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Saturday, June 30, 2018

Meet The Fashion Brands That Want You To Wear Less

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Forget buying shirts made from recycled fabric; a new wave of fashion brands and influencers are leading consumers towards a more environmentally friendly habit: purchasing carefully curated pieces that can be worn year-round. Enter the capsule wardrobe, where the adage of “quality over quantity” is elevated to encourage disposal of low-quality items and investment in seasonless staples.

Cara Bartlett, a former buyer at Rue La La and Saks Fifth Avenue, had a closet full of clothes but constantly felt like she had nothing to wear. In 2016, she launched a Kickstarter campaign to start a capsule wardrobe label. In just one month, she tripled her goal of $30,000, and VETTA Capsule was born.

“We exist to help create a curated option for our customers that they can easily mix and match,” Bartlett said, describing VETTA Capsule’s 5-piece sets—each of which retail for $449—as “starter kits” to a capsule wardrobe. The kits, she reveals, constitute 30% of the company’s sales revenue.

Similarly, Katie Demo and Jay Adams launched a Kickstarter campaign for Brass Clothing in April 2015, raising more than $27,000. The brand sells a 3-piece “Closet Kit,” which comes with a prepaid bag clients can use to send their old clothes in to be recycled.

“Now more than ever, women are working full time, taking care of their families and still wanting to look put together for work, but do not have time to spend worrying about getting dressed,” Demo says. “The Clean Out Bag stems from our desire for women to get rid of clothes in a responsible way and build a better wardrobe.” Based in Boston, the company offers 45-minute in-person appointments at its “studio,” where customers work one-on-one with a Brass team member to build a simpler wardrobe.

Mobile apps are also leveraging the new trend. Cladwell—which raised $3 million in seed funding from 500 Startups, M25, Sovereign's Capital, and other angel investors—allows users to input their wardrobe items into its database. Similar to Brass Clothing’s “Clean Out Bag,” the company encourages users to reevaluate excess clothing. The app designates a red dot to items that have not been worn in a month, and pulls the daily weather forecast—as well as the user’s planned activities—to generate outfit ideas.

“A [capsule wardrobe] is similar to a crash diet, because it’s breaking the cycle of mass consumption and allowing people to kickstart a better long-term lifestyle,” says the company’s co-founder and CEO Blake Smith. “Cladwell is a guide to that lifestyle: we facilitate capsule wardrobes, but we champion a broader philosophical shift of ‘doing more with less.’”

Consumers are often drawn to capsule wardrobes through social media, where a handful of influencers have made their names—and incomes—in the business of sharing their journeys to a slimmer wardrobe.

After being diagnosed with stage one cervical cancer at the age of 25, Jessica Rose Williams—a UK-based lifestyle blogger—was “stopped in her tracks” and reevaluated the way she was living. “I made a promise to myself that I’d start being more intentional with my life, and after stumbling across minimalism and the freedom this new mindset gave me, I wanted to share it with others,” she says.

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https://www.forbes.com/sites/veenamccoole/2018/06/30/meet-the-fashion-brands-that-want-you-to-wear-less/

1 Buaya Tertangkap, Diduga Masih Ada Buaya Lain di Jakarta

1 Buaya Tertangkap, Diduga Masih Ada Buaya Lain di Jakarta Buaya 1 meter yang ditangkap di wilayah Roxy, Jakbar. (Matius Alfons/detikcom)
Jakarta - Seekor buaya ditangkap warga dan diserahkan ke BKSDA DKI Jakarta. Diduga masih ada buaya lain yang berkeliaran di Ibu Kota dan masih dicari.

"Kita tidak bisa memastikan apakah buaya ini salah satu dari tiga ekor yang muncul di sini, karena kita melihat beberapa video ada warga yang menangkap buaya seukuran itu dengan dipancing. Kita tidak bisa pastikan itu," kata Kepala BKSDA DKI Jakarta Ahmad Munawir di posko pencarian buaya, Jl Latumenten, Jakbar, Sabtu (30/6/2018).


Dari laporan warga, setidaknya ada tiga buaya yang muncul di Kali Grogol. Petugas sama sekali belum berhasil menangkap satu pun buaya.
"Di sini kemarin kan ada tiga ekor, ada 2,5 meter, ada 1,5 meter, dan ada 1 meter. Ya kalau yang kita tangkap di Sungai Grogol ini belum ada, sampai hari ini yang kita lakukan di sini belum ada," ujar Munawir.
Satu ekor buaya yang diserahkan ke BKSDA hari ini ditangkap warga di wilayah Roxy, Jakbar, Jumat (29/6) kemarin. Buaya berukuran 1 meter itu sudah mati. Pihak yang menyerahkan buaya adalah Komunitas Pecinta Reptil.
(tor/aan)

