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Rumor Denied: Prada CEO Was Unhappy With The Spring Collection

October 5th, 2010 admin No comments
prada8 Rumor Denied: Prada CEO Was Unhappy With The Spring Collection

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According to WWD, there was a rumor going around that Patrizio Bertelli, Prada’s CEO, wasn’t so keen on Miuccia Prada’s bananas  spring collection. Sources told the newspaper that Prada had canceled appointments in Milan with American retailers because they planned to bring an “enhanced offering” of the collection to New York in a month.

Prada’s spring collection was plenty enhanced as it was for our tastes. Most other critics seemed to agree that the collection was a smashing success. And now Prada is “firmly” denying the rumors that Bertelli didn’t like it, or that the collection was being altered for NYC appointments.

Denial aside, it’s curious that the rumor ever even existed. Does this mean that despite the influx of neon that followed Prada’s showing, there is some concern that Americans won’t warm up to it? Would you wear Prada’s SS2011 collection?

Prada puts small Texas town on the map

October 5th, 2010 admin No comments

Marfa is home to modern art, the Marfa lights phenomenon and a Prada store. Yes, a Prada store is located off U.S. Route 90 in the middle of almost nowhere in Texas. Surprising, is it not?

This store, known as Prada Marfa, is a permanently affixed sculpture created by artists Michael Elmgreen and Ingar Dragset, known collectively as Elmgreen & Dragset. Although this piece of minimalist art was inaugurated on Oct. 1, 2005, Elmgreen and Dragset installed signs with the words, “Prada, Coming Soon” on the windows of a Chelsea Gallery years before. Little did everyone know that Yvonne Force Villareal and Doreen Remen, owners of the nonprofit organization Art Production Fund, with aid from Ballroom Marfa, would be funding this project.

Built on a desolate strip of U.S. Route 90 in West Texas, the piece is made strictly from adobe bricks, plaster, paint, glass panes, aluminum frame, medium-density fiberboard and carpet. It is made to resemble an actual Prada store, but this sculpture will not be maintained while it is present in this rural area of Texas. The artists are aware that the biodegradable adobe will eventually melt into the land and that there may also be vandals who may ruin the property. The artists hope to show the growth of luxury brands, while promoting the temporal relevance of fashion.

“If someone spray-paints graffiti or a cowboy decides to use it as target practice or maybe a mouse or a muskrat makes a home in it, 50 years from now, it will be a ruin that is a reflection of the time it was made,” Villareal said.

This sculpture store features an array of handbags and shoes from Prada’s fall/winter 2005 collection. It is said that these pieces were handpicked by designer Miuccia Prada.

Unfortunately, it took only three days for the sculpture to experience vandalism when the building was broken in to. Six handbags and 14 right-footed shoes were stolen, while the building was spray-painted with the words “Dumb” and “Dum Dum.”

Despite the goal of no maintenance to this building, the art was quickly repaired and replaced with new Prada handbags and shoes. This time around, the handbags did not have bottoms and were placed on an alarm system so that authorities would be immediately informed in the event of another theft.

This $80,000 building is a sincere project by its artists and by art foundations to promote fashion even in areas where fashion may seem like a thing of the future. Even though Texas does not have a flagship Prada store, it has made the home of Prada Marfa attract many minimalist artists and tourists from all over the nation.

Beautiful Boy

October 4th, 2010 admin No comments

Celebrated British artist Sam Taylor-Wood on her “Crying Men,” her Lennon biopic, and having a baby with her much-younger star.

(Photo: Francesco Carrozzini. Hair by Ayumi Yamamoto for Barex Italiana/Defacto; Makeup by Kateri Giehl/Ford Artists.)

(Photo: Francesco Carrozzini. Hair by Ayumi Yamamoto for Barex Italiana/Defacto; Makeup by Kateri Giehl/Ford Artists.)

I might have to breast-feed in the middle of this. Is that okay?” asks British artist and filmmaker Sam Taylor-Wood, arriving for lunch. In tow are her fiancé, actor Aaron Johnson (star of last spring’s Kick-Ass), and their 10-week-old daughter, Wylda Rae. After a brief discussion, it’s decided that father and child will go window-shopping while we talk. “It’s been challenging,” says Taylor-Wood, waving them off. “Newborn baby, jet lag, breast-feeding, raging hormones, and press conferences. I sleep on average every other hour and try not to burst into tears in the day.”

