Tag: Saint

Christopher Kane AW13

Christopher Kane recently sold 51% of his company to PPR, the group with Gucci, Saint Laurent, Balenciaga, Alexander McQueen and Stella McCartney in its brand portfolio. Yes, we're talking the highest fashion echelon, but take a minute to pay attention to those last two names: Alexander McQueen and Stella McCartney. At the turn of the millennium, they too were brands, like Kane, held in place by a glass ceiling of funding and resources. Until PPR came along, did the 51%, and voila----a decade later there were two British supers battling Italian and French houses.


This is what, excitingly, lies ahead for Kane, who will be able to develop his label, and place an all-encompassing context around his clothes, culminating in own-brand stores.

If you're wondering how he addressed that through his collection, it was by employing a thumping, relentless soundtrack, and opening with major SAGA fur pieces that could rival any European house. If that got people talking about a 'change, then sending out mini kilts – a nod to his Scottish roots – was Kane telling us he's doing it his way.

The entrance was underscored by a collection that made use of Kane's archive, with dresses that ghosted the silhouettes of his earliest lace/leather/velvet collections, made even further luxe. One motif on a sweater and dress appeared to show a lightning bolt breaking through a skull, and touching the brain: literally mind-blowing.

It all happened in a shiny, glass City venue. First, we took an escalator, and then, a lift god-knows-how-many floors up. We were literally sky-high. Soon Kane will be too.

Hair: Guido Palau

Makeup: Lucia Pieroni

Models pictured: Katlin Aas (@AasKatlin), Marine Deleeuw (@DeleeuwMarine), Elinor Weedon (@ElinorWeedon), Anika Torsing (@anikatorsing), Sam Rollinson (@SamRollinson), Catherine McNeil (@MeowcatMccat), Julia Frauche (@Juliafrauche), Juliana Schurig (@juliana_schurig), Nadja Bender (@NadjaBender), Manon Leloup (@ManonLeLoup), Kirsi Pyrhonen (@KirsiPyrhonen), Jourdan Dunn (@misshourdandunn), Senait Gidey (@Senaitgidey)

The Latest Digital: Labelux, Burberry & Chanel

Burberry trial Square’s mobile payment processing technology, Chanel re-launches its flagship website and Labelux moves into the blogosphere.

Though we have barely reached the end of January, much has already been said about the promise of mobile marketing in 2013. From QR codes to smartphone applications to m-commerce and mobile advertising, marketers are ready to spend as consumers increasingly rely on phones and tablets for purchasing and information.

As David Sadigh of Digital Luxury Group explained to Luxury Society, “Mobile consumption is growing at a very fast pace in both mature markets such as Europe and the US, but also in emerging markets like China and Brazil. It’s probably the first time since we entered into the digital era that a technology (mobile) is gaining such momentum, at such a huge scale.”

“To illustrate this we need not look farther than Facebook, which is receiving more than 500 million monthly users from mobile, more than 7 times the size of the entire French population. And this is just the beginning. 2013 will see a major increase in mobile penetration for several reasons. Smartphone and tablet penetration will continue to grow globally, but even stronger in emerging countries.”

Facebook is receiving more than 500 million monthly users from mobile, which is 7 times the population of France

Indeed, more than 20% of Facebook ad revenue now comes from mobile, which they only launched for advertisers in March 2012. Mobile ad rates on Facebook represent a 70% price premium over desktop ads, according to BizReport.

A recent survey by the Association of National Advertisers and MediaVest revealed that a significant number plan to increase their mobile marketing budgets. Though the sample was relatively small, almost all (96%) of those surveyed currently use mobile marketing, or at least plan to use it. Furthermore, those using mobile intend to put more money mobile’s way with 85% planning to up their spending in “the near future”.

It will be interesting to see how this affects the online marketing mix for luxury brands. 2012 was the year that digital launches became less frequent and less flashy, as brands scrambled to consolidate campaigns and focus on functionality.

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Burberry, Square

Burberry Brit is conducting a payment trial in collaboration with Square in its Westfield location in San Francisco. Square offers a free accessory that attaches to an iPhone or iPad and processes payments. The start-up recently announced that it is now handling $10 billion in transactions annually.

