Fashionista

How to Make It in Fashion: June 21, Dream Hotel Downtown, New York

Tuesday April 30th, 2013

The Best J.Crew Bridesmaid Dress for Your Body
Weddings

The Best J.Crew Bridesmaid Dress for Your Body

It’s wedding season, which means it’s also bridesmaid season.

In recent years, brides have tried to ease their friends’ insecurities and stresses by letting them choose the style of the dress. A popular option is to head over to J.Crew and let your bridesmaids pick any dress silhouette, as long as it’s a certain color and fabric.

This seems like a fair way to do it. But a friend of mine, who is a bridesmaid in one of these “J.Crew weddings,” is still stumped. “Do you have any idea which one will look the best?” she asked me. Of course, she means, on her.

So I asked bridal fashion expert Jacqueline Courtney, founder of wedding dress resale site Nearly Newlywed, for some ideas. Click through to see which J.Crew bridesmaid dress will look best on your body.

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Published at 5:41 PM

Monday April 29th, 2013

Altuzarra CEO Karis Durmer’s Unconventional Path to the Top of the Fashion Heap
Life With...

Altuzarra CEO Karis Durmer’s Unconventional Path to the Top of the Fashion Heap

Karis Durmer always knew she wanted a career in fashion. But it took a stint in finance (Bear Stearns), a stop-off at Columbia Business School, and experiences in publishing (Martha Stewart and Conde Nast) and startups (Make Meaning) to get there.

Today, Durmer is the ceo of Altuzarra, the maker of powerfully sexy clothes for women. (Not girls, women. Carine Roitfeld is a champion and muse and the team tells me that Helen Mirren is a “dream client.”) Durmer, who sits at a desk off to the side of company’s SoHo showroom and design studio, might have been an unlikely candidate for the gig in September 2011, when founder Joseph Altuzarra brought her on as his business partner. His mother, Karen Altuzarra, was his first ceo and is now chairman of the company.

Durmer was introduced to Altuzarra by a mutual friend at Proenza Schouler, where she was working for a brief time. While that certainly sounds like a convenient connection, it wasn’t always that easy.

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Published at 6:00 PM
Why Trying to Find Pink Jeans Online Made Me Rethink My Love of E-Commerce
e-commerce

Why Trying to Find Pink Jeans Online Made Me Rethink My Love of E-Commerce

I do 85% of my shopping online. Mostly because I sit at a computer all day and it’s a convenient procrastination tool. But also because I know exactly what I’m getting. I can visit a website and find the exact item in the exact color in the exact size and order it instantly.

At least that’s how I felt a few weeks ago, when I started searching for a pair of not-too-pricey pale pink jeans. However, the experience made me realize that sometimes, getting off your butt and visiting the mall is just easier—and that there needs to be more of a connection between online and offline retail.

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Published at 4:45 PM

Thursday April 25th, 2013

Joe’s Jeans Designer Launches Ambitious New Multifaceted Resale Site
e-commerce

Joe’s Jeans Designer Launches Ambitious New Multifaceted Resale Site

Ambre Dahan, the French-born, L.A.-based design director of Joe’s Jeans (and wife of Joe’s Jeans founder Joe Dahan), knows that the online resale space is competitive. And crowded. After all, 2012 was filled with launch-after-launch: The Real Real, Vaunte, Shop Hers, and Material Wrld, to name a few.

But Dahan believes that her self-funded site, Walk In My Closet, which launches today, is unique enough to make a real impression on the market. And she may be right.

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Published at 4:00 PM

Tuesday April 23rd, 2013

Who Should Replace Reed Krakoff at Coach? A Few Suggestions
The Business

Who Should Replace Reed Krakoff at Coach? A Few Suggestions

Coach’s Reed Krakoff announced today that he’s stepping down from the role of creative director to focus on his namesake luxury label. While Krakoff’s contract with the brand doesn’t end until the summer of 2014, he’ll be working on an advisory basis until then. Which means that Coach’s search for a new creative director is most certainly under way.

Krakoff’s partnership with Coach’s retiring CEO Lew Frankfort lasted a remarkable 16 years, and launched the leather-goods label into a new financial stratosphere. In 1996, when Krakoff came on board, sales were $500 million. In 2012, they reached almost $4.8 billion. Frankfort’s successor, Victor Luis, is already in place. (And a longtime member of the Coach team.) Whomever is brought on to replace Krakoff will have to be able to handle the tremendous financial pressure being a public company brings, but also help to expand Coach’s brand beyond handbags. Clothing, in particular, is an area where there is tremendous opportunity for growth, both abroad in and the US.

But who will it be? We’re sure Coach will search internally first, and that the search may end there. But it’s fun to consider outsiders. Here are our semi-educated suggestions for whom Coach should appoint as its next creative director. What do you think?

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Published at 6:23 PM

Monday April 22nd, 2013

Why Boston’s Retailers Will Bounce Back From the Marathon Bombing
Boston Strong

Why Boston’s Retailers Will Bounce Back From the Marathon Bombing

Something as horrific as the Boston Marathon bombing doesn’t just go away. If September 11, 2011 is any indication, the city will feel its repercussions for years to come. But there’s one big difference between now and then. Today, we live in a world that is sadly more prepared for such tragedies.

That’s why experts predict that Boston’s retailers will stay ‘Boston strong’ over the next year instead of losing sales. “I almost think it’s going to have the opposite effect,” says Ken Morris, a partner at consulting firm Boston Retail Partners. “People are pissed off. They’ll go out of their way to support local businesses to prove ‘we’re tougher than this.’”

