LuxuryActivist

LuxuryActivist is an international lifestyle webzine based in Switzerland. Get fresh news about luxury, arts, fashion, beauty, travel, high-tech and more. subscribe to our Happy friday luxury newsletter or follow us in social media.
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Jessica Zoob’s PASSION.

Next month we will have the London Olympic games, so you will probably visit the british capital during that time. There is not only sports in live, art too. So if you...

Key fashion trends of the season: Men’s sweatshirts

With the weather being so up and down you'll need a stylish practical layer in your summer wardrobe. We recommend investing in a sweatshirt. Our catwalk favourites were the birds of paradise prints at Givenchy. Here's our guide to the ten best buys Photograph: PR

The fashion line-up: Men’s shorts – in pictures

Different ways to style a particular item of clothing

Beauty spot: wild looks

beauty spot

Wild thing: unleash your inner animal. Photograph: Observer

This summer, think of your face as a kinetic Pinterest board, one on which to play out all your fancy-dress fantasies. Don't worry – they need go no lower than your chin. Now is the time to stick diamonds on your eyebrows and dance around an Essex field at dawn. Now is the time to paint your cheeks in primary colours and tell the man who sold you overpriced fags you love him. On the Givenchy catwalk, they stuck halved sequins to the models' eyelids and at Chanel they glued pearls down their necks. Everywhere else they painted gold leaf on to hair and eyes and had a bit of a laugh. For a wanton "fairy gone wild" look, experiment with glitter and Vaseline on the cheekbones. If you want to go more sophis, try MAC's Old Gold Pigment (17, maccosmetics.co.uk).

Alternatively

Eye Rock 7, asos.com Violent Lips 10, asos.com Clinique Chubby Stick 16, clinique.co.uk Topshop Crayon 7.50, topshop.com Shu Uemura Eye liner 15.50, shuuemura.co.uk

London Collections: Men (1)

YMC
What are the inspirations and references for your collection? A typical jumble of ideas inspired by vintage kimono prints, early 60s west coat surf and late 80s casuals all incorporated into an unstructured and relaxed silhouette
If you could give men one fashion tip what would it be? Shave your beard off, assuming you have one
What makes London such a brilliant fashion capital? London is a multicultural hotch potch of ideas without boundries
Photograph: YMC/Guardian

Prince Charles opens London menswear week

Prince Charles

'Clothes have to combine style with sustainability,' writes Prince Charles in GQ magazine. Photograph: Getty Images

He may not be monarch for a while yet, but for the next four days he is undisputed king of the front row. With the first ever week of men's catwalk shows in London falling hot on the heels of the jubilee, Prince Charles is the man charged with leading the British menswear industry into battle with the titans of France and Italy.

Tonight Prince Charles will host several hundred representatives from the fashion industry at a reception at St James's Palace, in celebration of the menswear shows that begin tomorrow.

Whether the prince will adopt Anna Wintour's trademark sunglasses for the duration is not known; what is certain is that the lure of a gold-embossed palace invitation is a significant coup for the British Fashion Council as they strive to fill the London front rows with the world's most powerful buyers and editors.

Despite stiff competition from parties hosted by Tinie Tempah (featuring crazy golf on the roof of Selfridges) and retailer Mr Porter (with DJ Alexa Chung), the St James's Palace invite the week's hot ticket. Menswear by Margaret Howell and Claire Malcolm of Hardy Amies on display during the reception, alongside designs by Christopher Raeburn, the winner of the emerging talent in menswear award at the most recent British Fashion Awards.

But the prominence of Prince Charles signifies more than simply a wish to capitalise on jubilee fever. The rich Savile Row tradition of British tailoring and a drive to promote quality British craftsmanship are a key part of the message of this fashion week. Those steering the event are keen to move the image of British designer menswear on from the creative-but-crazy label and into more commercial territory.

This is a shift which has been successfully made in womenswear, where the London collections are now a slick and respected element of the global industry rather than the eccentric afterthought they once were.

Writing in Vogue two years ago, Prince Charles demurred from being labelled "fashionable", but acknowledged that "there have been those generous enough to call me 'well dressed'". The Prince is a longtime customer of the shirtmakers Turnbull & Asser, whose shirts are made in a small factory in Gloucestershire, and the distinguished Savile Row tailors Anderson & Sheppard.

"Clothes have to combine style with sustainability," writes the prince in the current issue of GQ magazine, "and I find British-made tailoring more than meets that challenge – much to the amusement of my staff, who are sometimes surprised to find that what I am wearing turns out to be as old as or even older than they are".

This week's showcase for British designer menswear hopes to capitalise on new findings which show that while women are cutting back on luxury fashion and spending more on high street purchases, men are prioritising luxury purchases.

Research by American Express shows that in 2011, men's year-on-year spending on luxury fashion grew slightly by 1%, while spending on mainstream fashion fell by 1.2%. In contrast, women cut back slightly (0.7%) on luxury fashion spending, while increasing spending on mainstream fashion by 5.2%.

Men, show your boss that you know your own mind – put on some real shorts

See more here:  Men, show your boss that you know your own mind – put on some real shorts

Fashion: Aloha Hawaii – in pictures

Fashion: Aloha Hawaii - in pictures

The classic tropical print is back this summer. The louder and brighter the better

Fashion Editor: Helen Seamons
Photographer: Heather Favell
Model: Danny Schwarz at Elite London
Grooming: Dina Catchpole at Soho Management using Krastase Homme Capital Force and Clinique
Photographer's assistant: Lee Grubb

LuxuryActivist

LuxuryActivist is an international lifestyle webzine based in Switzerland. Get fresh news about luxury, arts, fashion, beauty, travel, high-tech and more. subscribe to our Happy friday luxury newsletter or follow us in social media.
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