AHAlife seeks a curator with an emphasis on men’s lifestyle product who will partner with the Merchandising team by scouring the globe looking for exceptional, quality objects.
AHAlife seeks a curator to partner with the Merchandising team by scouring the globe looking for exceptional, quality objects, while helping AHAlife achieve its vision of creating a community which values creativity and empowers independent designers & artisans.
AHAlife seeks a curator to partner with the Merchandising team by scouring the globe looking for exceptional, quality objects, while helping AHAlife achieve its vision of creating a community which values creativity and empowers independent designers & artisans.
I love products. Not just shoes and bags and dresses, but products. My significant other and I together own about six Apple computers, an iPad, four iPhones (we're trying to sell the old ones, if you're interested!), as well as a million weird little knickknacks, from a carved wooden image we picked up in Japan to several Smorkin' Labbits. We like stuff. But I must admit, there aren't many sites out on the Web that carry such stuff, whether it's the wood block LED alarm clock we recently put on our registry or a very, very specific lavender oil my future mother-in-law has been bugging us to unearth. In fact, sites that do carry such cool finds aren't comprehensive, or they're not well-designed, or worse, they refuse to ship internationally. (Let me put it this way: There's a reason we're doing an Amazon universal registry instead of pick stuff out at Bed, Bath, and Beyond.) Enter AHALife. Founder Shauna Mei wants to create an online space where you can learn about new products--hand-picked by 80-some curators, including Diane von Furstenberg and Tim Gunn--and maybe even buy something. Mei, a former business consultant for fashion labels, came up with the idea while living in Europe. "I noticed that there were very few e-commerce sites targeted towards the aesthetic consumer--the busy, savvy, in-the-know woman or man--who loves fashion but is not a slave to fashion," she explains. While sites like Net-a-Porter made it easy to shop for clothes and accessories, what about furniture, art, home goods?
We have a few significant moves to report on this week. Publicists arranging Fashion Week invites and seating charts, take note. Candy Pratts Price, who was laid off last year from her position as Style.com's executive fashion director, was just hired as Vogue.com's new creative director. The two sites are owned by the same company. Basically, this is just a shuffle that took a really long time to happen. Nancy MacDonell, another former Style.com editor, has just been hired at AHAlife as a contributing editor. Gilles Bensimon was also just hired by the new lifestyle shopping site as creative director.