2008-09-30

BLACK LACE DRESSES


BLACK LACE DRESSES
Delicate lace gets a lift when layered on top of bright white dresses – showing up on stylish stars like Paris Hilton, Taylor Momsen and Rachel McAdams.

STRAPLESS BLACK JUMPSUITS

STRAPLESS BLACK JUMPSUITS
The one-piece trend keeps trucking on, turning up in sleek belted versions on Rachel Weisz, Ana Ortiz and Kim Kardashian.
Would You Wear These Trends?

2008-09-29

I Really Love My ...


FENDI PURSE
Move over PRPS peg-legs, there's a new favorite in town – the Fendi F3 Secret Code bag! Katie Holmes shows her fashion cred with her new water snake purse that has become a staple for her N.Y.C. look.



BE & D SANDALS
Comfortable and stylish shoes are the key to surviving Fashion Week. Front row fixture Jessica Szohr relied on her Be & D "Merritt" black snakeskin slingbacks to get her from shows to late-night parties throughout the week.




GUCCI BAG
The singer shows off some new arm candy – the must-have Gucci "Boston" bag – while hitting the New York streets to shop before performing at the star-studded Fashion Rocks concert.



CHANEL TOTE
Fabulous bag alert! The always stylish Rachel Bilson shows off a new fall style from the French couture house while running around L.A.



PARKVOGEL SWEATER
Jessica Alba gets the most out of her Parkvogel striped "Henley," wearing it from her early pregnancy days to present play dates with daughter Honor Marie.



BULGA BAG
In addition to her new male friend, Miley Cyrus makes her Bulga "Le Tresse" bag an everyday companion.



ALEXIS BITTAR RING
From the red carpet to casual strolls with boyfriend Paul Sculfor, Cameron Diaz adds a pop of color with Alexis Bittar's 18-karat vermeil rough-cut ring.

Fashion Plays Peekaboo, Once Again

By ERIC WILSON
Published: September 12, 2008
NO one blinked at the Marc Jacobs fashion show last week when the model Freja Beha Erichsen appeared in a sheer black top that revealed that she was wearing a nipple ring. No one blushed at the Chris Benz show when Sasha Luss and Ekat Kiseleva posed in see-through camisoles. No one seemed particularly hot or bothered that Ali Stephens’s breasts were clearly visible through her dress when she walked for Derek Lam. No one was outraged that Francisco Costa showed a transparent raincoat at Calvin Klein with nothing but a thong underneath.




Evan Sung for The New York Times
TRANSPARENCY The Preen collection included many revealing outfits, some with harnesses.
Spring 2009 Collections


Richard Termine for The New York Times
DEGREES OF MODESTY A dress from the Marc Jacobs collection.



Béatrice de Géa for The New York Times
TOWARD LIBERATION? At Ohne Titel, sequins embroidered on a sheer top looked like body art.

Erin Baiano for The New York Times
A blackout bar across the breasts of a sheer top from Cushnie et Ochs.

Peek-a-boo was the biggest trend at the New York Fashion Week that ended on Friday, though you would have thought the shows were taking place on the Riviera given the blasé response of most editors and retailers. Blouses that reveal? Yves Saint Laurent was doing that in the 1970s. Yawn.
It is a paradox of the times that during a presidential election that has been shaped in large measure by women, when a female candidate was ridiculed for wearing pantsuits and the mere mention of lipstick takes on a sexist connotation, the political implications of the public display of breasts went by largely unnoticed as the fashion world was deciding what women will be wearing at the beginning of the next administration.
In 1968 (and not incidentally just after the Democratic National Convention that year), a feminist group called the New York Radical Women disavowed the traditional trappings of femininity at a protest of the Miss America pageant in Atlantic City. News media coverage of the event gave rise to the term “bra burning,” though no bras were actually burned.
In 2008, it is fashion designers who are jettisoning the undergarments. And some of those whose models were unburdened of their bras said they were consciously doing so to make a political statement.
“Don’t you feel that we as a society are almost at war about which way we choose to go?” asked Alexa Adams, a designer of an edgy new label called Ohne Titel, and one of the minority of women’s wear designers who happens to be a woman. “There is this question hanging over us: Are we going to remain in this conservative period, or are we going to choose to be more liberated.”
Judging by the sheer number of sheer fabrics shown at collections last week, it was not difficult to gauge which side the designers were on. Ms. Adams and her partner, Flora Gill, showed transparent bodysuits and leggings covered with sequins that made the models look as if they were tattooed. There were breast-revealing outfits at Preen and Jeremy Laing, and sheer looks that covered only the parts of interest to Playboy readers at Vera Wang, Thakoon and Proenza Schouler, making it difficult at times to find photographs suitable for publication in this newspaper. It was like watching Fashion Week through one of those new airport screening machines that can see through clothes.
“This was a reaction to conservative ideas,” Ms. Adams said. “We felt we had been surrounded by something so restrictive for the last few years, and we wanted to start with the idea of lightness this season.”
Mr. Benz, similarly, was thinking about transparency after spending the summer in Greece around women who were comfortable with that sort of exposure. He was surprised when the models arrived for his fittings and told him that sheer was the biggest trend of the season. None of them complained about the outfits, either.
“I feel that living in New York and being in this blue state bubble, we’re saying ‘This is us, and this is what we’re standing for,’ ” he said. “Maybe that’s the direction.”
But nudity, like fashion, has lost much of its power to shock.
We have become so desensitized to images of naked celebrities, sex tapes and Internet pornography that designers are hard-pressed to create anything that seems really transgressive. Even a strong undercurrent of bondage in the spring collections, with harnesses at Proenza Schouler and Rodarte, caging stripes at Narciso Rodriguez and Thakoon and blackout bars across the breasts of a sheer top from Cushnie et Ochs, a new label by recent fashion school graduates Carly Cushnie and Michelle Ochs, failed to whip up a frenzy.
One could argue that American tastes have become less puritanical, but it seems more likely that they have simply become dulled.
“I hadn’t even noticed,” said Julie Gilhart, the fashion director of Barneys New York.
“It’s almost expected at a fashion show today,” said Ken Downing, her counterpart at Neiman Marcus.
“It’s a cliché that American women are covering up,” said Roopal Patel, the women’s fashion director at Bergdorf Goodman.
Actually, Ms. Patel hastened to add, the sheer look might just be a boon to lingerie sales, since actual customers not walking a 100-foot catwalk would be likely to buy a slip or at least a bra to wear underneath.
It would seem that if it was the designers’ intention to provoke the sort of social reaction that led to women’s liberation four decades ago, they might have done better trying to put lipstick on a pig.