The couple met when Johnson auditioned for the title role in Nowhere Boy, Taylor-Wood’s feature directorial debut about the teenage years of John Lennon, when the soon-to-be Beatle yo-yoed between his purse-lipped Aunt Mimi (Kristin Scott Thomas), who essentially raised him, and his mother, Julia (Anne-Marie Duff), a flame-haired siren who died in a car accident when he was 17, thereafter ascending to the status of ghostly unattainable love object, like Dante’s Beatrice or Dylan’s “Sad-Eyed Lady of the Lowlands.” We are, in other words, at Lennon’s personal ground zero: dead center in the hurt zone.

“What we focused on was the journey from youthful innocence to the man who’s gone through such pain and anger and anguish, who’s more recognizable as the Lennon that we know,” says Taylor-Wood. “So by the time you get to the end, you’re completely convinced of his Lennonism.” The film was praised by critics upon its release in the U.K. (it opens here October 8) but got squashed by Avatar at the box office, while the Oedipal longings onscreen were overshadowed by the tabloid screech over Taylor-Wood’s relationship with Johnson: He was 18 at the time of shooting, making him 23 years her junior.
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Ready To Wear: From beef to bananas, why foodie fashion is having a moment

October 4th, 2010 admin No comments
 Following her show, Miuccia Prada took her bow with two very fine fruity accessories dangling from her ears

Following her show, Miuccia Prada took her bow with two very fine fruity accessories dangling from her ears

If food and fashion appear to be – for myriad and obvious reasons – unlikely bedfellows, their relationship is currently enjoying what might not unreasonably be described as a moment.

First up: Lady Gaga’s Argentinian beef dress. Despite the hype that has sprung up around this particular garment it is a not entirely original statement, having previously been made by not only Elsa Schiaparelli – whose lamb-chop hat was famously worn by the heiress Daisy Fellowes (there was also a lamb-chop jacket to match) – but also by Hussein Chalayan. In his days as an art student in the genteel seaside town of Leamington Spa, Chalayan used cuts of meat to create a not-so-genteel print. The gesture earned him a place at Central Saint Martins.

For the forthcoming spring/summer, meanwhile (and also for pudding?) the fashion follower might simply like to have a banana. Following her show in Milan last week, Miuccia Prada, the first lady of Italian fashion, stepped out to take her bow with two particularly fine and garish examples of that very fruit dangling from her earlobes where, more predictably, a pleasingly precious pair of vintage baubles might have been.
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“Fashion And Finance” Exhibit

October 4th, 2010 admin No comments
Large Copper Poem Dress by Lesley Dill at the "Fashion and Finance" exhibit (photo by Julie Tong)

Large Copper Poem Dress by Lesley Dill at the "Fashion and Finance" exhibit (photo by Julie Tong)

Both “fashion” and “finance” each have enough meat under their belts to stir endless commentary and criticism; to be made into films centering around these lone subjects as shown in “The Devil Wears Prada” or “Wall Street.”  But what would happen if you fused the two together into an art exhibit inspired by consumerism and focused on our culture’s obsession with money, fame, and glamour?

This is the topic explored in an exhibit titled, “Fashion and Finance” at Pepperdine University’s Frederick R. Weisman Museum of Art. There are two floors filled with a wide range of pieces mostly from the 20 and 21st centuries. This isn’t your typical art exhibit stocked with a few oil-on-canvases, but presents compositions that have taken the inherent creative quality found in fashion and translated it into something very special.

Among the works are a dress made entirely out of horse hairs, vans coated in bronze, and a man’s suit made from cloth and thread “literally riddled with text from [Emily Dickinson].” Artist, Lesley Dill states, “I think of words, and especially the poems of Emily Dickinson…as a kind of spiritual armor, an intervening skin between ourselves and the world.”
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Hair was barely there

October 4th, 2010 admin No comments
A model wears Prada’s pincushion curls. (AP)

A model wears Prada’s pincushion curls. (AP)

MILAN — Fashion is often subjected to such a degree of groupthink that it comes as little surprise to see so many designers here pouncing on the same idea at once, like bright stripes, for instance, which appeared in the spring collections of Prada, Fendi, Jil Sander and others. Sometimes these things are just in the air.

