From the monthly archives:

November 2009

trish

Editor’s Picks by Style Darling, LadyLux

by trish on November 12, 2009

Autumn Stroll
Brooklyn Chic Meets Central Park West

As we come into fall, our attention has gone to layers – warm layers; to protect us against chilly breezes as we stroll through Central Park or bustle down the streets of Brooklyn. Autumn in New York is amazing; the tree leaves boast brilliant shades of bright amber and burnt pumpkin. Here’s our perfect outfit, complete with accessories and beauty necessities to accentuate our fall style.

The Clothing

Krelwear Blue Hooded Sweater ($219) – This pima cotton beauty is mutli-season functional; from fall to winter, we can wear it with wide leg pants, leggings or skinny jeans and boots!

Mountains of the Moon “Sophie” Pant ($104) – The Sophie pants are truly LUX – while they are perfect for spring and summer, we can add thick cotton tights underneath them to extend them into fall.

The Accessories

MiMo “Mia” Satchel ($180) – We love structure of this satchel, as well as the rich tan coloring. Every woman must have a medium brown colored tote; it’s one of those staple items.

Sigma Gilady Gold Circle Necklace ($49) – This necklace as an accent piece. Jewelry doesn’t always have to make loud, bold statements. There’s something to be said for subtlety.

Eutectic Small Gold Hoop Earrings ($14) – Keeping with our dainty accessories theme, these delicate hoops go beyond this outfit and pair themselves with about 70% of woman’s wardrobe. We love them and can’t beat the price!

Beauty Essentials

bareMinerals All-Over Face Color ($18-20)  – Let’s face it, unless your lucky enough to call sunny California or Florida your home, a girl doesn’t get much sun during fall. We know that tanning is bad, so what do we do? We fake it of course! The bareMinerals all over face blush gives you a little color “umph” without harsh chemicals or damaging UV rays.

Laura Gellar Lip Heal * Seal Lip Gloss ($18) – A girl gets chapped lips due to blustery winds.  Laura Gellar’s lip treatment does double-duty as a lip conditioner and gloss. Protection and just a bit of shimmer, that’s LUX.

About LadyLux:
Once upon a time, there was girl named LUX. She believed in humanity, doing good for the sake of good, and all things beautiful in our world. As she grew older and began to take stock of the world around her, her mission in life became clear: be a Change Agent. The tasks associated with being an “Agent” is to use her mind and voice to help fix what is broken in the world and empower the people in it to do the same. Thus was born The Lady LUX Network.

Elizabeth Wahler founder ladylux
Founder Elizabeth Wahler

At LadyLUX, our motto is “Good for the Sake of Good.” We believe in doing good and being good, while looking good. We believe in fashion, life, love, philanthropy, eco-luxury and laughter. We empower women to follow their passions, live authentically, and to honestly know and love themselves. Choosing health and your best self, being good to others and good to the environment is simply living the LUX life. In each outfit we put together, we always include organic and “green” items that were created with the idea of sustainability.

See last week’s LadyLux Editor’s Picks here.

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trish

Bazaar Bizarre SF

by trish on November 11, 2009

New People Artist Village Banner

We see a couple darling designers will be showing at The Bazaar Bizarre in SF, Sat. Nov. 21, 2009. Go check out fiftyseven-thirtythree and Go Robot in person. Tell them Trish and Mo say hi! Wish we could be there. We see lots of other great designers in the list as well! Looks like a great place to do a little shopping for the holidays. The bonus, all locally made products from good ol’ American designers.

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Fiftyseven-Thirtythree
We make all our gear in East Oakland using water based, solvent free inks. No sweatshops, art directors, consultants, or teleconferencing are used in the production process. We hope our clothing makes you look good, feel good, gets you laid, whatever makes you happy. Made in the City of Oakland

GoRobot

Go Robot!
Go Robot! is the creation of Stuart Breidenstein, an Oregon-based techno producer-turned jewelry designer. Stuart uses combinations of materials, from the precious to the discarded, to create one-off and low-production jewelry and odd home accessories. With the help of his robot pals, he churns out funky stuff until the wee hours in his backyard laboratory/music studio.

