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In the retail world, we often throw around the term "disruptor" when we're talking about a promising new brand that breaks through the busy marketplace and challenges the status quo; or even leads the charge in a broader cultural movement. But in some cases, that story isn't about something new at all, but something enduring. Something that's been there all along, waiting for the world to catch up. Birkenstock is one such brand. For the majority of their roughly 250-year lifespan, Birkenstock—one of the oldest footwear brands in the world—has been slowly simmering in the background. They built a modestly successful business around the revolutionary innovation and the thoughtful evolution of their signature contoured footbeds, and over time their undeniable comfort and noticeable orthopedic benefits earned them an incredibly loyal yet hyper-niche following. Then, something remarkable happened. In 2012, at a Celine runway show, designer Phoebe Philo—known really in the fashion world for redefining modern luxury—walked out wearing a pair of fur-lined sandals that looked remarkably like Birkenstocks. It wasn't a marketing campaign. It wasn't a collaboration. It was just one woman, making a choice. And the world noticed. To help us better understand the incredible growth of this brand in the last decade plus, and the very tangible touchstone for its continued success, we're going to hear from David Kahan, President and General Manager of the Americas for Birkenstock. After that we'll take a closer look at Nordstrom's unique partnership with Birkenstock from one of our very own: Women's Footwear Buyer Randa Farran. Thanks for tuning in to episode 86. We hope you enjoy it! Did you know that YOU can be on The Nordy Pod? This show isn't just a one-way conversation. We want to hear about what Nordstrom looks like through your eyes. Share your Nordstrom experience, good or bad, by giving us a call and leaving a voicemail at: 206.594.0526, or send an email to nordypodcast@nordstrom.com to be a part of the conversation! And be sure to follow us on Instagram @thenordypod to stay up to date on new episodes, announcements and more.
Choć pogoda podczas ostatniego tygodnia mody w Paryżu naprawdę rozpieszczała, większość gości ani myślała o tym, by w swoich stylizacjach zrezygnować z modnych skórzanych kurtek. Zainspirowani rozpiętością fasonów zaprezentowanych pół roku wcześniej na wybiegach, a także skuszeni wiralowym statusem skórzanych kurtek z kolekcji Phoebe Philo i Saint Laurent nosili je od rana do wieczora: na pokazy, zakupowe maratony (czym w końcu byłaby wizyta w Paryżu bez małej retail therapy?), a także branżowe imprezy i wydarzenia. Skórzane kurtki bazą modnych looków były już jesienią i zimą, tej wiosny jednak przypieczętują swój gwiazdorski status. Na jakie modne kurtki wiosenne ze skóry warto więc postawić w tym sezonie i, przede wszystkim, jak je stylizować? Oto poręczna ściąga z wybiegów, dzięki której, przynajmniej na chwilę, zrezygnujecie z klasycznego trencza. Autorka: Michalina Murawska Artykuł przeczytasz pod linkiem: https://www.vogue.pl/a/5-najmodniejszych-damskich-kurtek-skorzanych-na-wiosne-2025-jak-wyglada-idealna-skorzana-kurtka-na-wiosne
デザイナーのPHOEBE PHILOがCELINEを去ったのが2017年、そこから数年の沈黙を経て彼女の名前を冠するブランドを立ち上げた事は記憶に新しいと思います。彼女のカムバックを喜ぶ業界内のファンも多かったものの、その内容は固定化されたファンに向けた物になっておりむしろデザイナーとしての自由度を閉ざす物ではなかったのか、そんな視点を出発点にPHOEBEのクリエイションを検証する回です。Chloe時代のコレクションまで遡ることで、今のPHOEBEのイメージが確立する前のデザインの豊かさに触れ、彼女が持っていた可能性をもう一度浮かび上がらせる内容です。また、彼女の弟子筋にあたるDANIEL LEEや、CELINE退任後にその顧客層を獲得していったTHE ROWにも触れ、現代のデザイナーの戦略性やその在り方を考察する所まで話は続きます。
Yep, me and Jai are back before the holidays to talk more rumors in the fashion world. We talk about the new Chanel appointment, Galliano officially out at Margiela, Chloe Sevigny, future collections we're looking forward to, and general fashion chit chat!---Get BONUS episodes on 90s TV and culture (Freaks & Geeks, My So Called Life, Buffy, 90s culture documentaries, and more...) and to support the show join the Patreon! Hosts: Lauren @laurenmelanie & Jai @jai_stylefactoryFollow Fashion Grunge PodcastFind more Fashion Grunge on LinktreeJoin me on Substack: The Lo Down: a Fashion Grunge blog/newsletter☕️ Support Fashion Grunge on Buy Me a Coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/fashiongrunge
Nach einer kurzen Sommerpause sind ist Lost On Planet Fashion - der Mode Podcast wieder zurück. In dieser Episode dreht sich alles um das Thema Megatrends der 2020iger Jahre und das Phänomen Quiet Luxury . Während in den späten 2010er Jahren die Logomania ihren Höhepunkt erreichte und Marken wie Gucci, Off-White, und Balenciaga mit gigantischen Logos dominierend waren, hat sich der Trend mittlerweile gewandelt. Heute suchen modebewusste Kund:innen nach etwas anderem: nach subtiler Eleganz und zeitloser Ästhetik, die sich in hochwertigen Materialien und minimalistischen Designs widerspiegelt. Wir analysieren, warum Quiet Luxury eine so starke Anziehungskraft hat und wie dieser Trend möglicherweise ein Spiegelbild unserer unruhigen Zeiten ist. In einer Welt, die zunehmend von Nachhaltigkeit und Handwerkskunst geprägt ist, rückt der Fokus auf Understatement und Reduktion – Luxus ohne die protzige Zurschaustellung. Wir stellen die Frage: Wird Quiet Luxury auch in fünf Jahren noch relevant sein, und passt dieser Stil überhaupt zu dir? Während der Episode besprechen wir Luxus-Marken wie The Row, Phoebe Philo und Victoria Beckham, die zu den wichtigsten Vertretern von Quiet Luxury zählen. Wir setzen diese Marken in Kontrast zu den auffälligen Designs von Balenciaga, Gucci und Louis Vuitton, die einst den Markt dominierten. Dabei beleuchten wir auch die psychologischen und wirtschaftlichen Faktoren, die das Kaufverhalten beeinflussen, und werfen einen Blick auf prominente Vertreter des Trends, wie Herzogin Kate und Gwyneth Paltrow. Ein weiteres Highlight der Podcastfolge ist der Vergleich von Quiet Luxury mit dem Old Money Style und klassischer Eleganz. Wir erklären, was diese Stile ausmacht, wo ihre Ursprünge liegen und welche Werte sie vermitteln. Dabei zeigen wir auf, wie sich diese Stile in verschiedenen Kontexten manifestieren – ob auf dem Polofeld, im Business-Meeting oder beim gemütlichen Stadtbummel. Wir diskutieren, ob dieser Trend wirklich so nachhaltig ist, wie oft behauptet, und welche Auswirkungen er auf den individuellen Stil und die Modewelt hat. Am Ende der Episode werfen wir einen Blick in die Zukunft und fragen uns: Wird Quiet Luxury das nächste Jahrzehnt überleben? Hört rein und lasst euch inspirieren! Folgt uns auf Instagram und TikTok für noch mehr Fashion-Inhalte und diskutiert mit uns eure Meinungen. Vergesst nicht, uns zu bewerten – wir freuen uns auf euer Feedback!
Zoe Ghertner is a photographer renowned for captivating work blending art, fashion, and documentary storytelling. With a keen eye for detail and an innate sense of composition, Ghertner's imagery transcends conventional boundaries. A New York native based in Los Angeles, her work often reflects the vibrant energy and diverse landscapes of Southern California. Ghertner's portfolio includes collaborations with leading fashion brands, such as Miu Miu, Chloe, Wales Bonner, and Hermès, as well as publications, such as American and British Vogues, i-D, Self Service, and W. Through her lens, she invites viewers into a world where reality and imagination converge. Episode Highlights: Ghertner had a very imaginative childhood, where she learned the importance of positive, clear messaging. Ghertner has partnered with Fee Steinvorth to create neoNutritions, a new vision of wellness rooted in spirituality and connection, with more of an interconnected focus on education compared to other health and beauty regimes. She sees what's contemporary now as a sense of connectedness that resonates despite a modern overabundance of images. Saying that photography and consumerism go hand in hand, Ghertner speaks to the struggle to achieve and sustain commercial success while also holding to the values deeply rooted in her work, such as unwavering attention to her subjects. Despite working with digital imagery and print media across personal projects and commercial collaborations, Ghertner says each effort informs another and that she's a natural multihyphenate creator. Her first shooting of model Małgosia Bela was a breakthrough in “being able to work with someone with skills and ability.” She went through a phase of digging deeply into her subjects before garnering enough experience to represent that research and those conversations in the final imagery. The support of women in the industry—such as Phoebe Philo, Miuccia Prada, Grace Wales Bonner, and Gabriella Hearst—has “allow[ed] me to grow and step into their worlds, which expands what my picture is about as well.” Speaking to how images can traumatize or trigger elements of culture as a whole, Ghertner says her reaction to the male gaze and mental health advocacy are “a big part of the what and the why of how I'm making the pictures I make.” Having moved to warm and sunny California to experience a better quality of life, Ghertner experienced a shift in perspective akin to experiencing motherhood for the first time and creating a new body of work—and a new book. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On a very special second episode, Lauren chats with fashion super-buyer Elizabeth von der Goltz—the hidden hand behind everything you see in stores—to discuss how the pricing business really works: why clothes get marked up, when they get marked down, the rise of “quiet luxury” (ugh) and what makes Loro Piana and Hermès so freaking expensive. For a 20 percent discount on Lauren's fashion business newsletter, "Line Sheet", click here. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
We're back to discuss some truly shocking fashion news: Dries Van Noten's retirement, Pierpaolo Piccioli's departure from Valentino, Alessandro Michele's return, and Phoebe Philo's decision to speak to a journalist! We also discuss some new movies: Love Lies Bleeding, Dune 2, and Problemista. Oh, and Euphoria is probably never coming back, R.I.P. Today's episode is sponsored by Quince! Indulge in affordable luxury! Go to Quince.com/Outfit for free shipping on your order and 365-day returns. Come see us on tour! We'll be in Boston on April 18th, New York on April 20th, Washington D.C. on April 21st, Philly on April 22nd, Pittsburgh on April 23rd, and Chicago on April 25th! And WEST COAST, we're coming to you. We'll be in San Francisco on June 16th, Portland on June 17th, and Seattle on June 18th.
A round-up of the week's most pressing and polarizing fashion news stories: from Valentino's Pierpaolo Piccioli and Dries Van Noten's shocking announcements, to the controversial (and comical) Hermès class action lawsuit, plus analyzing Phoebe Philo's first interview in a decade and enduring enigmatic appeal. And my own hot takes the plight of the female designer in 2024. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mosha-lundstr366m-halbert/support
Go! Go! Go! Go! This week, Jimmy and Larry are assessing the fallout from last week's nuclear pod, how many collars are too many collars, when is your belt dangle too long, hard-wearing Canadian gorp 2.0 and custom jewelry that needs to be on your radar, IG brands (derogatory) vs. IG artisans, getting lectured in your own home, why Kanye continues to surround himself with bozos like NoJulz, Milo Whatshisname and Dov Charney aka Woody Allen, fan accounts for hire, the week in grifting, handling hit pieces 101, Loro Piana are shockingly war profiteers, only Michael Clayton can take down Boeing and quiet luxury, Texas' PornHub ban and its ramifications on real beaters, new evil Abercrombie & Fitch scandal just dropped, Palace x Gap and why we're finally both bullish on a mall brand, Phoebe Philo speaks for the first time in a decade, cost per wear changes everything and much more. For more Throwing Fits, check us out on Patreon: www.patreon.com/throwingfits.
