Thursday, January 29

Pros & Cons: Alexander McQueen for Target

The good news: Alexander McQueen is doing the next designer-for-Target line!  This makes my heart skip a beat. McQueen is a genius, I mean, total fashion-Mensa genius.  A McQueen full skirt printed with yellow sparrows and a yellow underskirt at Corso Como was the first clothing item over $1,000 I'd ever tried on, and I think I'm still harboring a crush. The chance to find my love at Target is major.

The bad news: "The clothes are inspired by rocker-chick bands...meaning zippered black tights, slinky T-shirt dresses in hot pink and black tiger stripes and shirtdresses with a tattoo print." Some tees even feature Leila Moss, lead singer of the Duke Spirit (who, very coincidentally, happens to be the face of the brand, and whose band is doing an exclusive cd for Target).  Hold on, really? Zippered black tights and tiger tees? Is Target sure that they didn't call American Apparel's wholesale number by mistake instead of Mr. McQueen's studio?  This sounds like yet another designer collaboration that I'll avoid checking out just to save myself the crushing disappointment.  Le sigh.

[source: eric wilson]

Paperwhites -- Chanel pre-fall 09


there's something so wonderful about totally anti-utilitarian haute couture.


[source: Cathy Horyn's Chanel runway review for NYT)

Trend Schools (Seriously)


[doris day! source: dorisday.net]

How do trendsters stay so cutting-edge? Maybe they take classes! "Trend classes," you say, "Oh Rachel, come on now." But seriously, it turns out that pop culture trends are the subjects of some very serious (and expensive) study (though, to be fair, the students are usually not those who buy, but those who sell). I was just thinking about it because I got my hair cut last night, and the stylist was saying she was the salon's "education specialist," who got to travel all over the place and learn what was going on in the hairstyling industry. Really, I said, are you just going and looking at people's haircuts on the street? Well, yeah, but she also takes classes - not just on new tricks and techniques, but also on trends. Yep, hair trend lessons. Crazy...but maybe not so crazy, when I thought about the other trend lessons I've encountered:

[wgsn can see the future]

Before going to design school, it never occurred to me that trends, fashion or otherwise, were anything other than just kinda organic, waves of fads that randomly swept the nation. But I learned that "trend forecaster" is a very important and respected position in the fashion world, and that trend forecasting agencies like WGSN make millions telling designers and retailers what people are going to want two years in the future. It's completely fascinating; they look at political and cultural movements, music, art, international events, new crazes in other industries, like architecture...and come out with these huge, gorgeous books filled with sketches, photos and material samples that represent what they predict might be hitting the Style section eight seasons after. I went to an amazing seminar they did last winter at Bread and Butter with video montages of the three moods they predicted would be sweeping the fashion world (and world in general) in a year, and it was staggeringly interesting (and cool-looking). Subscriptions to trend forecasts costs thousands of dollars, and if you've ever wondered why designers sometimes seem to all have had the same inspiration...it's because they just might have.


I just got an email from Trend Central, a site that tracks social trends in marketing, digital media, beauty, and whatever else catches their eye (dorky as it is, I subscribe to their newsletter and it is AWESOME. OK, except for the recent one that defined new slang words. So dweeby, and totally not accurate at all [who says "povo" for "poor"? Like, no.]). Now they're hosting their first Trend School classes. Here's the description:
With our world newly transformed by huge social and economic changes, young people are being confronted with challenges and decisions far more difficult than those they have faced before. If you're wondering how Gen Xers and Ys are really responding to the Great Recession, what they expect from our new president, and how they envision their future, then join us at February's Trend School where we'll be covering all new information and research, as well as providing insight and inspiration by introducing you to the emerging trends that are defining these generations.

We'll explore a new Current¢y where money isn't exchanged for goods and services; a Cool Americana movement for the nation; a new escapist trend, The Great Escape; and the transformation of Xers and Ys as they rebuild their lives after the Identity Theft they have recently experienced. From Obamarketing and the Freeconomy to Vertical Farming and Moodswings, Trend School will teach you to navigate this new and uncertain future, and will arm you with the tools you need in this altered economy to meet your business and marketing needs.


"Current¢y?" Really? Jeez. And speaking of currency, people are going to fork over $2500 to attend these things. Le sigh.

Anyway, now I'm intrigued. What other industries offer trend classes? Hotel management, I bet. Forestry? What's Next In Smooth Jazz?

Monday, January 26

bberry good

whoa ho ho, i can post from my phone via email! LIKE MAGIC! keith olberman is in the background and i imagine he agrees. boop boop bee doop.

a material world: year 2, round 2!

Hello kittens,


Change is in the air! Not just for our nation, but also for this infinitesimal internet nation. MMMM-hm.

