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Lauren Sherman

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Seven Questions for Mary Katrantzou

Tuesday, Jun 7, 2011 / 4:00 PM

London-based designer Mary Katrantzou is a bit of a star these days. Not only has she broken the mold of many of her peers by actually being stocked at plenty of American department stores (think Opening Ceremony, Barneys–even Neiman’s) she’s also influencing the next generation. (Seriously, so many of the collections at the SCAD fashion show were inspired by Katrantzou shapes and prints–I was blown away.)

I recently caught up with the busy designer to chat about the business, down time, and mystery collaborations.

London may be “the” place for young designers right now, but very few are enjoying the amount of distribution you have globally. To what do you credit your success with buyers?
I started at a time when recession had just hit and buyers were looking for something new to attract their customers. They took a risk in a young designer that had a brave product but it proved commercially viable. I think it was because it was something unique with a distinctive signature and they didn’t have to commit to great quantities, they could try it out, see if it works. Fortunately, it did! It has been amazing to receive that support and build our distribution globally. We do our own sales, so it’s been invaluable to be able to form a close relationship with the buyers and understand their needs.

Your prints are (obviously) pretty amazing. Can you describe the process of creating a print?
I always work on a thematic collection, so it starts with a strong image. I then work on a visual collage, creating my own surreal prints, from the research I have done. My prints are inspired by art and design, which makes the research even more interesting and challenging, as you are looking into filtered beauty but turning it on its head. I then engineer the print around the female figure and work simultaneously within the pattern to make it flattering for the woman. If the print changes, so does the pattern and vice-versa. It’s a long and arduous process because most of the prints are built from scratch with 3D shading but that is what gives them a hyper-real rendering that has become distinctive of my work.

Each collection has such a different theme. Do you ever worry that you’ll start running out of ideas?
My collections have been thematic, ranging from perfume bottles, to interiors, to 18th century portraiture, to Objects D’Art, but there are always layers of abstraction in each season. I feel the need to push the boundaries of print but there are only so many ideas you can come up with that will bring something new to fashion, without turning it into a novelty collection. My challenge was to move past just coming up with a strong theme, into showcasing a maximalist aesthetic and strength in colour and form. The perfume season was very distinctive as an idea but then the blown glass collection that followed, was an abstraction of that very theme on glass. Similarly, the Spring 2011 interiors collection with the room prints was very referential but it was followed by the Fall 2011 collection, inspired by the objects of art found in these elitist homes. It was a natural progression but it was all about pattern on pattern and a cacophony of print and colour, as an abstraction of the more thematic room collection. I think there are so many influences in design to draw upon that if you have a strong eye to see the filtered beauty, there will always be ideas that will manifest themselves into something new each season.

Now that you’re sold all over the world, have you made any observations in regards to different markets? How is your American customer different from your British customer, and how is your British customer different from your Japanese customer?
Different parts of the world wear print differently. In the US, there is a great duality in the way they buy. Some of the bravest collectors of fashion are American and we have customers, who have bought the lampshade skirts or the demi couture pieces from the collection, wearing them with great confidence. At the same time the majority of the buyers focus on commercial separates that women can mix up and style themselves. The British customer buys into the cocktail dress and is more ready to commit to the complete printed look. In Asia it is again a completely different story. They dress for the red carpet and for one of our stores in Singapore we develop bespoke pieces for special occasions. It’s a great way of understanding how women want to dress and it’s helped us diversify our range.

You’ve done a bit of work with Swarovski. What’s it like to poke around their archive, and what have you found that you were most excited about?
We have worked with Swarovski Elements for four seasons already and it’s been such an inspiring collaboration. It’s helped me not only add a sense of luxury to the collection but also to push my aesthetic and build on the prints, adding depth to colour. Looking at their archive has really been mind blowing. There are so many ways of applying the crystals to such great effect. I also worked on a collaboration with Atelier Swarovski, which was a great way to offer a range of jewellery that is wearable, compared to our show jewellery, without compromising on the design.