One-on-one pod today, Chris is in New York, and Jason is home in Glendale. We chat about Chris flying Southwest, his SXSW panel discussion, an Austin, TX scene report when the server spends 15 minutes reading their menu, a martini mess-up for TJ, How to win friends and hustle people, a Phoebe Philo piece, Timmy as Dylan, Bruno Mars in the hole for fifty, ableist Madonna trudges on, tweeting about the injustice vs. seeking justice, you used to be able to shame, and Bill Maher is at it again. twitter.com/donetodeath twitter.com/themjeans Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Matthieu Blazy has been a quiet but powerful force in the fashion industry for years, having worked under powerhouse designers like Raf Simons and Phoebe Philo. But in 2021, he earned that status on his own when he was named the creative director of Bottega Veneta. Since then, he's developed a reputation for pushing creative boundaries; BoF editors named his carnivalesque Autumn/Winter 2023 collection, which featured tank tops and jeans made of leather, as their favourite show of the season. “I was very interested in this idea of boring clothes. How can we push it so it really becomes something precious and luxurious?” Blazy says.This week on The BoF Podcast, Blazy sits down with BoF editor-at-large Tim Blanks at BoF VOICES 2023, where he opened up about his creative processes and work at Bottega Veneta. Key insights:For Blazy, collaboration and a close connection with his teams are paramount for creativity. Before taking the creative helm of Bottega Veneta, Blazy spent four years at Maison Martin Margiela. “The way I work with the team is quite emotional. … When I arrived at Margiela I took my office out of the studio and I put it inside the atelier. It was nice because it was not just me thinking on my own. We were actually making it together,” he shares.Whilst Blazy recognises the power of technology in fashion, at Bottega Veneta, he still puts the emphasis on craftsmanship first. “When you make something by hand, it will always have a little mistake, which is not a mistake, which is part of the process. … so when you go to the store, you won't find twice the same product. You have the idea of a theory, of course, but it's never the same. One artisan cannot finish the work of another artisan.”As a global brand, Blazy hopes customers around the world will be able to see themselves in Bottega Veneta under his creative direction. “Fundamentally I want [global customers] to also find something where they also recognize themselves in the story that is not just Italian.” Additional resources: Who Is Matthieu Blazy, Bottega Veneta's New Creative Director?Bottega Veneta: Everything Old Is New AgainBottega Veneta's Everything, Everywhere Essence Strikes Fashion Gold Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Annie and Nick's house swap (almost) ends in tragedy at the Saks parking garage. Plus Nick gives his hot take on Phoebe Philo and Annie shares how her forehead has a six pack.
Dal ritorno di Phoebe Philo al “caso” Farfetch. Riavvolgiamo il nastro del fashion system nel 2023
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Phoebe Philo transformed Chloe and Celine over the better part of a decade, making LVMH close to a billion dollars. then, she took a step back to focus on other things. now she's back with an eponymous label, but is it too little too late? --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thoughtfulthreads/support
On this episode we discuss the work of Phoebe Philo and the role she has played in defining contemporary fashion, the aesthetic direction and the business model of her new eponymous brand as compared to her work at Celine, the reception of the first two drops, and what the future holds.Support the show
On this weeks episode, the muleboyz start off by talking about their Thanksgivings before getting into the week's topics. Andre 3000 is making waves because his first solo album is a flute album! He also did a collection with Cactus Plant Flea Market, who are staying in the headlines because of their other collab with Denim Tears and Levi's. The partnerships keep coming. Next up are two powerhouses, Emporio Armani x Our Legacy. This capsule collection is the favorite drop of the week! Future x Lanvin Lab release are next on the docket. This sparks an intriguing dialogue about how important celebrity affiliations really are. Phoebe Philo has quickly announced her second collection release and the fans are salivating! The hosts then discuss their "mules of the week" before posing a question to the audience: How frequently do you find yourself purchasing new underwear? Butt Watch: Balenciaga x Crocs Men's Faux Fur Mules Dries Van Noten Black Calf-Hair Clogs Kiko X Asics Mules by PDF Channel MULEBOYZ X LUSSO CLOUD Adidas Puffylette
In this episode, fashion-insider, host Kristen Cole catches up with In-Seam founder Ann Wehren on building the private marketplace platform and the future of luxury shopping. They touch on: Ann's fashion background in NY, why the wholesale-retail model is broken and how In-Seam is addressing it, the connectors (stylists, personal shoppers) powering behind-the-scenes luxury retail sales, new brands she's excited about, what's hot/ what's selling, why next-gen social commerce just may be the future, holiday shopping, differentiating core luxury customers vs. aspirational, and her venture capital fundraising. Kristen also shares what she's reading (Zadie Smith) and eating now in SoHo (bon jour, Revelie Luncheonette), the docs everyone's talking about, fashion news (Phoebe Philo's drop and NYC store openings), luxury campaigns she's loving (Bottega... ) and the feature editorial she's... not-so-much loving (yes, that one).
On this week's episode, the muleboyz kick things off by talking about their successful collaboration with Lusso Cloud and their event at Cueva. After reminiscing about their week, they get into the wildly anticipated return of Phoebe Philo and the reception of her first drop back in action. They stay on a fashion high discussing some CFDA Awards highlights and most notably, Willy Chavarria winning Menswear Designer of the Year! Ye's legendary but never-released brand, Pastelle, makes its second return since its creation in 2008, but are the people still hyped? Pharrell's auction house Joopiter is selling some of Nigo's classic memorabilia and kept his name in the headlines because his viral Louis Vuitton millionaire bag is “finally available ” with a literal million dollar price tag! They speak on their favorite mules of the week (aka Butt Watch), highlight Nicole McLaughlin's Hoka collab, Amine's New Balance collab, and the new Wales Bonner Samba Adidas. This week, they mule over: How often do your main pieces get washed? Butt Watch: Nike Clogposite LV Shark Clog McDonald's x Crocs Embossed Corduroy Boston Dr Martens Cow Print Isham
Emilia betygsätter Phoebe Philo! Plagget som är FÖR dyrt? Och DET får oss att köa utanför butiken, för första gången på många år… Säker stil-podden med Emilia de Poret & Ebba Kleberg von Sydow Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Today we attempt to process the never-ending onslaught of celebrity Halloween costumes, Matthew Perry's death, Vanity Fair's Real Housewives expose, and other utterly tragic celebrity news. Oh! And we talk about some non-tragic things as well, like the hard launch of Phoebe Philo's namesake brand and the fascinating new Mr. Chow documentary, now streaming on our beloved Max.Today's episode is brought to you by Blueland. Right now, you can get 15% off your order when you go to Blueland.com/Outfit!Want to hear our thoughts about Gen-X classic Reality Bites? Or Sofia Coppola's new book? Become a Patron! Patreon.com/EveryOutfitWant your call to be featured on a future hotline episode? Call 323-486-6773
This week on the pod, Chloe and Chioma chat about all things Phoebe [Philo!]. Then Vogue's Nicole Phelps, Laia Garcia-Furtado, and Mark Holgate interview two iconic designers: Maria Cornejo and Vera Wang. Both women are being honored at next week's CFDA awards. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
G turns 30, Phoebe Philo returns, we review celebrity Halloween costumes, and discuss Matthew Perry's death and Kim Kardashian's nipple bra. Get bonus content on Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This episode, recorded on Halloween, we chat about playing basketball in costume, Nick's Radiohead kick spurred on by the new season of Dissect, the new fashion reference heavy single by Pusha T and CyHi (the Prynce), the new Phoebe Philo and whether or not she's indeed racist, the Drake v Pusha T beef/disstracks, Kanye's trouble at Adidas, who we're gonna write in for president in 2024, the effectiveness of mass protests, the radicalizing effects of the pandemic and the internet, the continuing Gaza War specials from American Prestige, the UAW wins in Detroit, Ron DeSantis's heels, the return of the NBA, the menswear chat of A Continuous Lean, listening to Matthew Perry's memoir on audible (RIPYDB), True Detective, and more. Editor's note: CyHi did indeed have a verse on So Appalled.
One-on-one pod recorded live and uncut from Sydney. We chat about Australian guys, airports be like, stinky guys, getting a shed, Star Wars tattoo, baked bean rankings, hotel buffet politics, We do twenty minutes on a single plate of food, a full recap of our live show in Melbourne, the afterparty, new Phoebe Philo dropped, and our good friends at MECCA. twitter.com/donetodeath twitter.com/themjeans Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Stoppa mode-pressarna - hon är tillbaka! I måndags gjorde mode-ikonen Phoebe Philo comeback med sitt nya varumärke, i eget namn och dess första kollektion. Vi pratar om varför Phoebe är en big deal, varför kvinnor älskar hennes stil och om den nya kollektionen. Avslutningsvis blir det snack om Tiffany Kronlöfs Gustav Vasa teater som Anna varit på och om en viss lansering av en bröstvårts-bh... Lyssna! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
We are merely players. This week, Jimmy and Larry are going in on their favorite ugly sneakers of the moment, Japanese construction worker pants, your parents' cultural illiteracy, who is the funniest rapper, rocking with Michael Jackson in spite of the worst BAPE collaboration since the last worst BAPE collaboration, James gets his meat tenderized in the middle of the park, Kylie Jenner's new clothing line vs. the return of the queen Phoebe Philo, is fake leather actually fire, objectifying the faces of Skims Mens and the boys being bullish on the bulge, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander's must follow IG, the is NBA back aka tunnel fits season is here and why it represents everything wrong with our world, breaking down this week's guest's return to menswear prediction, Kanye is exposed once again but do we still smell a comeback in the air, Taylor Swift stays disrupting everything even one of our photoshoots, contrary to popular belief the Bravo Boyz are back in the building plus some bonus hot gossip straight from the sandwich shop, Lawrence ends his night by getting drive-by hazed, god bless the kids menu for adults and much more. For more Throwing Fits, check us out on Patreon: www.patreon.com/throwingfits.
This week on THAT'S ALL, Cosi and Em discuss Matthew Perry's sudden passing, their thoughts on 1989 (Taylor's Version) and several bonus Taylor theories, plus we reflect on Hailey Bieber's latest interview, Kylie Jenner's new business venture and the return of Phoebe Philo, plus some great recs - that's all! Don't forget to rate, review, download and subscribe!What Happens When Taylor Swift Visits Your NYC Restaurant?Our Film Critic on Why He's Done With the MoviesThe Odyssey of Hailey BieberThe Swiftgron Rabbit Hole – Beyond the BlindsKylie Jenner Built a Beauty Empire. Now She's Coming for Fashion.Demna's Right, Fashion Entertainment Is A ProblemPhoebe Philo's Return Is a Wake-Up Call – The CutPhoebe Philo's collection makes aging aspirational – The Washington PostFollow/talk to us/share the love: @thatsallpodcastNew eps every Wednesday xx Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
En el episodio de hoy nos centramos en Phoebe Philo, su historia (brevemente) y algunas de sus creaciones mas icónicas durante su trayecto como directora creativa en Chloè y Celine. Y por supuesto hablamos sobre su recién estrenada marca y todos sus detalles. Espero que os haya entretenido y que disfrutéis del episodio. See you soon :) INSTAGRAM : https://www.instagram.com/nuggetshion TIKTOK : https://www.tiktok.com/@nuggetshion INSTAGRAM DE NADIA : https://www.instagram.com/myilitri CANAL DE YOUTUBE DE NADIA : https://www.youtube.com/@myilitri LINKS : PHOEBE PHILO (THE BRAND) : https://www.phoebephilo.com/en_gb/ GENERAL INFO ABOUT HER : https://www.businessoffashion.com/community/people/phoebe-philo https://www.vogue.es/moda/modapedia/disenadores/phoebe-philo/52 INFO ABOUT HER BRAND : https://www.harpersbazaar.com/uk/fashion/fashion-news/a30888624/phoebe-philo-fashion-brand/ 10 PIEZAS ICÓNICAS : https://www.nssmag.com/en/fashion/32220/design-phoebe-philo
Vore hon artist skulle hon sälja slut arenor. Hon är en designer vars fans Philophiles är hängivna, trogna och övertygade om sin idols genialitet. Och snart, efter ett långt uppehåll, kommer en ny kollektion. Under tio år var Phoebe Philo chefsdesigner på det franska modehuset Céline. Där blev hon känd som någon som verkligen visste vad kvinnor ville ha. Och det var inte den look med tajta och trånga toppar med djupa urringningar, leggings och lågt skurna byxor som var överallt förekommande under det tidiga 2000-talet. Phoebe Philo lyfte i stället fram vida byxor med hög midja, rymliga tröjor med långa ärmar, generöst tilltagna kappor och platta skor och boots,som det gick att snabbt forsa fram i, som något attraktivt.Det tidigare dammiga modehuset Céline förnyades och femdubblade sin försäljning under hennes ledning. 2018 lämnade Phoebe Philo Céline för att tillbringa tid med familjen och efter fem års uppehåll är hon nu i höst tillbaka med en ny kollektion under eget namn. Förväntningarna är skyhöga.I veckans program berättar modeskaparna Pär Engsheden och Ellen Hodakova Larsson om sina första symaskiner. Vi tar reda på vad som egentligen menas med uttrycket minimalism tillsammans med designern och arkitekten Eero Koivisto. Och så pratar vi med Phoebe Philo-fanet Gabrielle Boucinhbo, som står bakom Instagramkontot Old Céline. Dessutom ringer vi upp Phoebe Philos mamma, den grafiska formgivaren Celia Philo, som hade ett finger med i spelet när omslaget till David Bowies klassiska skiva Aladdin Sane skapade.Gäst i studion är Jonna Bergh, chefredaktör på Style by och Damernas värld.
