Tag: tokyo

The Latest Boutiques: Berluti, Lanvin & Vacheron Constantin

Christian Dior debuts in Sao Paulo & Valentino unveils its refurbished Paris boutique, as Berluti expands in Asia and Lanvin launches its first menswear store

CBRE has released its Global Retail View for Q4 2012, and with it, exposed the 10 most expensive prime retail markets in the world. Hong Kong tops the list, where it costs more than €35,000 per square-metre, per annum, to rent a retail store. Somewhat unsurprisingly New York, London and Paris round out the top four.

But creeping into the top ten are cities like Sydney, Melbourne and – for the first time – Beijing, nestled between global shopping destinations and wealth centres such as Tokyo, Zurich and Moscow.

“With the strong momentum driving the China retail industry and the China economy as a whole, it comes as no surprise that Beijing is featured in the top 10 list,” explained CBRE Retail Asia Executive Director, Sebastian Skiff to Jing Daily.

Sydney, Melbourne & Beijing rank in the top 10 most expensive prime retail markets in the world

“We expect consumer market performance to provide, albeit at a healthier pace, the continued background for growth over the next 2 to 3 years in the retail property market. Our view is that both the consumer and retailer will be focusing more on quality rather than quantity.”

According to the study, rising prices in Beijing follow what’s being seen in other top ten markets – among them London, Paris and Sydney – historically low construction rates of top retail space, which leads to low availability levels and fierce competition.

As brands such as Gucci and Louis Vuitton begin to re-evaluate aggressive expansion strategies, it will be interesting to note the impact on luxury boutique openings in 2013.

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Berluti, Hong Kong

Berluti has chosen Hong Kong’s Elements Mall for its 13th monobrand boutique, opening a 160sqm store as part of an aggressive expansion plan for 2013. The LVMH owned menswear house is set to open in Tokyo, New York and Shanghai in the coming twelve months. Osaka boutique pictured

Website: berluti.com
Source: CPP Luxury

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Chloé, New York

Chloé has inaugurated its first boutique in New York’s SoHo, spanning 195sqm on Greene Street. The second NYC location houses jewellery, accessories, ready-to-wear, and handbags. The Deco-style boutique has been furnished with Bibendum chairs by Eileen Fray from the twenties and vintage pendant lighting by Curtis Jere.

Website: chloe.com
Source: Style.com

Dior, Sao Paulo

Christian Dior has opened its first flagship store in Sao Paulo, Brazil, located within the Citade Jardim Mall. Designed by Peter Marino, the boutique has been divided into salons, each dedicated to a different product category including ready to wear, jewellery and watches, shoes, bags and also features a VIP room.

Website: dior.com
Source: Pambianco News

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Lanvin, New York

Lanvin has unveiled its first dedicated menswear boutique on New York’s Madison Avenue, the second location to feature the new Lanvin retail concept as conceived by Alber Elbaz in collaboration with MR Architecture & Décor. The 540sqm boutique spans three floors of retail with two additional floors acting as corporate offices for Lanvin.

Website: lanvin.com
Source: Selectism

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Poltrona Frau, Dubai

Italian luxury furniture maker Poltrona Frau has unveiled its second UAE showroom in Dubai, occupying 600sqm on Bil Rashid Boulevard, opposite to the prestigious Burj Khalifa Tower. In partnership with Mubadala Development Company, the new showroom features three distinct spaces showcasing pieces by Le Corbusier, Pierre Jeanneret, Cassina, Poltrona Frau and Cappellini.

Website: poltronafrau.com
Source: CPP Luxury

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Pomellato, Hong Kong

The current subject of PPR takeover talks, Italian jeweller Pomellato has opened its first boutique in Hong Kong, within the IFC Mall. As part of the brand’s expansion strategy in Asia, the opening will be followed by launches in Beijing, Shanghai and Singapore.

Website: pomellato.com
Source: Luxury Insider

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Prada, Kuwait

Prada has opened one of its largest stores in the Middle East in Kuwait, spanning 850sqm over two floors within the Avenues Mall. The second Kuwait flagship, operated in partnership with Al Tayer Insignia, carries a full range of both women and men’s ready to wear, accessories, bags, shoes and eyewear.

Website: prada.com
Source: CPP Luxury

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Vacheron Constantin, Los Angeles

Richemont-owned Vacheron Constantin has opened a new flagship store in Beverly Hills, on North Rodeo Drive. The 140sqm space marks the Swiss watchmaker’s 36th mono-brand store worldwide, and fourth in North America. Custom crafted limestone flooring is complimented by sleek showcases and walls finished in fine Venetian plaster.