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Published at 5:52 PM

Friday April 19th, 2013

Why You Probably Won’t See Any Gatsby-Inspired Collections This Fall
Trendspotting

Why You Probably Won’t See Any Gatsby-Inspired Collections This Fall

The Great Gatsby! It’s finally happening. And I know this is fashion sacrilege, but boy could I give a hoot. Mostly because I am—please don’t hurt me—not a fan of Baz Luhrmann’s films. I do, however, love the story and Miuccia Prada, so if it gets great reviews I might see it.

Yet whether you’re a Baz fanatic, an F. Scott Fitzgerald disciple, or none of the above, it’s difficult not to imagine this film having a tremendous effect on what we’ll see on the Spring 2014 runways. After all, designers love a Roaring Twenties reference.

However, I think the impact may turn out to be minimal, and here’s why.

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Published at 2:00 PM

Thursday April 18th, 2013

Cherry Bombe Gives Food the Fashion Eye It Deserves
Magazines

Cherry Bombe Gives Food the Fashion Eye It Deserves

The bond between fashion people and food people is pretty damn intense right now. Look at Karlie Kloss’s collaboration with Momofuku. And the lifestyle-ization of Bon Appetit. Fashion people want to eat good food. And food people want to look good.

Cherry Bombe, the new magazine from Harper’s Bazaar alumni Kerry Diamond and Claudia Wu, is made specifically for those people. The focus is women in food, and women who love to cook, so there are interviews with Karlie Kloss, Sofia Coppola (!), Garance Dore and chefs including Prune’s Gabrielle Hamilton, The Breslin’s April Bloomfield, and Tennessee pit master Helen Turner. “There are so many people doing interesting, beautiful things in and around the food world,” says Diamond. “Our cover girl Karlie Kloss is a great example with her Milk Bar Karlie’s Kookies project. So is the artist Jennifer Rubell and food stylist Victoria Granof. It’s not just about being a chef. And we promise only one cupcake photo and one cat photo per issue.”

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Published at 2:15 PM

Wednesday April 17th, 2013

Farfetch’s New Retail Plan Could Revolutionize E-Commerce
Tech

Farfetch’s New Retail Plan Could Revolutionize E-Commerce

Every day, we receive numerous pitches touting the “next big thing” in e-commerce. Usually, these websites, apps and tools are way too complicated, useless, annoying, or all of the above to ever actually catch on. Occasionally, something special like Gilt Groupe, Moda Operandi, or Rent the Runway emerges. Farfetch, the online hub for independent boutiques, is one of those rare successes. And now, with another $20 million in funding—a round led by Conde Nast—Farfetch founder José Neves wants to revolutionize how e-commerce and traditional retail work together.

I spoke with Neves, who is spending some time in New York, earlier this week.

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Published at 2:15 PM

Monday April 15th, 2013

KCD’s Ed Filipowski on What He Looks for in a New Hire
How to Get a Job With Me

KCD’s Ed Filipowski on What He Looks for in a New Hire

KCD president Ed Filipowski is one of the most influential—and intimidating—execs in the fashion business.

As the head of public relations for KCD, he works with a wide range of prestigious clients, from Givenchy and Swarovski to Marc Jacobs and Victoria’s Secret. Filipowski is also revered for nurturing—and holding onto—talent. While public relations is known for its fast turnover, the publicist—an employee at KCD since the 1980s, an owner nearly as long—has been able to keep his staff close. Currently, the average tenure for a senior-level publicist is 9.5 years. (And a KCD publicist pretty much never defects to another agency, which is also rare.)

I spoke with Filipowski last week about how he got his job at KCD—and what he looks for when he’s interviewing both senior publicists and interns.

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Published at 1:00 PM

Friday April 12th, 2013

Friends & Associates’ Matthew Edelstein on Making the Move from Stylist to Designer
How I'm Making It

Friends & Associates’ Matthew Edelstein on Making the Move from Stylist to Designer

Veteran stylist Matthew Edelstein launched online magazine Contributing Editor in 2008 as a place where his friends could create the kinds of spreads they wanted to see in magazines but never got the chance to produce. Friends & Associates, Edelstein’s three-season-deep contemporary collection, is an extension of that idea. The stylist-turned-designer works with his talented network of friends—and yes, associates—to create the punchy collection, currently available on Shopbop.com as well as Friendshop.us. I visited Edelstein’s Garment Center office—which he rents from his accountant!—a couple of weeks ago to talk business.

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Published at 5:32 PM

Thursday April 11th, 2013

First Look at Kate Spade Saturday’s Fall 2013 Collection
Exclusive

First Look at Kate Spade Saturday’s Fall 2013 Collection

For those of us who love the Kate Spade attitude but are more tomboy than girly girl, the brand’s Kate Spade Saturday offshoot—which launched this spring—is something of a sartorial godsend.

While the currently available styles are a fun, not-too-serious mix of ’80s-inspired prints—I love the windowpane check and the blue paint splatter best—fall’s focus is a deep, dark palette with just a hint of ’70s ski bunny. But whatever era Kate Spade Saturday is channeling, the sporty, modern feel is the same.

Click through for a first look at the fall collection. And shop Kate Spade Saturday’s spring offerings at Saturday.com.

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Published at 5:45 PM