Website: burberry.com
Source: The Next Web

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Chanel, Website

French fashion house Chanel re-imagined its website to better integrate product browsing with content and imagery. The new look navigation directs visitors to various product families, with a focus on video content, mobile compatibility and new social functions exclusive to its ecommerce-enabled fragrance, makeup and skincare sections.

Website: chanel.com
Source: Luxury Daily

Goyard – Le Rendez-Vous from Sam & Raph on Vimeo.

Goyard, Film

For the first time in the brand’s history, Parisian Trunkmaker Goyard has released a video, showcasing its rue Saint-Honor boutique and longstanding craftsmanship. Directed by Samuel Rixon & Raphal Hache, the short film tells the story of a young woman having a meeting on Rue Saint Honor, at the Goyard flagship store to pick up her latest custom trunk piece.

Website: goyard.com
Source: Luxuo

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Labelux, Blog

Labelux, the home of Bally, Jimmy Choo, Belstaff and Zagliani, has launched The LiP blog, which stands for Luxury in Progress. The blog will showcase international creatives and their design processes, philosophy and techniques.

“Luxury in Progress is a concept that has defined the Labelux process since our inception. We thrive on discovering and learning from emerging perspectives,” explained CEO Reinhard Mieck to WWD. “The LiP will contain a collection of progressive voices from thought-leaders, creatives and sustainability visionaries sharing the latest inspirations from their worlds.”

Website: luxuryinprogress.com
Source: WWD

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Shoescribe, App

Yoox has debuted a new App for its shoescribe.com site, the online destination for women dedicated entirely to shoes. Launched for both iPhone and Android, the app is available in English and Italian, and offers users the opportunity to electronically catalogue their entire shoe collection, as well as shop anywhere, anytime.

Website & Source: shoescribe.com
Download: Shoescribe

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Starwood, Android App

Starwood Hotels & Resorts has debuted its Starwood Preferred Guest app on the Android platform, allowing users to book stays at Starwood’s nine hotel brands, access SPG benefits, manage SPG accounts and connect through integrated social media. The app also provides travel information such as weather, directions and information on hotel amenities.

Download: SPG
Source: Luxury Daily

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Swarovski, Instagram

Swarovski celebrated its recent holiday collection with the “Multiface(t)s: Style Yourself with Jewelry” mobile application, where users could enter to win prizes by uploading their augmented reality images to Instagram. After downloading the app, users were invited to virtually try-on pieces of jewellery and upload the results to Instagram using the hashtag #swarovskistyle.

Download: Swarovski
Source: Luxury Daily


For more in the series of The Latest Digital, please see our most recent editions as follows:

- The Latest Digital: Cartier, Prada & Tod’s
- The Latest Digital: Balmain, Yoox & Mandarin Oriental
- The Latest Digital: Versace, Balenciaga & Ritz-Carlton

Horse Play: Exclusive Gucci Film

Exclusive shoot and interview taken from the January issue of Dazed & Confused:

It’s not that unusual for a brand to receive feedback from customers about what they’re looking to buy, whether it be superfans emailing young designers’ studios for the killer showpiece or oligarchs doing special-order luggage at an artisan trunkmaker. But in the case of Frida Giannini, creative director for Gucci, her current bequest came via direct phone call – and showjumper and Monaco princess Charlotte Casiraghi was at the end of it.

“She was really interested in me designing some special equestrian wear for competition,” Giannini explains from Gucci’s Rome HQ. Casiraghi debuted the first of her personalised apparel in 2010. It was far more stylish than the offerings from technical brands. “Then I tried it on myself and asked her if we could commercialise a few pieces this year,” Giannini, a keen rider herself, continues. “I think it is good to have a little corner of it in our stores, because first of all, there are a lot of people in the world that practice horseriding and want beautiful stuff. Secondly, it’s something really connected to the Gucci world and the Gucci heritage; think about the classic loafer with the horse bit as just one example.”

Current muse Casiraghi is the granddaughter of Grace Kelly, for whom the house’s Flora print was designed in the 60s. Brands often talk about their lineage but Gucci really embodies that – this creative director is even from the brand’s hometown. Giannini, an only child, was born and raised in the 2,750-year-old Eternal City of Rome. Growing up with the Colosseum as your precinct and ancient history on your doorstep is bound to leave a mark on the mind (or spirit) in one way or another, and as an adolescent Giannini developed a strong attitude.

