Friday, April 30, 2010

Tinute pentru primavara 2010

Glamour style
Ador tinutele sexy si lejere in acelasi timp, iar primavara este cel mai bun moment sa le afisezi. Mai jos aveti prezentate 5 outfit-uri perfecte pentru o zi  insorita de primavara.

Thursday, April 29, 2010

McQ by Alexander McQueen

McQ By Alexander McQueen's latest fall 2010 lookbook is going back to grunge. Think brooding tones of fall, disheveled forms of plaid, and what would be a grunge collection without a whole lot of flannel. The collection, combined with messy up-dos and electric-blue streaks, totally evokes an androgynous theme and although McQueen's untimely passing makes future designs a bit of a delicate situation, we love seeing his legacy live on. Smells like teen spirit, indeed.

Thanks to fashion gone rogue for the pictures!

xx
The Fein Girls





Giorgio Armani's Iron Maidens

Gwyneth Paltrow si Scarlett Johansson sunt doua dintre cele mai elegante femei de la Hollywood, iar  luni nopatea la premierea Iron Man 2 ambele au fost imbracate de catre Giorgio Armani. Minunata Scarlett Johansson a purtat o  rochie de cocktail de organza bordurata pe un singur umar, iar Gwyneth Paltrow a aprut intr-un costum auriu de matase, pantaloni scurti si sacou punandu-si in evidenta picioarele.

yam & toast; eco-friendly furniture designed with kids in mind


What do you get when you cross eye catching designs, eco-friendly, sustainable materials and colors that pop? Why, yam & toast, of course! A Miami based, children's furniture design company, yam & toast manufactures its products with a child's development process in mind, believing that children should live and play in a beautiful and colorful environment, rich in stimulation.

Manufactured in Brazil out of only natural wood and the highest grade of low-formaldehyde, the wood comes from managed renewable forests established specifically to provide long-term responsible solutions towards the growing demand of timber related products...and yes, everything is FSC certified. All finishes are non-toxic, and only low emission glues are used. With pieces such as the Gummy Gear Chair and the Free Range Toy Box, a child can live and play in a creative, colorful and, most importantly, safe environment.

Eye-catching and eco-friendly, yam & toast provides the stepping stones for ensuring children become curious and enthusiastic young adults! We approve!

See more of yam & toast on amazon.com!

xx The Fein Girls


Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Look of the Day

Trend alert: The winged shoe

Imaginatia designerilor "a prins aripi" in acest sezon. Daca pana acum aripile se purtau imprimate pe haine sau genti in acest sezon s-au mutat pe pantofi sau sandale. Marc Jacobs si Beatrix au lansat aceste modele superbe pentru primavara anului 2010.




Willy Vanderperre for Miu Miu and AnOther Magazine

Photographer Willy Vanderperre took inspiration from cult thriller classics when he teamed up with AnOther Magazine and Miuccia Prada to present her A/W10 Miu Miu Collection.
The short film, shot in a vast Parisian villa - number 34, Avenue Foch, features the collection which was also showcased in the same house the previous month.

Says Vanderperre: "I wanted to reflect a kind of haunting, a feeling of unease in the room, and strange attraction." Olivier Rizzo, who styled both the show and the film, describes the collection as having "a dark Romantic side, nearly Baroque and very poetic, and a Futuristic side – very seductive in a playful way."

From a personal standpoint, we Fein Girls completely dig the film. It very much captures the essence of the brand. Check it out below!

xx
The Fein Girls

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

WWD's 5 New Designers To Watch

Today, Women's Wear Daily listed the top designers to watch. From South Africa and Taiwan, to right here in the United States, behold, the freshest crop of talented young designers making waves in the world.


Odilon

Backstory: Stacy Clark recalls creating patterns for garments when she was as young as eight. “I would lay down my clothes on paper, trace around them and allow for seam allowance,” she says with a laugh. But it wasn’t until after she graduated from the University of Victoria with a degree in the arts that the Canadian began considering a career in fashion. In 2006, she enrolled at the Fashion Institute of Design & Merchandising in Los Angeles and received a degree in product development. Clark created her first collection last year; fall 2010 is her first season going into production.