 Jil Sander gave her models severe buns while showing her 2011 spring-summer collection in Milan last month. (AP)

Jil Sander gave her models severe buns while showing her 2011 spring-summer collection in Milan last month. (AP)

And sometimes they are also in the hair.
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The future is bright in the Milan collections

October 4th, 2010 admin No comments

The Milan collections delivered radiant colour, clean lines and, of course, just a touch of the full-on glamour for which the city is famous. Carola Long highlights the key trends, quirkiest accessories and snappiest dressers

 Pattern and print: At Versace, the Greek-key pattern which forms part of the brand's logo was reinvented as a colourful repeat print

Pattern and print: At Versace, the Greek-key pattern which forms part of the brand's logo was reinvented as a colourful repeat print

Pattern and print

Miuccia Prada offered the quirkiest designs. She showed deliberately garish prints featuring black and yellow bananas, and monkeys clambering among baroque curlicues.

Stripes, too, were a major motif in this collection, and they also appeared in two-tone navy or purple with white at Jil Sander, and in multicolours at Versace. Etro and Marni are known for pattern, and this season was no different as Etro delivered paisley scarf prints and Seventies florals, and Marni offered wallpaper and psychedelic florals, spots and stripes. At Versace, the Greek-key pattern which forms part of the brand’s logo was reinvented as a colourful repeat print.
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Entrepreneurs’ passion for dessert and customers fuels gelato businesses

October 4th, 2010 admin No comments
Ciska Weber opened Cafe Gelato in 2006. She said that a key to her biusiness plan is, “to keep it simple.”

Ciska Weber opened Cafe Gelato in 2006. She said that a key to her biusiness plan is, “to keep it simple.”

If you want to sample some economic hope in Winston-Salem, grab a chair and try a scoop of gelato at Caffe Prada or Cafe Gelato on a Saturday afternoon.

“I have never seen my sales go down,” said Ciska Weber, who opened Cafe Gelato at 845 Reynolda Road in 2006. “The community has been really good to me.”

Cafe Gelato and Caffe Prada are two homegrown local businesses that have not only survived the recession, but also thrived. Families may have trimmed their dining-out budgets, but both Weber and Alex Prada, a co-owner of Caffe Prada, say they believe that gelato fills a niche in the changing economy because people still want little luxuries.

“A family of four can come here, the dad can have a beer, the mom can have a glass of wine and the kids can have gelato and they spend 20 bucks,” Prada said, who opened his cafe on Broad Street in 2008. “It’s a really affordable outing.”
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Good vibes return to Milan runway

October 4th, 2010 admin No comments

RETAILERS are thrilled, reporters are raving and designers are breathing a sigh of relief.

“Hey, Milan is back on track again,” said Dan Katen of Dsquared2 after it took him more than half an hour in traffic to get to a benefit event last Monday, the closing day of the womenswear fashion week for spring/summer 2011.

After several grouchy seasons, when, feeling the effect of the economic crisis, designers seemed devoid of ideas and the fashion pack lost its love of Milan – “too dull and too expensive” went the refrain – the good vibes have returned.

Everybody liked the new schedule – top-billed shows spread out over six days – and the new venues – fancy downtown “palazzi” rather than the sterile fair grounds.

Skimpy two-piece with matching bag and footwear from Giorgio Armani.

Skimpy two-piece with matching bag and footwear from Giorgio Armani.

Figures released by the Italian Fashion Chamber at the end of the week showed that Milan Fashion Week is alive and well. Fifteen thousand buyers from 40 countries attended the event, which included 178 collections, 78 shows and more than 100 presentations. The many fashionistas walking about town with big name shopping bags confirmed the upward move.

“Fashion is renewal, and it was time for us to renew ourselves,” said Beppe Modenese, founder of the Milan fashion event more than 30 years ago. Above all else, the upbeat mood was reflected in the ultra-colourful, cheerful styles, which drew inspiration from the fashion heydays of the 1970s.
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Landlord Lists London’s Prada Store Location For Sale

October 4th, 2010 admin No comments
prada Landlord Lists Londons Prada Store Location For Sale

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Lochlann Quinn, once the chairman of the Allied Irish Bank, has put a pricey piece of real estate up for sale: the Prada location at 16 Old Bond Street in London. The Independent reports  that the commercial real estate will be listed with property consultant Fineman Ross for around £30 million. The sale of the freehold of the building would also include the offices above the Prada store. The total rent is said to be more than £1 million a month. Old Bond Street, which in the Mayfair district of London, has been a fashionable shopping street since the 18th century. The southern part is known as Old Bond Street while the northern part is New Bond Street. Old Bond Street is home to a variety of luxury retailers including Tiffany & Co., Chanel, Gucci and De Beers.