So, a main reason I have this blog is because I'm always thinking about this and that, and getting my fancy captured (can one say this? I think yes.), and the internet is a welcoming place to go on and on about all of the above. So why has my writing been so sporadic of late? (ref: Clueless, vocab lesson scene.) I haven't been able to figure it out. It's not that my all-you-can-eat salad bar of ideas has run out, but I keep feeling like the things on my mind aren't right for this, or that they're not pure-fashion-related enough, or something. So I've been putting the cork in mah blogginz, and it sucks, because I miss it and also you lovely readers. Years of writing dozens of papers has left me with some kind of sick need to produce text on a regular basis, or else I start to feel sluggish and lazy. Bad sitch, y'all.

Anyway, I've finally realized that the thing is - DUH - it was more natural to write about fashionfashionfashion when I was working at Satine and at BCBG, i.e., in the 100% fashion world. Now I work doing marketing and events and branding; much of it's fashion-related, but it's still a very different animal. So it's no wonder that what I want to freak out about online has more to do now with fashion's blinging ties to the advertising industry than in the past.

Blah, blah, the point is: "a material world" will be a whole lot more interesting to read (and write) if I give myself free rein - or, shall we say, an open bar - and make the blog even more true to its name. I think when I started it, my tagline was something a bit ridiculous like "the slightly subversive sociology of fashion," and what does that entail, really? Um, marketing, branding, and the rest of the gobbeldygook that gives fashion its meaning for us.

Obviously, I'm not the only one to have this genius idea to include the glossy-billboard side of the fashion industry; I was just reading the lovely Annie's awesome article on luxury marketing, for one. She's so inspiring, talking about the perceived value of Madonna's crotch in Louis Vuitton ads! Tee, hee. But seriously.

Both fashion and advertising can seem totally meaningless and yet be totally significant, both can be gorgeous and insightful or tacky and repugnant... ah, the possibilities.


XOXO,
Material Girl

Monday, January 19

HAPPY INAUGURATION !!!


rachel zoe bananas rachel zoe bananas rachel zoe banans! rachel zoe obama shepherd fairey.

P.S. YES I MADE HER!

Saturday, January 10

Leggings Persist in 2009 (Alex + Chloe, too)

Since I was going to write an end-of-year post about how I hoped that everyone's lesson from 2008 was that Leggings Are Not Pants, it's only appropriate that today's inaugural 2009 post is about, sigh, leggings. And not just leggings, but the leggings that Lindsay Lohan features in her 6126 line. Remember when everyone was guffawing over it (I remember the Fug Girls, champions of "Leggings Are Not Pants," in particular)? WELLLLL, at the (very very fabulous) Alex + Chloe party at Revolve on Melrose today, what did I spy but several different 6126 leggings-not-pants? They actually exist!! Obvs, I HAD to try them on. (I am the queen of trying on things I know I'm not going to buy. It's kind of like reading "Harry Potter" in the bookstore, just so you know what everyone's talking about.) I almost took the pair of gold-spangled ones to the dressing room with me, but then these knee-padded ones just jumped off the shelf at me.

We tried to take photos of the resulting hilarity, but the bberry camera couldn't fully capture the padded glory. I thought that perhaps they'd be good for me, since I'm awfully clumsy and perhaps could benefit from some knee pads, but - get this - they are apparently sized only for Lindsay Lohan's stubby little self, because on my 34-inseamed legs, the knee pads entirely missed my knees. They were about 6 inches above the ol' kneecaps. In other words, they would provide ZERO protection at my next volleyball match, so what's the freakin' point? To be fair, they were nice and soft and felt real nice (and were long enough overall, which is a treat). But still. Not only are these leggings not pants, they aren't even sports equipment.

In other news, while the 6126 selection was a bust (though that's of course what I was hoping for), the Alex + Chloe party was a total smash. I'd never actually been to Revolve before, since it's in such a hidden little enclave on Melrose, but my girl Tita was DJing and the collection looked sweet. And god, Revolve is so cool! I've been missing out! It's all, like, black and white with neat displays and some very nice metal benches. You'll have to see for yourself. The A+C jewelry is rad, with black or white or mirrored plexiglass pendants (my fave below):

[alex+chloe online shop]

I picked up a pair of sunglasses that I LOVE (they're wayfarers without being wayfarers, in my faaaavorite color), and Dieu got one of their super-secret surprise gift bags, which turned out to have an awesome black-dipped shell pendant, a brooch & a scarfy dealy... so all in all in was a great success. Oh yeah, and even though Alex + Chloe's designers are supposedly super-secret mysterious beings (the party even had "Alex" and "Chloe" nametags for everyone to wear so NO ONE WOULD KNOW!), Tita knew one of them and he was totally there, looking unlikely. I didn't talk with him, but we did consult with another very hot guy who helped Dieu pick her surprise bag. I thought maybe he was the other secret designer, but Dieu said he was too friendly to be a man of mystery. Then we hoofed it over to A.P.C. and Fred Segal, whose sales I was all excited about, but they were both utterly disappointing. I found a pair of Prada pumps that were gorgeous and made me about 7 feet tall, but they were still $325 on sale so I passed. Winner: Revolve! First fashion find of 2009!


blue crush.