Archive for November 2010

Two competing biographies of Isabella Blow, widely regarded as one of the most brilliant and creative forces in fashion, hit shelves this week. There’s Blow by Blow, Detmar Blow’s biography of his late wife coauthored by Tom Sykes, and there’s Isabella Blow: A Life in Fashion by veteran fashion writer Lauren Goldstein Crowe. Crowe’s is being optioned for a movie. Detmar’s bio is the required reading for our first Fashionista book club (virtual) meeting.

There’s a lot of bad blood between the two books. At the New York launch party for Blow by Blow, Detmar told WWD that he had “no interest” in Crowe’s book. Following the London launch party for Isabella Blow: A Life in Fashion, Crowe wrote to tell Racked.com: “Personally I thought it more interesting that Detmar’s sister and cousin were there as were both Isabella’s sisters and her step-mother and a variety of cousins. Also Philip Treacy and Lucy Ferry who didn’t attend Detmar’s launch. But hey, that’s the world we live in.”

And now Tom Sykes, coauthor of Blow by Blow (and brother of Plum and Lucy) is fighting back. He sent us a long, angry email to comment on what he called the “outrageous slur that has been made today on our book by Ms Crowe on the fashion blog racked.com.”

Here it is in full (we’ve bolded the best bits):

‘Hey, that’s the world we live in’? What the hell is that supposed to mean?
Lauren Golsdstein Crowe’s outrageous insinuation seems to be that somehow her book is the ‘approved version’ because Issie’s sisters came to her book launch. This cannot go unchallenged. Lavinia, Isabella’s beloved youngest sister, came to the launch of our book in London, and was an honored guest at the dinner afterwards at Annabels. Freddie, Lavinia’s son and one of Issie’s cousins, was also at our launch in New York. And, for God’s sake, DETMAR WAS ISSIE’S HUSBAND FOR ALMOST TWENTY YEARS!!!!

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Dasha Zhukova, who replaced Katie Grand as the editor of Pop nearly two years ago, has resigned from the magazine, according to Telegraph fashion editor Hilary Alexander.

Pop
was Katie Grand’s baby and Zhukova–a Russia gallery girl, Kova & T designer, and partner of billionaire Roman Abramovich–was given a lot of crap when she entered the role. Owned by Bauer–yes, the publisher who runs Life & StylePop has taken on a less-fashion-y, more artsy vibe during Zhukova’s reign.

Whether or not Zhukova was unceremoniously canned or simply decided she’d had enough is yet to be determined. Know anything? Email us on tips@fashionista.com.

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Today Racked National published a label list for a magazine shoot that recently took place in Los Angeles. The magazine is unnamed, but we can pretty much guarantee it’s not Vogue. (Our sources tell us as much, but it’s also obvious–we’re guessing any mag just working on a minimal shoot right now is more likely to be a women’s pub, not a high fashion book.)

Anyway, the list includes advertisers that must be included (the usual: Armani, Celine, Michael Kors, Reed Krakoff) and labels they’d like to include even though they don’t advertise.

To us, it’s the second list that’s way more interesting. It features Phillip Lim, Proenza Schouler and Prabal Gurung, as well as Helmut Lang and Narciso Rodriguez.

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Ever wonder what models do after they stop stomping the catwalks (aka after they gain a few pounds and turn 25)?

Acting? Designing? DJing? Too obvious. Former runway model Maeva Althaus, 29, became a hypnotist, and recently launched her own hypnosis salon out of her SoHo studio called Hypnosis by Maeva.

For the last ten years, Althaus worked as a high fashion model. She was scouted by Ford in Paris at 17, worked as a fit and runway model for Alaïa, walked for Givenchy, Isabel Marant, Burberry, you name it. She did editorials for Vogue Italia, Numéro, and i-D.

“I felt the superficiality of fashion and I wanted to do something more,” says Althaus. After living the hectic, uprooting life of a model for a decade, Althaus, who says she’s always been into holistic medicine and meditation, decided to settle in the states. But, since you can’t smoke anywhere in the US, Althaus had to quit smoking (a habit most models find hard to kick). So she turned to hypnosis, and it worked. After hypnosis helped her to quit smoking, she got curious about it and “started to learn all the ways it can help people.”

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Shopping

Michael Kors Makes Holiday Shopping Easy

Wednesday, Nov 10, 2010 / 1:30 PM

Michael Kors is one heck of a salesman. Anyone who continues to pound the pavement at trunk shows thirty years into his career is more than okay by us. Of course it helps that his clothes are stunning.

Now Michael is taking his entrepreneurial spirit to the Web with a series of charming, semi-lo-fi videos. Above, he chooses his favorite MK gifts for the season. You can click the “MK” buttons on the video to purchase each piece mentioned. Pretty slick.

More than anything, the super star designer is such a genuine, lovely person that we just want to buy something from him. Enjoy the video, and go to Michaelkors.com for more.

