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Russh February/March 2016: Harleth Kuusik by Elina Kechicheva
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Hervé Léger S/S 2016: Stasha Yatchuk by Boe Marion
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Levi 501's
Hey guys
I have a serious craving for Levi 501's - I just love the wash and have spent countless hours looking for the right fit. I finally found a great close fitting vintage pair which are tight on my leg. However...I'm at a loss as to how to style them in the winter. I know it's meant to be simple - just a pair of 501's and a top - but my biggest thing is what shoes to pair them with when its cold in the UK. I watch bloggers jealously as they wear them with some slingbacks or flats. How do I make them work?
I have a serious craving for Levi 501's - I just love the wash and have spent countless hours looking for the right fit. I finally found a great close fitting vintage pair which are tight on my leg. However...I'm at a loss as to how to style them in the winter. I know it's meant to be simple - just a pair of 501's and a top - but my biggest thing is what shoes to pair them with when its cold in the UK. I watch bloggers jealously as they wear them with some slingbacks or flats. How do I make them work?
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Theresa Schreck
MA: Tune Models
Next Milan
height: 179
hair: red blonde
eyes: blue
bust: 84
waist: 60
hips: 89
Next Milan
height: 179
hair: red blonde
eyes: blue
bust: 84
waist: 60
hips: 89
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Carly
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Alice First
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Misty
MA: Gaga
IMG Paris
Uno BCN
17 y.o.
IMG Paris
Uno BCN
17 y.o.
Quote:
HEIGHT 178cm WAIST 58cm BUST 80cm HIPS 89cm SHOES 4 UK, 37 EU EYE COLOR Blue HAIR COLOR Brown |
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Kenzo Takada Working on U.S. Collaboration
Kenzo Takada Working on U.S. Collaboration
By Joelle Diderich
FOOD FOR THOUGHT: Could a Target collaboration with Kenzo Takada be in the works? Sitting front row at the Kenzo mens show in Paris on Saturday, the designer revealed he was working on an unspecified collaboration in the United States, set to be announced this spring. (wwd)
By Joelle Diderich
FOOD FOR THOUGHT: Could a Target collaboration with Kenzo Takada be in the works? Sitting front row at the Kenzo mens show in Paris on Saturday, the designer revealed he was working on an unspecified collaboration in the United States, set to be announced this spring. (wwd)
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Elle China March 2016: Liu Wen | Chinese New Year's Special

weibo/ellechina
This month's issue coincide with the start of Chinese New Year, the year of the monkey,
and fronting the cover is no other than Hunan native Liu Wen celebrating

ELLE CHINA MAR. 2016
'Ready to Fall in Love'
Ph: Mei Yuangui
Stylist: Jin Jing
Hair: Zhang Fan
Makeup: He Lei










weibo/chenwanliqq
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Harper's Bazaar Australia March 2016 : Lily Collins
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Sue Wayne
Jamaican stunner at Saint In'tl :heart:
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Shanika Mullings
Jamaican newbie at Saint Int'l :heart:
Quote:
My newest set of twins the chessplaying Mullings twins #Shanika(left) and Shanae(right) #beautiful #intelligent #funny #chessplayers #university #students #ambitious #amazing #development #Jamaica #islandgirls #saintmodels #modeltwins #twins #fashiontwins #unique |
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Shanae Mullings
Jamaican newbie at Saint Int'l :heart:
Quote:
My newest set of twins the chessplaying Mullings twins #Shanika(left) and Shanae(right) #beautiful #intelligent #funny #chessplayers #university #students #ambitious #amazing #development #Jamaica #islandgirls #saintmodels #modeltwins #twins #fashiontwins #unique |
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Kadiya 'Kadi' McDonald
15 year old Jamaican beauty :heart:
Signed with Saint International :flower:
Signed with Saint International :flower:
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Who will sweep up the Autumn/Winter 2016 Shows?