Website: vacheron-constantin.com
Source: Europastar

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Valentino, Paris

Valentino has unveiled its renovated flagship on Paris’s Avenue Montaigne. The retail space has been re-imagined by creative directors Maria Grazia Chiuri and Pierpaolo Piccioli along with architect David Chipperfield. The opening reflects the brand’s renewed focus on its own retailing and the relevance of the city for Valentino.

Website: valentino.com
Source: Pambianco News

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Vera Wang, Shanghai

Vera Wang has opened its largest flagship bridal store in Shanghai, spanning 850sqm over two levels, featuring three dressing rooms and one VIP salon. Sydney boutique pictured

The brand’s first Chinese store charges a non-refundable fee of 3,000 Yuan (US$482) to try on bridal gowns for 90 minutes, which will then be deducted from any purchases. The company indicated that the “trying or fitting fee” is a way to protect its designs. Taking photographs and filming is also banned in the store.

Website: verawang.com
Source: Red Luxury


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

- The Latest Boutiques: Patek Philippe, Corneliani & Louis Vuitton
- The Latest Boutiques: Hublot, Audi & Chanel
- The Latest Boutiques: Chloé, Brioni & Shang Xia

Ivan Poupyrev

Interview taken from the February issue of Dazed & Confused:

A mathematician’s son, Ivan Poupyrev left his homeland following the collapse of the Soviet Union and divided his time between Washington and Japan, where he earned a doctorate from Hiroshima University. After an eight-year stint with Sony’s Tokyo labs he moved to Pittsburgh to take up a senior post with Disney Research, where he dreams up the interfaces of the future. Poupyrev works in physical computing, making responsive interfaces out of unexpected objects. His Botanicus Interacticus transforms ordinary house plants into touch-sensitive musical instruments through the magic of Touché sensing technology. Mathematical wizardry enables Touché to add gesture control to any object that conducts electricity – so secret gestures can unlock doorknobs too. Revel was a similarly lo-fi stroke of genius; by manipulating our bodies’ electrostatic fields, it lets our hands feel computer-generated textures. An image of a ball can feel rubbery, sand gritty and pebbles smooth.

What drew you to touch-based technology?

We can completely control data and conjure any image or sound we want from it; there are no limitations to what we can create visually. But the sense of touch is really lacking from these creations. You can’t really feel it, touch its texture, wrap your hands around it. That’s a huge lack – touch is an important part of how we experience life. So my idea is to bring the virtual into the palpable realm. Maybe you can shape soundwaves with your hands, feel light falling on your hands, or grasp objects you can’t normally see with your eyes.

What’s the difference between physical computing and ‘the internet of things’?

They all refer to the same vision of the future but come at it from different angles. The internet of things is focused on objects talking to each other over wi-fi, for example. Whereas I approach this vision of the future by making the world an interface. I did my PhD in virtual reality – I was fascinated by creating completely artificial environments you become immersed in, where anything is possible. Physical computing brings qualities of the computer into physical reality.

If you could only use storytelling or technology to enhance reality, which would you choose?

The original storytelling pretty much used narrative alone. A narrator takes you through the story step-by-step and you are essentially passive. But computer games opened storytelling right up. With video games you are an actor in the story unfolding in front of you. A compelling story will remain really important but technology gives you a greater sense of immersion. Your actions have consequences, and that fosters a far stronger emotional connection.

What other things extend the technology of storytelling?

If you imagine what the ultimate game could be – with no limitations on your imagination – then it would be your own life. If you could live your life, then load it from level one (i.e. your birth), that would be awesome! We can approximate elements of this ultimate game with wearable technology: as you go through your day, it changes your experiences according to a certain narrative, and this narrative becomes part of your real life. This idea of thinking about the ultimate experience first, then stepping back and approximating it with what we have to hand, is how I work.

So what’s the future of entertainment?

Entertainment used to be a confined experience, one-on-one with a book or sat in front of a TV. It was bound to one particular place: the theatre or cinema. Mobile devices changed the game, so the next step is to connect to the real-world environment, and the next step after that is to enhance your real-world environment. I think the next technological revolution will be in merging the physical and the digital. Simplicity is key to this. Back in the 60s, if you wanted to own a car you needed to be a part-time mechanic to maintain it. Now cars just work, they’re simple. I think that same transition needs to happen with the technologies that connect the real world to the digital.