“Maybe I was quite rebellious or rock ‘n’ roll when I was younger but now I’m getting older and there’s not so much time to be,” she laughs. “But my work is often very romantic or sensual, so there it continues.”

Giannini studied at the Academy of Costume and Fashion in her hometown, and interned with small companies until she got her first role at Fendi aged just 24. “I was intrigued by designing since I was a child and it was something that I could understand very early on. In the 80s the prt--porter moment was born in Italy and basically there was a lot of partying – and all of the big brands like Armani, Ferr, Versace, everyone, were blowing up. I was surrounded by all of these images and pictures and it was the first moment I understood that I really wanted to work in fashion. I grew up with both clothes and music so they are very connected for me.”

We’re not talking DIY, safety-pinned Perfectos and spray-painted t-shirts here but a very bohemian glamour, influenced by the one and only David Bowie. “My uncle was a DJ in the 80s and would be preparing these amazing playlists from an incredible record collection. I was totally impressed. Unfortunately he passed away when I was 15 or 16 years old, but because he was my mother’s brother I inherited all this music.” Her vinyl collection is estimated at around 8,000 records, and Bowie has a strong presence within it. “I have a few rare pressings of his that I’m very attached to,” she rhapsodises. “I’m in awe of Bowie.” Gucci will sponsor the upcoming Bowie exhibit at the V&A, a decision she surely had a hand in.

Giannini is also in awe of Depeche Mode – and here comes the subtle part. Look closely between the lines of today’s Gucci and the strands of Frida Giannini’s obsessions become apparent. The Guilty fragrance advert features covers of the Basildon synth heroes’ hit “Strangelove” by Friendly Fires (Guilty for Her, 2010) and Bat for Lashes (Guilty for Him, 2011).

“Yes I’m a big fan of Dave Gahan!” she exclaims. “Depeche Mode’s music has travelled with me through life and each song has a story. They continue to be some of my favourite songs ever.” Giannini’s brilliantly odd culture-injection has also included having Raquel Zimmermann, Natasha Poly and Freja Beha disco-dance to Blondie’s “Heart of Glass” for David Lynch, each girl feeling a breeze of elevated consciousness in a 2007 Gucci by Gucci perfume clip. How to follow one of the greatest directors of the 20th/21st century? With a cult one. In 2010, Chris Cunningham, the director behind Bjrk’s robo-sex video “All is Full of Love” and Aphex Twin’s greatest visual moments, directed the promo for the Flora fragrance (a homage to the print). To the soundtrack of Donna Summer’s “I Feel Love” – re-recorded in haunting style with Summer herself – it saw Abbey Lee getting supernatural in a field of blooms before merging with her flowing chiffon dress into a miasma of moving cloth and light.

“I am not a minimal person and I am not a minimalist designer. It’s a good thing in life – and especially in this industry – to not always do the same thing as other people,” she explains frankly. “I was never in the Belgian mood, which was very important in the 90s.” Just as well – being able to boast that your design studio is in a 15th-century building with a faade and fresco by Raphael and Giulio Romano is a gift that shouldn’t be white-emulsioned out.

“There are a lot of paintings and colours and marble here, and my office is actually in the old chapel of this building, so it’s quite ‘decorated’,” she says. “Beyond that, I try and treat the environment in a new way – I have modern furniture, including pieces designed for Gucci stores. I don’t like empty space. I like spaces you can live in.” A scented candle takes care of the punctuated air of smoking and crucially she’s never without speakers for her iPod, adding, “I don’t have any special rituals for creating, apart of course from my music.

“The best advice I ever received is probably from my parents, to create a good balance between your personal life and your career and your professional life. When I started doing this job in 2005 it was one of my worst years, because I had this incredible opportunity, but I didn’t know about the pressure, about the difficulties I could have – it was really bad and I was upset.”

Giannini, who has risen in the company from handbag-design director to creative director of accessories to creative director of everything, has succeeded in the monumental task of taking a house that really is a household name, namechecked to the hilt in pop culture, and keeping it relevant, desirable and focused on the future. The gilt is shining very brightly.

