Senin, 30 September 2019

Fashion Designer Edeline Lee Discusses Her Namesake Brand, And Playing Fashions Long Game - Forbes

Edeline Lee is the Canadian-born, British designer behind her eponymous brand which she launched in 2013. Exuding intelligent, modern femininity, her line is loved by the stylish, from Alicia Vikander, Karen Elson, and Taylor Swift to Livia Firth and Solange Knowles.

Toby Shaw
And she has just launched her Spring/Summer 2020 collection this month, which was all about performance. For the script, the designer partnered with the award-winning actor, writer, and producer, Sharon Horgan. The performance itself lasted 15 minutes (it was on repeat), featuring both models and actors donning the joyous, playful and vibrant collection. 

Fresh from her London Fashion Week catwalk show, Lee discusses her brand and what we can expect next.

Toby Shaw

Felicity Carter: What was your first fashionable memory?

Edeline Lee: Matching my socks to my t-shirts in elementary school. It was the first time I really discovered the power of fashion.

Edeline Lee

FC: How, when, why did you get into the industry?

EL: I studied at Central Saint Martins. I grew up reading the pages of Vogue, dreaming about the hallowed grounds that McQueen and Galliano walked. It was a crumbly, old building, but it just felt amazing to be there.

Toby Shaw

FC: How would you sum up the aesthetic?

EL: Structured, feminine, playful.

FC: What is luxury to you?

EL: Intelligent, craftsmanship, clothes with meaning and depth.

Toby Shaw

FC: Who is your customer?

EL: She is worldly, highly educated and aesthetically advanced. She maintains a punishing schedule, she is doing it all and she is doing it beautifully. I make clothes that fit seamlessly and practically into her life.

Edeline Lee

FC: Which was the first-ever piece that you designed and how did it come about?

EL: I designed a pair of shorts in my home economics class at school. Peach and cream windowpane check. They were pretty ugly. FC: Currently which is your favorite piece and how do you wear it/them? EL: I like my pieces to be complete in and of themselves. Forgivingly cut and only just decorative enough that you can wear them without any accessories if need be. I like them to resist wrinkling so that I can literally throw them on and feel polished with no effort. At the moment, I am wearing the Alexandria Dress a lot.

Toby Shaw

FC: What's the best piece of advice that you've been given when it comes to handling the industry?

EL: My tutor at Central Saint Martins always compared us to racehorses, chomping at the bit.  But it is a VERY long-distance race. Fashion is by definition ephemeral, but I prefer to play the long game.

Edeline Lee

FC: What are your immediate and long term goals for your company?

EL: I would like to spend more time developing our own Ecommerce site. In the long term, I dream about a fully circular, sustainable company that nourishes both my team and clients. I love making and producing from one place here in London, I love being able to touch everything that goes out of the door, and I hope that we can continue doing this in the long term as we grow.

Edeline Lee

See more from the label at www.edelinelee.com.

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https://www.forbes.com/sites/felicitycarter/2019/09/30/fashion-designer-edeline-lee-discusses-her-namesake-brand-and-playing-fashions-long-game/

2019-09-30 06:59:43Z
CAIiEB6xfGHM--t20QSZJ9rzocQqFQgEKg0IACoGCAowrqkBMKBFMLGBAg

Minggu, 29 September 2019

The Iowa Teen Opening New Doors in Fashion - The Wall Street Journal

Model Ugbad Abdi backstage getting her makeup done in preparation for a Michael Kors runway show during New York Fashion Week. Photo: Andre D. Wagner for The Wall Street Journal

Iowa teenager Ugbad Abdi had just graduated from high school in Des Moines last year when she got a message on Instagram that would change her life.

Ms. Abdi, who had been posting shots of herself in different makeup looks, had drawn the attention of a top modeling agency. But it wasn’t just her striking looks or her height that made her compelling. Ms. Abdi also happens to be a Somali-born Muslim who wears a hijab—which made her even more compelling.

“There are women in the world that look like Ugbad and dress like Ugbad and our business of fashion should really be concerned with addressing all people that consume clothes and beauty,” said Kyle Hagler, president of the New York division of Next Management, which signed her last year.