Augmented reality is technology that merges the digital with the physical. Kevin Slavin famously criticised its visual bias and said ‘reality is augmented when it feels different’. Do you agree?

I can see both sides of the argument. Realism, by itself, is boring. When the artist can inject their very personal view of the world, morph the world and objects within it in a way that reflects how they feel about the world, that’s when things become interesting. That’s why cartoons are compelling. The resurgence of 8-bit graphics is also related to this. Bitmapped graphics enable a purity of expression: when you’ve got a limited palette, every pixel matters. Things become interesting when you can create experiences you cannot experience in the real world. That’s what fascinates me.

Brian Eno famously complained about the imprisoning nature of computer interaction. he said, ‘how does one Africanise, or Brazilianise, or otherwise liberate a computer?’

I’m with Brian Eno 100 per cent on that! Liberating yourself from the screen was exactly why I got into virtual reality in the first place. But computers themselves are a culture. For the original supercomputer designers, the idea that you would use a machine of that power to play games on would be outrageous! That way of thinking about computing as a serious tool to do serious business is still very strong. It’s less about west vs east, but it’s a historical legacy of how computers came to be.

Where do you look for inspiration?

I’m always looking at trends. I want to see the seeds of what is happening, not the results. Printed electronics really interest me at the moment. Printing is a very old technology but it’s seeing a reinvention right now. We’re printing things which were not supposed to be printed. The big shift is we’re printing things that can do things themselves. We printed an optical sensor that senses input, using LEDs and light pipes printed inside the object! These technologies will let us create previously impossible things. It’s going to be hugely significant.

Where will the next tech revolution happen?

Well, the revolution happens from all quarters. I think that the enthusiasts are the ones on the forefront but it’s when there’s big business to be had that things accelerate fast. Even with lots of stupid money being wasted on projects during the first dotcom boom, it was that swell that made the big companies wake up to the internet. But the maker community around (open-source tools for creating interactive environments) Arduino and Processing was eye- opening for me. They are tools that lower the entry bar, and the community that’s emerged bucks the trend of passive consumers. When entry barriers are lowered, people get involved. Curiosity is wired into us: the excitement of making and creating something new.

Best Fashion Moments 2011

The Best Fashion Moments in 2011

From super stylish parties in Cannes to ultra-sexy Victoria's Secret models, FashionTV remembers the greatest fashion moments of 2011.

VOTE AND COMMENT NOW FOR BEST OF FTV 2011 !

This year, FashionTV highlights the style moments that took our breath away and transformed beauties, visions, and inspirations into works of art.

Who can forget Adriana Lima, Alessandra Ambrosio, and the other sexy girls of Victoria's Secret as they sashayed down the runway for the 2011 fashion show in stunning superhero costumes and sequined disco numbers?

What about Sarah Burton's rise to the top at Alexander McQueen when FashionTV and the rest of the world learned she designed Prince William's bride Kate Middleton's wedding dress? Just a day later, she was being honored as part of the McQueen label by the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Costume Institute Gala!

Fashion shows like Marc Jacobs and Anna Sui in New York, Burberry and Vivienne Westwood in London, Dsquared2 and Roberto Cavalli in Milan, and Prada and Balmain in Paris left us clamoring for Fall 2011 and Spring 2012 trends and not just because their front rows were packed withcelebrityandfashion heavyweights.

Which Fashion Week was your favorite?

The dapper duds of Mad Men met high-fashion on the Jean Paul Gaultier Fall 2011 runway at Paris Fashion Week, where pussy bow blouses, pinstripes, and gloves took center stage in the return of 50s sophisticate trends. Hats, gloves, and retro prints were also imitated in major boutiques.

For haute couture, Elie Saab reigned supreme with his clever composition of beautiful embroidered bodices and frothy feminine gowns. Gucci's Milan Fall 2011 collection was so popular it was seen on Tokyo model Ai Tominaga and actress Jennifer Lopez.

With statement-making style like Sports Illustrated model Kate Upton in a

Beach Bunny wedding bikini

and pearls, FashionTV caught sexy swimwear and beautiful beachwear in Miami, Milan, Rio de Janeiro, and Sao Paulo. In Rio and Sao Paulo, models like Isabeli Fontana, Aline Weber, and Caroline Francischini took center stage in vibrant colors and geometric prints.

