Tuesday, September 26, 2006

Steal This Hoodie

Well, sort of. LuvCharlie now features "The Weekly Steal," which allows customers to get deep discounts on very current items, like this Mike & Chris Drew Hoodie. What makes this hoodie so darn special? Mike & Chris allow you to be comfortable in 100% cotton fleece, but not at the expense of style, so you can be cozy and still look cool. In addition to the Drew hoodie, we also love the (albeit full priced) Harvey Fleece Tunic, which has cool ribbing details at the top, bottom, and sleeves. It's all so simple, but that is what makes it so striking.

This weekly only at LuvCharlie.com you can get the Mike & Chris Drew Hoodie for $120 instead of $165. You can wear it all fall as a light jacket, and once it gets colder, layer it with thermals and tees for warmth. Available here.

Photo courtesy of LuvCharlie.com.

Monday, September 25, 2006

Take That!: Lippman Nail Polish's 'Hit Me With Your Best Shot' vs. Chanel Black Satin

With the launch of Chanel's Black Satin nail enamel, polish isn't as simple as choosing Essie Ballet Slippers or a classic red anymore. Chanel Black Satin--a deep black with subtle flecks of silver--would be nothing, however, if the whole dark nail trend hadn't exploded over the past year. Why is this relevant to fashion? Because nail color has become increasingly important as a vehicle of self-expression, just like clothing. It sounds silly, but nails--whether they are long and artificial, or short and well-groomed--are as essential an accessory as a handbag to many people. They reveal (or conceal) characteristics about ourselves that speak volumes to the world. Nails, as it would seem, have become yet another surface upon which to make our mark, to indicate whether we "get" a trend and embrace it, or not.

What was once considered a look for only the truly 'goth' among us, black nail polish has been embraced by all types whether they be diamond-ring-wearing Barneys shoppers, or cheeky purveyors of street fashion. Proof of the explosive popularity of black nail polish? Just try getting your hands on a bottle of Chanel Black Satin nail polish--not possible. What retailed for $18 a bottle at Neiman Marcus or Saks can now only be found on eBay, easily going for $80 plus a bottle (here are some eBay listings for the stuff). Despite this buying frenzy, Jolie in NYC blogs, "While I love most everything Chanel, I’m sorry, folks—no nail polish is worth paying nearly triple for."

Jolie recommends trying Essie Licorice instead, but we also really love Lippmann Collection's "Hit Me With Your Best Shot," (pictured in photo at left) a nail polish developed with 80's rocker Pat Benatar. "Hit Me With Your Best Shot" is less strikingly black like the Chanel polish, but just as pleasing with a very subtle (very) gunmetal finish, with flecks of silver that are not extremely noticeable (similar in that way to the Chanel Black Satin polish). If that does not work for you, try hunting down a bottle of OPI or Rimmel's Black Satin colors (yes, they both have the same name as the $18 Chanel version). One word of caution, however, Rimmel Black Satin is a flat black--it does not have a trace of shimmer like the OPI version, or for that matter, the Chanel or Lippman versions. You can purchase the Lippmann Collection online at www.lippmanncollection.com, or www.beautysak.com.

Black nail polish, unlike black clothing, is not universally flattering. So, just like every other trend, we must always evaluate whether or not it will look good on ourselves. Another wearable alternative to black nail polish is OPI's Lincoln Park After Dark. This is an extremely dark color, but has a plum undertone that makes it a bit more palatable. ...And if you decide not to even go there to the dark side (of nail polish, that is) there are plenty of other incredible nail polishes that will say lots about you in just the same way.

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

Ashley Olsen Debuts "The Row"

Ashley Olsen, the twin that internedfor Zac Posen in her freshman year at NYU, is now the designer behind new label The Row, according to Fashion Week Daily. At a recent event held at Barneys to honor Nicholas Ghesquière, Ashley wore a plaid shrug of sorts with ruffle detail at the collar. The piece had an allure all its own, which is sort of like the Olsen style ethic: a little risky, perhaps a touch unusual, but completely fashionable in the sense that what they wear isn't totally cookie cutter. The fact that the Olsens often get derided in popular media for their outfits is even refreshing—at least what they put on doesn't look like a clone of every other Rachel Zoe-styled young celeb.


As Nitrolicious blog points out, we can only hope that the rest of The Row is just as interesting as Ashley's shrug at the Barneys party. Still, however, one has to marvel at the dexterity of the Olsen twin empire. Here are two young women able to sell scented body spray in CVS, clothing at Wal*Mart, and also, at least in the case of Ashley, have the ability to add an upscale, interesting clothing line into the mix. Regardless of the fact that this ability to produce numerous sources of revenue is motivated by a desire to futher their DualStar empire, it is done in a thoroughly modern way. Their brand is truly democratic--they want their take on fashion (if you can call it that) to be available to everyone--so whether you shop at Walmart or Bergdorf, you'll be able to get a piece of the enigmatic "dumpster chic" the Olsens made popular more than a year ago, and which was so newsworthy Ruth La Ferla of the Times wrote,

"LAST fall, soon after Mary-Kate Olsen enrolled as one of only two self-made multimillionaires in the freshman class of New York University, she was seen dashing around Greenwich Village wearing floppy hats, huge sunglasses, dust-catcher skirts and street-sweeping cable-knit cardigans.