Ms. Abdi outside the Michael Kors show, which wrapped up her New York Fashion Week. Soon she would board a flight for London Fashion Week, followed by Milan and Paris. Photo: Andre D. Wagner for The Wall Street Journal

Increasingly, the fashion business is showcasing models with a wider range of ethnicities, races, sizes and ages, finding it makes business sense to better reflect a customer base that has long been more diverse than the models featured on runways. Ms. Abdi’s rapid ascent is a prime example: In less than a year, she went from Iowa high schooler to fashion It girl.

In January, she made an attention-getting runway debut at Valentino’s couture show in Paris. Since then, she has walked the runway for brands including Burberry , Chanel, Fendi and Marc Jacobs. She was in Vogue in April, August and its all-important September issue.

During New York Fashion Week earlier this month, Michael Kors booked her exclusively for his show, where she modeled the opening look. She went on to walk the runways of Burberry, London Fashion Week’s biggest show, for a second time, and then in Milan at Max Mara and Fendi. The 19-year-old is currently at Paris Fashion Week, which ends Oct. 1, and has appeared in big shows including Lanvin and Dries Van Noten.

Ms. Abdi and her agency embrace her Muslim faith, explaining to casting directors, stylists, and photographers that her religious observance means she won’t wear skin-baring clothing or reveal her hair.

Ms. Abdi wearing the opening look to Michael Kors’s Spring 2020 runway show. Photo: Peter White/Getty Images

“Ugbad’s grace on the runway or in front of the camera is evident, but that is only part of what makes her an exceptional model,” said Anna Wintour, editor-in-chief of Vogue magazine and artistic director and global content adviser of Condé Nast. “From the beginning, she has used her platform to challenge stereotypes about Muslim women and open doors for others.”

Few people are more surprised by her sudden rise than Ms. Abdi herself, who has retained a teenage awe while navigating her ascent. “I’m in American Vogue Couture Story while wearing my hijab?!!?!,” she posted to Instagram in March. She had never been to New York until last year, when she met with agency executives to talk about signing on. “From there, everything happened,” she said, describing the entire experience as “amazing.”

Share Your Thoughts

What do you think of the modeling industry’s push to show more diversity on runways and in ads? Join the conversation below.

She recalls the giddy moment while riding through New York’s Union Square in a car with her agent when she saw herself in an ad for Fendi plastered on a giant billboard. “I almost freaked out,” she said. She later went back to take photos, including one of her looking at herself in the ad, which she posted to Instagram. “That was a big moment for me,” she said. “I had to post that.”

“Everything that has happened so far to this moment, it’s like, all a dream come true,” Ms. Abdi said in an interview after the Michael Kors show. “I always get emotional,” she said while tearing up. “It’s good to see that people want to see change. It’s an honor to have a voice and maybe educate some people who didn’t know anything about the hijab before. I feel like this is a journey for everyone. ”

Few people are more surprised by her sudden rise than Ms. Abdi herself, who has retained a teenage awe while navigating her ascent. Photo: Andre D. Wagner for The Wall Street Journal

The fashion industry’s efforts to diversify have been slow to evolve. In the 1970s, several black models became popular, alongside civil-rights activism and the “Black is Beautiful” movement. In 1974, Beverly Johnson became the first black model to appear on the cover of American Vogue. Iman achieved stardom starting in the mid-’70s, followed by Naomi Campbell, Veronica Webb and Tyra Banks in the ’80s and ’90s. But the dominant look in modeling remained white, as well as young and thin.

More East Asian models began to appear on runways beginning in 2011, as China’s economy opened up. In 2017, plus-sized model Ashley Graham appeared in a Michael Kors show, paving the way for other curvier models.

At the same time, a growing number of mainstream clothing brands, from lingerie brand Aerie to department store Macy’s , have been featuring more diverse women in their advertising, positioning diversity as a selling point. And beauty brands’ advertising and social-media campaigns now feature more celebrities, models and influencers of color, fueled in part by the launch of Rihanna’s inclusive Fenty Beauty by Rihanna line in 2017.