The Prettiest Baby Bump Ever: Miranda Kerr posed nude for W magazine, six months pregnant with what will be the most attractive child to ever be born. {W}

Wedding Disaster:
In related news, Kerr might also be walking down the aisle naked because American Airlines lost luggage containing her wedding dress in July. Four months later, she still thinks she has a chance at getting it back and asked her Facebook friends for advice. {Racked}

Is London More Posh?
Victoria Beckham might start showing in London instead of New York. “I’m very proud to be British and the brand is British,” said the designer. {Vogue UK}

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This Spring, Alexander McQueen’s life work will be in full bloom at the Metropolitan Museum, where the Costume Institute is celebrating the late designer’s career with a retrospective. It sounds beyond amazing. Called Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty, the exhibition will be on view from May 4 through July 31, 2011 and will encompass all of his work, from his Central Saint Martins postgrad collection in 1992 to his final runway presentation this past February.

The exhibition begins two days after the Costume Institute Gala Benefit, and here are the deets we have on that: Honorary Chairs are François-Henri Pinault and Salma Hayek, and the Co-Chairs will be Colin Firth, Stella McCartney, and Anna Wintour. Expect lots of McQueen.

As for the exhibition–the Costume Institute is not just throwing a range of dresses onto mannequins and calling it a day. The thoughtful retrospective will feature around 100 examples of McQueen’s work from the Alexander McQueen Archive in London, the Givenchy Archive in Paris and private collections.

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Kate Spade is known for vibrant colors and vintage-inspired styles. The label’s Spring 2011 collection features all that and more with floppy hats, an amazing newspaper clutch, and beautiful wedges. Take a peek at our favorite items from their Spring 2011 lookbook.

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It’s been almost a week since the hotly-anticipated opening of Dash New York, so we decided it was about time to see it for ourselves. Walking up to the store, I saw no police officers, fistfights or camera crews, which I presumed meant a lack of Kardashain blood inside. In fact, the shop was nearly empty and would range from about two to 10 customers in the half hour or so I was there, which, granted, is probably average for a SoHo boutique on a Tuesday afternoon. Still, I expected a little more from a store whose recent opening warranted police barricades and multiple arrests.

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Lately, the cool thing, if you’re famous, is to claim that you don’t have a stylist. (Cough, Blake Lively, cough cough.) Sometimes, that’s true. But most of the time, chances are someone is likely helping the starlet make clothing decisions, even if it’s not a Rachel Zoe/Nicole Richie-type relationship.

There are some stylists who make celebrities look like they’ve done it themselves. Leslie Fremar, who styles Julianne Moore, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Jennifer Connelly, and several other perfect specimens, makes her clients feel so comfortable on the red carpet that for years I fully believed Gyllenhaal did it solo.

But alas, what celebrity has time to go it alone, especially when it’s a big event like the Oscars? As one publicist told me, “I don’t think they have time to find PR contacts, you know?”

Even Chloe Sevigny, whose style is innately her own–probably more than any other celebrity–uses a stylist for big events. Ezra Woods, her sometimes-stylist, also works with Michelle Williams, who looks as effortless on the street as she does on the red carpet. (And there’s no way Woods is picking out her outfits every morning.) Perfect person Gwyneth Paltrow even started using someone after her too loose Ralph Lauren dress at the 1999 Oscars. (Although I loved it regardless.)

So what about Blake? And Diane? And January? What’s truth and what’s fiction? Here are the real stories behind these stars without stylists:

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Cathie Black, who has been the chairwoman of Hearst Magazines for 15 years, and before that publisher of New York magazine and USA Today, will replace Joel Klein as the chancellor of New York City schools.

While it comes as no surprise that Black is leaving Hearst–she was passed over for president when David Carey got the job last July–her departure comes quicker than Hearst execs had anticipated and her new title comes as a shock to many given her lack of experience in education. A senior staff member in the Department of Education told the New York Times that the announcement caught top aides off guard, that “Mr. Klein had not said anything to them about wanting a new job” and that “top aides did not know anything about Ms. Black.” And in a memo to Hearst staffers, chief executive Frank Bennack conceded that he expected “Cathie’s handling of the transition with David…to take place over a longer period of time,” according to WWD.

At yesterday’s press conference announcing the shift, Mayor Bloomberg called Black “a superstar manager who has succeeded spectacularly in the private sector” and added, “There’s no one who knows more about the skills our children will need to succeed in the 21st century economy,” the NYT is reporting. Black admitted that she had little experience dealing with unions and that her own children attended private boarding school in Connecticut, but said, according to WWD, “the change and the opportunity to make a difference is what compelled me to want this position.”

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As promised, we’re giving away a copy of the new Matthew Williamson book. Added incentive? It’s signed by the designer himself.

Valued at $65, Matthew Williamson is the perfect coffee table book for fashion lovers. Williamson’s electric designs leap off the pages of this image-heavy page-turner, written and edited by legendary fashion writer Colin McDowell, and published by renowned publisher Rizzoli. In addition to beautiful images of Williamson’s creations (as if you needed much else) the book contains contributions from Alexandra Shulman, Anna Wintour, Zandra Rhodes, Joan Burstein and Sir Paul Smith.

Sign up now for a chance to win this gorgeous tome. You have until 5 pm on November 16.