As fall turned to winter and edged toward spring, Ms. Olsen, 18, pushed her version of ashcan chic to emphatic extremes, an evolution charted by glossy magazines that snoop on stars in everyday activities. The look became dottier and dottier, until it morphed into a kind of homeless masquerade, one that was accented by subtle luxuries like a cashmere muffler, a Balenciaga lariat bag and of course her signature carryout latte from Starbucks.

Ms. Olsen is a fashion pauvre, and so is her equally funky twin, Ashley (the other self-made millionaire N.Y.U. freshman). Their style would seem to mark them as front-runners for Earl Blackwell's worst-dressed list. In fact the twins are trendsetters for the latest hipster look. They are influencing the same generation of girls and young women who fell for them as wholesome child stars, buying their Mattel dolls, and who later, as tweens, spent $750 million a year on denims and pastel tops from the mary-kateandashley line at Wal-Mart.

''The Olsens are the real thing,'' fashion role models for a generation entering adulthood, said Karen Berenson, a stylist who works in New York and Los Angeles. She is unfazed by Mary-Kate Olsen's widely publicized admission last year to a clinic to treat an eating disorder and her continuing recovery. ''She makes skinny girls in baggy clothes look cool,'' Ms. Berenson said.

Teenagers and young women have long taken style cues from celebrities, of course. But the sway of the Olsens is especially surprising because it is a radical swing from influences of recent years, like the flamboyantly sexy, skin-baring style of Christina Aguilera and Jessica Simpson, as well as the heiress look popularized by Paris Hilton.

Just months ago, ''stylish young women used to wear Gucci or Prada head to toe,'' Ms. Berenson said. Today they are more apt to be seen at supermarkets or parties toting a beat-up Chloe bag, their eyes shaded by enormous, high-priced Laura Biaggiotti sunglasses, the faint suggestion of opulence hidden beneath chadorlike layers of cashmere and ankle-length peasant skirts.

David Wolfe, the creative director of the Doneger Group, which forecasts fashion trends, was in Las Vegas last month at a fashion trade show. ''The trendiest, coolest people were wearing things like a chiffon skirt with fur boots,'' he said. ''It looked like they had gotten dressed in the dark.''

The new look has acquired a name: Bobo style. ''You know, bohemian bourgeois,'' explained Kathryn Neal, 28, a freelance writer in New York, who is partial to billowing Alexander McQueen pirate shirts worn with beat-up jeans. ''Bobo'' is borrowed from the title of a five-year-old work of pop sociology, ''Bobos in Paradise'' by David Brooks, now an Op-Ed columnist for The New York Times. He used the term to describe a breed of well-heeled consumers who bashed materialism while embracing all manner of luxury.

Lauren Stover, the author of ''Bohemian Manifesto: A Field Guide to Living on the Edge'' (Bulfinch Press, 2004), has noticed the trend, which has cropped up in moneyed communities from Beverly Hills to the Upper West Side, where young women wear grandma's crocheted shawl, moth-eaten cashmere sweaters and scuffed cowboy boots. ''It's perfectly fine to look like a bag lady,'' Ms. Stover said.

The look flies in the face of the conventions of elegance that dominated fashion runways as little as a year ago. More important, it seems to address the discomfort of a younger generation with overt displays of wealth."

--Taken from "Mary-Kate, Fashion Star," New York Times, March 6, 2005 (Sunday), Section 9; Column 5; Style Desk.


Although many still balk at the idea of the Olsen brand of dumpster chic, it does have an upside. As
Scribbilista pointed out back in February, "...there is a silver lining to Dumpster Chic: We can all eat carbs again." -StyleChronicles.com

Tuesday, September 12, 2006

It's 9am on a Wednesday, and an engagement you're supposed to make an appearance at is the same evening. At the office and unable to take the day off to go shopping, you realize your options are limited: attend the event in the same item you wore to work that day (which is decidedly unfabulous) or somehow manage to use your lunch hour to scour the racks at either a local department store or boutique. While women across the country may face this dilemma quite often, Manhattanites no longer face such quandries. Net-a-porter.com, home of all things fabulous (McQ by Alexander McQueen, Chloe, Matthew Williamson, and Catherine Malandrino, among others) now gives customers in Manhattan the option of receiving their merchandise the same day.

The same day delivery option comes in tandem with other Net-a-porter good news: the website now ships from the U.S., which means you get your Louboutins in about two business days, and you don't have to deal with exchange rates and duty fees. Sound too good to be true? It's not! Just check out Net-a-porter.com for details.