Collection: The label is named for the French artist Odilon Redon. “He still had that Impressionist technique but painted very morbid subject matters,” says Clark, 23. “I found him refreshing.” Her line takes a dark tack as evidenced by her recent collection, inspired by postapocalyptic images. To wit, the flashes of orange — seen in vests and jackets, some hooded — come from hazard signs, while textured nylon-coated jersey leggings are meant to mimic burnt flesh. “I’m influenced by horror and zombie movies, too,” says Clark, who also notes an affinity for juxtaposing natural and synthetic materials.

Stats: Wholesale prices range from $45 to $680. The collection will be available at Forty Five Ten in Dallas.


Johan Ku

Backstory: What a difference a year makes. In 2009, Johan Ku was just another young designer from Taipei who had enrolled at Central Saint Martins. Now, he’s a buzzed-about name in his native Taiwan — he dressed popular Mandopop group S.H.E for the cover of its March “Shero” album and was the subject of a recent show at the Taipei Fine Arts Museum, called “Breakthrough: Johan Ku Wearable Sculpture Exhibition.” Not bad for a 30-year-old who fell into fashion because he failed the test for his first career choice: graphic design. “I didn’t get a high enough score, unfortunately — or fortunately enough,” remarks Ku, who received his B.A. and M.A. in fashion and textile design from Shu-Te and Fu-Jen Universities, respectively.

Collection: The designer has a one-track mind: Ku is crazy for the knitwear. “I always wanted to create something in three dimensions,” says Ku, whose aesthetic skews toward the experimental and arty side. “Even as a kid in art class, I would enjoy doing real sculpture instead of 2-D drawings. That influenced me a lot.” For his collection, he uses mainly raw wool, which gives his designs that ultrahefty, rough-hewn feel. “People use that material for spinning, not for knitting. That’s how I can create my chunky garments,” he explains, while adding that a more commercial collection may be in the pipeline once he gets enough financing.

Stats: Retail prices start at $800 and run upward to $30,000 for his one-of-a-kind designs.




Kal Rieman

Backstory: Cleveland-born Cally Rieman caught the fashion bug while studying abroad in Taiwan. “I was teaching a gentleman English, and he owned a textile manufacturing company,” says Rieman. “I was surrounded by a world I had never been in before and thought it was really cool.” Rieman, now 39, studied poli-sci and East Asian studies at Denison University and graduated in 1993. After a four-year stint in finance, she enrolled in the fashion program at the Art Institute of Chicago, graduating in 2000. She has since worked for Rubin Chapelle, Jean-Charles de Castelbajac and H by Tommy Hilfiger, the last two in the men’s department.

Collection: Given her men’s wear background, it’s no surprise Rieman works a masculine vibe — crisp shirting, vests and loads of tailoring. “I’m fascinated by the suit,” she says, noting she works with a men’s wear tailor for her blazers “so they’re made like a men’s jacket with canvas construction, horse hair….” New York-based Rieman adds that her stint at de Castelbajac proved influential. “What I pulled out of my time there was a sophistication — this dandy look for women, with high collars and structured jackets,” she explains, “but without the kitsch.”

Stats: Wholesale prices range from $150 to $550. The collection is available at P45 in Chicago.



Alexander Koutny

Backstory: While a philosophy student at the University of Cape Town in 1997, Johannesburg-born Alexander Koutny launched a men’s wear collection, named Aka. In time, he would add a women’s counterpart to the line, which he describes as “structured and utilitarian,” before closing up shop to move to London in 2000. “I thought, if I’m going to continue and take it to the next level, South Africa wouldn’t be the place to do that,” says Koutny, who went on to work for Marjan Pejoski. The experience couldn’t have been more different — Pejoski is best known as the designer responsible for Bjƶrk’s 2001 swan dress. At Pejoski’s suggestion, Koutny enrolled at Central Saint Martins, graduating in 2003.

Collection: New York-based Koutny notes that his current collection, which he launched last year, straddles the line between Aka and the “extreme” one-off garments he created during his London years. “I started out on the commercial side,” he says, “and then pushed the boundaries of [avant-garde] fashion. This is the balance between the two.” For fall, Koutny found inspiration in earthquakes, plate tectonics and the underground, which explains the abstract lava prints throughout the collection. But the core vibe here is the collection’s sense of ease — even the more tailored jackets and coats come slightly slouchy and draped. “The lifestyle element we’re pushing is something more robust,” explains Koutny, 37, “something you wouldn’t mind throwing on the floor, picking up and still loving.”