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Kalo berita nya ga lengkap baca dan buka link di samping https://news.detik.com/berita/4091601/1-buaya-tertangkap-diduga-masih-ada-buaya-lain-di-jakarta

How A Shared Passion For Travel Built This $43 Million Fashion Brand

Tea Collection

Tea Collection Founders Leigh Rawdon and Emily Meyer

An unlikely pair of friends, Leigh Rawdon had just finished a Harvard MBA when she met Emily Meyer, a fashion designer. The two had little in common, except a shared love of travel. Combining their passion with business and design experience, Rawdon and Meyer joined forces to create Tea Collection, a globally-inspired children’s clothing brand that celebrates the beauty and diverse cultures found all around the world.

Bootstrapped in 2002 with just three pima cotton sweaters, Tea Collection brought in over $43 million in revenue in 2017. With a firm dedication to giving back, the company has raised over $500,000 for the Global Fund for Children and gives employees a travel stipend to encourage global exploration. Here, Rawdon explains how the brand’s values have remained at the heart of their growth, successfully bringing them this far.

Michelle Martin: What was the inspiration for Tea Collection?

Leigh Rawdon: My co-founder, Emily, had been working in the fashion industry for a number of years and recognized the movement towards embracing global aesthetics and cultures and taking a stand against the 'fear of other.’ She was one of the first to realize how much power came from a sense of belonging and curiosity. At the time, she was working on children's clothing and realized how impactful it can be to reach children through a brand with values, and thus, the company was born.

We chose the name Tea Collection as tea is something shared and celebrated in so many cultures around the world. It's timeless. It gives a sense of connection. There's something about sitting and sharing a cup of tea — you gain a sense of presence, connection and warmth, which is something we want to bring to life with our customers.

Martin: You have said that you and Emily bonded over a shared passion for travel. What was your first global trip that really changed your global perspective?

Rawdon: I grew up in a small town outside of Memphis, Tennessee in a family that did not travel. The exception was my aunt, a school teacher who would travel to exotic locales like Israel, Scotland and Holland during her time off. Each year at holiday parties she would share her stories, beautiful garments, trinkets and art. These conversations impacted me as a young child and nurtured a hunger to discover more of the world.

When I was 16, my French class planned a trip to Paris for spring break. I got my first passport, went to my first foreign country, tried to 'speak French,' and from that point on was hooked. I finally could see the world was a bigger place than Tennessee, but I felt at home. After that trip I set my mind to travel.

Tea Collection

Marjorie Tan, a Design Director for Tea Collection on an inspiration trip to India for the Spring 2015 collection

Martin: How do you think fashion can be used as a tool to educate people about different cultures and increase acceptance?

Rawdon: We believe clothes are the beginning of a conversation. Each season, we interpret a different destination — we 'translate' a culture into an apparel collection. That translation creates an opportunity for kids and their families to “make the foreign familiar.” It's subtle, but if young children are introduced to a graphic tee with a kanji on it, or a dress inspired by a regional dance or art form, it creates a connection with a foreign concept.

Thanks to today's technology and travel, now more than ever families are exposed to foreign people and places. Its important to feel a connection instead of separation with these varying ideologies. Parents need to teach their children that we are more alike than we are different - that we have common ground and a shared humanity. That really matters.

Tea Collection

Tea Collection staffers on a trip that inspired the 2016 Italy collection

Martin: Your collections draw from global inspiration. How do you decide which destination or community to feature?

Rawdon: Our design team travels twice a year: once for inspiration for spring and summer, and again for fall and winter collections. We choose our destination in a very organic way - there are no analytics or numbers, just what our designers resonate with in the world. We explore aesthetics then tap into the broader sense of the place.

The team members who travel are always rotating, which I think is important. The goal is to completely immerse themselves in the culture. We visit museums, eat the food, go dancing, learn the music, meet with local artists, walk shops and bazaars, and take lots and lots of pictures. Doors, tiles, animals - anything and everything that grasps the place. Our team then returns to our offices in San Francisco to translate what they experienced into a collection. It's important to note that none of these translations are literal, meaning we don't do costumes. Everything we do is inspired, and we hope to inspire even more curiosity about the locations we visit.

While we visit, we arrange meetings with local craftsmen and artists to collaborate with. Each season we highlight 3-4 specific artists who co-design our prints. When we do this, we also share profits.

Tea Collection

Tea Collection dress inspired by Native American Pueblo pottery prints

Martin: Why do you think it is important to raise global citizens from a young age?

Rawdon: In our childhood we learn how to see the world and interact with others. It's important from a young age to create a perspective that we can be at home in a very big, very foreign world. We shouldn't be afraid to find common ground. If that's the way we grow up, that's something we will carry our whole lives. This foundation enables children to be contributing citizens and create habits that last a lifetime. 