Pour rendre TheBoldWay encore plus proche de vos besoins, je viens de créer un sondage simple et facile à remplir. Si vous avez 7mn à me consacrer, j'adorerais connaître vos pensées.
Pour rendre TheBoldWay encore plus proche de vos besoins, je viens de créer un sondage simple et facile à remplir. Si vous avez 7mn à me consacrer, j'adorerais connaître vos pensées.
Brecht van Hulten in gesprek met Madelief Hohé, conservator mode en kostuum bij Kunstmuseum Den Haag. Vivienne Westwood, Alexander McQueen, Stella McCartney, maar ook de maatkleding van Savile Row, Britse kostschooluniformen, de Schotse ruit, sportkleding, kleding van de Britse Royal Family, hoeden voor Ascot van Philip Treacy en Stephen Jones: de Britten hebben hun stempel stevig weten te drukken op de modegeschiedenis. En denk daarbij zeker niet alleen aan keurige, conservatieve maatkleding. In Engeland hadden ook de rebellen van Swinging London, punks en skinheads invloed op het modebeeld. Net als de Britse royals zelf, en dan vooral de zo geliefde Lady Diana. Behalve mode-icoon was zij ook een rebel die mode aangreep om een statement te maken. Kunstmuseum Den Haag duikt met de modetentoonstelling 'Royals & Rebels – British Fashion' in de rijke geschiedenis van de Britse mode en brengt hiermee ook een eerbetoon aan Vivienne Westwood. Er komen naast haar, McQueen en McCartney talloze andere Britse ontwerpers aan bod, onder wie Charles Frederick Worth, Liberty's, Lucile, Edward Molyneux, Mary Quant, Katharine Hamnett, Paul Smith, John Galliano, Phoebe Philo, Richard Quinn, Gareth Pugh, Simone Rocha en jonge talenten zoals Bora Aksu, Robert Wun, Charles Jeffrey Loverboy en Matty Bovan.
Kathryn interviews Anthony Purcell.In the late morning of February 6, 2010, Anthony Purcell dove into the waters of Miami Beach, something he'd done many times before without incident. This time, he misjudged the depth of his landing spot, broke his neck, and bruised the C5 and C6 vertebrae in his spine. He injured his spinal cord. He was paralyzed, unable to resurface from the water on his own.Thanks to the quick rescue efforts of his cousin Bernie who pulled him from the waters and the emergency personnel who quickly arrived at the scene, Anthony's life was saved. But his life would never be the same. Walking With Anthony, a charity founded by Anthony's mother Micki, serves as a movement to bring awareness and funding to the plight of SCI suffered by hundreds of thousands of people in the US alone. Walking With Anthony has been featured in ABC World News Tonight, New York Weekly and more.Kathryn also interviews Author Kara Alloway.What happens when six women join the cast of a reality tv show to try to change their lives? For those behind and in front of the cameras,make-ups, break-ups, and manipulation are all in the name of great entertainment. Real Housewife of Toronto, former Allure Magazine editor and reality TV show producer Kara Alloway is the go-to expert on reality TV, giving viewers an inside look on all things REAL HOUSEWIVES all around the world as she brings readers the inside perspective of someone who has been the reality TV villain and survived. She has hosted a variety of daily fashion and beauty radio shows, with industry icons such as Stella McCartney, Laura Mercier, Phoebe Philo, Zac Posen, Diane Von Furstenberg, Bob Mackie, and Oscar de la Renta. She currently has three reality shows in development as an executive producer.
Kathryn interviews Anthony Purcell.In the late morning of February 6, 2010, Anthony Purcell dove into the waters of Miami Beach, something he'd done many times before without incident. This time, he misjudged the depth of his landing spot, broke his neck, and bruised the C5 and C6 vertebrae in his spine. He injured his spinal cord. He was paralyzed, unable to resurface from the water on his own.Thanks to the quick rescue efforts of his cousin Bernie who pulled him from the waters and the emergency personnel who quickly arrived at the scene, Anthony's life was saved. But his life would never be the same. Walking With Anthony, a charity founded by Anthony's mother Micki, serves as a movement to bring awareness and funding to the plight of SCI suffered by hundreds of thousands of people in the US alone. Walking With Anthony has been featured in ABC World News Tonight, New York Weekly and more.Kathryn also interviews Author Kara Alloway.What happens when six women join the cast of a reality tv show to try to change their lives? For those behind and in front of the cameras,make-ups, break-ups, and manipulation are all in the name of great entertainment. Real Housewife of Toronto, former Allure Magazine editor and reality TV show producer Kara Alloway is the go-to expert on reality TV, giving viewers an inside look on all things REAL HOUSEWIVES all around the world as she brings readers the inside perspective of someone who has been the reality TV villain and survived. She has hosted a variety of daily fashion and beauty radio shows, with industry icons such as Stella McCartney, Laura Mercier, Phoebe Philo, Zac Posen, Diane Von Furstenberg, Bob Mackie, and Oscar de la Renta. She currently has three reality shows in development as an executive producer.
Kathryn interviews Anthony Purcell.In the late morning of February 6, 2010, Anthony Purcell dove into the waters of Miami Beach, something he'd done many times before without incident. This time, he misjudged the depth of his landing spot, broke his neck, and bruised the C5 and C6 vertebrae in his spine. He injured his spinal cord. He was paralyzed, unable to resurface from the water on his own.Thanks to the quick rescue efforts of his cousin Bernie who pulled him from the waters and the emergency personnel who quickly arrived at the scene, Anthony's life was saved. But his life would never be the same. Walking With Anthony, a charity founded by Anthony's mother Micki, serves as a movement to bring awareness and funding to the plight of SCI suffered by hundreds of thousands of people in the US alone. Walking With Anthony has been featured in ABC World News Tonight, New York Weekly and more.Kathryn also interviews Author Kara Alloway.What happens when six women join the cast of a reality tv show to try to change their lives? For those behind and in front of the cameras,make-ups, break-ups, and manipulation are all in the name of great entertainment. Real Housewife of Toronto, former Allure Magazine editor and reality TV show producer Kara Alloway is the go-to expert on reality TV, giving viewers an inside look on all things REAL HOUSEWIVES all around the world as she brings readers the inside perspective of someone who has been the reality TV villain and survived. She has hosted a variety of daily fashion and beauty radio shows, with industry icons such as Stella McCartney, Laura Mercier, Phoebe Philo, Zac Posen, Diane Von Furstenberg, Bob Mackie, and Oscar de la Renta. She currently has three reality shows in development as an executive producer.
Kathryn interviews Anthony Purcell.In the late morning of February 6, 2010, Anthony Purcell dove into the waters of Miami Beach, something he'd done many times before without incident. This time, he misjudged the depth of his landing spot, broke his neck, and bruised the C5 and C6 vertebrae in his spine. He injured his spinal cord. He was paralyzed, unable to resurface from the water on his own.Thanks to the quick rescue efforts of his cousin Bernie who pulled him from the waters and the emergency personnel who quickly arrived at the scene, Anthony's life was saved. But his life would never be the same. Walking With Anthony, a charity founded by Anthony's mother Micki, serves as a movement to bring awareness and funding to the plight of SCI suffered by hundreds of thousands of people in the US alone. Walking With Anthony has been featured in ABC World News Tonight, New York Weekly and more.Kathryn also interviews Author Kara Alloway.What happens when six women join the cast of a reality tv show to try to change their lives? For those behind and in front of the cameras,make-ups, break-ups, and manipulation are all in the name of great entertainment. Real Housewife of Toronto, former Allure Magazine editor and reality TV show producer Kara Alloway is the go-to expert on reality TV, giving viewers an inside look on all things REAL HOUSEWIVES all around the world as she brings readers the inside perspective of someone who has been the reality TV villain and survived. She has hosted a variety of daily fashion and beauty radio shows, with industry icons such as Stella McCartney, Laura Mercier, Phoebe Philo, Zac Posen, Diane Von Furstenberg, Bob Mackie, and Oscar de la Renta. She currently has three reality shows in development as an executive producer.
On the Glossy Week in Review podcast, international reporter Zofia Zwieglinska and editor-in-chief Jill Manoff break down some of the biggest fashion news of the week. On this week's episode, we discuss Birkenstock's road to IPO, Prada's beauty expansion via makeup and skin care, and Phoebe Philo's return to fashion, set to kick off in September.
I don't think I have ever been as nervous about interviewing someone in my entire career as I was when my former boss and colleague Suzy Menkes agreed to speak with me for this podcast. I worked side by side with Suzy for 16 years at the International Herald Tribune, which is now known as the International New York Times. Over that period she mentored me, encouraged me and guided me. Shaping my career as I moved from her assistant to fashion writer and finally the Online Style Editor of the IHT. During our time together we experienced so many amazing fashion moments, from the John Galliano, Alexander McQueen and Marc Jacob eras at Dior, Givenchy and Louis Vuitton, respectively, to watching first-hand the rise of LVMH, Gucci Group, Kering and the whole transformation of the fashion industry from artform to billion-dollar luxury business. Not to mention witnessing the debuts of iconic designers like Nicolas Ghesquière, Alber Elbaz, Phoebe Philo, Tom Ford, Stella McCartney, Alessandro Michele, Riccardo Tisci, Maria Grazia Chiuri, Pierpaolo Piccioli and the list goes on. Suzy's career as a fashion critic spans close to 60 years, starting with her college days at Cambridge where she was the first female editor of the university newspaper. But even before that, as a teenager, she moved to Paris to study at the fashion school that is now known as ESMOD. So her love of fashion as a visual expression of self and society runs very deep indeed. She started her true calling as a fashion journalist at the age of 24. Working under the watchful eye of Charles Wintour, the father of Anna Wintour, who would be an early mentor for Suzy. But Suzy came into full bloom as one of the most respected fashion critics in the world during her 26-year tenure at the International Herald Tribune. Her words were read in the pages of the daily newspaper by hundreds of thousands of readers around the world and eventually by millions once the internet was born. An audience that only expanded with the advent of social media and her turn as Condé Nast's International Vogue Editor, which saw her words being translated into different languages and her reviews posted on all of the international Vogue websites. She also was the mastermind behind the idea of the modern luxury conference, events that are now commonplace but were brought into being at the IHT, and later continued at Vogue, under her guidance. Suzy is renowned for her honest, fair and insightful writing, and her ability to put fashion into the context of a wider global narrative. Today she runs her own very successful podcast called Creative Conversations with Suzy Menkes, where she continues to interview the leading movers and shakers within the fashion industry. She is still asking the questions every fashion lover wants to know the answers to, but now I am lucky enough to be able to turn the tables on her a bit and ask her a few questions of my own.
