Tag: valentino

Vanessa Beecroft x Valentino for Vogue Ukraine: a timeless idea of femininity

Vanessa Beecroft has proved herself to be one of the most original artists of her generation. Always finding the specific angle that will generate a strong reation to everyone who would see...

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

Valentino AW13

Maria Grazia Chiuri and Pier Paolo Piccioli's Valentino show was such an alluring conflation of elements it was difficult not to be spirited away and totally enchanted by it. That's when fashion is exciting, when you're so drawn into a vision that your head changes entirely for 10 minutes.

The designers took "stereotypical garments, part of the collective culture," intervened and improved them to perfection, with a nod to 60s British style and Carnaby Street on their strong, youthful casting.

We were taken to a divine world, one where models including #dazedmodelarmy's Alexander Beck stalked their inherited mansion to a noirish soundtrack. Through the Htel Salomon de Rothschild's grand salons, with their ornate painted ceilings, chandeliers and parquet floors, the boys wore transparent soled Chelsea boots, ponyskin trenches, military furs, capes and experimental thermoform tailoring (which moulds a suit to the body), realised in Prince of Wales checks and Black Watch tartans.

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

Russian luxury market, so what?

Since the ex-URSS disappeared, many brands, especially the luxury ones have been trying hard to make good money in Russia. Luxury shopping malls in Moscow were built and many companies installed subsidiaries...
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