“The best thing about working hard is that I can do something great everyday. But I always have a rest, a breath of fresh air, and talk about something else other than fashion, just to give my mind space to approach different things and come into the office with new ideas and new energy. It’s important to give out good energy instead of being very dramatic! In fashion we are always running, rushing, so you need to have something lighter in your approach to inspire and motivate those around you.”

But does Frida Giannini go home after a long day and watch trash TV like the rest of us? “When I have spare time I prefer to be at home with friends or to have a nice dinner, I love cooking,” she says. “But sometimes I do, of course! I’ve been watching a reality series with people that used to be famous in Italy, which is one of the most trash-TV programmes you’ll find!”

Back to the equestrian look. The capsule she’s created is about function as well as form but what does Giannini love about it as a uniform, an aesthetic?

“The elegance,” she muses, “and I really love the rigour because to horse ride, you have to have a strong discipline. Another thing I love is that it is almost completely unisex, so basically you can wear the same jacket and the same trousers and the same boots, which is quite interesting. The sport is one of the only ones where men and women can compete together.

“The primary essence of the Gucci woman is to be very strong and independent and selfconfident. It is always very inspiring when I can see women so elegant and powerful and original in their way. It is not very easy to find beautiful women with a strong attitude.”

Such women head straight to Gucci – or, even better, speed-dial its creative director.

CREDITS

Photography and video by Harley Weir
Styling by Agata Belcen
Model Elena Bartels at Premiere Model Management
Hair by Alex Brownsell at D+V Management using Bumble & Bumble
Make-up by Nami Yoshida using Yves Saint Laurent
Set design by Petra Storrs
Photographic assistant Amber Weird
Styling assistant Mhairi Graham
Hair assistant Natasha Spencer
Set design assistant Tasha Dean

The New YSL – Saint Laurent Paris

A new era for legendary fashion house Yves Saint Laurent has begun. Top designer Hedi Slimane, YSL’s new and talented creative director, has decided to change the brand’s name to Saint Laurent Paris. This extreme and surprising move is just one part of the plan to bring new spirit and fresh designs to the rejuvenated brand.

When Hedi Slimane took over Stefano Pilati’s chair as the new creative director at Yves Saint Laurent back in March, a wind of change filled the air. Now the actual changes are taking place. The talented and innovative designer has decided to change the legendary brand’s name to a more casual and playful one. So, from now on – Yves Saint Laurent – OUT. Saint Laurent Paris – IN!

According to WWD, the new name should be implemented within a few months. By the time Slimane will reveal his Spring/Summer 2013 collection, the new name will replace the old one.

Though the new name came as a surprise, it matches Slimane’s plans to bring new spirit to the ancient fashion house. Freedom, youth and modernity are the designer’s new themes. But those themes are not going to replace the components that inspired legendary Yves Saint Laurent, the founder of the fashion house. According to Slimane, those inspirations will remain, but with a new twist that can draw a young and new crowd.

As remembered, in 1996 Slimane was the director of the YSL men’s ready-to-wear line. After the debut of his successful “Black Tie” collection, he chose to leave the brand in favour of another top French label Christian Dior Homme. In 2007 he decided to make another career turn and went back to his first love – photography.

Nowadays Hedi Slimane is working on his first ready-to-wear collection as Saint Laurent Paris’s creative director. The highly-anticipated collection will be revealed during the upcoming Paris Fashion Week. This fashion week will start on September 25th and will be over 8 days later, on October 3rd.

FashionTV will be there to bring you the best fashion shows; newest trends and unique lines .Stay tuned and join us for the seasonal Parisian fashion celebration.

The YSL of Yesteryear

Do you remember Yves St. Laurent in its heyday? Will Hedi Slimane be able to rejuvenate the brand and bring it back to the glory of its former years?