Curator Romy Cockx talks to Danielle Radojcin about Man Ray's journey from growing up as the son of working-class immigrants in Philadelphia to a towering giant of 20th Century image-making.Man Ray was responsible for some of the most eye-catching photos of women in the 20th Century: Lee Miller's floating lips, the glass tears of Kiki de Montparnasse, and portraits of fashion stars Coco Chanel and Elsa Schiaparelli to name but a few.MoMu, the Fashion Museum in Antwerp, is currently running an exhibition showcasing Man Ray's relationship with fashion, from his photo editorials for Harper's Bazaar and Vogue, to the gowns worn by some of the famous women who modelled them. Cockx talks about what influenced Man Ray, from Paul Poiret to Marcel Duchamp and the Marquis de Sade, and the designers he in turn has influenced, including Phoebe Philo and Martin Margiela.Recommended links from Romy Cockx:https://www.stockmansartbooks.be/nl/man-ray-and-fashion.htmlhttps://www.momu.be/en/exhibitions/man-ray
It is a privilege to welcome TV personality, writer, and producer Kara Alloway to Jake's Take with Jacob Elyachar Podcast! After graduating from Canada's McGill University, Kara was hired by Conde Nast's ALLURE Magazine in Los Angeles. Under the tutelage of ALLURE founder Linda Wells, she worked as an assistant West Coast Editor. Kara quickly became known for her writing contributions, sharing her perspective on the fashion and beauty worlds with a journalistic approach and investigating the topics honestly and objectively. Kara was recruited back to Canada and became editor-in-chief of INGEUNE Magazine, which under her direction, had the fastest growth in circulation in Canadian publication history for the teen target demographic. In addition, she also hosted a daily fashion and beauty radio show, wherein content included interviews with such icons as Stella McCartney, Laura Mercier, Phoebe Philo, Zac Posen, Diane Von Furstenberg, Bob Mackie, and Oscar de La Renta. In 2017, Kara Alloway appeared on the Real Housewives of Toronto. She innately understood the workings of reality television content and carried the show, prompting several journalists reviewing the franchise to ask, “Without Kara, would there even be a show?” Upon completing work in front of the camera, she signed with Electus in Los Angeles to produce unscripted content. In 2019, Kara joined Hanger 56 Media in Los Angeles to continue her role as an executive producer. On May 30, Kara Alloway will release her new book: Most Hated. The book follows three women who try to change their lives in the ruthless world of Reality TV through the hot docu-soap Talk of the Town. Most Hated received high praise from Real Housewives icons, including Jill Zarin, Kathy Hilton, and Vicki Gunvalson. In this edition of The Jake's Take with Jacob Elyachar Podcast, Kara Alloway spoke about the lessons she learned from talking to fashion icons such as Bob Mackie, Diane Von Furstenberg, and Oscar de La Renta and previewed Most Hated.
This week, Brian Stelter looks at how Maria Bartiromo, once one of the most respected reporters on TV, became the mouthpiece of Trump's post-election lies, and finds herself at the center of a billion-dollar lawsuit against Fox News. Later, Linda Wells shares everything you need to know about the debut issue of Air Mail Look, our new monthly vertical that covers all things beauty and wellness. And then, Vassi Chamberlain has the story of Phoebe Philo and her much-anticipated return to fashion. Five years ago, she walked away from her job at Celine under mysterious circumstances. Now she's back and Vassi has the details. All this and more make this week's show one you won't want to miss. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
B-day recap, food rambles, and fashion news. Warning: T-Pain vocals continue to haunt our podcast
Former USMNT goalkeeper Tim Howard joins us this week to discuss MSCHF boots, the infamous Tim Howard Jordans, drip competitions between players, dressing for spring/summer, morning routines, Pharrell going to Louis Vuitton, Phoebe Philo and the churn of fashion houses, the #forestcore aesthetic, mewing, wishlist additions, and so much more. This week's listener digest: www.willdefries.substack.com Shop Sunday Scaries Merch: www.sunday-scaries.shop Shop the Sunday Scaries Scented Candles: www.vellabox.com/sundayscaries Watch all Retail Therapy episodes on YouTube: www.youtube.com/sundayscariespodcast Support This Week's Sponsors Shopify: www.shopify.com/scaries ($1/month trial!) ZBiotics: www.zbiotics.com/scaries (15% off) Follow Along Retail Therapy on Instagram: www.instagram.com/retail.pod Will deFries on Twitter: www.twitter.com/willdefries Will deFries on Instagram: www.instagram.com/willdefries Barrett Dudley on Twitter: www.twitter.com/barrettdudley Barrett Dudley on Instagram: www.instagram.com/barrettdudley Credits Podcast artwork by Alfonso Ruiz and Tristan Pigott All music by Kevin MacLeod Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
En este episodio, Paloma y Adriana hablan sobre la esperada vuelta de la diseñadora Phoebe Philo y hacen repaso a la alfombra azul de los Goya. Mahou 0,0 Tostada SERIES/CINE: - You (Netflix). - Tu casa o la mía (Netflix) - Wu Tang: An American saga (Disney +). GOODREADS: - Adriana https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/150328923-adriana-ruz - Paloma https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/146889862-paloma-cardenas-garrido -- LATTE AND CLOSET: https://www.latteandcloset.com -- GRUPO DE TELEGRAM: https://t.me/+Gka25fCEm1W9VJ2Z -- Puedes seguirnos en Instagram: - Latte and Closet https://www.instagram.com/latteandcloset/ - Paloma https://www.instagram.com/indacloset/ - Adriana https://www.instagram.com/adrianaruz/ Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals
This week's show starts with some very exciting breaking news about Phoebe Philo. Then, Gabriella Karefa-Johnson talks to Chloe and Chioma about what goes into styling a Vogue cover shoot and what she took away from the much-publicized Kanye West debacle last fall. Also, Chioma visits Raul Lopez's studio where he designs Luar. Share your thoughts on Vogue's The Run-Through podcast. As a token of our appreciation, you will be eligible to enter a prize drawing up to $1,000 after you complete the survey. [LINK] For a transcript of this episode, please follow this link. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Dry Clean Only: Conversations on Fashion + Style In this episode, fashion-insider, host Kristen Cole sits MADE FOR ALL founders, Danny Burke and Brandon Winslow, on their just launched luxury leisurewear brand. They discuss the founders' sharp focus on quality, equity, style and customer experience, their commitment as a Black-owned brand to equity across their supply chain, the streetwear, loungewear, leisurewear classifications, other brands in the luxury leisurewear space like Fear of God's Essentials, and how men are dressing now. We discuss Danny and Brandon's backgrounds, what they are doing different, and the intersection of sports, fashion and travel. Kristen also touches recent fashion news; Copenhagen F23 standout collections like Ganni, Paris Haute Couture, Paris F23 Mens, Bode and Aime Leon Dore, Climate-Impact labels, new decree in France, Recycled Cashmere for Ralph Lauren, Ryan Roche, Another Tomorrow and Patagonia, Marc Jacob's S23 show in NY in homage to Vivienne Westwood, happy NYFW F23, Gucci's new creative director, Burberry's new campaign under Daniel Lee, Phoebe Philo returns (!), and more....
Riccardo Tisci chez Givenchy, Phoebe Philo chez Céline, Jonathan Anderson chez Loewe : derrière ces stratégies de recrutement de talents créatifs au succès incontestable se trouve Pierre-Yves Roussel. À la tête du LVMH Fashion Group et du comité exécutif pendant plusieurs années, Pierre-Yves a supervisé le développement des marques du groupe leader du luxe en définissant le positionnement de chacune, mais surtout en constituant les équipes créatives et business. C'est en s'intéressant au processus du travail créatif qu'il a brillamment projeté sa vision où le dialogue entre chaque partie est primordial. La connaissance 360 du secteur a permis à l'ex-conseiller financier de chez McKinsey de résoudre des problèmes avec agilité. Aujourd'hui, c'est aux côtés de Tory Burch qu'il continue d'écrire l'histoire d'une aventure humaine, créative et entrepreneuriale. Dans cet épisode, Pierre-Yves nous livre ses clés pour coordonner des métiers de passion et de raison, écrire l'histoire d'une marque pérenne et comprendre les objectifs d'un bon management d'entreprise. « À chaque fois qu'il y a une crise, il y a des opportunités.» Ce que vous allez apprendre dans cet épisode : Pierre-Yves se présente Ce qu'il a gardé de sa carrière dans la finance Comprendre les problématiques d'une entreprise d'un point de vue extérieur Ses débuts chez LVMH Son rôle et l'évolution de ses missions Ses apprentissages auprès de Bernard Arnault La vision qui l'a menée au succès Le recrutement dans la direction artistique Mesurer le succès d'un recrutement artistique Comment recruter un bon CEO compatible avec le DA ? Ses débuts chez Tory Burch Son recrutement chez Condé Nast L'ambition de la marque Comment se renouveler ? Préserver son business et son couple Comment rester passionné par son business ? Sa vision sur la réussite d'une entreprise Comment faire durer une marque ? Ses conseils pour Réuni « Je crois qu'on apprend toute sa vie. Le jour où on n'apprend plus, ça veut dire qu'il faut changer d'activité.» « Une marque, c'est comme un livre : vous écrivez différents chapitres et il faut que l'histoire soit raccord. Si vous répétez la même chose, on s'embête.» « Je regarde toujours le succès des entreprises à travers le succès des individus. » N'oubliez pas de vous inscrire à la newsletter de Entreprendre Dans La Mode, les industries créatives et l'art de vivre sur www.entreprendredanslamode.com Aussi, si vous souhaitez me contacter ou me suggérer de nouveaux invités, vous pouvez le faire sur Instagram sous le pseudonyme @entreprendredanslamode Enfin, le plus important : laissez-moi un avis sur Apple Podcast ou iTunes, 5 étoiles de préférence ; cela m'aide à faire connaître le podcast à plus de monde et me motive à faire de meilleures interviews ! Merci de soutenir ce podcast et à bientôt pour un nouvel épisode ! Références: Wharton : https://www.wharton.upenn.edu HSBC : https://www.hsbc.fr McKinsey : https://www.mckinsey.com LVMH : https://www.lvmh.com Andam : https://andam.fr CFDA : https://cfda.com Tory Burch Foundation : https://www.toryburchfoundation.org Tory Burch : https://www.toryburch.com