Stats: Wholesale prices for the line range from $150 to $400. So far, Eva in New York and Una in Portland, Ore., have picked up the collection.



Charles Henry

Backstory: Charles Henry is already act II for Kentucky native Meredith Fisher. The University of Southern California alum — she graduated in December — launched her first collection, WAYF (Where Are You From), as a junior in high school. At the time, Fisher was spending the summer in Los Angeles, interning for Jennifer Nicholson, when she caught the eye of the buyers at Satine. “I walked in [the store] wearing one of my dress designs and they noticed,” recalls Fisher. “So I started making things for them on the side.” She eventually signed with a showroom and, later that summer, launched WAYF, which sold at retailers such as Barneys New York, Shopbop.com and Intermix. Last year, Fisher took a break from design to “finish college,” she says.

Collection: Fisher named the line after her maternal grandfather, a clothing manufacturer in Tennessee, and it’s more grown-up-looking than WAYF. “The core is there,” she says, “but [my girl] isn’t just wearing sweet little dresses. She wants leather, she wants fringe, she wants a little of everything in her wardrobe.” The fall Charles Henry debut ranges from silk blouses and skirts, with tassel details, to velvet burn-out dresses, featuring custom prints by Fisher.

Stats: The collection ranges from $85 to $270 at wholesale, and will be available at Madison and Switch in Los Angeles and Harvey Nichols in Hong Kong.

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Denim Overdose!

Denimul este o arta, asta stim deja, insa editorialul din Vogue Germania Mai 2010 ne arata cat de adevarat este acest lucru. Este imposibil sa ne imaginam un un sezon fara denim, uneori exista mai putin uneori mai mult, insa pentru 2010 designerii vin cu un supradozaj de denim. Prin urmare in acest sezon se poarta denimul din cap pana in picioare, de la blugi, camasi, jachete, rochii, fuste pana la pantofi si palarii.


Model: Catherine McNeil
Fotografi: Knoepfel Claudia & Stefan Indlekofer
Revista: Vogue Germania
Mai 2010

Thursday, April 22, 2010

White-Hot



The white pantsuit is back!

I for one, am thoroughly excited. Why, you ask? Well, there are a number of reasons, but if I had to list my top two, they would be:

1) The resurgence of the white pantsuit gives me yet another reason to exclusively drink vodka-martinis.

2) This epic fashion statement conjures up images of grandeur in my mind. I can't help but picture myself in a pristine English manor with a pristine suit to match, saying things like, yes, well, Christopher has the Bentley today, but I can take The Rolls, cheerio chaps!

It could happen.

Anywho, everyone from ChloƩ and Todd Lynn, to Jil Sander and Tommy Hilfiger have gotten down with this look. So what are you waiting for? Grab a fantastic pair of heels, toss a jacket over one shoulder with stylish ease and strut your way to the parlor room.

Fashion Goes Digital



There is a new wind blowing through the fashion world; a type of digital revolution.


Technology has ushered in different ways of approaching prints, allowing new patterns to develop, and creating visually stunning effects. The results? Showstopping pieces, unlike anything the industry has seen before.








Unsure of what we mean? See below.











The late Alexander McQueen's exploration of technology led to enhanced nature-inspired effects on sculpted dresses.















The summer collection by Erdem Moralioglu, recent winner of the British Fashion Council/Vogue Designer Fashion Fund award, was a mix of patchy, computer-generated florals. Says the designer: "I've always been able to do all my prints digitally. My prints are quite organic - I might find a piece of old wallpaper, photoshop the print and add watercolor."













A collage of colors was the focus of Peter Pilotto's summer collection. What began as a series of illustrations and photographs capturing exploding fireworks, worked its way onto the runway.















Mary Katrantzou, created a series of vivid and original prints, gave up traditional screen printing and now favors digital design, stating:"with a screen print 10 or 15 color separations need great expertise. With digital, there is no limitation - you can print a photographical version of anything."