What do you like to do when you’re not working?
That’s a rarity these days! I visit art galleries, go to the cinema, see my friends and I try to take some time off and go to Greece.

What’s next on your agenda?
A collaboration with Pablo Bronstein for his ICA retrospective, where we designed the costumes for his performance piece, a resort collection that we were due to launch this season but had to push back to next year and two very exciting collaborations that I can’t talk about yet, but will be unveiled in October!

Kanye smizing. Photo by Getty.

Kanye West seemed pretty relaxed last night at the CFDA Awards after party, just shooting the shit with friends like GQ‘s Jim Moore and Adam Kimmel. Kanye was even nice to us when we sidled up to him and asked a couple of questions. “Here’s the thing, I don’t do quotes.” So, is he really designing his own line? “[Smile.] I don’t do quotes.” Uhuh.

Luckily, there were other partygoers willing to dish on the collection, set to launch in October in Paris. “Oh, he’s definitely doing it. But you didn’t here that from me!” said one industry insider.

So it’s looking like the rumors are true, but of course we’ll have to wait a while longer for a confirmation from Mr. West.

Sofia and Marc. Getty.

Last night’s CFDA Awards were a decidedly star-studded affair, what with Lady Gaga, Kanye West, Sofia Coppola, Jessica Alba, Gerard Butler, Naomi Watts, and host Anderson Cooper spending time on the stage. Cooper had to leave early because of “that Weiner thing,” or so Diane von Furstenberg said, but otherwise the audience received plenty of face time with their star of choice–there were even a couple of moments when one could forget this was, you know, a fashion industry event. But only a couple.

The evening began with a toast to Hilary Alexander, who was presented the Eugenia Sheppard award by Michael Kors. Alexander, as if you didn’t know, is retiring this month from her post at the Daily Telegraph and plans on getting a degree in archeology….

Next up was “geriatric starlet” (her words, not ours) Iris Apfel, who before presenting the Accessories Designer of the Year award to Alexander Wang, told a little ditty about how her first employer–WWD, natch–paid her just $15/week. “But that was common in those days.”

Michael Bastian received the Menswear Designer of the Year award from Gerard Butler, and Hal Rubenstein received the Eleanor Lambert award from Jessica Alba (who was wearing a lovely DvF dress). To celebrate Swarovski’s decade-long support of the CFDA, nearly all the former winners (including Jason Wu and Zac Posen) graced the stage to present Nadja Swarovski with her very own Trova.

Soon enough Kanye West appeared, proclaiming his devotion to the world of Phoebe Philo. “I don’t get up on stage unless I really believe in something,” he pledged. The Céline designer accepted the International Designer of the Year award in a stunning tux of her own design. Best-dressed of the night, for sure.

And then there was Gaga. The CFDA Fashion Icon of the Year stepped on stage in a studded thong and 24-inch backless heels. She talked rats, fashion, and accidentally calling Anna Wintour a bitch. Read more here–we had to devote an entire story to her.

Then the great Grace Coddington appeared on stage to present photographer Arthur Elgort with the Board of Directors’ Special Tribute award. The reel of his images was definitely the most captivating part of the night. (Even more captivating than Gaga’s thong, we might argue.)

Karolina Kurkova sang a bit of Gaga before presenting the Swarovski awards to up-and-coming designers Eddie Borgo (accessories), Robert Geller (menswear), and Prabal Gurung (womenswear). (She was actually pretty good.) Each of these guys is very humble, but the most memorable speech came from Gurung, who addressed his fellow nominee Joseph Altuzarra directly. “This award truly is as much yours as it is mine,” he said. “People are always pitting us against each other, but it’s not like that. You make the playground more interesting.”

Finally, it was time for the two biggest awards of the evening. First up were Jack McCollough and Lazaro Hernandez of Proenza Schouler, who won Womenswear Designers of the Year, and quite rightly. “We are so honored to receive this award and to join the impressive roster of designers to come before us–a list of individuals we have so much respect for,” the duo said in a statement released soon after the evening ended.