Of 221 major fashion shows held in February and March in New York, London, Milan and Paris, nearly 40% of the models cast were nonwhite, a record, according to theFashionSpot, a fashion blog that has tracked model diversity since late 2014. More plus-size, older and transgender and nonbinary models have appeared on catwalks in recent seasons.

“Inclusion is happening right now and may it continue,” said Bethann Hardison, one of the pioneering black runway models of the 1970s.

Business reasons underlie the changes. Modest fashion, for instance, represents a big opportunity, especially in the Middle East. Muslim spending on clothing is expected to reach $361 billion by 2023, according to Thomson Reuters.

Ms. Abdi’s family fled from war-torn Somalia to a Kenyan refugee camp when she was small. A U.N. refugee agency relocated her family to Des Moines when she was 9. In high school, people encouraged the tall, thin teen to look into modeling. She admired Iman, also from Somalia, and Halima Aden, a hijab-wearing Muslim model IMG signed in 2017.

After she signed with Next, the agency was upfront with industry professionals about Ms. Abdi’s wish to keep her head covered and not wear revealing clothing.

Ms. Abdi awaiting her first time walking for Michael Kors. The show’s casting director, Piergiorgio Del Moro, who also cast her for Fendi, said he immediately thought of Vermeer’s ‘Girl with a Pearl Earring,’ when he met her for the first time. Photo: Andre D. Wagner for The Wall Street Journal

Casting director Patrizia Pilotti tapped Ms. Abdi for her debut at the Valentino couture show. “We didn’t book her because she was Muslim. We booked her because she was beautiful,” she said.

Soon after, major industry pros clamored to book her. Piergiorgio Del Moro, who cast her in Fendi, Max Mara, Michael Kors and other shows, called her “so elegant and special” and said “she was confirmed right away” for a Fendi ad campaign. “Whether it’s size or age or background, gender, religion, I don’t think it should be a stumbling block for a designer to make people look remarkable,” said Mr. Kors.

“People have been getting really creative with things, designing certain scarves for me, which is really nice,” said Ms. Abdi. “They sometimes put a lot of hats on me. So it’s really like we can do anything.”

Ms. Abdi at Paris Fashion Week. Photo: Benoit Tessier/REUTERS
As Fashion Seeks More Diversity, New Models Stand Out
Photo: Getty Images

Adwoa Aboah Freckled faced, with a buzzcut and a jeweled tooth, Ms. Aboah has walked the runway for labels including Chanel and Dior and appeared in campaigns for brands including Burberry, Chanel, Giorgio Armani and Revlon. She is also a contributing editor at British Vogue, and founded an online platform for young women called Gurls Talk.

Photo: Getty Images

Valentina Sampaio The 22-year-old transgender model from Brazil made a splash over the summer when she was hired as Victoria’s Secret first trans model. She joins a growing number of transgender models being tapped by fashion and cosmetics brands. She appeared on the cover of Vogue Paris in 2017 and signed deals with brands including L’Oréal and Dior beauty.

Photo: Getty Images

JoAni Johnson The 67-year-old model has appeared in shows for brands including Tommy Hilfiger and Deveaux New York and starred in campaigns for brands including Sephora and Rihanna’s Fenty. A casting agent saw a 2016 photo of her by a street style photographer and cast her in an Allure video on aging gracefully that went viral. A new modeling agency signed her soon after.

Photo: Getty Images

Anok Yai The 21-year-old, Egyptian-born and of Sudanese descent, has become a rising star and part of a wave of darker-skinned models of African descent expanding the range of brown skin shades on runways. In a Vogue YouTube interview, Anna Wintour singled out Ms. Yai and Ms. Abdi as having “had very very strong seasons” for the Fall 2019 shows.

Photo: Getty Images

Paloma Elsesser Influential fashion makeup artist Pat McGrath selected Ms. Elsesser, while studying at the New School, to star as a muse for her new makeup line in 2016. The 27-year-old has since appeared in fashion magazines, on runways and in campaigns.