Let the speculation begin! :lol::flower::woot:
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Burberry combines Mens & Womens shows, collections available immediately
Quote:
Burberry Aligns Runway and Retail Calendar in Game-Changing Shift LONDON, United Kingdom As discussions heat up around the broken fashion system and brands seek new ways of presenting their collections to better align their runway shows a powerful driver of consumer demand with retail drops, BoF can reveal that British megabrand Burberry is completely shifting the way it produces, presents and sells its collections. Starting this September, Burberry will combine the presentation of its mens and womens offerings, packaging them together as one unified collection to be shown twice a year at major runway events during London Fashion Week. (The brand will no longer stage two annual menswear shows at London Collections: Men, but will retain a presence at the event.) While Burberrys mens and womens collections have long followed the same creative theme and recent seasons have seen female models appearing in the brands menswear shows and vice versa the brand will, for the first time, be presenting its offering as one, holistic collection. Immediately after the shows, the full collection of men's and womens looks will be available to buy both online and in-store, supported by digital and print advertising campaigns, which will launch as soon as the show ends. The new collections will be seasonless and branded February and September rather than Spring/Summer and Autumn/Winter, nomenclature conceived with an eye towards global consumers who live in non-Western markets with different climatic patterns. The decision follows the companys move to unify its Prorsum, London and Brit lines under a single brand umbrella, known simply as Burberry. In October, hurt by weak sales in Asia, Burberry forecast declining profit for the second year in a row and announced plans to trim discretionary costs, like travel, by £20 million this financial year. But most importantly, Burberrys new strategy addresses a long-standing problem with the traditional fashion calendar, a legacy of a pre-Internet era in which fashion shows were conceived as closed industry events for press and wholesale buyers to preview collections months before clothing was available for purchase in stores. In recent years, the rise of digital media has put tremendous pressure on this model, as runway shows now instantly shareable on the internet have morphed into powerful consumer marketing events, leaving brands ill-equipped to convert buzz into sales for collections that have yet to be produced. Burberry has been taking steps to close the gap between runway and retail for some time, sharing its shows online and allowing shoppers to buy select items straight from the runway. But fully aligning the brands runway and retail cycles is a major step forward with significant implications for the company's production and supply chain, as well as its communications strategy and marks what may be the beginning of a sea change in the fashion industry. The BFC executive board has been talking for some time about fashion shows better connecting to consumers and being a direct driver for retail sales," said Caroline Rush, chief executive of the British Fashion Council. "Burberry is a truly innovative brand and this strategic move shows brilliant leadership from Christopher Bailey and his team in driving this agenda forward. A number of British brands will move to a similar model over the next few seasons. In an exclusive, in-depth conversation, Burberry's chief executive and chief creative officer Christopher Bailey talks to BoFs Imran Amed about the logic behind the brands new model. Imran Amed: Overall, what is the motivation for these changes and why now? Christopher Bailey: In 2010, we did a livestream of the show. It was a meaningful decision to get closer to the customer and a broader audience, because we were doing these spectacles of shows, but it was feeling very insular. I remember saying, this show has historically been shown to essentially an industry audience of press, media, buyers and people that we collaborate with. We are opening it up to an audience who just do not, and should not, have to think about our industrys ways and approaches and timings. You cant force a different audience to understand something that is designed as an industry event. All the things weve been doing since then have been steps to get closer to an audience that loves fashion, loves the energy of fashion, the music, the spectacle, the people. It just feels like a natural next step. But, you know, it takes time. Youve got to work things through. This obviously will have a big impact on our supply chain, but in terms of the design and the creative process, its actually less radical than it might seem. Really, the squeeze is on our supply chain. Thats taken a lot of careful consideration and thought. IA: Lets talk about the supply chain. This requires all sorts of changes in how you operate internally, with regard to ordering fabrics, predicting demand and manufacturing in advance. How have you worked that out? CB: We needed to build a much more agile and flexible supply chain. You normally design the full show, then you show the show, and then your supply chain starts to kick in. Now, we will be designing the show and, as were doing that, we will be passing things over immediately to our supply chain partners to say: lets look at the lead times on this; how can we work with this factory to get this on the date that we need it? As we are starting to create the collection, we will have to commit to fabrics or trims or embroideries. Its more of a partnership than a handover on one specific date. Its important to say, we do not have the answers to everything. We are going to be learning as we go and rapidly evolving to make sure we execute this in the way that it needs to be executed. Theres just something that innately feels wrong when were talking about creating a moment in fashion: you do the show in September and it feels really right for that moment, but then you have to wait for five or six months until its in the store. Was it that moment, or was it the moment at the show that felt really right? You create a lot of energy when you do the shows, and the broader these have become whether its livestreaming, instagramming, or showing online youre creating all this energy around something, and then you close the doors and say, Forget about it now because it wont be in the stores for five or six months. And then youve got to create that energy again. The reality is that, today, were bombarded with images, film and music. To try to recreate the energy that you created five or six months ago, youve got to just question how relevant it is. IA: Youre also going to pull up the release of ad campaigns, which would usually come out later, to the time of the show. How are you going to manage that in terms of shooting in advance? And how will you prevent