Martin: Tell me more about your partnership with The Global Fund for Children

Rawdon: What I'm most proud of is the length of our partnership— Tea Collection and The Global Fund for Children have worked and grown together for 15 years. We share the same mission of celebrating local initiatives, meaning that we find local, on-the-ground leaders that best know the needs of their respective community. We believe these types of leaders are the most empowered and can make the biggest difference. This ideology resonates with our brand as we also believe there is no cookie-cutter approach to life and culture. I'm proud of this shared culture, and the contributions we’ve made to support these community leaders.

Martin: What is your vision for Tea Collection moving forward?

Rawdon: We have always aspired to inspire global connections and curiosity for little citizens of the world. That's how we started, that's what made us successful and we don't plan to change.

Corporate social responsibility has been in our DNA from the very beginning. Ethical work is an expectation we have for everyone we work with, whether it's our team in San Francisco or our extended vendor network. We can't have a brand that celebrates people without people doing the right thing.

Our goal now is to follow and inspire even more families that buy our products, boutiques that carry our products, craftsman that create the products, and beneficiaries of The Global Fund for Children. Our magnitude is already large, but we want to be even bigger.

This interview was condensed for brevity.

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https://www.forbes.com/sites/michellemartin/2018/06/30/how-a-shared-passion-for-travel-built-this-43-million-fashion-brand/

Friday, June 29, 2018

Katie Monster Is The Unapologetic Fashion Star You Need to Follow

Today, she doesn't have as much free time to sit and tool around with thrifted finds, but she says she enjoys sharing ideas with the designers she works with, most of whom run emerging Thai brands like Landmee' and Dry Clean Only (whose customized tees have earned the Beyoncé stamp of approval). She flies back to Bangkok about once every two months to meet with the teams about design, marketing, and breaking into international markets, then visits showrooms in London and Paris during their respective fashion weeks. In between, she works mostly via video conference and writes a monthly column for Elle Thailand.

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https://www.refinery29.com/2018/06/203251/katie-monster-fashion-instagram-style

From Ben Whishaw to freckles: this week's fashion trends

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  1. From Ben Whishaw to freckles: this week's fashion trends  The Guardian
  2. Full coverage
https://www.theguardian.com/fashion/2018/jun/29/ben-whishaw-freckles-fashion-trends

Thursday, June 28, 2018

Karen Pence, Fashion Daredevil?

Karen Pence is on the receiving end of some flak. No, not because she insists that her husband, the vice president of the United States, not eat alone with other women. And it’s not because she once shilled the wildly unnecessary accessory that is “towel charms.” This time, people are crying “inappropriate” at what she wore in front of the King and Queen of Jordan on Monday: a black and pink, below-the-knee, strapless dress with two small cutouts below the neck.

In comments left on a photo tweeted by Mike Pence, several people claimed that Karen Pence’s dress was too risqué for the occasion.

“For God’s sake, get your wife a stylist and quick! So inappropriate next to the Queen of Jordan, who looked classy and understated,” one person wrote, while another agreed that “The dress is too short and tight for her.”

Many praised Queen Rania’s sleeved, A-line dress, however, with one commenter tweeting that “Yes so much more elegance could of [sic] been shown and wasn’t. But that’s the joke on all of us with this whole administration. But The Queen looked like a lady with some grace. And style.”

Pence, whose wardrobe typically consists of business-casual dresses or cardigans and trousers, didn’t seem to stray too far from her norm during Monday’s meeting. Perhaps it was the floral-embellished black belt or the strappy heeled sandals that set Twitter off.

There are many things worthy of critique when it comes to the Second Family and the current administration, fashion choices included. A woman over 60 showing her shoulders, many may be surprised to learn, is not one of them.

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https://www.vanityfair.com/style/2018/06/karen-pence-fashion-daredevil

Shorts Are (Finally) in Fashion

A man in skimpy shorts approaches the Dior Men fashion show held this past week in Paris.
A man in skimpy shorts approaches the Dior Men fashion show held this past week in Paris. Photo: Getty Images

WHILE PACKING FOR MY biannual transatlantic trip to attend the Spring 2019 men’s fashion shows in Europe (see my reports from Florence and Milan), I almost, almost slipped a pair of shorts into my suitcase. But then I thought: No.

Shorts, even the neat olive green pair I had picked out, seemed too informal and too revealing to fly in the finicky atmosphere of Men’s Fashion Week. My fears were not unfounded: Jesse Hudnutt, a men’s buying consultant who jets to Europe each season for the shows, was barred from entering a Milan restaurant last year for wearing shorts. Though it’s unclear whether the restaurant in question still enforces that dress code (Mr. Hudnutt didn’t try his luck again this summer), shorts were otherwise so pervasive in European cities that I regretted my own no-shorts policy. In Florence, Milan and especially Paris I was confronted with exposed calves just about everywhere I turned, both on the runway and off. While there can often be a disconnect between the runway and real life, shorts proved an exception.

