Fashion Is Fun, Slideshows
J.Crew Goes Girly for Spring
By Britt Aboutaleb Thursday, Oct 22, 2009 / 9:37 AM
Editors swooned over J.Crew’s spring/summer collection at the company’s Astor Place headquarters yesterday.
Creative Director Jenna Lyons presented a slouchy, girly, heavily layered look. There were liberty print rompers (that won’t make it into stores, even though I’d buy five), camo jackets, sequined shorts and tanks, a bunch of grandpa cardigans and one great gown all paired with brogues and what looked like Kork-Ease wedges.
There were touches of neon everywhere (even more than for fall) and chunky jewelry layered atop itself on wrists and necks, including those Miriam Haskell pieces Lyons was so excited about.
Pants-less looks made more than one appearance, with plaid ruffled high-waisted bloomers and what looked like grey knit short, short shorts. And though the clothes were fantastic, it’s the brilliant styling that made everyone want to jump in and live in J.Crew world.
That and the pigs in a blanket they were passing around.
Tags: J. Crew, Jenna Lyons
Most Popular Stories
Comments [19]
Staff
- Executive Editor
- Leah Chernikoff
- Features & Beauty Editor
- Cheryl Wischhover
- Fashion News Editor
- Hayley Phelan
- Associate Editor
- Dhani Mau
- Editorial Assistant
- Nora Crotty
- Contributors
- Steff Yotka, Alice Pfeiffer, Ashley Jahncke, John Ortved, Chris Benz, Zandile Blay, John Jannuzzi, Sally Lyndley, Elana Fishman, Sarah Ferguson, Natalie Matthews, Misty White Sidell, Alaina Hernandez, Amanda Enowitz, Dana Kruspe, Modesta Dziautaite, Elysia Mann, Fawnia Soo Hoo, Nora Crotty, Jennifer Chan, Jihan Forbes, India-Jewel Jackson, Jo Piazza, Justine Harman, Tyler McCall
Popular Stories
Recommendations
Topics
Agyness Deyn Alexa Chung Alexander McQueen Alexander Wang Anna Wintour Balenciaga Barneys Carine Roitfeld Chanel Chloe Coco Rocha ELLE Fall 09 Fashion Trivia Fashion Week Gap Gossip Girl Gucci H&M J. Crew Jeremy Kost Kanye West Karlie Kloss Karl Lagerfeld Kate Middleton Kate Moss Lady Gaga Louis Vuitton Marc Jacobs Michelle Obama Models Net-a-Porter Prada Project Runway Rachel Zoe Stella McCartney Target Teen Vogue Television TopShop Urban Outfitters Vivienne Westwood Vogue Vogue UK WWD






The 10 Best YouTube Hair Tutorials
The 10 Best YouTube Makeup Tutorials
Fashion's Most Stylish Guys Give Mark Zuckerberg an (Almost!) Hoodie-Free Makeover for Facebook's IPO
Style and Substance: 10 Ladies Who Have Proven You Can Have Both
10 Beauty Boards You Should Be Following on Pinterest
i think j crew does chris benz better than chris benz.
love the orange, sequins, and baubles…
http://www.newandworthy.com
Wow, this is great. Totally wearable. I want. Especially those sequin/paillette top/dresses. and that suede jacket! aiiii.
J. Crew will always promote a layered look! More layers = more purchases for one look. I can’t remember a time when J. Crew didn’t recommend layers…
i can’t remember a time when i could afford jcrew. and yet their price point keeps going up and up.
Yes! J.Crew’s styling is, to quote RZ in spite of myself, “on another level.” I die over their website, which I have literally started to check every single day. But the price point thing is an interesting J.Crew issue that I’ve never heard resolved. Like, for instance, they have a $2,500 shearling jacket for sale online. Who would buy that? Who expects to find a $2,500 shearling jacket in a J.Crew? Still, it’s awesome looking and Jenna Lyons is nothing less than a dynamo! If only she was the creative genius behind menswear my world might start to make sense (and if she is in charge of menswear please don’t tell me. I’d like to absolve her, if possible).
Sean has a good point.
Everything looks good but do you think the regular JCrew girl dresses like this?
It’s going to be a challenge for Jenna to create a Marni girl from the west coast, in price and appearance.
Just because you’re writing about fashion doesn’t mean you have to write like this. Give Strunk & White a once-over sometime. Did you editors really “swoon”? Would you really have purchased five liberty print rompers?
Seriously. The catalog looks great, and then you stop and say, “you’re wearing a button-down shirt, under a turtleneck, under a jersey dress, with a cardigan, and a blazer, AND a BELT wrapped over all of it, plus 5 necklaces, pumps, and socks.”
I mean, don’t get me wrong, I love their catalog and think it looks great, but I agree that all those layers are probably not wearable.
Clar, I love S&W. I keep the illustrated copy on my desk with the Chicago Manual of Style. But…I’m a legal intern, so I guess that’s different.
Clar, I was just going to suggest that if you don’t like the writing style of a publication, you should probably read something else, no?
ughhh J Crew, why are you soo irresistable?
Wow, some cute clothes. By the way, Liberty should be capitalized. It is a brand name (Liberty Art Fabrics, from Liberty of London), after all. Shouldn’t fashion writers know such things?
ew @ #13.
and obviously the catalog isn’t meant to be copied directly. it’s meant to inspire women to LAYER. period. it doesn’t have to be a thousand layers and belts and jewelry and men’s shoes. just, to be creative and pair things you normally wouldn’t. DUH.
I adore J.Crew but I simply can’t justify the price. They charge far too much for what they have to offer. If I’m spending $130 on jeans, am I really going to go to J.Crew to buy them?
Can’t believe someone said “ew” because someone else noted a misspelling! Is that really worthy of a “ew”?
What’s really ew-worthy is #14′s attitude. DUH, really?
Ever since J. Crew has started selling items at a higher price point (which has been years now, btw) I have been confused and grossed out by people’s responses. They can’t justify spending that much for something from J. Crew. I don’t understand why people don’t understand that they are actually getting MORE for their $ when they buy $130 jeans at J. Crew, because they are NOT paying for the name or the certain design on their pocket (plus, no designs on the pocket proclaiming a brand name = yay, of course), they are paying for the quality. I just think it is sort of label-whorish not to want to spend money there, if you have that money to spend at all, especially when their countless catalogs painstakingly explain why their python ballet flats are well-made enough to cost $400, when you will pay that much for, say, gucci logo flats or something that are made by the thousands in a sweatshop instead. Silly.
Dig. Dig. Dig.
And I agree with #18.
BUT, I don’t buy their shoes because I don’t spend $400 on shoes with synthetic linings and soles.
That’s the one quality ‘fall down’ that I get with them.