Dans ce nouvel épisode nous allons à la rencontre de Regis Pennel, il le président fondateur de l'Exception un concept store créé il y a 6 ans de créateur français et internationaux. Dans cet épisode on revient sur son parcours de polytechnicien passé par la case ministère du budget, on parle de son switch vers le luxe via LVMH, de son blog et de comment Pierre Yves Roussel (Président-directeur général de LVMH Fashion Group) lui a donné l'opportunitée de monter L'Exception alors qu'il était encore en poste chez CELINE, bien sur on parle de ses six années au manette de L'Exception et de beaucoup d'autres sujets. J'ai adoré interviewer Régis, j'espère que vous prendrez autant de plaisir à l'écouter. Pour suivre Régis sur Instagram et sur Linkedin SE RETROUVER DANS L'EPISODE 01:20 Régis se présente et reprend son parcours depuis Polytechnique jusqu'à CELINE 05:30 Son entrée chez CELINE, comment il s'est formé à la mode, on parle de Phoebe Philo et Johnny Coca 12:30 Il nous parle de son blog qu‘il a lancé en parallèle de CELINE pour comprendre le milieu 16:00 L'émergence de l'idée de créer L'Exception 17:35 Comment LVMH a déclenché son envie d'entreprendre et comment ils l'ont accompagné 22:30 La POC (Prove Of Concept) de L'Exception, le départ de LVMH, la première levée de fonds Friends & Familly, passer de 40 marques à 100 marques sur le site 25:00 Le "business model" d'origine , son quotidien à l'époque, les différents "milestones", les premières levées de fond, pivotage du modèle économique32:00 Sa relation avec ses investisseurs, la vision qu il vend sur ses roads show 36:30 Qu'est ce qui a changé dans l'écosystème depuis qu'ils ont démarré 40:00 Pourquoi ils sont leaders sur l'homme aujourd'hui en France, qui est le client L'Exception 42:00 L'acquisition de ses clients, la communauté L'Exception, le bouche à oreille, le lancement de la marque en propre 47:30 Les erreurs de L'Exception 48:40 les différences entre le e-commerce et le retail, ce qu'il a appris en ouvrant sa première boutique, qui il a regardé pour se nourrir, s'inspirer 52:00 L'accompagnement de la jeune création55:30 Comment il s'y prendrait aujourd'hui pour lancer une marque 59:00 Les créateurs qu'il rêverait d'avoir, les pré-requis pour rentrer chez L'Exception, comment il découvre de nouvelles marques01:03:00 Ca ressemble à quoi ses journées, comment il fait pour couper, son moteur, ses outils de productivité KEY LEARNINGS Le POC de l'exception c'était entrer 40 marques et faire 100K€ en 4 mois et en combien de temps nous ferions le premier million. Se fixer des objectif chiffré et à court terme. D'après Régis, le bon ratios de lever de fond c'est une fois le CA. On a des investisseurs extrêmement bien veillants, qui sont là sur le long terme et qui ne sont pas uniquement là avec des ratios en tête et une sortie a 3 ans et ça ça change tout.Le truc qui est terrible dans l'e-commerce de mode c'est que tu es en road show perpétuel. Le jour où tu as finis ta levée tu est quasiment en train de préparer ton road show suivant.Ça nous met un an à lever des fonds.On est leader sur l'homme car on est quasiment les derniers. On a gagné par abandon. Nous on fait doucement mais surement, on a jamais fait de grosse levée de fonds, on a fait les choses à notre rythme, on a pas fait des croissances à 100% car on avait pas forcement l'argent pour faire ces croissances là. Mais c'est ce qui fait qu aujourd'hui je n'ai pas cramé l'argent que d'autres boîtes ont pu cramer. L'histoire montre que c'est la bonne stratégie.Nous on a pas hacké quoi que ce soit, on a pris les rames et on a ramé à contre courant et on rame tous les jours.On a un service qui est top, on cherche de nouvel marques, on fait de l'acquisition de client, on fidélise et on re-fidélise. On a pas fait de gros coup médiatiques.On est bon en exécutions. On vit pas sur un coup de buzz. Pour l'acquisition on a les piliers, on a la presse pour la notoriété, on a Adwords pour la conversion immédiate, Facebook pour l'acquisition de nouvelle clientèle et le branding, Instragram et le re-targetting, on a le guifting, un peu d'influence, on prends tous ces piliers la et on essaye de les optimiser au maximum,On a un gros projet sur l'hiver qui est de sortir notre marque en propre. On a un vrai effet boule de neige sur l'homme.Il y a eu un virage qu'on a eu du mal a faire qui était le fait qu'on soit uniquement marque française, on s'était mis nous même dans une niche, il fallait absolument en sortir et on a mis beaucoup de temps a en sortir. C'était sur notre signature, sur notre logo « sélecteur de créateur français » , en 2017 on a rentré des marques étrangères car on n'arrivait plus a sourcer sur le marcher français et on arrivait pas à proposer au client ce qu'il avait envie d'acheter.Dans le retail on va dépendre du trafique, de l'offre et surtout on va dépendre du personnel de vente. On est sur un business qui est très difficile, 80% des marques avec qui on avait commencé n'existent plus. Les marques quand elles démarrent, elles sont petites, elle arrivent très rapidement a faire un premier chiffre d'affaire, à rentrer 10, 20 boutiques. Puis elle arrivent a un seuil qu'elles ont du mal à dépasser. Il y a une double problématique: le financement des productions, des collections de plus en plus large , des salons à financer et une problématique simplement humaine, au bout de 2 ou 3 ans d'existence, la personne a besoin de vivre, de se payer, et au bout de 2 ans elles se demande comment elle va arriver a se payer et si ça va être comme ça à vie.Passer des 20 point de vente à 100/ 200 c'est ce qui est le plus difficile. Les clés pour passer de 20 à 100 comme AMI. Il y a 3 choses qui sont déterminante, nous on l'a vu chez AMI c'est le bon produit, au bon prix, qui permet de trouver le bon client. Ensuite savoir se renouveler suffisamment, AMI arrive à introduire de nouvelles choses à chaque collection. Et la troisième chose c'est le financement, AMI a réussi a faire tout de suite une grosse levée de fond et a réussi tout de suite a faire une production très grosse, ouvrir des boutiques.Faire des salons avec ses "samples" c'est un modèle qui ne marche plus. Il faut y retourner à un moment. Il faut démarrer digital car c'est là que il y a les plus grosses croissances.Une marque comme Coralie Marabelle qui est une marque très image, mais qui utilise les technique des marques digital natives pour s'adresser directement au client finale plutôt que de s'adresser à des revendeurs.On y revient au whole sale, car en fait les marques se rendent compte que ouvrir que des boutiques ça suffit pas car il faut aussi être sur des point de vente image et faire du volume pour faire diminuer les coûts de production.L'idéal ça serait un mixte digitale et de wholesale. Hors la valeur ajouter d'une marque digitale c'est qu'elle casse les prix mais la structure de prix ne correspond plus au modèle whole sale. En fait il faudrait l'intégrer dès le début à la réflexion.Je fais tous les salons, je vais de la première allée à la dernière allée. Si il y a une marque que je connais pas je me dis que c'est pas normale. Tous les showrooms, je demande à voir toutes les marques puis beaucoup de veille sur la presse, sur Instagram.Ce qui me drive c'est d'amener L'Exception le plus loin possible, que ce soit le concept store de créateur de reference dans le monde. RÉFÉRENCES DANS L'EPISODE Impala - Jacques Veyrat Le slip Français Coralie Marabelle See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Riccardo Tisci chez Givenchy, Phoebe Philo chez Céline, Jonathan Anderson chez Loewe : derrière ces stratégies de recrutement de talents créatifs au succès incontestable se trouve Pierre-Yves Roussel. À la tête du LVMH Fashion Group et du comité exécutif pendant plusieurs années, Pierre-Yves a supervisé le développement des marques du groupe leader du luxe en définissant le positionnement de chacune, mais surtout en constituant les équipes créatives et business. C'est en s'intéressant au processus du travail créatif qu'il a brillamment projeté sa vision où le dialogue entre chaque partie est primordial. La connaissance 360 du secteur a permis à l'ex-conseiller financier de chez McKinsey de résoudre des problèmes avec agilité. Aujourd'hui, c'est aux côtés de Tory Burch qu'il continue d'écrire l'histoire d'une aventure humaine, créative et entrepreneuriale. Dans cet épisode, Pierre-Yves nous livre ses clés pour coordonner des métiers de passion et de raison, écrire l'histoire d'une marque pérenne et comprendre les objectifs d'un bon management d'entreprise. « À chaque fois qu'il y a une crise, il y a des opportunités.» Ce que vous allez apprendre dans cet épisode : Pierre-Yves se présente Ce qu'il a gardé de sa carrière dans la finance Comprendre les problématiques d'une entreprise d'un point de vue extérieur Ses débuts chez LVMH Son rôle et l'évolution de ses missions Ses apprentissages auprès de Bernard Arnault La vision qui l'a menée au succès Le recrutement dans la direction artistique Mesurer le succès d'un recrutement artistique Comment recruter un bon CEO compatible avec le DA ? Ses débuts chez Tory Burch Son recrutement chez Condé Nast L'ambition de la marque Comment se renouveler ? Préserver son business et son couple Comment rester passionné par son business ? Sa vision sur la réussite d'une entreprise Comment faire durer une marque ? Ses conseils pour Réuni « Je crois qu'on apprend toute sa vie. Le jour où on n'apprend plus, ça veut dire qu'il faut changer d'activité.» « Une marque, c'est comme un livre : vous écrivez différents chapitres et il faut que l'histoire soit raccord. Si vous répétez la même chose, on s'embête.» « Je regarde toujours le succès des entreprises à travers le succès des individus. » N'oubliez pas de vous inscrire à la newsletter de Entreprendre Dans La Mode, les industries créatives et l'art de vivre sur www.entreprendredanslamode.com Aussi, si vous souhaitez me contacter ou me suggérer de nouveaux invités, vous pouvez le faire sur Instagram sous le pseudonyme @entreprendredanslamode Enfin, le plus important : laissez-moi un avis sur Apple Podcast ou iTunes, 5 étoiles de préférence ; cela m'aide à faire connaître le podcast à plus de monde et me motive à faire de meilleures interviews ! Merci de soutenir ce podcast et à bientôt pour un nouvel épisode ! Références: Wharton : https://www.wharton.upenn.edu HSBC : https://www.hsbc.fr McKinsey : https://www.mckinsey.com LVMH : https://www.lvmh.com Andam : https://andam.fr CFDA : https://cfda.com Tory Burch Foundation : https://www.toryburchfoundation.org Tory Burch : https://www.toryburch.com
Tonight's dinner guest is the ever-chic Julie Pelipas. Julie is arguably one of the most elegant stylists in our industry. No-one nails tailoring better than this woman, hence her dominance on the street style feeds every fashion week. Her career path is impressive. She set up Harper's Bazaar in Ukraine then moved on to set up Vogue Ukraine as Fashion Director. Since then, Julie has launched her sustainably focussed brand Bettter.Us with the ambition to set up a new system in fashion using technology, impeccable design and upcycling. Interviewing her is the equally stylish Naomi Smart, British Vogue's Commerce Director and Julie's “Instagram friend from afar”. Julie and Naomi discuss wearing suits as armour, the search for Phoebe Philo's overalls, the perfect rhythm in architecture and surfing as a form of meditation. Lyst is a fashion shopping app. Make great choices with personal recommendations from over 12,000 of the world's best brands. Download here: https://www.lyst.com/app/ You can shop our Julie inspired list in the app with our Minimal Style Icon series here: https://lyst.app.link/julie
Lúc Hedi Slimane mới tại chức nhận nhiệm vụ chèo lái con thuyền Céline của cựu thuyền trường Phoebe Philo có rất nhiều hoài nghi về sự thành công của CELINE tân thời. Nhưng thực tế đã chứng minh rằng Hedi Slimane đang khiến những túi tiền của các ông chủ LVMH rủng rỉnh hơn. Vậy con đường chiến lược ở đây là gì? Mời các bạn nghe podcast.
Lúc Hedi Slimane mới tại chức nhận nhiệm vụ chèo lái con thuyền Céline của cựu thuyền trường Phoebe Philo có rất nhiều hoài nghi về sự thành công của CELINE tân thời. Nhưng thực tế đã chứng minh rằng Hedi Slimane đang khiến những túi tiền của các ông chủ LVMH rủng rỉnh hơn. Vậy con đường chiến lược ở đây là gì? Mời các bạn nghe podcast.
