Saturday, April 2, 2011

Holt Renfrew showcases homegrown brands at LG Fashion Week


For whatever reason, the Fashion Design Council of Canada insists on declaring a theme for LG Fashion Week. There was much head scratching over last season’s “The Style of Power.” This season’s "The Business of Fashion" just so happens to share the same name as a widely popular fashion blog founded by Imran Amed, a Canadian who now lives in London.






Holt Renfrew opted to address the theme prior to its show last night with a campy video (directed by Justin Wu) showing designers, models, store employees and apparel manufacturers lip-synching, shimmying and shaking to BTO’s Taking Care of Business. (Imagine a slicker version of one of those filmed American Idol segments and you get the picture.) It made for a decidedly feel-good kickoff to a week that celebrates our apparel industry as much as individual creativity.

This is the second time that Canada’s luxury retailer has staged a show at LG Fashion Week. The point, it seems, is to feature homegrown brands available in store. The list currently totals 11: Todd Lynn, Ezra Constantine, Greta Constantine, Denis Gagnon, Pink Tartan, Wings + Horns, Smythe, Lida Baday, Canada Goose, Twenty Cluny and Jeremy Laing. It’s a smart approach, mostly because each label presents five or six looks – just enough to get a sense of the collection but not too much in cases where there is also a completely separate show (look for a review of Pink Tartan tomorrow).

Style-wise, there are contrasts aplenty. London-based Todd Lynn excels at a certain cerebral edginess (zippers that twist around the body, a deft hand with draping) that shares little in common with Canada Goose pink bomber jackets. The cheeky prep sensibility that Smythe designers Andrea Lenczner and Christie Smythe continue to explore (a Fair Isle duffle coat, plaid riding blazer) would seem to attract a different customer than the slinky dresses featuring sequins sewn into faux fur conceived by Twenty Cluny designer Sarah Rabin. Jeremy Laing's geometric approach to cut – an interplay between cling and cocoon – is a world apart from the more classically draped, tucked and belted dresses conceived by Lida Baday. There is little obvious overlap between hypermasculine Wings + Horns and all the draped tops and dropped crotch trousers from Ezra Constantine.





Yet, a common thread exists. Canadian designers understand winter, and if they aren’t addressing its bite with layers of long underwear, they’re conceptualizing shapes that envelop and protect. “You actually see a Canadian spirit,” said Barbara Atkin, Holt Renfrew’s vice-president of fashion direction, after the show. “We spend a lot of times outdoors and we need to look chic outdoors.” Up here, that equals good business.

One last lingering thought: Laing’s moonscape print with its repetition of bleak craters was truly out of this world.

Vanessa wants to launch her fashion line



Actress Vanessa Hudgens says she wants to launch her own fashion line.

"When I find the time and the right partner to do a fashion line, I'm definitely going to," contactmusic quoted her as saying.

"I would probably have different seasons dedicated to different styles. I'm one who really mixes it up in my normal life - from the cowgirl to the bohemian to the Indian princess to the rocker to God knows where."

The 22-year-old actress believes her diverse ethnic background makes it easier for her to be experimental with her look.

"I love fashion. I do work at it but now more than ever I get to play with my looks, especially because I'm so many different ethnicities and I can pass as so many different things," she said.

Friday, April 1, 2011

Fashion Weeks сolliding in Moscow



This spring in Moscow is becoming a hard time for fashionistas. Two competing fashion weeks – Volvo Fashion Week in Moscow and Mercedes Benz Fashion Week Russia – are taking place simultaneously, and both offer quite a lot to see.
The main fashion event in the country kicked off on Thursday in the capital. Mercedes Benz Fashion Week Russia is welcoming around 90 domestic and foreign designers to display their latest collections and set trends for the next Autumn-Winter season.

Volvo Fashion Week is already in full swing, having displayed the collections from Russian celebrity designer Valentin Yudashkin, classy and avant-garde Alena Akhmadullina and the collection of fur from Russian actress Renata Litvinova over the past two days, with more to come.

And the first day of Mercedes Benz Fashion Week Russia saw a total of four shows. The main to be mentioned was the catwalk show from Russia's most acclaimed and classy couturier, Slava Zaitsev. His signature luxurious looks, rich hats, furs and embroidery have been the trademark of the Week's opening days for the last several years.

Among the brightest names to be represented at this Week are Tatiana Parfionova, Viva Vox, Poustovit, Dasha Gauser, Ludmila Norsoyan, Borodulin’s, and many more. Mercedes Benz Fashion Week will also display collections from the Italian brand Iceberg, which is very popular with Russians. And the show from young Briton Marios Schwab, who dresses such style icons as Kate Moss and Chloe Sevigny, will become the crowning event of the fashion marathon.

This year Russian Fashion Week changed its name, having signed a contract with the German car brand Mercedes Benz. Now it stands alongside the most prestigious fashion weeks in the world, including Mercedes Benz Fashion Week New York, Mercedes Benz Fashion Week Berlin, and Fashion Week in Paris, Milan and London, where the car brand is also a partner.