leaks and maintain the element of surprise on the runway? CB: Again, this is not something that weve done before and its not something where we can follow a best practice. Were in a very fortunate position where the majority of our creative is done with the internal team weve basically got a design studio here where we do film, photography, animation. With an ad campaign, its no different. Nobody sees those images. Lets say the show is in February. Well shoot the campaign in March or April with Mario Testino, but no one sees those images until July anyway. When you break it all down, its just a shift in your supply chain thats the crunch but in terms of the other stuff, youre doing it all anyway, just at a slightly different time. IA: The other impact, as we think about the ripple effects throughout the activities of a company like Burberry, is on buyers. How will that work with your internal buying system, but also with external wholesale accounts? CB: With our own retail stores and online, thats exactly the way we work anyway: the buyers come in as were doing the collection, they look at it and start to form a buy, and we build that together. That wont change. The big change will be our wholesale partners. There, we will just have to work in a collaborative relationship, saying, Guys, we have to trust you. This stuff will be embargoed for a while, but we want you to come in and see it, feel it, try it on. It gives us the opportunity to build things alongside the show collection that are more exclusive for specific stores, or create special packages and say to a wholesale partner: the show is on 20 September, lets do a special event for your important customers, so that they come to the show or we livestream it to your store and they can try it on and shop the collection immediately. IA: When you say immediately after the show happens, how quickly are we talking? CB: Instantly. Bear with us weve never done this before but the objective is we will have the show at 2 oclock on Tuesday afternoon, and by the time the shows finished, we will have set up our retail stores to reflect the show. IA: Observers of Burberry shows for the past few years would have noticed that the mens shows, which came first, always gave a hint as to what was going to be in the womens shows. It seemed as if they were designed together already. But why do you want to show them together? CB: As Im going through the process of creating a collection, I have a spirit in mind I dont really ever think in terms of whats specific to a gender. Weve shown men with the womens collection, and the last year weve been putting women in the mens collections. It feels like its a natural evolution. Youre able to create more of a story when you get your mens and womens collections together, because it reflects one mood and one season. We often have women buying the mens coats and some of the mens pieces. Everything just feels a little bit more blurred, rather than having things in little boxes. IA: Did the idea of saving costs and resources play a role in the decision to merge the collections? Its no secret that companies like Burberry are looking to tighten their belts. CB: It definitely did not start from there. We will run through the costing process to see if it will actually cost less money in the end, we still have to do a mens collection and womens collection, so in terms of the product it will certainly not be any less expensive. In terms of all the things around the show from the show space and the lights and the music yes, there will definitely be some kind of a saving, but its difficult to quantify now. Were looking into whether we will need a bigger show space, if weve got the mens and womens show in one space. The objective wasnt a cost-saving initiative, but I will be delighted if there is a cost saving. Responsibly, looking at this, we have to make sure there is some kind of a saving. IA: Youve also decided to label collections as seasonless and not refer to Autumn/Winter or Spring/Summer. What was the rationale behind that, and how does that change how you build a collection? CB: Im trying to look at everything in the spirit of what it is, rather than what we have defined it as through our industry. It often felt slightly superficial to be talking about an Autumn/Winter collection, when its 90 degrees in a third of the shops were selling it in. We are a global company and the world is not one weather pattern. Last summer, we had these very soft, lightweight silk dresses but then we also had big peacoats and overcoats and we were labelling it the Spring/Summer show. That felt pretty stupid holding up a cashmere peacoat and calling it the Spring/Summer collection. Its just being a little bit more pragmatic. IA: This is the latest in a series of major changes at Burberry. Last year, you consolidated Prorsum, London and Brit into one main brand. It feels like Burberry is in the midst of a massive reinvention in terms of the way the company operates. How does this fit into everything else thats happening at Burberry at the moment? CB: We are basically making sure that weve got a point of view that reflects the way that people live today and the different audiences that engage with the brand whether theyre interested in the music side, whether its fashion, whether its the social stuff that we do. When we built Prorsum, London and Brit, it was very specific. Brit was the casual element; London was more formal, what you might wear to work; and Prorsum was much more fashion in its attitude. Im just not sure thats how we live our lives anymore: today, those lines are much more blurred and people mix them up much more. There have been many steps to this. We didnt decide to do these changes from one day to the next. From livestreaming, to runway made-to-order, or something I call Tweetwalk where we launched the collection on Twitter, its been an evolutionary development. But this is certainly a big step for us, because it is absolutely shifting the way that we work. I hope that what well be able to do is create a moment that feels relevant when the customer actually sees it, rather than telling him or her theyve got to wait until five or six months after weve excited them. |
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Vogue Portugal March 2016 by Oliver Beckmann

ph:Oliver Beckmann
model?
(source: facebook.com/vogueportugal)
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Male Jewellery
Hi,
Does anyone know any place online to discuss male jewellery? I'm sure there must be a community but I can't find one anywhere.
Any help appreciated.
Thanks,
Shigeo
Does anyone know any place online to discuss male jewellery? I'm sure there must be a community but I can't find one anywhere.
Any help appreciated.
Thanks,
Shigeo
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Frame Denim S/S 2016 : Lara Stone by Erik Tortensson
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US GQ August 1980: Russell Long by Bruce Weber
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