Three of the many short-wearing attendees at Paris Fashion Week, held in the French capital last week.
Three of the many short-wearing attendees at Paris Fashion Week, held in the French capital last week. Photo: Getty Images

At French brands Ami and Kenzo, short lengths fell below the knee, dangerously close to the capri fault line. At Dior and Hermès, the cuts were skimpier and paired for maximum contrast with jackets and long-sleeved sweaters up top (that kind of coverage balance is a decent idea to try at home). And at Lanvin, shorts were glen-checked and pinstriped, like shorn dress pants.

In reporting that shorts exist, I realize I’m not breaking news. Yet, like boxer briefs, tank tops and socks, shorts have traditionally been more about function than fashion, only occasionally (and often oddly) receiving their turn out on the catwalk.

“By nature, [shorts are] not really a fashion item, they’re a leisure weekend thing,” said Bruce Pask, men’s fashion director at Bergdorf Goodman and Neiman Marcus. More a form of sartorial air conditioning than anything designers fuss over, shorts have primarily come in simple forms with some notable exceptions (Thom Browne has made shorts suits for years). Khaki for Home Depot runs. Mesh for the gym. Madras if you think you’re Bill Murray or were raised in Kennebunkport.

Shorts were a common sight on the runway as well as off. Hermès, Ami and Dries Van Noten were three of the many brands that weren’t afraid to show some skin.
Shorts were a common sight on the runway as well as off. Hermès, Ami and Dries Van Noten were three of the many brands that weren’t afraid to show some skin.

Yet this round of fashion shows marked a bit of a coming-out party for this humble garment. Shorts were fertile ground for creativity, with designers presenting novel ideas that went well beyond the battered J. Crew critter shorts you’ve had since your undergrad years. The new variations were, as Mr. Pask said, “not your everyday Bermuda.”

Designers played with fabric—with results ranging from paint-smeared beige cotton shorts at OAMC to acetate nylon numbers at Comme de Garçons Homme Plus to candy-striped cottons at Thom Browne. The length debate inspired wild experimentation, from the skimpy (Hermès, Dior, Sacai) to the super-long (Issey Miyake, Jil Sander, OAMC). This season, according to Mr. Pask, proved that shorts can “suit a wide array of personalities and comfort levels.”

But why is fashion embracing shorts now? On the most basic level, it’s hot and men at the shows just want to wear shorts, modesty be damned. All week long, as I dragged my sweltering self from show to show, I envied my fellow attendees who were bold enough to wear shorts. Dozens and dozens of them. Even on editors and buyers, the most calculatingly style-conscious folks imaginable, shorts were as common a sight in Paris as cigarette smoking teenagers. “My decision to wear shorts during fashion week mainly started from a comfort thing” said Matthew Marden, the style director of Esquire, who let his legs fly free in shorts all week. As Paris’s temperatures climbed up toward the 90s, his approach seemed ever wiser.

Common sense, it would appear, has prevailed. Though comfort has increasingly been a factor in shaping men’s fashion over the last few years, it seems that fastidious editors and no-compromise designers have set aside past persnicketiness to acknowledge that, now, even shorts just make sense. Perhaps the prideful clotheshorse’s mantra “suffer for fashion” has given way to “keep me comfortable and maybe, if you could, also try to make me look good too”? In any case, next season, I’m packing shorts.

Write to Jacob Gallagher at Jacob.Gallagher@wsj.com

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https://www.wsj.com/articles/shorts-are-finally-in-fashion-1530208168

Shorts are (Finally) in Fashion

A man in skimpy shorts approaches the Dior Men fashion show held this past week in Paris.
A man in skimpy shorts approaches the Dior Men fashion show held this past week in Paris. Photo: Getty Images

WHILE PACKING FOR MY biannual transatlantic trip to attend the Spring 2019 men’s fashion shows in Europe (see my reports from Florence and Milan), I almost, almost slipped a pair of shorts into my suitcase. But then I thought: No.

Shorts, even the neat olive green pair I had picked out, seemed too informal and too revealing to fly in the finicky atmosphere of Men’s Fashion Week. My fears were not unfounded: Jesse Hudnutt, a men’s buying consultant who jets to Europe each season for the shows, was barred from entering a Milan restaurant last year for wearing shorts. Though it’s unclear whether the restaurant in question still enforces that dress code (Mr. Hudnutt didn’t try his luck again this summer), shorts were otherwise so pervasive in European cities that I regretted my own no-shorts policy. In Florence, Milan and especially Paris I was confronted with exposed calves just about everywhere I turned, both on the runway and off. While there can often be a disconnect between the runway and real life, shorts proved an exception.