But before it did, there was Marc. Sofia Coppola presented the “Half-Lifetime Achievement Award” to Mr. Jacobs, saying that when she met him in the early ’90s, “I felt like someone was making clothes for me…for the first time.” We remember feeling that way, too. Marc said many thank yous, but the most important was to his business partner Robert Duffy. In fact, he actually accepted the award on behalf of both of them. To work with someone for over 25 years and still feel that indebted and connected? That’s one for the fashion history books.

I love the DvF label when it’s a smart interpretation of top trends. I loathe the DvF label when it’s all about boho chic.

Luckily, the fashion gods were on my side at yesterday’s presentation of the Diane von Furstenberg Resort 2012 collection, shown in front of a glow-in-the-dark backdrop at the Highline Studios on 15th Street.

von Furstenberg and Yvan Mispelaere sent out a punch of patterns in acid green and fluoro blue, reflective of surf, snowboard and street references. Of course, none of it was too fashion-y. The last thing DvF wants to do is alienate her core conservative customer. So mixed in with day glo orange bike shorts were pretty pink and green strapless dresses.

Cute, colorful, and above all, easy: What else more could you want from DvF?

**Photos courtesy of DvF.

There’s no doubting fashion labels are pretty obsessed with their Facebook pages, from DKNY’s pre-order opportunities to Dolce & Gabbana’s live streaming.

But according to data compiled by fashion marketing firm Stylophane, Vera Wang might take the cake for most active fashion brand on Facebook.

In May 2011, the lifestyle label posted 136 times. The runner up, BCBG Max Azria, posted 111 times, while Dolce & Gabbana came in third with 81 posts. (Next up was Oscar de la Renta with 79 posts. The other brands in the top ten were more street wear-focused.)

But whose Facebook page is the most influential? That’s difficult to determine, given that as of May 2011 Dolce & Gabbana had nearly three million followers, while Vera had a (still respectable) 120,048 and Oscar had 190,770.

Which high design label’s Facebook page is your favorite?

Life With...

Life With Jason Wu!

Monday, Jun 6, 2011 / 11:33 AM

Jason sketching a look from Resort 2012.

In less than half-a-decade, Jason Wu has gone from being part of a group of promising young designers to being the most promising young designer around. Sure, it has something to do with Michelle Obama wearing his design to the inauguration ball, but it’s also about Wu’s ability to create upscale-yet-modern clothes for wealthy clients, and at the same time work on out-of-the-box, accessible collaborations with brands like nail polish purveyors CND.

At just 28-years-old, the boy wonder has already accomplished more than many designers do in a lifetime. We recently caught up with Wu at his studio, where he sketched a look from his 2012 Resort collection just for Fashionista, and also talked a little more about his daily rituals.

So, you’ve recently launched e-commerce, a Twitter account, and you’ve had a blog for awhile….
You know, it’s a fun platform because we do so much that people don’t see and now with the blog and Twitter I think people can really see more of what we do. There’s so many little things. The number one most asked question is, “So how are the clothes made? Is there a machine?” Because to most people outside of fashion, it’s just a person controlling a machine. But really there’s a person controlling the fabric, doing everything by hand.

So how would you go about doing one simple dress with no embellishments? What’s the process after you’ve sketched it?
Well I do a million little sketches in my pad, which I carry around with me everywhere. I sketch out a million variations, select one, drape it on the form, look at fabrics, keeping in mind which one I’ll actually use–muslin, usually–and then put it on the fit model. If it’s good, we’ll correct the pattern and proceed to making the final sample. But if it isn’t, a dress can take up to four fittings. It’s a lengthy process at best.

How do you do fabric sourcing? Do you go to the big fairs?