TBC sind zurück aus der Sommerfrische und holen auf, was im Sommerloch verpasst wurde. Besprochen werden die Rückkehr Phoebe Philo's mit eigenem Label, die ersten Fotos und Trailer zum Film “House of Gucci” mit Lady Gaga und Adam Driver, den Launch der Vogue Scandinavia mit Titelstar Greta Thunberg und musikalische Neuheiten: Billie Eilish's Album “Happier Than Ever” und das zweite Video im Solar Power Universum “Mood Ring” von Lorde.
Nordstrom has a new retail partner, Phoebe Philo has surfaced, and New York Fashion Week has a new home this fall. Trying to extort Nike will get you at least 2 years in prison, and there's family drama at Alex Mill. Come hang out!
Join show hosts Oli Stratford and Johanna Agerman Ross as they explore the design elements behind the opening ceremony of the Tokyo 2020 Olympics; Phyllida Barlow's new sculpture for Highgate Cemetery; Samuel Ross's 2021 Black British and POC artist grants; the second edition of the Where Are the Black Designers? annual conference; Virgil Abloh's promotion at LVMH; and the return of Phoebe Philo.The month the show also features a long-form interview with David Rockwell, founder of the new York-based architecture practice Rockwell Group, speaking about his new book Drama and why architecture has much to learn from the impermanence of set design. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The British fashion designer is lauded for her ability to produce garments with the female gaze in mind. With news that Philo will launch an eponymous brand, fashion journalist Dana Thomas tells us what we could expect from the designer's return to the industry.
This week's new music. Is Kim Kardashian's brand suffering without Kanye? Phoebe Philo's return to fashion. All over a glass of chardonnay and game 5 of the NBA Finals. Catch up with Nigel and Miles!
This week we're talking the Venice fashion shows, the return of Phoebe Philo (and why she's misunderstood), the Bottega Venetaissance, Christian Slater, Sob Rock, Gossip Girl, and Adele and Skepta's Prada outlet shopping spree. Buy a Corporate Lunch dad hat here. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
This week we're talking the Venice fashion shows, the return of Phoebe Philo (and why she's misunderstood), the Bottega Venetaissance, Christian Slater, Sob Rock, Gossip Girl, and Adele and Skepta's Prada outlet shopping spree. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Phoebe Philo está de volta à moda, com uma marca própria. Neste episódio, a gente conta um pouco mais da trajetória dessa estilista britânica que coleciona uma legião de fãs, os Philophiles. E ainda: os desfiles de alta-costura da Pyer Moss e Valentino, a compra da My Shoes pela Arezzo, além da nova coleção genderless da Tommy Hilfiger, em parceria com Indya Moore. Montagem e publicação: Compasso Coolab Este episódio usou trechos das apresentacões de alta-costura da Pyer Moss e da Valentino, além das músicas Criminal, de Fiona Apple; Deadly Valentine, de Charlotte Gainsbourg; Glory Box, do Portishead; Lost Cause, de Billie Eilish; I'm coming out, de Diana Ross; Loka, de Simone e Simaria, com Anitta; além de Piruetas, com Chico Buarque e os Trapalhões. Philo? Phoebe Philo está de volta à moda, com uma marca própria. Neste episódio, a gente conta um pouco mais da trajetória dessa estilista britânica que coleciona uma legião de fãs, os Philophiles. E ainda: os desfiles de alta-costura da Pyer Moss e Valentino, a compra da My Shoes pela Arezzo, além da nova coleção genderless da Tommy Hilfiger, em parceria com Indya Moore. Montagem e publicação: Compasso Coolab Este episódio usou trechos das apresentacões de alta-costura da Pyer Moss e da Valentino, além das músicas Criminal, de Fiona Apple; Deadly Valentine, de Charlotte Gainsbourg; Glory Box, do Portishead; Lost Cause, de Billie Eilish; I'm coming out, de Diana Ross; Loka, de Simone e Simaria, com Anitta; além de Piruetas, com Chico Buarque e os Trapalhões. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
On this week's episode, the girls break down the first And Just Like That still, Charlotte's Monica Bellucci makeover, bulldog slander, the return of kooky Carrie ensembles, new cast members, Lauren gives a #FreeBritney update, Emmy nominations, character motivations in the new Gossip Girl, the costume designer's SATC past, Phoebe Philo's eponymous label, her greatest fashion moments, Pyer Moss' couture debut, Kim feeling agoraphobic during Quar, Kravis married (?!?!), and so much more!Visual references for this episode can be found here:https://www.everyoutfitinc.com/episode21
On this week's episode of Wine'd Down, we indulge in a prosecco and fan girl over the red carpet at Cannes. We're discussing the aftermath of the Euros, the Sex and The City reboot and Phoebe Philo's new brand. Of course there will be a book recommendation from Lydia, Scott's free gift of the week and a dose of good news. Enjoy!Get in touch via our email wineddownthepodcast@gmail.com and follow us on Instagram @wineddownthepodcast and Twitter @wineddown_Music provided by: Elizabeth's Groove by Amarià https://soundcloud.com/amariamusiqueCreative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0Free Download / Stream: https://bit.ly/elizabeths-grooveMusic promoted by Audio Library https://youtu.be/-MO-mrBlo5s See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Hello angels, and a happy new year! This week we're talking to actual ray of sunshine Charlee Fraser—one of the most successful models to come out of Australia in the last decade. Charlee was scouted within a year of finishing high school, and quickly became a darling of the world of high fashion, walking for (among others) Chanel, Prada, Versace, Valentino and Dior. Plus, she was something of a muse for Phoebe Philo, wearing era-defining looks in Philo's final collections for Celine, and has appeared on the cover of Harper's BAZAAR and multiple international editions of Vogue. Charlee is also a proud Awabakal woman, and is using her considerable influence to encourage Indigenous representation in all facets of the Australian fashion industry. She has recently become the ambassador for First Nation Fashion + Design, an initiative that offers skill development and access to industry contacts for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander designers, textile artists, jewellery designs, photographers, hair and makeup artists, stylists and models. When we spoke to Charlee, she had just returned from two weeks On Country, an experience she says changed her life.We talk to Charlee about the strange contradiction that so many models suffer from self-esteem (and how to battle your inner saboteur during castings); how the power dynamics have shifted behind the scenes since #MeToo; being a central part of some of the most iconic collections in recent fashion history; and how to achieve real inclusivity in Australian fashion. We hope you loved listening, and if so, please rate, review and subscribe. This episode is bought to you by our friends at Ultra Violette, who has partnered with After Work Drinks for the whole summer. Enter the code AWD10 at the checkout to receive 10% off your next order (excludes limited edition sets, can be used once, and not in conjunction with other offers). Get bonus content on Patreon See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
GOC is back with new designers, new rules and new scoring! We thought it only fitting to continue our Decades theme into this season, so each host will select picks based on the brand’s age. Each city will include a brand under 10, brand under 20 and a brand older than 20 years old. Listen in this week to hear our lineups as well as the results from NYFW. While New York was less than stellar overall, there were some unbelievable moments including Marc Jacobs’ perfectly choreographed dance and Bill Nye’s smooth moves. We’re also seeing major trends evolving as the shows unfold (Victorian Vampire, anyone?). Plus in Style Snacks, Phoebe Philo, the queen herself, is rumored to be making a return. And. We. Can’t. Even. www.runwaywalkscurrenttalks.com https://www.instagram.com/runwaywalkscurrenttalks/ https://twitter.com/RunwayTalks https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCW7W32h_5l7nnlrL1vazjlw/featured
Timeless is a word so overused nowadays that its meaning has almost become redundant, but the Stan Smith is one of the few products that’s design has really stood the test of time, transcending trends, music genres, and subcultural movements. So many other brands have tried to copy its minimal aesthetic and adidas itself has dropped countless versions and collaborations, but almost 50 years since it first hit the court and it hasn’t lost any of its character. In the fickle world of fashion, the Stan Smith opened up the floodgates for a new generation of female sneakerheads. You can pinpoint the moment when the stereotype of the so-called “fashion girl” went from Jimmy Choo heels to comfortable sneakers. It was those ten seconds when Phoebe Philo walked onto the catwalk to take her bow for Celine’s Fall/Winter 2012 runway show wearing an olive green turtleneck, straight cut black pants, and a pair of Stan Smiths. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Timeless is a word so overused nowadays that its meaning has almost become redundant, but the Stan Smith is one of the few products that’s design has really stood the test of time, transcending trends, music genres, and subcultural movements. So many other brands have tried to copy its minimal aesthetic and adidas itself has dropped countless versions and collaborations, but almost 50 years since it first hit the court and it hasn’t lost any of its character. In the fickle world of fashion, the Stan Smith opened up the floodgates for a new generation of female sneakerheads. You can pinpoint the moment when the stereotype of the so-called “fashion girl” went from Jimmy Choo heels to comfortable sneakers. It was those ten seconds when Phoebe Philo walked onto the catwalk to take her bow for Celine’s Fall/Winter 2012 runway show wearing an olive green turtleneck, straight cut black pants, and a pair of Stan Smiths. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Your Favorite Artist's Favorite Artists: Virgil Abloh. Today we dive into the influences of popular designer Virgil Abloh. These influences include architects such as Rem Koolhaas and Ludwig Mies Van Der Rohe, fashion designers like Kanye West and Phoebe Philo, and visual artists such as Jim Joe and Takashi Murakami. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/your-favorite-artists-favorite-artists/support
I sjette afsnit af Poptillæggets serie om 10'erne skal det handle om mode, magt i modebranchen og om modebloggens fødsel, som åbnede døren for en generelt større rummelighed over for alle stemmer, kroppe og nationaliteter i modebranchen. I modens verden blev 10'erne nemlig mangfoldighedens og forandringens årti. Bloggere blev til influencere som blev til modeikoner med andre formål end blot at vise nyt, sponsoreret tøj frem. 10'ernes influencere lærte at skille sig ud, men ikke bare ved at tage flere hatte på. De lærte at have noget på hjerte, at bruge deres stemme og at lege med køn og kropstyper. Lyt med og bliv klogere på hvad der skete med modebranchens outsidere, der pludselig blev modebranchens insidere, på årtiets store trends og få desuden historien om IKEA-posen og Crocs-sandalen, der pludselig dukkede op på catwalken. 10'ernes modetendenser: 1. Flere er kommet til orde i modebranchen 2. Riccardo Tiscis arbejde for Givenchy 3. Rihanna! En stærk modekvinde i 10'erne, som satte dagsordenen for mange ting 4. Det er umuligt at snakke om 10'erne uden at snakke om Phoebe Philo fra Celine, som fokuserede på, at den stærke kvinde skulle føle sig tilpas 5. 10'erne blev årtiet, hvor det kunne rummes at tale om problematikker omkring sort hår. Se eksempler på hair journeys på YouTube Ugens gæster: Sidsel Alling, Kenneth Ruus Blakensteiner Nielsen (Kenneth Cockwhore) og Moussa Mchangama. Vært og tilrettelægger: Lucia Odoom. Producer: Kathrine Eggert Wadsholt. I redaktionen: Sille Westphal og Nina Kragh.