Three of the many short-wearing attendees at Paris Fashion Week, held in the French capital last week.
Three of the many short-wearing attendees at Paris Fashion Week, held in the French capital last week. Photo: Getty Images

At French brands Ami and Kenzo, short lengths fell below the knee, dangerously close to the capri fault line. At Dior and Hermès, the cuts were skimpier and paired for maximum contrast with jackets and long-sleeved sweaters up top (that kind of coverage balance is a decent idea to try at home). And at Lanvin, shorts were glen-checked and pinstriped, like shorn dress pants.

In reporting that shorts exist, I realize I’m not breaking news. Yet, like boxer briefs, tank tops and socks, shorts have traditionally been more about function than fashion, only occasionally (and often oddly) receiving their turn out on the catwalk.

“By nature, [shorts are] not really a fashion item, they’re a leisure weekend thing,” said Bruce Pask, men’s fashion director at Bergdorf Goodman and Neiman Marcus. More a form of sartorial air conditioning than anything designers fuss over, shorts have primarily come in simple forms with some notable exceptions (Thom Browne has made shorts suits for years). Khaki for Home Depot runs. Mesh for the gym. Madras if you think you’re Bill Murray or were raised in Kennebunkport.

Shorts were a common sight on the runway as well as off. Hermès, Ami and Dries Van Noten were three of the many brands that weren’t afraid to show some skin.
Shorts were a common sight on the runway as well as off. Hermès, Ami and Dries Van Noten were three of the many brands that weren’t afraid to show some skin.

Yet this round of fashion shows marked a bit of a coming-out party for this humble garment. Shorts were fertile ground for creativity, with designers presenting novel ideas that went well beyond the battered J. Crew critter shorts you’ve had since your undergrad years. The new variations were, as Mr. Pask said, “not your everyday Bermuda.”

Designers played with fabric—with results ranging from paint-smeared beige cotton shorts at OAMC to acetate nylon numbers at Comme de Garçons Homme Plus to candy-striped cottons at Thom Browne. The length debate inspired wild experimentation, from the skimpy (Hermès, Dior, Sacai) to the super-long (Issey Miyake, Jil Sander, OAMC). This season, according to Mr. Pask, proved that shorts can “suit a wide array of personalities and comfort levels.”

But why is fashion embracing shorts now? On the most basic level, it’s hot and men at the shows just want to wear shorts, modesty be damned. All week long, as I dragged my sweltering self from show to show, I envied my fellow attendees who were bold enough to wear shorts. Dozens and dozens of them. Even on editors and buyers, the most calculatingly style-conscious folks imaginable, shorts were as common a sight in Paris as cigarette smoking teenagers. “My decision to wear shorts during fashion week mainly started from a comfort thing” said Matthew Marden, the style director of Esquire, who let his legs fly free in shorts all week. As Paris’s temperatures climbed up toward the 90s, his approach seemed ever wiser.

Common sense, it would appear, has prevailed. Though comfort has increasingly been a factor in shaping men’s fashion over the last few years, it seems that fastidious editors and no-compromise designers have set aside past persnicketiness to acknowledge that, now, even shorts just make sense. Perhaps the prideful clotheshorse’s mantra “suffer for fashion” has given way to “keep me comfortable and maybe, if you could, also try to make me look good too”? In any case, next season, I’m packing shorts.

Write to Jacob Gallagher at Jacob.Gallagher@wsj.com

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https://www.wsj.com/articles/shorts-are-finally-in-fashion-1530208168

Fashion Trust Arabia Supports Local Talent With New Prize Initiative



Sheikha Al Mayassa bint Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani

Sheikha Al Mayassa bint Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani  Courtesy Photo

LONDON — As the Arab fashion industry continues to gain ground, a new charitable venture, Fashion Trust Arabia, is being launched and it’s spearheading a new prize initiative to support local design talent through mentorship and funding.

The initiative, which follows on the footsteps of the British Fashion Council’s Fashion Trust, will be chaired by Sheikha Moza Bint Nasser and co-chaired by Sheikha al-Mayassa Bint Hamad Al-Thani and Tania Fares, founder of the Fashion Trust in the U.K.

A wide range of local and international business and fashion leaders are said to participate in the new venture, joining its executive committee or judging panel and mentoring participating designers. Fashion Trust Arabia is yet to announce its committee members.

The launch of the prize aims to coincide with the increased interest in the growth potential of the region’s fashion industry, to support local talent that has so far been operating under-the-radar and spark investment opportunities.

Fashion Trust Arabia’s inaugural prize will be awarded at an event hosted in spring 2019.