FashionTV partied around the world with the best of them, hitting up bashes like the Flavio Briatore's Billionaire Club during Formula 1 Grand Prix in Monte Carlo and store openings like the Jean Paul Gaultier concept shop in Ginza, Tokyo, where the designer dressed up as an astronaut. At the celebrity soiree from De Grisogono during the Cannes Film Festival, guests like Bianca Balti, will.i.am from The Black Eyed Peas, and Carine Roitfeld made appearances, and FashionTV had the exclusive!

Campari or Pirelli: Which 2012 calendar is hotter?

FashionTV also featured the best fashion photographs with an inside look at major photoshoots like the sexy 13th edition of the Campari Calendar with Milla Jovovich featuring Milla in many sexy costumes and an “end of the world” theme and a behind-the-scenes peek at the making of the 2012 Pirelli Calendar with models like Joan Smalls, Lara Stone, and Kate Moss posing nude for fashion photographer Mario Sorrenti. Photographer Giuliano Bekor stunned with his photos of model Jessica Perez wearing leopard print for Shape magazine's June 2011 issue.

One of the biggest trends for 2011 was the intertwining of fashion and music. FashionTV honed in on this milieu right away, as models mixed with music stars and celebrities at major events. Duran Duran showcased the top supermodels of the 90s in their Girl Panic video with Naomi Campbell, Cindy Crawford, and Helena Christensen making highly anticipated appearances. The super sultry Etam lingerie show featured models like Monika “Jac” Jagaciak, and Karolina Kurkova, but also Karen Elson, DJ Mark Ronson, Boy George, The Kills, Beth Ditto, and more. The Victoria's Secret fashion show had models Adriana Lima and Chanel Iman swaying their hips alongside musical acts like Nicki Minaj, Kanye West, Jay-Z, and Maroon 5. The

Versace for H&M fashion show

with models like Natasha Poly and Lindsey Wixson featured guests Nicki Minaj and Prince in the audience, who later riled up the crowd with rapturous performances at the Versace for H&M after party.

For fashion, 2011 was full of memorable moments that will last a lifetime. FashionTV wants to relive those moments with you this month!

What’s your favorite fashion moment of 2011?

Fashion Roundup: Monica Cruz For Agent Provocateur, Natalie Portman’s Wedding And The New Adidas Video With Nicki Minaj

Penelope Cruz’s little sister, Monica Cruz, 35, is the new body for Agent Provocateur! Cruz will star in the brand's new Autumn/ Winter 2012 campaign named “Wilhelmina: Show Your True Self”. The theme for the campaign is set in a haunted prison of Victorian London, giving the photos a very eerie but sensual atmosphere. (Huffington Post)

The Chanel “Obsession” video campaign features model and Lagerfeld muse Edie Campbell and is directed by video artist Cyrille de Vignemont. The tone is upbeat, visually mesmerizing and stylish with the theme of multiple personalities very noticeable. (Refinery 29).

Mashable offers the top 20 fashion galleries to follow on Pinterest. The compilation is a stellar list of fashion icons to follow, including Peter Som, Glamour magazine and more. To follow FashionTV on Pinterest, head to http://www.pinterest.com/fashiontv. (Mashable)

What is happening at Bill Blass Limited? According to reports, President Scott Patti has cancelled its September runway show and dismissed its entire women’s design staff, including head designer Jeffrey Monteiro. Monteiro will be the fifth designer to leave the brand under similar circumstances. (Styleite)

Earlier this week, Natalie Portman and Benjamin Millepied have exchanged vows in a Jewish ceremony along the California coast line. Portman has stated that everything in her life has drawn her towards having a French family and accomplishing her Francophilic desires. Congrats! (People)

Closing our list of fashion highlights this week, we bring you the new Adidas Originals campaign video featuring Nicki Minaj and 2NE1, with designer Jeremy Scott. The video is filled with young, colorful, stylish streetwear, that stretches all over the world, from Paris to London, Tokyo and Rio. A really exciting collection for Fall 2012...take a look:

Yuima Nakazato studio visit

As a pendant to Nicola Formichetti's full-on fashion in the #Fantasia issue, we set out, guided by the superstylist, to meet some of the most exciting Tokyo design talent of the moment. Yuima Nakazato makes brutally futuristic menswear, famous for his holographic pieces. Though the designer tells us his next collection will be different. So keep an eye out.

Dazed Digital: Can you tell us when you launched your label?
Yuima Nakazato: After my studies at Royal Academy of Antwerp, Ann Demeulemeester said: "Individuality should appear in a course, as well as in a creation". I started my label in my hometown of Tokyo, 2009.