We don’t. We work directly with fabric mills and friends in Italy, over 50 per season from specialized lace and wool mills, the best of the best. So basically everything in the collection has been customized in one way or another, whether it’s a customized color or pattern; the prints are always made from scratch. And then adding embellishments and all those things. There’s a lot of back and forth with a lot of different people. Now, we’re at the point where the inspiration needs to be echoed throughout the collection, and that’s not just how the models are styled, that’s from the fabrication to the print to the texture of the fabric. All these things matter. So we can’t buy off the rack, so to speak.

What was your inspiration for Resort?

Well, Resort was really inspired by all these colorful houses in Puerto Rico. I went there for New Year’s and a couple times last year. It’s so fun, one of my favorite vacation spots, and on the drive you always see houses in these crazy colors: pink, blue, coral, peach, all with white molding. They almost look like they came out of a set. But they’re actually the most traditional houses, in Old San Juan you can see a lot of it. There’s a pink church with white molding! I thought it was really beautiful and charming, it felt really happy.

I feel like a lot of designers cull a lot of inspiration from travel and it’s very important. How much do you get to travel?
I get to travel a lot, it’s for work but I always mix in a little play. That’s why I love my job, I get to go to so many places. In the last month I’ve been to Chicago, Taiwan, to Dallas. I have to go to Atlanta soon, and Brazil and China, both Beijing and Shanghai, and this is all within the next two months. I make a point to see an exhibit or check out a local artist or go sightseeing. Oh and I was just in London, too! It’s a lot, but I’ve really gotten very good at flying.

What do you do for your skin when you’re traveling?

I always carry these face masks with me from MyFaceWorks, they’re really great because they’re in a little package and I can just put them on right off the plane. I actually use very simple skincare–Neutrogena, and exfoliating facewash from Bliss. Simple but effective. I think skin is a foundation.

So you’re traveling a lot; I’m assuming some for work–sales appointments, meeting clients–and some of it for sourcing.
Yeah, business meetings, I often go to Paris because I have to work with embroideries. Different opportunities, different business meetings. I think it’s really great that I get to go to so many different places and have an excuse to travel and really be able to see the rest of what these places have to offer, and be able to meet so many interesting people on my trips and through my work. They introduce me to such great things so yes, it’s been very fruitful to gather inspiration from all these trips.

What’s it like to make an in-store appearance and meet your customers?

It’s really interesting, the clients are really into the clothes. Last time I went to Nordstrom to do a trunk show, one woman bought 41 pieces. We have some dedicated clients out there. And almost every time I do a personal appearance in a store I get a group of fashion students. A little insight on what the industry is about because I feel not that long ago, I was a student myself.

If there was one thing you could tell someone that is trying to break into the fashion industry, what would it be?
I think it’s perseverance and hard work. Fashion, like any other industry, is difficult. There’s so much talent out there and so little space, to really survive in an industry you have to work really hard. It’s not all about the glamor and the red carpet, it’s really about the hours of hard work and the dedication you put into your craft and in the end you just have to make really good clothes that women want to wear. You can’t forget that.

What’s a typical day for you?

Well there is never really one typical day for me, which is the fun part about my job! I wake up, get a shot of espresso, come here (to the studio), check on every department–PR, design, sales–to see what everyone is up to, have some group meetings. I’m very big on group meetings, keeping everyone united as we grow is very important. Then catch up on my emails, which I really do from the second I wake up. The downfalls of having too much technology these days!

There’s really no way to shut it off these days.

I found myself talking to one of our embroiderers in India at 2am the other day. It’s really 24 hours. In the morning I generally catch up with Paris and Italy, and get ready and come to work then [catch up with] everybody here. It depends on what the goal of the day is. If it’s a big fitting day then we round up as many samples as we can. Some days are about brainstorming and I’m gathering ideas all over the place and researching and going to libraries. And all that’s peppered in with so many everyday things, fixing something in the office or it’s time to gather new inspiration for two season after or playing with different leathers for new accessories. All of those things. My day doesn’t really end until 8pm.