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https://wwd.com/fashion-news/fashion-scoops/fashion-trust-arabia-supports-local-talent-new-prize-initiative-1202739491/

A New Generation of Fashion PRs Steps Out

NEW YORK, United States — Last January when Pyer Moss designer Kerby Jean-Raymond started to think about the upcoming autumn campaign, featuring his first collaboration with Reebok, he turned to Nate Hinton, a veteran publicist who left PR Consulting, an influential fashion communications firm, to start his own agency last year.

Hinton left behind his old firm’s scale. In its place, he offers to personally oversee tasks that fall outside the normal purview of public relations managers. For Jean-Raymond, Hinton not only helped conceptualise the campaign, he also oversaw the casting and logistics of the shoot. Hinton says he performs similar services for other clients, mainly emerging designer labels such as Public School and LaQuan Smith.

Hinton is part of a generation of seasoned publicists who have struck out on their own in recent years. They say they are developing communications strategies for an age where marketing dollars might be better spent on Instagram than major television networks or the pages of fashion magazines.

In practice, that means more digital marketing and fewer fashion shows and sample trafficking. Publicists say they also devote more individual attention to clients and provide a holistic approach.

Large communications agencies, many built by singular personalities like Karla Otto and Pierre Rougier, still handle many of fashion’s largest brands. They are putting their considerable resources — offices on multiple continents, specialty divisions, networks of relationships — behind weathering this period of digital upheaval for their clients. The industry as a whole is shifting toward tailoring services to individual customers, says Rachna Shah, partner and managing director at KCD. The agency was founded over 30 years ago and represents brands such as Alexander Wang, Balmain and Victoria’s Secret.

We have some brands that say, 'We don’t want more than 10 percent of your time spent on print.'

“It’s not necessarily big scale versus small scale, or global versus not; I think the point is that PR and communications have changed and has evolved,” she says. “If [publicists outside big agencies] want to specialise in a different way, we are happy for them and it’s good for the industry.”

Previously, “earned” or unpaid media coverage — such as a profile of a designer in a fashion magazine or an editorial featuring a brand’s It-bag — was the best and only way to get the word out and drives sales.

Now, brands are trying to reach customers through more media channels. They rely more on their own social media and influencers to reach prospective consumers. But that method is growing more costly as social media platforms get more crowded. Content created at expensive events can be easily overlooked and there is no guaranteed way to engage an audience.

“We have some brands that say, ‘We don’t want more than 10 percent of your time spent on print,’” says Guillaume Delacroix, who launched DLX Paris in 2015 after working at KCD, Giorgio Armani and Balenciaga. He counts MatchesFashion and Altuzarra among his clients. He now spends much of his time working on influencer campaigns, customer-facing events and brand projects sponsored by companies such as American Express and Air France.

All clients, whether they are global brands or emerging designers, have fundamentally the same goals — get more people to know about your business, think positively about it and buy your products. The newer, smaller players in the PR/communications landscape aren’t changing that. What they are doing is trying to approach problems and execute solutions differently.

Many have dropped the term publicist entirely, billing themselves instead as consultants who are embedded in their clients’ businesses, advising on sales strategies and digital marketing spend, art directing campaigns and managing relationships with influencers and celebrities.

They still seek retainer agreements, but instead of offering a menu of services with different costs, they often determine fees based on time. They can be less expensive overall. Many are dispensing with industry norms like clothing samples and fashion shows. Their clients are often digital-first brands or emerging designers.

With a diversity of approaches to choose from on the market, it is more important than ever before for brands and designers to understand their own priorities.

“We are a more difficult brand to do conventional PR for,” says Jess Christie, chief brand officer at luxury e-commerce retailer MatchesFashion, which generated £293 million ($394 million) in sales in fiscal 2017. The company works with eight agencies in different regions of the world — including DLX Paris in France and Black Frame in the US — and prefers smaller-scale boutique-like operations because they feel more like an extension of its in-house team.

“From a logistical perspective, we need people who are quite agile, risk-takers thinking on their feet,” she says, because the retailer works with hundreds of brands and therefore can’t always plan its communications strategy months in advance. Christie says the company also likes to work with agencies that aren’t separated into different departments because MatchesFashion doesn’t have traditional needs, like runway show production.

From MatchesFashion's Paris In Residence event | Source: Courtesy

Delacroix’s DLX Paris worked on MatchesFashion’s launch in France, organising a three-day conference in Paris where customers could attend panels featuring museum curators, designers and others. The speakers were chosen for their ability to attract shoppers with different interests who may not be familiar with the retailer.

“There is room for a new kind of smaller business, and I don’t think it’s conflicting with the bigger agencies,” says London’s Daisy Hoppen, who went freelance in 2013 after a career at Purple and Karla Otto, and is known for her connections in the art world.