Découvrez RÉUNI, mon nouveau projetSuivez les aventures de RÉUNI sur Instagram I Twitter I Linkedin I Facebook EPISODE Dans ce nouvel épisode, qui a été enregistré en live lors de la première vintage fair de Imparfaite nous allons à la rencontre de Julien Sanders, il est expert en mode vintage pour marque de luxe. Dans cet épisode, il nous parle de son parcours, de la recherche iconographique, et de beaucoup d’autres sujets. J’ai adoré interviewer Julien, j’espère que vous prendrez autant de plaisir à l’écouter.SE RETROUVER DANS L’EPISODE 01:13 Julien se présente, revient sur son parcours, sa formation d’antiquaire et sa première vente.19:42 Sa rencontre et son travail avec Benoit Bethume, la recherche iconographique.29:32 Comment il trouve et chine ses magazines, ses vêtements, comment il s’est fait connaître.37:55 Le prix d’une pièce vintage, la réutilisation des vintages dans les nouvelles collections.44:52 Son travail avec les studios, stylistes et directeurs artistiques, comment il imagine le futur de son entreprise.54:34 Sa pièce préférée, son intérêt pour les marques qui n’existent plus, ce qu’il apprend des DA, ce qu’il dirait à Julien 20 ans.1:01:11 Ce qu’il conseille à une personne qui veut faire le même métier que lui, qui souhaiterait-il entendre dans ce podcast, sa vision du futur de la mode1:05:47 Questions du public.KEY LEARNINGSDès que je vais dans une nouvelle ville, en vacances ou pour un week-end, je vais toujours dans les magasins de livres de seconde main, et je trouve en fouillant, en cherchant et c’est comme ça que j’ai constitué ma collection de magazines.Pour comprendre la mode actuelle, il ne faut pas être monomaniaque et s’intéresser à tout.On a beau avoir peur, cela ne changera rien. Si tu ne le fais pas, tu seras quand même déprimé.Il faut ouvrir des livres, des magazines, parler et surtout aller vers des gens qu’on admire.REFERENCES Julien Sanders https://www.linkedin.com/in/julien-sanders-431811103/?originalSubdomain=frBenoit Bethume https://www.benoitbethume.com/Thanks God I’m a VIP https://www.thanxgod.com/v3/Sylvie Chateigner https://www.thanxgod.com/v3/a-propos/Nanushka https://soundcloud.com/entreprendre-dans-la-mode/75-sandra-sandor-nanushkaCarven https://www.carven.com/Guillaume Henry https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guillaume_Henry_(styliste)Jean Patou https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_PatouCarine Jeyson ? lingerie belgeChristophe Lemaire https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christophe_Lemaire_(styliste)Marine Serre https://marineserre.com/Bibliothèque Forney Paris https://www.paris.fr/equipements/bibliotheque-forney-18Diet Prada https://www.instagram.com/diet_prada/Phoebe Philo https://www.instagram.com/p/BvGsQxZhThg/Nicolas Ghesquière https://www.instagram.com/p/Bwq8wgPAX8z/Guy Bourdin https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guy_BourdinAnne-Marie Beretta https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anne_Marie_BerettaAngelo Tarlazzi https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angelo_TarlazziGuy Laroche https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guy_LarocheClaude Montana https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claude_MontanaGauthier Borsarello https://soundcloud.com/entreprendre-dans-la-mode/54-gauthier-borsarelloJW Anderson https://www.instagram.com/p/Brrv3JQBth2/
The duo behind Stockholm-based tailoring Brand, Atelier Saman Amel, are two of the most down-to-earth individuals in menswear. Dag Granath and Saman Amel met as toddlers, and have been friends (and latterly business partners) ever since.Atelier Saman Amel is now nine-years-old, and during that time the pair have worked tirelessly to create a dynamic menswear brand with clothes that are neither formal, nor casual, but for those ‘in-between’ moments in a man’s life. They create clothes that make flawless use of texture and a tonal colour palette, inspired by art, architecture and interior design. Building a brand has been a real adventure for this pair, and to have the chance to hear their story gave all of us at HandCut Radio real pleasure. We hope that you’ll enjoy this episode too.---HandCut Radio is produced in collaboration with Birch, a London and New York based creative agency. Our theme music is by Joe Boyd.---Show Notes:Atelier Saman Amel — Website | Instagram[02:15] Thomas Sandell[12:55] Interaction of Color by Josef Albers[17:01] Highsnobiety[17:03] Hypebeast[17:10] Highsnobiety‘The New Luxury’ Whitepaper[19:12] Maison Margiela[19:13] Helmut Lang[20:37] Atelier Saman Amel Knitwear[22:14] Saman Amel RTW on Mr Porter[37:15] Ralph Lauren Biography[39:40] Paul Croughton (coming soon to HCR!)[45:48] Phoebe Philo at Céline
In this week’s instalment of Fashion: No filter, your hosts Camille and Monica are still parked stateside for the resort shows and continue their exploration of the NY design scene. Enter Cate Holstein, founder of Khaite, one of the most talked about emerging brands in the industry today, that launched in the Fall of 2016 — and is incidentally up for the 2019 CFDAs fashion awards emerging designer of the year on June 3rd. The girls sit down with Cate to talk to her about what made her want to launch a label of carefully curated basics — or as she likes to call them “cherished pieces” in the era of loud digital statements and an oversaturated market.They cover everything from her first stab at design for her namesake label (that closed shortly after the 2008 recession hit the US), to cutting her teeth as a designer on the high street at GAP and in the luxury market for Vera Wang, to what made her come full circle and back to designing her own thing, only this time focusing her aesthetic on a quiet collection of timeless classics — a spot that has been highly coveted since the departure of Phoebe Philo at @OldCéline.Follow Khaite on instagram: @Khaite_nyEmail fashionnofilter@gmail.com or reach us on Instagram @fashionnofilter. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Suicide, substance abuse, transgressions and mental health issues have disproportionately claimed the bulk of fashion's most celebrated and successful class of fashion designers to exist in the last two decades; era-defining talents including Alexander Mcqueen, John Galliano, Stefano Pilati, Milan Vukmirovic, Christophe Decarnin, Marc Jacobs and now Phoebe Philo. In this age of accountability, who is accountable for the health of the industry's brightest talents?
Bienvenidos a el Editorial con Viviana e Ivana Piña (VIPSisters) en este primer episodio analizamos y debatimos sobre como el cambio de director creativo en la casa de moda Celine puede tener un gran impacto en la industria de la moda. También hablamos de la influencia de las bandas de K-Pop y el futuro de la moda masculina. Síguenos en Instagram y Twitter como: @vipsisters, @ivanapina y @vainannie
Hello, Fellow Fashion Junkies. We have reached the end of the year, and with that, we have brought you the final podcast of the season/year. We can say that these hosts had a blast with each recording. We promise to record more, bring your more content via social media and many more interviews, currently talking about a new guest.This episode we bring you the latest PR stunt from Palessi or Payless. The Hosts talk about the sensitivity of our current times and the Dolce & Gabbana scandal, as well as the Ted Baker one. They chat about the return of Marc Jacobs and the what the heck is Phoebe Philo. Not that she is missing but she's been mentioned in the media. They also have a lengthy discussion of the Ted Talk BOF aired of Cambridge Analytics and the influence brands had for 2016 and possible 2020 presidential election. (Scroll down to see the video we discuss.)Thank you for a marvelous year and we're getting ready for a new one!! Many more to come and hopefully more things as well. Subscribe to iTunes! Who Will Succeed at Chanel?Coco Chanel & Karl LagerfeldBritish Designer Phoebe PhiloD&G VS ChinaSnap from D&G commercial airing in Chinese MarketScreenshots from Gabanna's Instagram DM's. Welcome to Palessi!Payless PR stunt takes you on a ride of what Consumer Behaviorism is all about. inside the fake brandWho really chooses in political elections?!MUST VIEW!! It's that good. Ted Baker's CEO has a hugging policy?Marc Jacobs makes a comeback.
The fashion industry is buzzing about the Spanish designer Johnny Coca. Everyone wants to know how, in just three years, he has turned the Mulberry brand around. A big part of his success comes thanks to his innovative business strategy, his inventive and exuberant collections and some seriously covetable bags and accessories. Mulberry made the right call when they hired Johnny. And I am guessing that decision was pretty much a no brainer for the brand, considering that Johnny spent years working alongside Phoebe Philo at Celine. He was head of the design studio when it came out with the brand’s iconic Trapeze bag. And before that he was coming up with winning accessories for Marc Jacobs at Louis Vuitton. The man just knows how to make great accessories! And now is turning those design skills towards womenswear collections, all of which so far have garnered warm reviews from top fashion critics. It was a real treat getting to know Johnny during our conversation. By the end of this interview I was bowled over both by his warm and open nature and his bold clear vision for the future of the Mulberry brand.
Pour ce nouvel épisode de Chiffon, je vous invite à entrer dans l’univers de Bonton au travers de sa directrice générale, Vanessa Bonnefoux. Cette petite brune dynamique de 47 ans, maman de 2 enfants est une pro de la finance habituée à parler de chiffres, de fusions acquisitions et de fonds d’investissements. Quand je l’ai invitée à venir parler de fringues avec moi, elle m’a répondue « je suis bien trop timide ». Mais en fait, vous verrez qu’elle est intarissable sur le sujet et qu’elle aime manier aussi bien les chiffres que les fringues ! Elle en connaît en rayon de part son expérience professionnelle puisqu’elle a travaillé chez Bonpoint, puis chez Merci, et Officine générale aux côtés de ceux qu’elle considère comme ses « mentors », Bernard et Marie-France Cohen. D’ailleurs, quand je lui demande ce qu’est le mauvais goût, Vanessa nous cite Marie-France : « chacun son mauvais goût ». Mon invitée est loin de la caricature de la financière « type ». Pour moi, elle incarne le chic discret et raffiné. Elle est arrivée à notre rendez-vous en jean et santiags. Le jean est en effet sa seconde peau ! Vous verrez que c’est une tradition familiale chez Vanessa. Elle aime chiner les vêtements des créateurs français des années 70, porter des chemises en « popeline craquante », des santiags, des jeans taille haute, du cachemire, le tout agrémenté de bijoux. Ses créateurs préférés ? Alaïa, Karl largerfeld, Isabel Marant (qui selon elle, « sait humer les silhouettes qui vont avec l’air du temps» ) et Phoebe Philo. Elle admire autant le look classique d’Audrey Hepburn que celui d’Isabelle Adjani dans l’Eté Meurtrier. Je vous l’avais dit que mon invitée en connaît un rayon sur le sujet ! Cet épisode est aussi l’occasion de découvrir l’univers Bonton qui n’est plus seulement destiné aux enfants mais à toute la famille de part sa collection « Maxi Me » et sa nouvelle ligne de senteurs naturelles et cosmétiques Bio (en boutique à partir du 3 décembre). www.bonton.fr/fr/ Valérie Tribes Réalisation Gautier Carbonneaux Cet épisode de Chiffon est réalisé grâce au soutien de la marque Gemmyo. A l'occasion des fêtes, cette marque symbolisée par un petit chat rose s'associe à Chiffon pour vous offrir 10% sur votre commande avec le code CHIFFON10 aussi bien sur l’eshop www.gemmyo.com qu’en boutique. (Offre valable jusqu'au 31 décembre 2018) See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Der er drama i modeverden, efter designeren Hedi Slimane i slutningen af september lancerede sin første kollektion for Celine. Modehuset Céline har længe været synonym med den tidligere chefdesigner Phoebe Philos bløde, feminine og eksklusive design, lavet til en moderne, voksen kvinde med et almindeligt arbejdsliv. Under Slimane er Céline blevet til Celine, og i slutningen af september delte han vandene, da han sendte modellerne ned af catwalken for at præsentere sin første kollektion, der lagde sig bemærkelsesværdigt tæt på det mørke rock-look, han blev kendt for hos bl.a. Saint Laurent.Ugens panel belyser kontrasterne mellem Phoebe Philo og Hedi Slimane og diskuterer, om tiden er løbet fra Slimanes heroin-chikke, tynde, hvide modeller i læderjakker, sølvpailletter og sorte jakkesæt. Og hvad betyder intrigerne og impulserne i modeverden egentlig for dig?Ugens panel:Sidsel Alling, Niels Pedersen og Esben Weile Kjær.Ugens anbefalinger:1. Instagram-profilen oldceline.2. DR3-dokumentarserien 'Høj på strip'.3. Dokumentarfilmen 'McQueen'.4. Hiphop-boybandet Brockhampton og deres nye album 'iridescence'.Redaktion: Lucia Odoom og Christine Runøe.