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trish

Sharing

by trish on November 11, 2009

originally posted Nov. 10, 2009 by Fashionably Marketing

I wanted to share this with the community, one because I think there are great sites highlighted. If you don’t already know about them you need to take the time to click through to all of them. Two because Smashing Darling is included. As always please feel free to share this with as many people as you like.

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17 Fashion Sites Every Fashion Industry
Professional Should Know About

As the fashion industry adapts to technology, more and more fashion sites and communities are coming to fruition every day. Digital space is becoming increasingly cluttered as brands build their own social networks and burgeoning fashion bloggers use their blogs to develop their expertise in any given niche.

Last February, we wrote about the top 25 fashion-oriented sites everyone should know about; recently, AdAge released its top six fashion site picks for fashion marketers.

With so many social networks, branded fashion communities and blogs, we’ve decided to share which ones continue to hold our attention.

SmashingDarling.com

SmashingDarling.com

Fusing Fashion + Technology

1. Inside The Tents – Now in its (upcoming) third season, Inside The Tents offers up-to-the-minute online news coverage on everything related to New York Fashion Week. Creator Yuli Ziv (founder of Style Coalition and My It Things) has done an amazing job in creating real-time coverage, and the site aggregates blog posts, on-the-spot interviews with designers, fashion-related Tweets and tagged Flickr images.

2. Polyvore.com – As far as social fashion websites go, Polyvore is leading the democratization of fashion in the digital space. What’s more, Polyvore now offers amazing opportunities for fashion brands and retailers with their custom PPC programs (rumored by many brands to deliver better conversions than Google – WHAT!?!?). Polyvore allows community users to create and edit fashion sets created from items saved from real online stores. Once completed, members save the “sets” they’ve created and share them with other community members; sets can be embedded to most social networks and to any blog.

3. Weardrobe.com
– Weardrobe is addicting as it is beautiful. Weardrobe touts that  it is “a fashion community focused not just on what you wear, but how you wear it”. Weardrobe was inspired by the unique and inspirational styles of “What I Wore” fashion bloggers and groups like Wardrobe Remix. Weardrobe even held their own blogger conference before S/S 2010.

4. MyItThings.com –  MyItThings.com is an online, user-generated fashion and trend magazine. MyItThings encourages its community to contribute their own articles, pictures and photos from their blogs and websites. The site even allows apparel and accessories designers to submit their own designs as content. The content is extensive – covering everything from home to men’s fashion to eco-inspired design.

Inside The Tents

Inside The Tents

Bridging Brands + Bloggers

5. IndependentFashionBloggers.org – IFB is a blog and community forum for fashion bloggers and website owners. IFB was created in reaction to corporate networks springing up faster than Jennine Tamm (author of The Coveted) could keep track of. IFB is a community of independent fashion labels, men and women who love some aspect of fashion/design and have dedicated their writing to their passion. The community is supportive and informative; forum participants are dedicated to supporting fellow members in growing their online businesses and monetizing their websites. Recently, the community has been trying establish guidelines for brands and bloggers working together and help address new FTC regulations.

6. SmashingDarlingSmashingDarling is  a site that’s hard to classify, simply because of owner Trisha Ginter’s amazing online social engagement. It’s an e-commerce site, similar to Shopflick or MarketPublique, but geared towards emerging or small brands that want to sell their product lines online. Cleaner and less confusing than Etsy, the site is easy to use. Designers can create an account for free and upload their products. The products sell at set prices and the sales go directly to designers, minus an 18% selling fee. We feel this is more than reasonable given that average sales representatives take 15-20% in commission. What’s more, the Smashing Darling blog is an addictive read.

Read the rest of this post here.

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We love to think as Kaytee Papusza, independent designer behind Papusza Couture, as our very own Darling Alice! Kaytee just recently was asked to embrace that very persona in a photo shoot featuring Papusza-wear for Above the Fray magazine (check it out here).  Kaytee was one of the very first designers (awwwhhh) to open a boutique here on Smashing Darling coming up on almost three years ago, wow! We love to hear what she is up to, and since we haven’t interviewed her since 2007 -time flies when you are having fun- we thought we would take a moment and get all the knitty gritty on this fantastical photo shoot. Enjoy!