Write to Ray A. Smith at ray.smith@wsj.com

Copyright ©2019 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-iowa-teen-opening-new-doors-in-fashion-11569754801

2019-09-29 11:00:00Z
CAIiEG_VpgfnVrLgV9d4TfyAtp4qFwgEKg8IACoHCAow1tzJATDnyxUw54IY

Jumat, 27 September 2019

Fashion Concept GmbH: Jeremy Meeks to conquer fashion world - Yahoo Finance

FRANKFURT, Germany--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

We are experiencing a time of social and technological revolution. Fashion Concept GmbH is not just a pioneer, it has also been able to sign a deal with one of the icons of the fashion industry, former "hot felon" Jeremy Meeks. Fashion Concept GmbH focuses on the international trade in textiles. By using sustainable materials and promoting investment in new technologies, the company aims to ensure the long-term availability of environmentally-friendly fashion.

The company's goal is to set new standards for sustainability. To reinforce this goal, Fashion Concept has just signed a $15 million deal with Jeremy Meeks to develop his own brand. For Meeks, who has been a regular presence on the catwalk for various fashion designers, this collaboration means a higher profile and a wider audience, because not only will he be a top model, but he will also be marketing his own fashion label.

It is not just this mega deal that is a milestone in Jeremy's career; his private life is also on the upswing. He was recently photographed with a well-known actress. But things are not just on the upswing for Jeremy: Fashion Concept GmbH, with its focus on uniquely innovative and sustainable technologies, is making a bold move with this deal as it seeks to drive forward change in the fashion industry. Fashion Concept aims to expand the growth in fashion and lifestyle brands. Higher revenues are being generated each year on Germany's fashion market, in retail and, in particular, through online business; private investors, too, will soon have the opportunity to benefit from this growth. The profit margins of often up to 30% will be of particular interest for investors.

This is precisely the market segment where Fashion Concept is active. In international trade, the company has seen a growth of almost 300% in its sales over the last two years alone. The company is already making profits in purchasing, since it can access its own production facilities in Turkey. In addition, merchandise such as textiles and accessories from many top manufacturers are being produced and purchased at very favourable conditions. The opportunity to purchase at high volumes allows savings of up to 90% to be achieved.

The company plans to purchase further top textile brands in 2020. This will not only expand its product offerings significantly, it will also have a direct impact on prices.

The group works with numerous distributors, allowing it to be able to choose the most efficient marketing channel for its products at all times. In this way, it can maximise the revenue from the quick sale of its merchandise.

The company does not rely on bank loans, but instead uses subordinated loans, bonds, profit participation rights, and silent partnerships for individuals who can directly benefit from the company's growth with a fixed return, currently at three to five percent.

View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20190927005188/en/

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https://finance.yahoo.com/news/fashion-concept-gmbh-jeremy-meeks-112500938.html

2019-09-27 11:25:00Z
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From cucumber sandwiches to Kurt Cobain: this week's fashion trends - The Guardian

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From cucumber sandwiches to Kurt Cobain: this week's fashion trends  The Guardian
https://www.theguardian.com/fashion/2019/sep/27/cucumber-sandwiches-kurt-cobain-fashion-trends

2019-09-27 06:00:00Z
CBMiXmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnRoZWd1YXJkaWFuLmNvbS9mYXNoaW9uLzIwMTkvc2VwLzI3L2N1Y3VtYmVyLXNhbmR3aWNoZXMta3VydC1jb2JhaW4tZmFzaGlvbi10cmVuZHPSAQA

Kamis, 26 September 2019

Face masks to decoy t-shirts: The rise of anti-surveillance fashion - Reuters

LONDON (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - As top designers wrapped up London Fashion Week and made their way to Paris to grab the world’s attention with their lavish creations, a group of artists in London were making their own fashion statement, in a bid to become invisible.

Emily Roderick, 23, and her cohorts in “The Dazzle Club” walked around the British capital last week with blue, red and black stripes painted across their faces in an effort to escape the watchful eye of facial-recognition cameras.