And then you end up going out for work events, right?
Yep, I’ve had to go out every single day in the last three weeks.

It’s been really crazy!
Yeah! The way I’ve been able to keep in touch with a lot of industry friends or those outside the industry is after work, it’s always through dinner. I get home around 10:30, 11. Catch up on TV and go to bed, although I do work some more before I go to bed.

Resort 2012 sketch!

I remember when you opened this studio and I saw your office wall papered with Observer newspapers–the space is just so beautifully decorated. The fabrics are so lush, even for summer if it’s a burlap fabric it’s still so rich. Because you do a big collection, how do you keep that all working together without being the same?
It goes to always being out there, always looking for new inspirations, new textures, new colors, new techniques. The continuous exploration that I do every season keeps my mind fresh. And also my team is always bringing something interesting to the table. I think it’s really important to keep really creative people around you, no matter what work they’re in, to really inspire and motivate you. To us it’s a big art project all day! Always finishing, editing, and then on to the next one. Working in fashion, sometimes more is just more, you know? Sometimes having too much of a break between seasons causes you to have less ideas. This was a good question actually. What I love about doing 4 seasons in a year is that each really feeds off the last. Pre-Fall and Resort are laboratories. Resort is always the start of my new year, get to travel and see tons of new things. And towards the end of every collection you always have these sudden moments of genius or bright ideas. But for the sake of every cohesive collection you’ve got to edit. It’s important so that the point is razor sharp. Therefore, there are a lot of ideas you don’t use and you want to keep exploring them, so then comes the catalyst of the next collection. So you never really come to a stop, which is good because I feel really inspired right now, and I’m not grasping for straws. I have a lot of ideas and am fortunate to be able to use them.

Well that brings me to my next question: Mrs. O. When she wore your dress the industry was already really keen on you but then all of a sudden everyone knew who you were. How have you dealt with that? Has it affected the way you design?
The aftermath was chaos. I did more press those next two days that I ever had in my entire career. More mainstream press–Good Morning America, The Today Show, the Washington Correspondents Dinner–and I was really out of my element. It brought my name to a new demographic, a global demographic, and also exposed me to so many things outside of fashion that I otherwise wouldn’t have known. It was that moment that was so fantastic and great, but it did happen to two weeks before my fall show so my mind was still on the collection, which I had already done so I was hoping the reception would be good. And it was good. The experience added to the growth of our business. The last two years I’ve tried to stay very grounded and dedicated to growing my brand, not to fall into the pitfalls of big moments. I gave myself 24 hours to celebrate because I needed to plan my next act. And that’s why we’ve really been able to be successful and go from a young designer to a larger brand in two years. It’s something I continue to do, I never feel done or like I’m too good to learn something. It’s very important, because in an industry with so much flash, whenever there’s any doubt I go back to why I got into fashion in the first place. I literally just love the craft of it. I love making clothes.

That’s the thing you’ll look back on in 20 years and say “Oh my God, I can’t believe that happened.”
I look back now and say I can’t believe I did that. It was the craziest thing. And cemented in history–being the first designer under 30 to be in the Smithsonian. And the first Asian American designer to do an inauguration dress, and the first African American President. So many firsts. And I never thought when I moved to the US that I would ever become a part of American history, it’s really the American Dream, so incredible. I definitely appreciate it and realize how significant it was but I also make sure that I work harder and prove I’m worth the recognition.

How old were you when you moved here?

I moved here 10 years ago exactly, so I was 18. My parents are from Taiwan.

Jason's sketching kit.

What made you decide to move here?
My mother was really really supportive. She knew I was really artistically inclined when I was about five or six and into art and I forced her to let me take a sculpting class. I was seven. And in Taiwan at the time it was much more conservative, most parents wanted their kids to go into business. She was a very adventurous woman and moved us to Vancouver so I could learn English and have an opportunity to explore this side of me that I otherwise might not have been able to; art was not regarded as a prestigious career, more of a pastime. And I learned English because she would give me a stack of fashion magazines that she had and I sort of picked it up and thought, “Oh this is interesting, what is it all about?”