Her agency’s client list is focused on buzzy designer brands such as Molly Goddard and Shrimps, but she also works with Ganni and Aesop. “I just wanted something where I felt like I could spend a whole day with a client and it wouldn’t impact my business,” says Hoppen. “Just like it’s very hard to build a global fashion brand today, I think it’s hard to build to the same scale of a global PR business that you could do 20 years ago.”

The new generation of PR is also more discriminating about their often limited client lists, having experienced the frustration of working with brands that do not see how interconnected communications, marketing and social media have become.

“I think we are at the beginning of that shift,” says Danielle McGrory, formerly the senior digital director at KCD. She and former colleague Hallie Chrisman left the agency this year to start their own business, Communité. “We were told [by brands]: here are the assets and information, get it out… [Communications teams need] to be able to touch more of these points more cohesively.”

For some new agencies, PR and communications have become more focused on driving sales. When Clara Jeon and Kenneth Loo started an agency called Chapter 2 in New York in 2015, they prioritised e-commerce and digital marketing services because their emerging designer clients needed to expand their direct sales channels.

“We time out and plan how those ads are going to hit and how much money you are spending at different times,” said Loo. “Digital marketing is not just an ad, it’s also a caption, it could be slides [in an post], it could be a video.”

When one of Chapter 2’s clients, Cotton Citizen, released a collection of cobalt blue pieces last year, Jeon and Lee prepared for the launch by getting the product to influencers and celebrities ahead of time and followed it with a social media advertising campaign. Once fashion sites started picking up on the colour “trend,” they paid to amplify the reach of those articles on social media through the brand’s channels.

“You see the line really blurring on the media side between ads and editorial,” said Jeon. "You almost have to take that approach with press."

The large-scale agency model is adapting to the needs of smaller and emerging designer brands. Tanya Taylor, who launched her namesake brand in 2012, says she has noticed a “huge change” in the way she works with her PR agency, Karla Otto, over the last year.

“Any good idea we have, we don’t sit on it like we used to in the past; we have to seize it,” says Taylor, she says about the role of her in-house team. “When it comes to meeting with Karla Otto, it’s about industry changes, what their other clients are doing and events that are coming up that they can help produce.”

Karla Otto says her agency identifies how to bring its expertise to brands’ in-house communications teams. “You have to listen to your clients while keeping a discerning ear to what’s relevant and creative,” she said via email. “It’s only then that you can enable yourself to create something impactful.”

Bottom line, brands need to find agencies that share their perspective.

“Often people go out looking to engage agencies for ideas, and that’s absolutely a part of the process, but the agency can never do that if you don’t understand who you are and what you are trying to achieve,” says Christie. “You need to go out there and find somebody who you feel really understands and believes it. That’s more important than scale.”

Related Articles:

The Changing Face of Fashion PR

Fashion PR in the Digital Age

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https://www.businessoffashion.com/articles/professional/a-new-generation-of-fashion-prs-steps-out

Beat it: a moonwalk through Michael Jackson's fashion history

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  1. Beat it: a moonwalk through Michael Jackson's fashion history  The Guardian
  2. Full coverage
https://www.theguardian.com/fashion/gallery/2018/jun/28/beat-it-a-moonwalk-through-michael-jacksons-fashion-history

Wednesday, June 27, 2018

In Paris, New Elegance and the Revolution That Wasn't

PARIS, France — Great expectations loomed large over the men’s fashion week that ended Sunday in Paris. This was the season of LVMH, so to speak, with the debuts of Virgil Abloh at Louis Vuitton and Kim Jones at Dior (formerly Dior Homme, rest in peace skinny tailoring and teenage angst) resulting in just the kind of hype the French luxury conglomerate was likely aiming for.

Above all, it’s context that matters more than content these days. Clothes are relatively unimportant  if not irrelevant  to the wider brand communications narrative, which is now the essence of the industry. But let's not forget that fashion, despite having become a pillar of popular entertainment, is rooted in garment-making. And if we actually examine the clothes and not the Instagram-friendly showmanship, there was little to report and this piece could end here.

But let's not be too radical. In fashion, genuine progress is new shapes defining new attitudes while responding to new needs. Sampling and collaging ideas together to create seemingly new silhouettes that are actually iterations of staid tropes creates stagnation.

So, did the much-anticipated disruption actually materialise? No, it did not. It was much ado about little, with Kim Jones bringing a coating of pop desirability and couture softness (with some devilishly perfect millennial-friendly merchandise along the way) to the house of Dior and Virgil Abloh embracing tailoring of the slouchy variety instead of splattered logos at Louis Vuitton. Indeed, what actually stood out was the sense of continuity.