Chelsea Goldman is the Founder and Creative Director of the emerging designer RTW brand, CF. Goldman, which launched in Spring 2015. She interned at Celine, Narcisco Rodriguez and Proenza Schouler. She went to London College of Fashion and Central St. Martins. Chelsea grew up in NYC. Growing up here causes one to grow up quickly, but you get such great access to multiple cultures and people. It gave her the opportunity to take classes at Parsons and FIT from a young age. She was able to sneak into fashion week and went to her first show, Lela Rose, at 13. Chelsea's mom was a fashion designer and her dad is in the jewelry business, so she comes from a design-oriented family. London is a more creative place in terms of fashion and they are willing to take risks in a different way than New York since NY is very business focused. She wanted to meld the design and spirit of London to NYC. Chelsea emailed people on LinkedIN, especially alumni in order to land her incredible internships. She was there the latest, worked the hardest and she always said yes. This work ethic and mindset allowed her the opportunity to go to Paris and work at Celine. She was Phoebe Philo's second assistant a year in. Because of this, she was able to go into the atelier with Phoebe and watch her work. Celine was her longest internship. She would spend 2 days a week at school and 3 days a week at Celine. A month before fashion week, she would go to Paris and work in the studio. In choosing the name, CF. Goldman, she wanted to make sure it was a unisex name so she could later branch into other categories. The corset is an interesting item for women because it is such a historic item that has been worn as undergarments, although sometimes restrictive. She likes the thought of taking that back and also loves that it is something that is really crafted. You have to really make it well. There are so many layers, there is a stretch to it and it is made in such a beautiful way. The brand is all about craft, you can't cheap out on a corset. She started working on the collection 4 or 5 months before it came out. It was the longest lead time she had and since you don't have production, there is such a luxury of time where you can hone the vision. You don't have to worry about sales or production. When designing a collection, she starts in fabrics and research. She and her team go to libraries, Tumbler, Pinterest, artists she likes, etc. They compile everything they've seen for the last six months that has interested them. They go to different mills in the city to look at fabrics. After, they start sketching as well as look at old shapes they like that they want to re-use and redo. They give the sketches to the factory who makes the first sample, they will have fitti --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/delia-folk8/support
Penny Martin, editor of The Gentlewoman magazine, speaks to broadcaster Danielle Radojcin about scoring Zadie Smith for her latest cover, what it was like interviewing Celine's Phoebe Philo, and her concept of fashion which she calls 'soft glamour'. The regular recording takes place at Violet bakery in East London, in front of an audience of about 20 people.
Marie Schiele (doctorante en philosophie, Paris Sorbonne) parlait de "l'esthétique du drapé" à l'IFM hier matin => exploration esthétique et philosophique d'une approche du vêtement signifiant tour à tour le luxe exubérant, l'éminence, la richesse et l'autorité (souvenir de l'Antiquité via Véronèse), mais aussi l'élan vital et le flux sanguin (Rick Owens) et permettant des variations infinies autour des structures de la matière (chez Phoebe Philo, Céline, par exemple). Plus de conférences : http://podcast.ifm-paris.com/
In this week's podcast, Andre interviews fashion editors Grace Coddington, Phyllis Posnick, Tonne Goodman and Virginia Smith following their return from Fashion Month. Throughout the interview, they candidly discuss common trends, favorite looks, and androgyny and its role in fashion today. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
David Bowie (1947-) är den man som vi ägnar vårsäsongens första program åt. Inte bara för att denne brittiske artist överraskat med att ge ut en nyskriven låt Where are we now? den första på tio år, utan för att han är populärkulturens allra stilsäkraste man, oavsett vilken skepnad han under åren valt. Den 23 mars öppnar även en stor utställning om David Bowie på Victoria & Albert Museum i London. David Bowie is, heter den. Mer om varför han är en sådan stilbildare berättar vi i veckans STIL. David Bowies karriär spänner från sextiotalet ända fram till – ja, än idag. På sin sextiosjätte födelsedag den 8 januari 2013 så överraskade han hela världen med att i all stillsamhet släppa en helt ny låt, och video – balladen Where are we now?. Filmen är gjord av den kände amerikanske multimediekonstnären Tony Oursler, som jobbat mycket med just video. Bland annat hjälpte han David Bowie med hans 50-årsföreställning, 1997, på Madison Square Garden, och turnén som följde hans platta Earthling. Tony Oursler signum är just förvridna ansikten. Klot och bubblor som visar munnar och ögon. Kvinnan, vars hårt beskurna ansikte är bredvid David Bowies i videon, är för övrigt Tony Oursler fru – Jacqueline Humphries – även hon konstnär. I programmet gör vi nedslag i David Bowies karriär under 70-talet och försöker bena ut varför just han gjorde sådant intryck på dåtiden, och samtiden. Än idag refereras det till saker som han gjorde då. Den rödblå blixten från skivan Aladdin Sane (från 1973) dyker än idag upp, inte minst i olika modesammanhang. Vi har ringt upp den grafiska formgivaren till skivan för att höra hur omslaget egentligen kom till. Hennes namn är Celia Philo. Och ja, hon är faktiskt mamma till chefsdesignern på Céline, Phoebe Philo. Vi har även talat med serbiska Elle, som på omslaget har satt den blonda och späda modellen Andrej Pejik, en man som används som man och kvinna av modevärlden. Vi tar också en titt på fenomenet kjol för män. Nej, det är inte bara en artist som Kanye West som försökt sig på att använda kjol (vi tänker på den läderkjol han bar under välgörenhetskonserten för orkanens Sandys offer i Madison Square Garden i New York). Kjolen förekommer även bland grovarbetande män i Sverige. Mer om det i veckans program. Och så får vi höra en svensk skådespelerska som, i likhet med David Bowie, inte varit rädd för att göra tvära kast i karriären – Regina Lund. Veckans gäst är Jan Gradvall, kulturjournalist med inriktning på musik
Det franska märket Chloé firar nu i höst 60-årsjubileum. Men vad står det egentligen för? Vem startade det 1952, och varför? Bakom det välbekanta namnet finns förstås en historia som sträcker sig långt längre tillbaka än till modeskapare som Stella McCartney och Phoebe Philo och produkter som den omtalade Paddingtonväskan. Den som orsakade lätt hysteri 2005. I veckans STIL berättar vi om bakgrunden till märket. Känner man sig osäker på märket Chloés historia är man inte ensam. Det är faktiskt först nu – inför 60-årsjubiléet – som hela dess historia samlats ihop. I Paris kan man från och med den 29 september (fram till den 18 november) se utställningen Chloé. Attitudes på Le Palais de Tokyo i Paris. Där finns ett sjuttiotal plagg från flera av de designer som arbetat för märket under årens lopp – Gerard Pipart, Maxime de La Falaise, Karl Lagerfeld, Martine Sitbon, Stella McCartney, Phoebe Philo, Hannah MacGibbon och Claire Waight Keller, som är dagens chefsdesigner. Men från början var tanken att ingen designer skulle sticka ut. Märkets grundare Gaby Aghion ville erbjuda ett alternativ till dåtidens modehus där starka (manliga) modeskapare satte trenderna. Plaggen var dessutom rätt obekväma, tyckte hon och ville skapa lite lyxigare vardagskläder. ”En kvinna ska kunna glida in i sina kläder”, som hon sade. Hon skulle heller inte behöva tänka på kläderna hon bar – och hon skulle aldrig se ut som om klädde sig för män. Gaby Aghion, som var född i Alexandria i Egypten men sedan 1945 bosatt i Paris, var ingen designer. Hon anlitade därför en hel kader av olika modeskapare som ritade plagg i hennes anda. Det var också själva tanken – plaggen skulle tala, inte designern. Men en av dem blev ändå berömd för sin design för märket Chloé – Karl Lagerfeld. Under 1970-talet var det han som fick märket att bli ett av dåtidens trendigaste. En stor anledning till det var en man vid namn Antonio Lopez. Han var illustratör, influgen från New York till Paris – där han kom att stanna under nästan hela 70-talet. Han fångade inte bara tidsandan med självklara penseldrag, utan hans sinne för stil och glamour kom att prägla en mängd människor inom modevärlden. Antonio Lopez blev offer för den första vågen av AIDS, 1987. Han blev bara 44 år gammal. Men nu i september publiceras – äntligen – en stor bok om hans liv och verk som påverkat så många, och så mycket – Antonio Lopez: Fashion, Art, Sex, and Disco heter den. I programmet har vi träffat en annan illustratör som fångades av hans stil, den like svenske som världsberömde Mats Gustafson. Chloé visade sina kläder för första gången offentligt 1956, under en modevisning på Café de Flore i Paris. Detta berömda café har inte bara varit tillhåll för existentialister, författare och konstnärer. Här har även många modescener utspelat sig. Modeskribenten Karina Ericsson Wärn berättar om några av dem. Vi har även ringt upp kostymören för den omtalade amerikanska tv-serien Girls, Jenn Rogien, som berättar om hur de tänkt för att skapa en helt annan sorts vardagskläder, långt ifrån den lyx som varit vanlig att se på TV under senare år. Och så har vi mött den svenska modeskaparen Josefina Larsson, en nykomling på den svenska modescenen. Hon berättar om vikten av ett namn. Veckans gäst är Cia Jansson, modechef på tidningen Elle.
Förra veckan var det modevecka i Stockholm, vilket var början på de internationella modeveckorna, som nu är i full gång. Och som vanligt finns modejournalister på plats för att rapportera, recensera och analysera - är plaggen konventionella? Kommersiella? Eller konstnärligt intressanta? Men när vi själva står i butiken och ska välja vilka kläder vi ska köpa är det, ofta, en helt annan fråga vi vill ha besvarad, nämligen - är det fint eller fult? I veckans STIL luftar vi frågan om det är någon skillnad mellan män och kvinnors syn på vad som är snyggt. Det italienska märket Marni tas ofta upp som ett exempel på mode som kvinnor gillar, men som män finner obegripligt. Kan det bero på att det inte uppfattas som ”sexigt”? Under mitten av 90-talet blev Marnis lediga klänningar ett befriande alternativ till dåtidens tajta, och kroppsmedvetna, mode. Det vann snabbt en initierad kundkrets, och märket har sedan dess ansetts vara en av modevärldens ”bäst bevarade hemligheter”. Ett märke utan logotyp för de invigda som uppskattar plaggens bekvämlighet, och begriper sig på design vars huvudsakliga syfte inte är att framhäva kvinnokroppens kurvor, utan att ge desamma frihet. Chefsdesigner Consuelo Castiglione menar att märkets plagg inte är medvetet osexiga, ”men kanske mindre avslöjande”, än andra modehus. ”Den manliga blicken” är en term som ofta dyker upp då man undersöker hur kvinnor framställs i den visuella kulturen, så som modefotografi, reklam, konst och inte minst film. Begreppet myntades av filmforskaren Laura Mulvey i mitten av 1970-talet när hon skrev en essä om hur Hollywoods filmkultur gjorde kvinnan till ett objekt för mannens blick. Det här gav så klart upphov till stora diskussioner – och även till ännu ett begrepp, skapat som en motreaktion: den kvinnliga blicken. Mer om det får vi höra i programmet. Vi får även höra om ett annat modemärke som vunnit gehör hos kvinnor under senare år – Céline, där chefsdesignern Phoebe Philo har blivit symbol för den moderna yrkeskvinnan som inte låter jobbet gå ut över sina barn (Céline har till och med ställt in sin planerade modevisning, på grund av att Phoebe Philo är höggravid). Men märket har en historia, långt innan hon tog över. Och det har funnits, och frodats, i Sverige. Det får vi också höra om. Dessutom har vi träffat industridesignern (och varumärkeschefen) Maria von Euler som tagit fram en produkt som är en blandning mellan elektronik och mode. En produkt där hon medvetet valt att exkludera mannen, och enbart fokuserat på kvinnans behov. Veckans gäst är Suzanne Osten, regissör.