So she’s a fashion person? I saw that picture of her in the New York Times.
I mean my mom taught me what YSL meant, haha, she always had her hair done and was very chic. She’s very stylish and design-conscious and appreciates beautiful things. She never deterred me, which I really appreciate, and without parents like mine I would never be sitting here today, I’d be at a desk job filling out paperwork.

What about being acquired? There’s always talk of that, especially for a brand like yours.
In the short term, the company is something I’d like to hold on to.

Were you the star sketch student in school?
I was always the artsy one. I originally wanted to be a fashion illustrator.

I’d love to see you sketch, I’m really excited. [He starts sketching.]
I never erase. Fashion illustration is pretty because it’s not perfect. Its beauty is in the imperfections.

When you’re doing fabrics, do you know what you want before you create them? I know you do your own prints. I start four or five months before, so some seasons I’ll overlap them. You have to have a fundamental idea to start with, the base of your ideas. The map.

How many sketches do you do for one collection?

So many. But I don’t color them all, some are tiny, like in my Moleskine. I date them and keep them. I go through about a book a month.

Your sketches will make an incredible exhibit 30 years from now. Do you think you’re one of those people who is in fashion because you couldn’t imagine doing anything else?
I could not imagine doing anything else. I feel like there would be nothing else that would make me this happy. I do know that many years down the line I would love to have a restaurant, that would be another creative thing.

Are you into food?
I’m SO into food.

What’s your favorite new restaurant?
Umm…. Well, I’m in New York but I travel so much so I’m not very local. There’s this really good place in Chicago, it’s almost a molecular gastronomy type thing. Graham Elliot. They have truffled popcorn and deconstructed Caesar salad. A square of iceberg and right below it is a cheese Twinkie, they call it; it’s toast filled with cheese. and anchovies with dressing on top… like a Tiramisu salad. Here, I love Colicchio And Sons. I had their braised pork shoulder the other day.

And finally–I can’t help asking, since I just got married. Do you do a lot of bridal?
No, really just for my friends. It was really interesting to do that bridal collection (for Net-a Porter), like with tops and bottoms. But no, mostly just my friends who were getting married.

Look out for our review of Jason Wu’s 2012 Resort collection later on this week.

Still obsessing over Catherine Middleton‘s Sarah Burton for Alexander McQueen royal wedding gown?

Those in London any time between July 23 and October 3 will get a chance to view the gown at Buckingham Palace, where it will be on display. The Royal Collection has confirmed that, along with the dress, Middleton’s ivory silk tulle veil, Cartier tiara, McQueen shoes and Robinson Pelham diamond earrings will also be on view.

Will you visit Buckingham Palace this summer just to get a look?

Best Dressed

Best Dressed: MTV Movie Awards

Monday, Jun 6, 2011 / 8:00 AM

Usually the MTV Movie Awards is a fashion shit show. But this year, there were actually plenty of nice red carpet looks. Click through to browse our favorites.

Photo by Getty.

Anyone who’s ever ridden in a cab with me knows that I’m a stickler for good customer service. (I.e., if a driver is incompetent I get real annoyed.) I’m like this about pretty much everything, from restaurants to department stores. (No one–I mean no one–who works at Uniqlo knows where anything is. Unless they’ve been promoted to the +J department. There, I’ve noticed, you can’t be lazy. But I digress.)

Because of my high standards, I never really stick to one place for beauty treatments, particularly manicures, pedicures, and Brazilians. To me, all nail salons are pretty much the same. The people are nice, but you can’t put a tip on a credit card and it’s rare to find a technician with whom you’re so impressed that you make an effort to go see her every week or two.

I was fine bouncing along, getting a manicure whenever I had the time. Until, that is, I discovered Tenoverten, a light-filled loft in New York’s TriBeCa neighborhood.