Louis Vuitton Spring/Summer 2019 | Source: InDigital

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And yet Jones showed guts and knowledge, playing with fit and structure, and offering a glimpse of what the future could hold at Dior. Abloh, on the contrary, has work to do. It's not a matter of having design training or not — Giorgio Armani never went to design school. There was, of course, the new era of inclusivity that was apparent in the phenomenal casting and staging of the show. But unless Vuitton lowers its prices, it will ultimately still exclude most of the kids out there.

Much more challenging and interesting is what Glenn Martens is doing at Y/Project, mixing design experimentation with the coarse grittiness of the street. By pushing the limits of taste to the extreme in order to play with the downright ugly, Martens keeps inhabiting a strange niche at the crossroads of different genres. You either love it or hate it. Yet, he undoubtedly has the will to test new forms and propose new species of clothing. There are very few young designers working like this today. Matthew Williams of Alyx is a deft experimenter, yet he needs to build a look as forward as his designs.

Among the established names, a few lonesome titans keep marching to the beat of their own drum regardless of the passing fads and other shared preoccupations. Rick Owens is one of them: a creator who invariably delivers punchy shows filled with punchy fashions. The coloured smoke filling the plein air setting this season was particularly noteworthy, as were the reconfigured tool belts and the wearable tents. Dresses are habitats, that's for sure, but Owens brought them to the level of self-sufficient units, calling out the Tower of Babel and Tatlin's Tower along the way. If you want to isolate yourself from the horrors of the present world, look no further. Rei Kawakubo, au contraire, was in feisty mode and her playful suits went accordingly bonkers and delightfully so.

But as in Milan, the biggest battleground in Paris was youth. On one side, there are those who keep identifying a youthful spirit with streetwear; while on the other, there are those who are pushing youth to new sartorial grounds, creating a debate that's finally pushing fashion away from the streetwear craze that has produced a lot of lazy design lately.

Valentino Spring/Summer 2019 | Source: InDigital

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Pierpaolo Piccioli of Valentino deserves kudos for constantly trying to expand the Valentino codes by looking at what's happening in the world. He has been interested in the street — or a fantasy of it — for quite some time now. This season the movement reached a peak, bringing him right on the sidewalks of the metropolitan ghettos where trappers live in their tracksuits and bucket hats, quite a stretch from the Roman grandeur of Piazza Mignanelli, the home of Valentino.

Did the clash of couture and street music, of extravagance and suburban flash, of feathers and logo work? It did: Piccioli knows how to master chaos and keep his expression elegant even when delivering a suit printed with the loudest of Valentino logos. Yet, it all seemed like too much of a concession to the taste du moment and one that deeply questioned the identity of the Valentino man in the whole Valentino system. The Valentino trapper, in fact, hardly speaks to the Valentino woman, not to mention Valentino’s couture heritage. Piccioli's aim seems to turn Valentino into a kaleidoscope, exploring his own many creative personalities with the different voices of the brand. One way or another, he identified youth and street, which is starting to look like the past.

Raf Simons, now into his 50s but still enamoured with long lost youth, is of a different inclination, leading the bunch of creators who are trying to give formality a second chance. Although missing the edge of past efforts and actually fairly repetitive in terms of shapes, Simons’ latest collection for his namesake label proved that a suit or a faultless coat, even one worn on reverse with torn-apart lining, can stand for youth just as much as a sweatshirt. OAMC, the brainchild of Luke Meier, was a perfect marriage of precision and pragmatism: urban-wear raised to sartorial grounds.

Dior Homme Spring/Summer 2019 | Courtesy: InDigital

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In a stellar collection for Alexander McQueen, Sarah Burton did away with trainers and other obvious signifiers of youth to focus on the twisted precision of tailoring, which she filled with the freewheeling sense of elegance of artists like Francis Bacon and John Deakin. It was a lot, with a sense of masculine restraint and abandon that felt invigorating, not least because it had glamour.

Glamour, what an old school word. And what a progressive concept. Leave it to the master John Galliano at Maison Maegiela to wrap up the season with a feat of technical prowess that was as sartorially challenging as it was progressive in terms of its representation of masculinity. In his first Artisanal collection for men — and having recently observed how freely the new generations approach black tie dressing — Galliano transported his own signature bias cut to menswear, concocting new visions of sensuality and fluid sexuality. The mix of vinyl and couture finesse, corsets and bikers, was smashing. But what really stood out were the bias pieces such as the capes capturing the hastened gesture of throwing a coat over one’s shoulders.

Here you are then: a new need for elegance translated into a garment that creates a new gesture. This is the kind of fashion worth writing about. The rest is just noise.

Related Articles:

At Paris Menswear, a Prayer for Proper Clothes

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https://www.businessoffashion.com/articles/fashion-show-review/mens-paris-fashion-week-louis-vuitton-dior-ss19