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Darlings: How did this shoot come to be? Where did it take place and how did you pull it all together?
Kaytee: Mikey Pozarik, the fantastic photographer who did the shoot, contacted me about the project and doing a feature in Above the Fray. I was immediately really excited about the project because I love Lewis Carroll’s Alice as well as Through the Looking Glass.  I had wanted to do a shoot involving the story for years, it was easy to be inspired!

The shoot took place in the East Village in early October. The whole team was awesome: gorgeous, amazing photography, really fantastic, creative hair and makeup, and very good models. I have to give a huge shout out to the models since the day of the shoot it was freezing. The girls were all in dresses, corsets, and bodices without sleeves. Even though you can’t tell based on how fantastic they all look in the photos, there was shivering, and even some talk about numb fingers at a couple of points. They toughed it out though, and did a really great job getting into character. So kudos to the whole team!

I built a lot of the props for the shoot, which was super fun. I enjoyed bringing special touches from the original story into the set. The birdcage was one I found out by the dumpsters near my loft. I took it home, cleaned it, bent it up with wire pliers, painted it, and then covered it in ribbons and feathers. The eyeballs where the final touch. I liked the idea of making a birdcage with a face. I also made a “DRINK ME” bottle, and a huge heart shopped clock. I liked bringing in these elements of time, size and surrealism from the original story.

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Darlings: LOVE those tights and all the accessories, give us the scoop on those!

Kaytee: YES! Lot’s of great contributors in regards to accessories. The blue feather millinery was from millinery designer Tessa Morehouse (www.VelvetAntlerNYC.com). The crochet collar was from miss Siri (www.SiriusLux.com) and the big feather earrings came from Roxy and Nicki at Mayapple designs (a duo based out of Arkansas and Seattle). I am really lucky all these fantastic ladies were kind enough to loan their pieces for the shoot. The looks would not be complete without them!

The tights and gloves were hand-dyed by me. I have been working on hand-dyed legwear for awhile, and have a lot of it to accompany my Oceania Etherea collection. The gloves are a new thing I am doing for winter. Some of them have little buttons and embellishments, some are fingerless and some have fun fringe. With both tights and gloves the primary intention is to focus on the dye and how it stains the fabric. I like creating wave like patterns with the dye, and leaving some of the pieces looking slightly discolored, as if they are antique items that have been sun spotted, and dimmed over time. These will soon be for sale on Smashing Darling. I am calling them Papusza Limbs.

For this shoot, fantastic stylist and accessories designer Rachel Singer helped me pull all the final looks together.

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Darlings:Do you have an alter ego? If so what advice does it give you? OR What does it tell you to do that you haven’t done yet?
Kaytee: My alter ego is my mother voice, the one which nurtures me, and reminds me it is important to take care of myself. In being an individual who is highly driven by my creativity it is easy for me to get carried away in the chaos of my thoughts, and daily life. Living in New York I feel I encounter chaos everytime I walk onto the street. It is easy to forget the calm. In order to create in a way that is healthy and functional it is very important for me balance out the chaos with the calm.

The advice I get from this alter ego is to take time to relax. To drink tea and smell flowers. To make curried vegetables, and read a good book. To take a hot bath, and look at the shapes the clouds make in the sky. To leave the city every once and awhile and let the beauty of nature renew my spirit. It also tells me that when I decide to leave New York I need to use the resources of nature to create beautiful things for Papusza-ful girls to wear. The ideas behind these creations have been culminating in my brain for awhile now. I look forward to sharing them with the world once I have made them.

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Darlings: If your studio walls could talk what would they say?
Kaytee: “SHE’S INSANE!!!!” Haha! Seriously, there probably would be some talk like that, if the walls could speak. When I get into my creative head space it really takes over, and I do things that might not make sense to people looking in from the outside. I am known to talk to my garments when I am making them. I usually give personas to the pieces I make. Swan dive dress. Neapolitan cupcake gown. Seagull wing bustle.