I work in SoHo and live in South Brooklyn, so for me, TriBeCa is kind of on the way home. But even if you live far, far up on the Upper East Side, you should make an effort to get down there. (Maybe after brunch at Locanda Verde and a stop by Edon Manor?) Because Tenoverten is nail mecca.

Owned by Adair Ilyinsky (a financial analyst at Coach) and Nadine Ferber (owner of Mick Margo), Tenoverten is a salon for picky fashion girls (the polishes range from the latest Chanel and Nars and Essie to the entire Bernhard Willhelm collection–swoon), busy ladies (their quick dry polish seriously makes your nails like bone in five minutes), and anyone who appreciates high touch customer service.

The receptionist–who looks like an Opening Ceremony model–is sweet and takes your coat, and even chats with you about your new jeans. There’s wine and soda and cheese and iPads to play with, too. The aestheticians are quick and nice and make the dreaded Brazilian wax as painless as possible. And the nail technicians–oh, the nail technicians!–are all incredibly kind and incredibly talented. I’ve been about five times now, have had a different technician each time, and I would go back to every single one. (Although Stephy is so funny and sweet, I may ask for her specifically next time.) Even when I’ve chosen Chanel nail polish–notorious for chipping quickly–the color has stayed fairly still for about five days. (My nails usually begin chipping at after no more than two days.)

They don’t seem to do gel nails, but honestly, I had that done once and thought it was nasty, so I’m not bothered. As for nail art–everybody’s obsession these days–it’s not a priority, but if you want a heart or a flower or maybe even a palm tree, they’ll comply.

Did I mention that the owners have even stocked the shelves with their favorite beauty products, from Rodin’s Olio Lusso to Weleda Skin Food?

As for pricing, it’s pretty standard. The brazilian is $55, and so is a regular mani/pedi combo. (Sure, the nails are bit more than your typical corner place, but the experience makes it worthwhile.) And maybe the best news of all: You can put the tip on your credit card and they’ll email you the receipt. You can even book every appointment via their website.

Bottom line: I’m excited to get my nails done. I take my friends here to show them how awesome their nails can be, too. Tenoverten is great, and if you live in New York and want to get your money’s worth from a trip to the salon, it’s the place to be.

www.tenoverten.com
112 Reade St
2nd Fl
(between Church St & Broadway)
New York, NY 10013

Benz's bag.

DvF’s Magical Tool of Seduction: Yeah, that’s how her new fragrance, Diane, is described. Apparently, seduction includes frangipani and violet leaves. {WWD, subscription required}

Fendi’s Fur-Free Floating Island Fashion Show: Karl and crew showed the label’s fall collection on a manmade island in Seoul. However, all fur pieces were removed from the show so as not to offend South Korean protestors. {Reuters}

Technicolor Punk: A credit card-bruising roundup of this season’s top day glo punk pieces. Argh, we want that Tom Binns necklace. {Stylelist}

Miuccia Made Bank: Mrs. Prada raked in over $14 million in 2010. {WWD}

Chris Benz’s Cute Lancome Bag: Buy $60 worth of Lancome cosmetics at Saks Fifth Avenue and get an adorable Benz-designed tote filled with Lancome goodies. {Elle.com}

Cray Cray Brides Go Cray Cray: At the annual Filene’s Basement wedding dress sale. {Racked NY}

Read more »

Get excited! Project Runway host Heidi Klum will appear naked in ads for the series’ ninth season, according to the Hollywood Reporter.

The campaign is part of Lifetime‘s new marketing strategy–the basic cable channel is aiming to go less “woman in peril” (even though LTMs are ahhhmazing) and more “brazen, strong, confident and sexy.”

Of course, it’s not the first time Klum has posed nude. And we’re not exactly sure how effective her being nekkid on adverts for a show about making clothes will be. But we guess sex sells?

Project Runway: Season 9 debuts this summer.