairnets, blow driers and a boatload of Bumble & Bumble hairspray. The ends of their strands created spunky little Jovovich bangs, and the team cut some additional fringes out of fake hair to add in when the look needed more weight.

Hanlon said his team landed on this look almost without thinking after growing frustrated with a series of tests that weren't quite right. The final results were matted and mussed-up but almost elegant when paired with the simple, clean makeup look Gucci Westman created.

"You have to be careful that it doesn't start to become very even or commercial, almost too Mia Farrow. I don't want it to look like that," Hanlon said. "I want it to have more of an extremeness to it. Just very haphazard. The punks used to cut their hair with broken pieces of glass so the hair would shred, and it just has that element to it."

So maybe don't try to recreate the look by taking a broken bottle to your own hair. But if you're in for a DIY, we do suggest stopping at the drugstore on your way home to stock up on product.

"Really, it's just all about the hairspray," Hanlon said. "Lots and lots of hairspray."

Saint Laurent Has Doubled Its Business Since Hiring Hedi Slimane

Saint Laurent Has Doubled Its Business Since Hiring Hedi Slimane:

Saint Laurent's spring 2015 show in September. Photo: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images
Saint Laurent's spring 2015 show in September. Photo: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images
The French luxury conglomerate Kering announced Tuesday that although its revenue grew 4 percent over the course of 2014, its profit dropped five percent from €1.75 billion in 2013 to €1.66 billion.

There's a lot riding on a turnaround from Gucci under its brand new creative director, Alessandro Michele, and chief executive, Marco Bizzari. Though it's by far Kering's biggest luxury brand at €3.5 billion in revenue this past year, Gucci's sales have been sliding for the past few years, decreasing 1.1 percent by the end of 2014. (That's slightly better than its performance in 2013.) Now that Kering has replaced former creative director Frida Giannini and former CEO Patrizio di Marco, we'll just have to wait and see whether, and how quickly, sales will rebound under the new leadership.

If Gucci follows Saint Laurent's trajectory, they very well could. Kering says that the latter's revenue has doubled in the three years since Hedi Slimane came on board as creative director. In 2014, sales rose 27 percent to €707.3 million. Also showing solid growth is Bottega Veneta, which clocked a nearly 13 percent increase in revenue to €1.13 billion.

New year, new you, Gucci.

Monday, February 16, 2015

DKNY's New York Girl Gets a Masculine Update for Fall

DKNY's New York Girl Gets a Masculine Update for Fall:

A look from DKNY fall 2015. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images
A look from DKNY fall 2015. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images
It's no longer a surprise when DKNY cites New York City as a point of inspiration — "NY" is right there in the name, an integral part of the brand DNA. So finding a new spin on that can't be an easy job, but somehow Donna Karan and co. do it every season. First, the brand got innovative with the show scenery: the backdrop featured tweets from fans who tweeted @DKNY about what New York meant to them.

In terms of the clothes, the brand honed in on a borrowed-from-the-boys feel this season: there was a lot of dark suiting alongside oversized knits and coats rendered in nubby greys and camels. Shots of color and sparse dashes of bejeweled detailing provided a much-needed boost of energy. The effect was pretty on button-down shirts, where the jewels formed a military-like sash down the front of the shirt, and looked especially cool under blazers.

The footwear was good too: Athletic socks (with "DKNY" on the side, natch) paired with super-chunky heels or platform creepers added another masculine touch.

The collection can be best summed up by a line from Peaches' "Boys Wanna Be Her," which played during Sunday's runway show: "The girls wanna be her, the boys wanna be her, I wanna be her."



A look from DKNY fall 2015. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images
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A look from DKNY fall 2015. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images



A look from DKNY fall 2015. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images
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A look from DKNY fall 2015. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images



A look from DKNY fall 2015. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images
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A look from DKNY fall 2015. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images



A look from DKNY fall 2015. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images
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A look from DKNY fall 2015. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images



A look from DKNY fall 2015. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images
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A look from DKNY fall 2015. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images



A look from DKNY fall 2015. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images
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A look from DKNY fall 2015. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images



A look from DKNY fall 2015. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images
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A look from DKNY fall 2015. Photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images