The walls would also probably be able to quote you a world of Bjork lyrics. They might call me a mad scientist for the hours of spattering dye over garments, burning hems, and hand stitching taxidermy like a lunatic. They would have lot’s of stories to tell about the depths of the night, I am nocturnally creative, and feel that I bond the most with my work at the silent hours of dawn, after working on a piece for 12 hours straight. These walls would have some stories…

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Darlings: Are there any misconceptions about what you do that you want to clarify?
Kaytee: People are often freaked out by the use of animal products in my work. I love fur, taxidermy, bones and leather. I find it odd that people are so creeped out by this. I have even had people confront me with animal rights issues in regards to my use of certain materials. I guess it makes sense that some people would respond this way though, being that I have no disclaimer anywhere stating where I get these materials, or why I use them.

To clarify, all the fur I use is reclaimed. I find it when I am thrifting, from vintage garments. I cut it up work it into my pieces, because I love the texture. I think this is okay, because nothing is being killed for my benefit. In regards to the bird parts or bones I use, they are things I find already dead in nature. I collect their remaining parts, treat and clean them. I like using these elements of nature because they are very special to me. I find the use of birds especially to be very spiritual, and I love all the details in their wings and little bones.

In a lot of regards I think of what I do as being very green. I am taking things from nature which are already decomposing, and using them to create something beautiful. From an anthropological point of view people in tribal communities have been doing this for thousands and thousands of years. It is their way of celebrating the earth and giving back. I view my work the same way.

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Darlings: What is your absolute favorite moment(s) in your studio … the thing that you won’t let yourself do until some of the drudgery is done, the thing that is the prize at the end of it all?

Kaytee: After putting hours into a piece and working all night I like to sit back and absorb. It feels really good to loose myself in the moment of creating, to lose all sense of time and reality, and become one with what I am making. Sometimes I go into this zone for twelve hours straight. When I come out of it I like being able to sit back, relax, have a cup of tea or a glass of wine, and admire my work. I know that might sound narcissistic, but it is like feeding off the fruits of my labor. The ability to create with my hands is what drives me.

Ultimately, this is what makes putting shows on worthwhile too. That moment, after having spent hundreds and hundreds of hours culminating and constructing a collection, when I am able to sit back, and watch it walk down the runway, see the faces of the people that absorb it… that is what I live for. I like watching my art come to life. It is like having children and watching them grow up and go out into the world. My couture pieces are my babies. I wouldn’t have it any other way.

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Rope Dress – $229

• The rope print layer dress has Wakana Koike original textile design which combines marine and status feelings. All fabrics were custom made by the Japanese ink-jet factory, Seiren.
• Fabric: cotton rough silk (si 60% co 40%)
• Measurements:
S – Front Length 34″ Back Length 36″, Bust 33″, Waist 36″, Hip 40″
M -Front Length 35″ Back Length 37″, Bust 35″, Waist 39″, Hip 41″
• Dry clean only.

About the Designer:

Wakana Koike is a winner of the inaugural ‘It’ Designer contest launched in May 2008 in search of undiscovered talent in the fashion design world.  Hundreds of designers from all corners of the country had submitted designs and nearly one hundred thousand votes had been cast by the My’It’Things community.

Three finalists showcased their creations on October 15, 2008 in a highly publicized runway show NYC, and were featured in WWD. The winner of the ‘It’ Designer contest was chosen 50% by popular vote and 50% by the celebrity judges’ votes and was awarded $5,000 toward the production of the Spring 2009 line. The line will be available for pre-order here starting February 2nd, 2009.

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trish

Emerging Fashion Twin City Style

by trish on November 9, 2009

I am sure there are more than 2 shops between the Twin Cities that support emerging and independent fashion, here are the 2 I most recently found while perusing the internet. I love stumbling on shops supporting emerging fashion while surfing around. My dream would be to take a tour across the country to visit them all.

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W7 Collective will feature not only the work of local independent fashion designers, look for the work of  other local artists and photographers too. The market is in the Pliney Building, 1032 W 7th St, St Paul, and will be open every second week end of every month. W7 Collective is on facebook and is also a supporter of The 3/50 Project.

