Monday, 14 March 2011

Emma Watson's Post-Potter Plans: Fashion Designer!

Alberta Ferretti, Emma Watson 

Watch out, Ashley and Mary-Kate Olsen: Emma Watson's moving in on your territory.
Just after wrapping up her last collection for mass-market brand People Tree, the Harry Potter star and Brown undergrad is busting into the high-fashion world...
Emma's teamed up with Alberta Ferretti to create Pure Threads by  Emma Watson, an eco-friendly capsule collection inspired by '70s icon  Jane Birkin.
The British babe tells Women's Wear Daily, "I'm pleased that a luxury brand such  as Alberta Ferretti has decided to create ecological clothes. I believe  this is a big step forward for all of the international fashion  industry, but also an important step for an increased sensitivity to the  problem of ecology."
Her environmentally friendly line, which consists of just five pieces—two dresses, a shirt, a pair of denim shorts and a long skirt—will be available online March 21.

Blake Lively: Face of Chanel, Envy of Millions

Blake Lively, Chanel Ad

 

Blair Waldorf would be fuming! Apparently, no one can say enough good things about Gossip Girl star turned Chanel muse Blake Lively these days.
Take your pick: this weekend the New York Times called her, "a healthy, perky, all-American surfer girl." Michael Kors gushed, "Blake's the triple S: sporty, sexy, sophisticated." While a WWD profile out today lauded her as, "Bubbly, articulate and self-assured beyond her 23 years."
And that's all before she's sold a single Chanel Mademoiselle bag.
But the designer darling did have a head start...
Lively's made a stellar style impression since the introduction of her couture-clad CW character Serena van der Woodsen. Then there are her three Vogue magazine covers, among others, and parties on both sides of the Atlantic this past week to kick off her collaboration with Chanel designer Karl Lagerfeld. (Her first ad debuts today!) She even got a guided tour of Christian Louboutin's boutique Sunday from the shoe guru himself!
So what's the secret to all this success? We'll let Blake explain that: "I've just always believed you should put a lot of positive out there,"  she tells WWD. "When I have bad days, I just eat lots of chocolate ice cream  and dance to The Lion King soundtrack. It's really odd, but it's  true."
So there you have it folks, she's young, rich, beautiful, beloved by the fashion world and doesn't seem to gain a pound despite eating lots of chocolate ice cream. Is anyone else jealous yet?

Emma Watson: Fresh Face of Lancôme

Emma Watson
So that explains the break from Brown.
Following the news that she was taking time off from her studies to focus on work, Emma Watson tweeted her latest professional assignment this weekend: "It starts with an L and ends with an E. I'm sure you have guessed the new face of Lancôme is me! :-)"
Or in corporate speak...
"Thanks to her charm, romanticism and her incredible modernity, Emma  Watson has become the icon of her generation. We are delighted by this  new collaboration with Emma who brings a fresh spirit to Lancôme," said  company president Youcef Nabi in a statement today.
At the tender age of 20, the Harry Potter star is Lancôme's youngest pitch person, joining global beauties such as Julia Roberts, Kate Winslet, Penélope Cruz and Anne Hathaway.
The gig is just the latest in a string of jobs keeping the actress and fashionista very busy. Watson is working on the last Harry Potter movie (hitting movie screens this summer), recently unveiled a collection for ethical clothing chain People Tree and will collaborate with designer Alberta Ferretti to produce an organic clothing line.
If only she could receive school credit for all the extracurricular work she's doing.

Wednesday, 9 March 2011

Chanel Fall 2011: A Grunge Moment

        

PARIS–It was not the transformation of the massive grounds of the Grand Palais, with black sand, volcanic rocks and remnants of smoke smoldering underneath the long wooden platform, running nearly the entire length of the exhibition hall built in 1900 for the Universal Exposition. It was not the wall-sized images of burnt trees etched onto ceiling-height Styrofoam boards, which made the rectangular hall feel like the inside of a deep crater.  And surely it was not the amount of looks that came out, nearly 80, with models traversing the length of the wooden platform from both sides of the rooms when the light bridges were lowered. 
Instead, the most impressive and outstanding achievement at this morning’s Chanel show occurred when the models came out for the finale stood together with Mr. Karl Lagerfeld in the middle of the platform as the smoke intensified from underneath.
Why? Because that moment illuminated how relevant he has made Chanel to the lives of women now. This was also the essence of the couture show in January, where the classic Chanel skirt suits, cleansed of surface decorations, were paired with stretch jeans, thus breaking the formality of a couture look. In this ready-to-wear show, the designer went further to propose easy and elegant clothes without the fussiness of looking like you were wearing, well, Chanel.
The first outfit on Freja Erichsen said it all: A black wool single-breasted jacket with a familiar signature mixture of fabrics amd a little bit loose and cropped to just under the belt loops. It was worn with pleated, slightly loose pants and charcoal shiny leather low boots.  The French have a perfect word to describe this–décontracté–and there isn’t really a translation that can account for its subtlety. But this notion of ease and non-challance permeated the entire show. 
Call these looks grunge if you will. But the flare grey mixed gingham coat on Saskia, the black one-button pantsuit with a black and white checker Chanel cropped jacket on Sasha, and the loose black and white checker wool coat, matching short dress and slim black jeans on Anja–all against a concerto remix of an ‘80s sample of the Cure–certainly demonstrated how Chanel is changing to embrace a new generation of consumers. 
That means younger working women around the world who are less likely to adopt a rigid dress style and much less likely to embrace designer fashion that look and feel overdone.  Front row guests like Joana Priest wearing a knit dress and black leather jacket, Marine Vacth in a gold tweed, black crew neck sweater and black jeans, or Kiko Mizuhara in a shot sleeve checkered tweed pull-over jacket and black jeans attested to Chanel’s commitments.
Even the evening looks–like the beaded strap tank dress with rolled-up loose pants, a lace flare leg jumpsuit over a black tank and shorts, or a grey spotted short dress with black puff sleeves–lacked that sense of formality associated with more heavily beaded gowns of past seasons. 
I am not the biggest fan of jumpsuits, but I must admit I do like the loose jumpsuits in charcoal tweed and a black beaded version with leather pockets. One of my favorite looks was the men’s charcoal tweed jumpsuit worn by a male model, complete with a Chanel purse, of course. Or is that a man purse, otherwise known as a murse?
As the fall fashion shows wind down in Paris tomorrow, it is easy to see how difficult it really is for designers to propose new manners of dressing for women today. Sitting through so many shows, I have a sense that often many designers work independently of women’s lives. Their runways shows, however elaborate, are out of touch.  But Mr. Lagerfeld always has his feet firmly on the ground and this Chanel fall show resonates because the collection speaks volume to a new generation.