The artists took their silent stroll through the city’s King’s Cross area hoping their bold make-up would act as camouflage and confuse the cameras.

“We’re hiding in plain sight,” Roderick told the Thomson Reuters Foundation, explaining that bright colors and dark shades of make-up are known to hamper a camera’s ability to accurately recognize faces.

Computers have become adept at identifying people in recent years, unlocking a myriad of applications for facial recognition, from tracking criminals to counting truants.

But as cameras appear at unlikely spots across the globe, activists raise fears about lost privacy and say society might be on the doorstep of a dystopia where Big Brother sees all.

Altering people’s looks to cheat cameras has become increasingly popular with artists and designers in recent years, as the use of facial recognition has grown more pervasive, raising fears over privacy, according to fashion experts.

From sunglasses to face masks, numerous wearable devices promising a veil of anonymity are making their way into the mainstream, said Henry Navarro Delgado, an art and fashion professor at Canada’s Ryerson University.

“There has always been something subversive about streetwear, and one of the new areas of subversion is definitely surveillance and, in particular, facial recognition,” he said.

In Hong Kong, for example, protesters against a bill that would have allowed people to be sent to mainland China for trial have sought to avoid surveillance by wearing masks and dressing in black.

MASKS AND T-SHIRTS

The Dazzle Club’s monthly decorative walks take place in different parts of London to raise awareness about the growing use of facial-recognition technology in public spaces, said Roderick.

Last month, Britain’s data protection watchdog launched an investigation into the use of surveillance cameras by a property developer in the King’s Cross area.

The revelation that the cameras were capturing and analyzing images of people who passed through the site without their permission triggered a public backlash and led to the start of the Dazzle Club walks.

In a statement released in September, developer Argent said it had turned off the software, and had been using the technology “only to help the (police) prevent and detect crime in the neighborhood”.

The bright face paint Roderick and her associates wore was pioneered by U.S. artist Adam Harvey in 2010 for an art project called CV Dazzle.

The project’s name is a nod to a camouflage technique first used in World War One, when British ships were painted in zig-zag patterns to stop German U-boats from being able to tell how big they were or which way they were heading.

Harvey, 38, said he drew inspiration from the London “BoomBox” party scene of the early 2000s and tribal make-up from Papua New Guinea to develop a series of eccentric looks combining face paint and spiky hair fringes that bamboozle cameras.

In 2016, he doubled up with a “decoy” textile pattern featuring stylized faces that caused face detectors to register false hits.

Some online clothing stores have since printed the pattern onto clothing to sell on their websites.

“The main objective of this project is to show people that surveillance is not invincible,” Harvey told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in a phone interview.

Other designers have since joined the quest to use fashion to help people keep private in public.

Online retailer Adversarial Fashion sells shirts, skirts and other garments emblazoned with fake license plates that it says are picked up by traffic surveillance cameras, “injecting junk data” into a system used “to monitor and track civilians”.

Chicago-based designer Scott Urban has developed sunglasses that block infrared facial recognition cameras.

Urban said his main concern was the potential hacking of facial feature data that is collected by cameras and tied to people’s identities.

“If someone steals your credit card, you can cancel it and get a new one ... (but) most of us are not going to do plastic surgery to rearrange our identity,” he said by phone.

U.S. artist Leonardo Selvaggio took the mask concept one step further, developing a 3D prosthetic copy of his own face that anyone could buy online for about $200 until the company manufacturing it folded earlier this year.

Besides shielding users from cameras, the device aimed to mess up facial recognition systems by tying Selvaggio’s face and identity to a multitude of different bodies, the artist said.

“My hypothesis was that if we could do that large enough - and hopefully eventually with other faces - then we could call into question facial recognition’s ability to do its job,” he explained.

Selvaggio said he was aware of similar prosthetic masks that had been used to commit crimes.

In 2010, a white man pleaded guilty to carrying out six robberies in Ohio wearing a mask of a black man’s face - a ploy that initially led police to arrest the wrong man.

The aim of his project, he added, was to show that no technology used to catch criminals was “infallible”.

