Posts for November 30th 2012

Calvin Klein

Calvin Klein Concept and Denim Spring 2013

Why should runway collections have all the fun?
Calvin Klein Concept and Denim Spring 2013 | Pictures

Why should runway collections have all the fun? To present the Spring 2013 wares from its sportswear, denim, underwear, and accessories lines, Calvin Klein constructed the first floor of a home in an all-white space using 2x4 studs painted black.

The space made a perfect backdrop for models to display next season's various products. While some languished in Calvin Klein's iconic underwear and jeans, others wore new striped designs that echo Francisco Costa's stark black and white collection for Spring. The modernist designs were tempered with pops of color or prints.

Hanneli Mustaparta, the model-turned-blogger who has been helping Calvin Klein raise its digital profile since earlier this year, was on hand to take pictures of the collection. A look at the setup — and all the clothes — here in the gallery.

Photos courtesy of Calvin Klein

Dior

Explaining How Jil Sander Replaced Raf Simons at Jil Sander

The exact circumstances under which Jil Sander replaced Raf Simons as the creative director of her eponymous fashion house were unclear until today.



The exact circumstances under which Jil Sander replaced Raf Simons as the creative director of her eponymous fashion house were unclear until today.

According to a new profile in WSJ. Magazine's Winter issue, Sander wasn't called back to the house she founded in 1968 just because Simons was on his way to Dior. In fact, Sander entered talks with Onward Holdings Co., the Japanese private equity firm that owns the label, about coming back over six months prior to Simons's departure. Sander left her job designing the +J capsule collection for Uniqlo in September 2011, and it was announced that she would replace Simons at the end of February 2012.

Simons's departure, it seems, came before he officially accepted the Dior job — though when he left, he had already entered talks with LVMH about becoming the house's creative director. And while Simons's work at Jil Sander was a critical success, the profile notes that during his time there, "the company remained solidly in the red." To turn Jil Sander's fortunes around, the label's chairman Franco Pene said he wanted "to get back to the roots of the company — to its DNA. And there was no one more capable of doing this than the original designer."

Whatever the reasoning for her return to the label, where her first two collections have earned favorable reviews, Sander credits divine intervention with steering her back home.

"With all of my history, I feel it's been more like a journey, and driven by something up there," she says, pointing toward the heavens. "This is actually what it has to be. We learn to never go back, never try to repeat, only look to the future. But in this case, maybe this is an exception."

Photo courtesy of Jil Sander

Link Time

Oscar de la Renta's Exhibit, Iman's Beauty Secrets, and a Chorus of Angels

Those stories and more in our daily news roundup.



Those stories and more in our daily news roundup.

  • Oscar de la Renta's exhibit about the late Spanish artist and designer Mariano Fortuny y Madrazo opens today at the Queen Sofia Spanish Institute in New York. The show will be on display until the end of March. [Elle]

  • "When it comes to plastic surgery, I'm against it," said 57-year-old supermodel Iman when asked about aging well. "I can say that because I don't need it yet." [Into the Gloss]

  • The iconic cone-shaped bustier Jean Paul Gaultier designed for Madonna was auctioned for a whopping $52,075 — more than twice its presale estimate. [The Daily Mail]

  • David Walliams says the child he and Lara Stone are expecting will have a "normal" name. "It's a bit of a curse if you're called Apple or Peaches or something like that," he said. [Vogue UK]

  • Canadian retailer Aritzia is now offering ecommerce. [InStyle]

  • Here's a quick refresher course in holiday party etiquette, courtesy of Derek Blasberg and two very cool cats. [Fashion Foie Gras]

  • Fast Retailing — the Japanese company that owns Theory and Uniqlo — has just purchased an 80 percent stake in J Brand Jeans, leading some to believe a denim collaboration with Uniqlo isn't far off. [Racked]

  • Candice Swanepoel, Adriana Lima, Alessandra Ambrosio, and Miranda Kerr are among the Angels who lip-synched along to Justin Bieber's "Beauty and a Beat" backstage at the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show. [Styleite]

Neiman Marcus

Karlie Kloss's Eye-Popping Commercial For Target Neiman Marcus Is Here

You've seen the products, you've seen the behind the scenes, but you haven't seen this: Karlie Kloss's full commercial for the upcoming Target Neiman Marcus collaboration.



You've seen the products, you've seen the behind the scenes, but you haven't seen this: Karlie Kloss's full commercial for the upcoming Target Neiman Marcus collaboration.

Lensed by Craig McDean, the video features a dancing Kloss and a plethora of eye-popping imagery from Quentin Jones — remember that amazing Victoria, Victoria Beckham video for Harvey Nichols a while back? — as well as all 50 of the collaboration's drool-worthy items.

Between Kloss's unbelievably tight ponytail and all the CFDA-designer goodies on display, you won't be able to avert your eyes — promise. Peep it here before the collection hits online and at Neiman Marcus and Target stores on Dec. 1.

Related: Every Piece From the Target Neiman Marcus CFDA Holiday Collection


Books

Stephanie LaCava Shares Her Extraordinary Theory of Objects With Us

Rare birds of fashion do exist, but rarer still are those that live in that pretty place between substance and style.
Stephanie LaCava Book | An Extraordinary Theory of Objects

Rare birds of fashion do exist, but rarer still are those that live in that pretty place between substance and style. Stephanie LaCava is one such creature, but if her well-documented personal aesthetic and journalistic work are not already proof enough, her upcoming literary debut, An Extraordinary Theory of Objects, certainly is. A little book big on heart, it feels dreamy, personal, and utterly relatable all at once, and it draws the reader in with a strange sort of charm — much like LaCava herself.

"It's a narrative about my childhood growing up in Paris in the '90s, told in sort of fragmented essays and extended footnotes," the writer says. Seemingly random objects appear in the story and are explained via detailed historical asides. "But it's not meant to be a conventional story told in objects; the objects are just a way of showing how I would use things to distract myself from my own thinking — the footnotes distract from the narrative the same way I would use the objects, places, research, or obsessions to escape."

But if objects offer distraction, they also offer a point of connection — and it's precisely this sensibility that makes LaCava's book so appealing. "When you find those objects somewhere else, it's a bit of a comfort, and that's what the objects are about too. I think objects and people who share love of them have that in a way that's kind of unspoken. It's a way to relate, it's a taste, it's an aesthetic thing. It's not really the objects themselves that are important — it's the thought process."

Lately, LaCava has found new ways to explore that thought process. "I have so much fun with Instagram just because I can share that same kind of crazy sensibility. Whenever I find something that sort of has my spirit, I can register it right there and then. It's a way to convey that same sensibility without saying words; just having the spirit, having the aura."

In honor of that spirit — and the release of An Extraordinary Theory of Objects on Dec. 4 — LaCava takes us through some of her current object fixations and favorite snapshots. See them here, then contribute your own with #strangebeauty on Instagram.



Above photo by Fashionologie; all other photos courtesy Stephanie LaCava