Katy Perry took to Twitter to share her easy, breezy, beautiful new CoverGirl campaign poster. Doesn't she look purrrty? {Twitter} Looks like there's some fashion trubs brewing in the Kardashian-West household: Kim and "control freak" Kanye are reportedly fighting over what her new baby clothes line should look like. {Radar Online} And in other Kim K news, her engagement ring from ex-hubby Kris Humphries sold for a paltry $749,000 at a Christie's auction held yesterday. {US Weekly} If there's one thing we've learned from stalking following Kate Middleton's outfits, it's that the Duchess knows a good bargain when she sees it. Find out her royal highness's shopping secrets from author and "sale guru" Mark Ellwood. {Daily Mail}
"Street style has ruined EVERYTHING," a friend of mine exclaimed on GChat after spending an extensive amount of time—which is like, five minutes in GChat world—trying to think of industry eccentrics whose outfits are cooler than the typical street style fodder. What she meant, I think, was that while more people look really good during the shows, less people look really weird. And that's too bad, because the odd ones are what make fashion week—and fashion in general—so great. Click through for seven unorthodox street style stars you should look out for at the tents.
James Goldstein, an older gent of mysterious origins who favors a wardrobe almost exclusively made of cowboy hats, neckerchiefs, and exotic skins, has been a staple at the shows for the past thirty years. Now he's turning his fashion super fandom into a business and launching his own eponymous line, to debut this fashion week in Milan.
PARIS--Yesterday was a bit lazy. I went to Céline, wrote, met some friends for cocktails at Hotel Costes (where, I discovered, the entire fashion industry spends their downtime), and that was it. Until, surely enough, that was not it.