NEW NORMAL?

While anti-surveillance accessories offer some degree of disguise, many designers warn their creations are tools for social commentary rather than invisibility.

Harvey, for example, acknowledged that his many-faced textile pattern worked on a system that was widely used a few years ago but has since been surpassed.

“It does not work for modern face detection systems that would be used by law enforcement,” he said.

Anti-facial recognition fashion has also drawn some criticism, with one academic saying it risked “normalizing” surveillance.

“These artworks are accepting pervasive surveillance as being inevitable,” said Torin Monahan, a professor of communication at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Meanwhile, the Dazzle Club walkers in London say camera camouflage is helping people reclaim their identities and hope the initiative will spread to other cities, said Roderick.

“There’s definitely something important about being able to take ownership of our own image and understand when we want to put that out into the public space,” she said.

Reporting by Umberto Bacchi @UmbertoBacchi in Tbilisi and Adela Suliman @Adela_Suliman in London, Editing by Jumana Farouky and Zoe Tabary. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's and LGBT+ rights, human trafficking, property rights, and climate change. Visit http://news.trust.org

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https://www.reuters.com/article/us-britain-tech-fashion-feature/face-masks-to-decoy-t-shirts-the-rise-of-anti-surveillance-fashion-idUSKBN1WB0HT

2019-09-26 05:39:00Z
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Rabu, 25 September 2019

Gucci's straitjackets draw fashion model's silent protest on runway - Stuff.co.nz

Ayesha Tan-Jones protested against the designs with a message.

JACOPO RAULE/GETTY IMAGES

Ayesha Tan-Jones protested against the designs with a message.

Everything was white: the walls that the Gucci models slid past, the conveyor belt they stood on, the prisonlike sandals they wore on their feet and the straitjackets that covered their unmoving bodies.

Before Gucci brought out patterns and lace and loud colours at Milan Fashion Week, the blank slate and bland clothing was meant to represent "the most extreme version of a uniform dictated by society and those who control it," according to Gucci.

Designer Alessandro Michele made the "blank-styled clothes to represent how through fashion, power is exercised over life, to eliminate self-expression," Gucci wrote on Instagram. "This power prescribes social norms, classifying and curbing identity."

During the opening of the Gucci show in Milan on Sunday afternoon, the label's 20 models, somber and staring blankly ahead, moved past onlookers with their arms limp at their sides - all but one.

READ MORE:
* Gucci models hit catwalk in Devast8-like facial art
* Grace Jones slays the runway at Zendaya and Tommy Hilfiger's epic Paris Fashion Week show
* Gucci creative head breaks silence over 'blackface' sweater

Ayesha Tan-Jones - who identifies as gender-nonbinary and uses the pronouns they and them - raised their arms.

"MENTAL HEALTH," their palms read in black marker, "IS NOT FASHION."

Tan-Jones did not immediately respond to an interview request, but they said in a series of statements posted to Instagram after the fashion show that they decided to protest because "I believe, as many of my fellow models do, that the stigma around mental health must end."

Gucci said that the specific clothes were just a statement for the show, and would not be sold.

JACOPO RAULE/GETTY IMAGES

Gucci said that the specific clothes were just a statement for the show, and would not be sold.

As someone who has struggled with mental health, and as someone with loved ones who have experienced bipolar disorder, depression, anxiety and schizophrenia, Tan-Jones wrote that it is hurtful and insensitive for a major fashion house such as Gucci to use this imagery as a concept for a fleeting fashion moment."

Tan-Jones continued: "Straight Jackets are a symbol of a cruel time in medicine when mental illness was not understood, and people's rights and liberties were taken away from them while they were abused and tortured in the institution.

"It is in bad taste for Gucci to use the imagery of straight jackets and outfits alluding to mental patients, while being rolled out on a conveyor belt as if a piece of factory meat.

"Presenting these struggles as props for selling clothes in today's capitalist climate is vulgar, unimaginative and offensive to the millions of people around the world affected by these issues."

Models wear jumpsuits that were designed to mimic straitjackets.