Some from New York fashion week.

Actress Blake Lively smiles backstage before the start of the Miss Sixty Spring 2009 show during New York Fashion Week September 7, 2008.(Lucas Jackson/Reuters)



Host Heidi Klum (R) kisses guest judge Tim Gunnas during the taping of the season finale of Project Runway during New York Fashion Week September 12, 2008.(Keith Bedford/Reuters)
Photo Tools








In this Sept. 6, 2008 file photo, actress Lindsay Lohan and Samantha Ronson, left, attend the Charlotte Ronson 2009 Spring Collection in Bryant Park during Fashion Week in New York.(AP Photo/Peter Kramer, file)







Tennis player Serena Williams waits for the start of the Calvin Klein Spring 2009 show during Fashion Week in New York September 11, 2008.REUTERS/Lucas Jackson

Borat actor crashes Agatha's party at fashion show

MILAN (Reuters) - Actor Sacha Baron Cohen, best known for his eccentric character Borat, burst onto the catwalk at Agatha Ruiz de la Prada's show in Milan on Friday, bringing the playful show to a halt as security guards stepped in.

Baron Cohen is in Milan making a new film about fashion centered on his character Bruno, a flamboyant Austrian fashionista.
He bowled onto the start of the catwalk rolled up in what turned out to be a long, black caped outfit with eccentric accessories.
After a few minutes of darkness while Baron Cohen, or Bruno, was escorted off the catwalk, the show started again. Models had kept their cool but the designer was visibly upset when she appeared at the end of the show.
Baron Cohen's film is titled "Bruno: Delicious Journeys Through America for the Purpose of Making Heterosexual Male."
Agatha Ruiz de la Prada's show restarted after the actor left. The designer said her show was inspired by Spanish painter Diego Velazquez and the headdresses were based on typical Spanish pi�atas.
But the dresses with their bold shapes were more reminiscent of another famous Spanish painter -- Joan Miro.

(Reporting by Jo Winterbottom)

2008-09-28

10 Best Dressed Stars of 2008




KATE HUDSON
Hudson is already known for her haute hippie taste, but in 2008, she added a new touch of polished elegance to her looks – like her flowing Balmain gown and chic Valentino leather coat.

















RIHANNA
As if her much-copied hair wasn't enough to earn her a spot on this list, Rihanna hit all the right notes in her sophisticated mix of glamorous gowns, like her yellow Giambattista Valli, and funky dresses, including this feathered Zac Posen.



















GWYNETH PALTROW
The Oscar winner proved better than ever, revving up her classic look and taking off length from her famously long locks – and her hemlines! Paltrow showcased her flawless legs in her Preen minidress and, in her Lanvin toga, put the attention on her trendsetting bob.















FERGIE
A long way from her belly-baring days, a refined Fergie emerged as a confident and cool dresser this year. From chic shorts on the street to classic Calvin Klein at the Grammys, there is no doubt that this singer is totally "G-L-A-M-O-R-O-U-S."

















HEIDI KLUM
There's no auf Wiedersehen in sight for this hard-working supermodel. Klum wins us over every week with Project Runway but works the red carpet in designs from luxe designers like Roland Mouret and John Galliano.



















SARAH JESSICA PARKER
She may have topped the box office as Carrie Bradshaw, but the New Yorker dazzled fans with her own unique sense of style. She wowed at a Sex and the City premiere in Versace and created her own style mix with Marni and Rag & Bone in N.Y.C.

















MICHELLE OBAMA
Politics may be tougher than ever, but Obama has wowed along the campaign trail with confidence, in polished looks that bring to mind a famous former first lady. Sticking mainly to favorite hometown designers like Maria Pinto, who crafted her sleek purple sheath, Obama has also tried new looks by Isabel Toledo and jeweler Tom Binns for campaign fund-raisers.















EVA MENDES
Mendes got pulses racing with her sexy Calvin Klein ads, but her looks on the red carpet were perfectly feminine and sweet – like these Dolce & Gabbana frocks.













CHARLIZE THERON
As if her acting choices weren't daring enough, the Oscar winner never missed an opportunity to turn up the drama on the red carpet. Whether wearing these feminine Dior frocks or trying a bold Balenciaga, Theron commanded attention wherever she went.