DD: Who wears your clothes?

Yuima Nakazato: Mainly youth but especially people who like fashion.

DD: What's your most famous design?

Yuima Nakazato: The most famous designs are the hologram items (made from special material like a jewel/beetle). In my first collection there was a men's hologram dress and I've continued it up to now.

DD: What's the best moment in your career so far?
Yuima Nakazato:When I see someone wearing my clothes.

DD: What are your hopes for the future?
Yuima Nakazato:I want to express a richness of mentality in my work.

DD: What's your favourite thing about Nicola Formichetti?
Yuima Nakazato:His creation stems from the fusion of two cultures, Japanese and Italian. This will continue to broaden the horizons of fashion.

PhotographyDaisuke Hamada

East Asia’s new wave: day #2

Alfred Ng, 23, Hong Kong

As a student, tattooist Alfred Ng had no interest in art, but a bet to match his friend’s final grades in art class changed all of that. Not only did Ng win the bet, he tapped into an undiscovered talent and passion for painting. This turned into a fascination with tattoos, and Ng got his first taste of ink when he was 18. He hasn’t looked back since.

Describe your personal style in three words.
Punk. Raw. Black.


Name three songs that you can't live without.
Zeds Dead - Eyes on Fire / Deadmau5 - Raise Your Weapon / Nero - Innocence



What is the most exciting part of Asia's young creative arts scene?

Asia's arts scene had always been slightly different to the rest of the world; for me, art should be appreciated in terms of its creative/artistic/historical value. Asian art, on the other hand, has always been aimed at making money, hence why I see 'art' in Asia always being incorporated with different media elements, such as music and live-shows, for greater commercial value. It seems, as long as it provides a certain commercial gain, you'll suddenly become 'artistic'. 


How do you think the perception of Asian pop culture has changed in the last 10 years?

The development of technology and social media such as Facebook, Instagram, Tumblr and Weibo has influenced the way in which people communicate with one another. The immediacy of thoughts, pictures and songs being posted online has allowed for much quicker integration and transfer of information between people. Whereas, ten years ago, information might have been limited within the local community, it is now possible to know what's happening thousands of miles away, thanks to the Internet. I think it has helped the liberation of Asian pop culture, and how Asian pop culture is being perceived nowadays. For example, anything with sexual, violent connotations would probably not have been seen as 'art' ten years ago, or someone with tattoos might have immediately been viewed as a criminal or a gangster—nowadays however, these narrow-minded views are slowly changing and there has been greater diversification in Asian pop culture.



How does the city influence your creativity?

Hong Kong's diverse culture and buzzing nature provides a very interesting dynamic and energy that cannot be found anywhere else in the world. The British colonial buildings and Chinese buildings, the old streets of Hong Kong, local market stalls and art galleries never fail to provide inspiration for ideas in terms of my illustration, photography or creative thoughts.


Best hangout spot?

Austin Road West in Kowloon. There is a park with a running track. It is a lesser-known spot with very nice views of Victoria Harbour and the Peak.


Favourite website?
Lost at E-Minor.


What do your parents think of what you do?
Being stereotypically Asian, they are against tattoos and body art. I respect their views but life is too short – I want to be true to myself, be who I am and do what I love.


Matcha, 20, Tokyo

Nicola found 20-year-old Matcha at Candy, one of Tokyo’s stores of the moment, and cast him for his Nicopanda project at Isetan. He works at that store and models for its website daily, wearing Phenomenon, Gareth Pugh, KTZ and many other exciting designers’ collections. “Matcha” means “green tea” in Japanese – “I always eat this ice cream called Supercup Matcha,” he says, “and one day my friend named me Matcha, haha.”

Describe your personal style in three words.
Free. Moody. Self-satisfaction.

Name three songs you can't live without.
Azealia Banks: ‘212’. / Jason Chance: ‘Sober Talk’. / TLC: ‘Come Get Some’.

How do you think the perception of Asian pop culture has changed in the last ten years?
It's getting more exciting in both the music and fashion industries.

What has been the biggest highlight of your career so far?
When Nicola cast me for his Nicopanda pop-up store shoot at Isetan.

What’s the best hangout spot in Tokyo?
Fashion boutique Candy in Shibuya.

Favourite website?
www.fashiontography.net

Who's the wildest person you follow on Twitter?
Lady Gaga.

What do your parents think of what you do?
They don't care.

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