1DC Exterior - One_2.0001

DESIGN COLLECTIVE is a clothing store featuring the latest collections of LOCAL apparel, accessory and jewelry designers. All pieces at the store are made by the talented hands of our emerging designers and are therefore high quality and exclusive. There mission is to bring a fresh style and unique designs to the Twin Cities. If you are in the vicinity and would like to be considered for the boutique contact info@designcollectivempls.com.

STORE HOURS
Monday to Saturday 11am-7pm
Sunday 12pm-6pm
Closed Tuesdays

1311 26th St
West Minneapolis, MN

1DC Interior - Two_2.0001

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trish

Prada: Innovation In A Book

by trish on November 6, 2009

Just in time for the holidays. Prada: creativity, modernity, innovation, the book was unveiled yesterday.  Can one ever get enough fashion?

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The book will be available to the public at Prada stores worldwide as well as on prada.com and selected bookshops.

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trish

American Beauty Exhibit Opens at FIT Today

by trish on November 6, 2009

posted by trish

This is an exhibit I don’t want to miss. It’s already inspiring me to want to drape all day today. I love when the muslin’s are included, it is fashion’s version of being unplugged. It is raw and there is no hiding poor quality with a muslin. My next fashion show will include muslins on the runway with the finished garments.

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American Beauty: Aesthetics and Innovation in Fashion opens today Nov. 6, at the Museum at FIT and will run through April 10, 2010.

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The Museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT) presents American Beauty: Aesthetics and Innovation in Fashion, the first exhibition to explore how the “philosophy of beauty” is allied to the craft of dressmaking. Each of the 75 looks on display was chosen to exemplify the relationship between technical ingenuity and artistic excellence. Curator Patricia Mears has focused on approximately 25 American fashion designers, ranging from the obscure, such as Jessie Franklin Turner, whose work dates from the late 1910s, to rising stars of the present day, such as the Mulleavy sisters of Rodarte. Other designers featured include Adrian, Bonnie Cashin, Maria Cornejo, James Galanos, Halston, Elizabeth Hawes, Charles James, Charles Kleibacker, Claire McCardell, Norman Norell, Rick Owens, Ralph Rucci, Isabel Toledo, Pauline Trigère, Valentina, Yeohlee, and Jean Yu. Read more…

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tafe-600x400

Photo: Quentin Jones

Models wearing designs by TAFE fashion students

I love this quote.

“It would be great if they didn’t have to go and work for someone else, if they were able to use their own signature and be creative. It’s a gift, so they should have a ball with it.” Nicholas Huxley said of recent graduates from TAFE NSW Sydney Institute’s Fashion Design Studio.

I’m glad I’m not the only one thinking it.

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Photo: Quentin Jones

Read the full article here.

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Photo: Quentin Jones

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This is a great opportunity for up and coming Chicago designers to find out more information about Chicago Fashion Resource and to see if the Chicago Fashion Incubator would be a good fit. Darling designer Lara Miller Director for the incubator will be a part of the Q & A being held at noon. All the details are below.

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* Get a behind the scenes look at CFI.
* Learn about our year long Residency.
* Join us for a Q&A at NOON with:
Melissa Gamble,
Director of Fashion Arts & Events
for the City of Chicago
Elise Moran,
Program Coordinator Stitches Fashion
Lara Miller,
Director Chicago Fashion Incubator

The Chicago Fashion Incubator at Macy’s on State Street Application is Due on November 16th!

Please go to www.chicagofashionresource.com for more information and to download your application today.

Please enter through the West Randolph St. Entrance, located just West of the loading dock on Randolph St. When you enter Macy’s you will be in women’s handbags. Walk down past the TOUS counter and make a left past TOUS before LINKS to take the employee elevators up to the 11th floor.

Signs will direct you to the incubator from the hallway once you come up to the 11th floor. You can also call Lara at 312-781-5267 if you have any problems.
Darling designer Anna Hovet video of her new space with the Chicago Incubator.
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