Dark Innocence

A story in leather, lacquer, babycat, denim and pussy bows, Hedi Slimane’s first collection in five years takes a rock wardrobe and infuses it with the youth explosion that characterised Saint Laurent’s ready-to-wear line in the 60s, Rive Gauche. In many ways the tale here is one of genesis, as what the late Yves Saint Laurent did as the first couturier to propose luxury ready-to-wear with the spirit of the street, Hedi Slimane did from the late 90s to 2007, redefining menswear both in silhouette and attitude. Essentially, as Saint Laurent liberated women, Slimane did so for men.

Since 2007 the influential designer has concentrated on a parallel career in photography, introducing the monochrome illusive portrait – what the camera shouldn’t see – into contemporary culture. His images are charged with the ethos of what he began in fashion, demonstrating a talent for capturing the spirit of our time that goes beyond clothes, however sublime.

On his return to design, there is a notion of planets aligning. Slimane’s installation at Saint Laurent befits the wishes of both the late Monsieur Saint Laurent and his partner Pierre Berg, to whom the debut women’s catwalk show was dedicated.

As stores are reconceptualised under Saint Laurent’s original helvetica logo, Dazed heralds a new fashion epoch by heading to Stockholm to shoot a 2012 youthquake on a group of professional and street-cast models. Here we present an extended image edit from the magazine editorial and meet the boys from the shoot.

CinematographyMartin Rinman
Edited byInessa Tsulimova

PhotographyFumi Nagasaka
StylingRobbie Spencer
GroomingSharin at Link Details
ModelsAdam and Peder at Nisch Management, Daniel, Hugo, Kimie, Martin at Stockholmsgruppen
Photographic AssistantHannah Richter
Styling AssistantUlrika Lindqvist
RetouchingColor One NYC
Special Thanks ToJane Glandal, Meghan Scott, Hjalmar Klitse

All clothes Saint Laurent by Hedi Slimane SS13 menswear

The stories' lead protagonist, Hugo, soundtracked the film with his band Side Effects. Visit theirofficial Facebook page

Valentino: Master of Couture

Writer, architect, painter, designer and art director Patrick Kinmouth, set designer and art director Antonio Monfreda and reader in Fashion History and Theory at Central Saint Martins Alistair O'Neill are the curators behind Valentino: Master of Couture opening today at Somerset House. Synonymous with 'Valentino red', Roman couturier Valentino Garavani – and the handiwork of his atelier – is celebrated over a 50 year career, with the visitor taking the place of the model, walking along a sixty-metre runway to view the ‘audience’, all dressed in Valentino Couture. Grouped by themes rather than chronologically, the display culminates in recent dresses by the house, headed by Pier Paolo Piccioli and Maria Grazia Chiuri. We caught up with one third of the curating team, Alistair O'Neill to hear more.

Dazed Digital: Valentino has such a vast archive. How did you being to unravel that and decide which pieces you wanted to select?
Alistair O’Neill: Well, there’s three of us curating this, so I suppose we wanted to go against that widely accepted definition of what Valentino couture is, as an occasion dress, on a red carpet, worn by an actress. Tends to be column, tends to be a block colour. And when we went to see the full array of the archive at the atelier in Rome, just next door to the Spanish steps, we were bowled over by the complexity, nuances and themes – and we wanted to be able to show that. We respect the fact that a London audience for a fashion exhibition is quite sophisticated, so we really wanted to be able to show all facets of Valentino couture.

DD: Was there anything which shocked or surprised you?
Alistair O’Neill: I was really furious that a dress I’ve loved for years, and years, was actually ready-to-wear! I mean it looked so couture, in every photograph that I'd ever seen of it. So that was a disappointment. We wanted to be strictly, 'only couture'. I didn’t realise how much I'd love daywear, it’s a really important aspect of a couture woman’s wardrobe.