VICTOR BOYKO/GETTY IMAGES

Models wear jumpsuits that were designed to mimic straitjackets.

Tan-Jones continued the thought in a separate statement.

"Many of the other Gucci models who were in the show felt just as strongly as I did about this depiction of straitjackets, and without their support I would not have had the courage to walk out and peacefully protest," Tan-Jones said, adding that they had joined other models in donating a portion of their show payment to mental health charities.

Representatives from Gucci did not immediately respond to a request for comment, but in their statement on Instagram after the show, they made clear that the white outfits that started the show will not be sold and were only included as part of the performative art.

Those outfits, including the straitjackets, were meant to juxtapose Michele's colourful spring and summer collection, the account said, which he designed to convey "fashion as a way to allow people to walk through fields of possibilities, cultivate beauty, make diversity sacrosanct and celebrate the self in expression and identity."

Michele told The New York Times after the show that he "wanted to show how society today can have the ability to confine individuality and that Gucci can be the antidote."

"For me, the show was the journey from conformity to freedom and creativity," Michele told The Times.

Michele, an Italian designer who became Gucci's creative director in 2015, has faced criticism in the past for other "make it fashion" moments that were characterised as insensitive.

In February, Gucci issued an apology and pulled a wool balaclava jumper that retailed for $890 from its shelves after online critics accused the turtleneck of miming blackface. The brand also faced backlash for putting white models in turbans as if the Sikh religious headwear and later selling them in stores for hundreds of dollars.

After those uproars, Gucci formed an advisory council and made plans to hire a global director for diversity and inclusion.

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https://www.stuff.co.nz/life-style/fashion/116100421/guccis-straitjackets-draw-fashion-models-silent-protest-on-runway

2019-09-25 08:07:00Z
52780392461542

Senin, 23 September 2019

How a chance encounter helped launch Misha Nonoo's fashion company - GMA

How a chance encounter helped launch Misha Nonoo's fashion company | GMA

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https://www.goodmorningamerica.com/culture/story/chance-encounter-helped-launch-misha-nonoos-fashion-company-65574317

2019-09-23 08:15:00Z
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Emmys: Fashion hits and misses on the purple carpet - Los Angeles Times

The 71st Emmy Awards on Sunday was filled with its share of onstage surprises. (After all, didn’t you think “Schitt’s Creek was going to walk away with something after all of the fanfare and media attention?) However, the action — the sartorial action, that is — got started early on the purple carpet as stars — such as Catherine O’Hara in a custom black-and-white color-blocked column gown by Greta Constantine; Zendaya in a green (perhaps) Poison Ivy-inspired Vera Wang gown; and Amy Adams in a sheer Fendi Couture gown — made their way through the crowd to the Microsoft Theater in downtown Los Angeles.

Each woman above made it on to our Emmys fashion hits-and-misses list, and yes, we considered the major trends of the evening — bold color combinations and bare shoulders — in making our selections. You’ll have to visit our photo gallery below to see more. You might agree. Or maybe you’ll disagree. No matter what, it’s all in good fun. After all, who’s complaining about wearing something designer and being the belle (or beau) of the ball? That certainly doesn’t appear to be the case with anyone in these photos.

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https://www.latimes.com/lifestyle/story/2019-09-23/emmys-fashion-hits-and-misses-on-the-purple-carpet

2019-09-23 07:45:00Z
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Emmys: Best Fashion on the Purple Carpet - Variety

Emmys Fashion: Best Dressed on the Carpet 2019 – Variety

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The biggest stars in television stepped out on the Emmy purple carpet on Sunday night in a stunning display of gowns and vivacious looks.

Fashion expert Brooke Jaffe, who visited Variety’s set after the show, picked some of her favorite dresses of the night, which included Zendaya’s truly enviable Vera number and Mandy Moore in custom Brandon Maxwell.

Watch the video above.

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  • Emmys Fashion: Best Dressed on the

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https://variety.com/2019/tv/news/emmy-fashion-best-dressed-mandy-moore-video-zendaya-1203345490/

2019-09-23 07:36:00Z
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