DD: Was there a particular moment, a collection that kind of stuck with you?
Alistair O’Neill: There’s so many. I mean, I mean the White collection really stands out for me. It was 1968. It's the moment in which America starts to wake up to Mr. Valentino in Rome, Diana Vreeland starts to write about him in Harper’s Bazaar, society ladies of New York start to wear it. He does a series of trunk shows that become really pivotal in that kind of a way. And Jacqueline Kennedy starts to wear it. She then decides to marry Aristotle Onassis and she wears this amazing daywear wedding dress, that’s so chic to see today. At that time he designs these really intricate organza, beautiful, embellished pieces of daywear; they’re quite short, and they’re also very chic. One of them Audrey Hepburn wore and the other one Marisa Berenson wore. She’s such a beautiful woman and it was just at that time when she starts to get into acting. There’s a Henry Clarke shooting, in American Vogue, and she’s wearing that dress in Cy Twombly’s palazzo in Rome and it’s totally black and white the story – and if you think about it, it’s at the height of the psychedelic phase. To be doing that and to have the assurance of being right, as well as wanting to make an established model and aspiring actress look like a countess is amazing. So for me that really stands out. What’s amazing about Mr. Valentino is that he’s been working for over 50 years – and is still working. He's just done costume designs for the New York City ballet. He retired officially in 2008, but he’s still very much working.

DD: How involved was Valentino in realising the exhibition?
Alistair O’Neill: I mean I have to say that we worked formally with Giancarlo Giammetti, Mr Valentino’s business partner since 1960. Everything was always. Fed back to Mr. Valentino, and then we would have comments that would come back. And that’s the way that they’ve always worked. Mr. Giammetti is the business side of the enterprise, and Mr. Valentino is the creative side. Mr. Giammetti tends to front a lot of business meetings and tends to be the kind of gatekeeper. It’s no different from those great creative partnerships in fashion such as Pierre Berg and Yves Saint Laurent. But as soon as we started installing, Mr. Valentino would arrive, making announced or unannounced visits to see how it was progressing. It’s thankfully, been a very happy process.

DD: Do you think that at a time when designers are being pushed to do more and more collections per season that couture will continue to be what it has been?
Alistair O’Neill: I think couture is a rarefied world, the man on the street, still aspires to 'designer' clothing and they don’t necessarily understand that distinction. Although Valentino’s couture business is in robust health, many of the small-scale industries that support couture are very fragile, more fragile than we think. For me this project is about trying to raise awareness of this and try to educate people about how important hand skills are. I mean you’ve only got to look at Chanel’s recent decision to buy Scottish cashmere company Barrie. It shows you they think that that’s in peril – it’s our country’s pride and we should be supporting that all the more. Chanel recently bought a number of ateliers so the feather work of Lemarie and the embroidery of Lesage can continue. They don’t just serve Chanel, they also serve couture houses like Valentino. So it’s really, really important that we understand a project like this isn’t just the chance to see beautiful dresses on display but it’s a way of trying to educate people about the workers in the atelier, who are actually upholding this. If those skills aren’t passed on, this is something that is going to die off.

Valentino: Master of Coutureruns from 29th November 2012–3rd March 2013 at Somerset House

Fashion Roundup: Rihanna’s Nude Campaign and Brad Pitt Tease for Chanel

First look at Scarlett Johansson and Jessica Biel pictures from the set of Hitchcock. The two will perform opposite Anthony Hopkins and Helen Mirren in the upcoming film, showcasing great looks from classic Hollywood glamour era. (Hollywire)

After infamous scandals this year, Prince Harry turns up on top as he's labeled ‘Man of the Year’ by Tatler and appears on the magazine's cover. The royal gone bad is referred to as ‘Dirty Harry’ by the glossie, appearing in his finest military gear. (Huffington Post)

Rihanna’s new campaign for her Nude fragrance is not so nude after all. After previously leaked photos from the same shoot, it seems that the final version of the ad is a bit more toned down than expected. (MTV Style)

Yves Saint Laurent is missing over 400 personal drawings. The designer’s long-term partner Pierre Berge, claims the journal was allegedly taken for the Paris apartment that they used to share. The item includes approximately 300 sketches, many of which were erotic. (Vogue UK)

Nicole Kidman covers Harper’s Bazaar US’s November issue, posing in front of Terry Richardson’s camera in an amazing golden Emilio Pucci dress. Inside, Kidman returns to speaking on Tom Cruise and sexuality. (Refinery 29)

Why? Where? What’s the Mystery?

Closing our list of weekly highlights, three teasers have sprung out this week on Chanel’s YouTube Channel for the highly anticipated Brad Pitt $7 million appearance for the Chanel No.5 campaign. The answers to all of these questions will be revealed October 15, when the full commercial is set to launch. Take a look:

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