&Follow SJoin OnSugar
Net-a-porter UK

Posts for August 2010

August 31, 2010

why are titles so difficult to create? i can't think of a good title right now.

While the new POP cover fails to excite (but thankfully it is starting to grow on me and did you know it comes with Takashi Murakami stickers!), the editorials have pretty much made up for it.

Blonde Ambition

Photographer: Jamie Morgan

Stylist: Tamara Rothstein

I think I'm dying over this editorial right now. You don't want to know how many times I've had a 'HELL YEAH' moment throughout the whole spread. But what makes it even more amazing than the photography and the casting, is the ingenious styling that includes, *GASP* photos of magazine clippings, celebrities and newspaper headlines. It feels incredibly fresh, and just the picture of Britney Spears on a Calvin Klein dress adds a whole new dimension and playfulness to the otherwise simple (but elegant) clothes. And not forgetting Doutzen Kroes who was put in a Comme 'intestines and organs' dress. Umm....can we please discuss the hidden connotations behind this?

August 29, 2010

fuzzy yellow balls

Umm.......hello my lovely fashion homies. Here's what I'm thinking:

Fashion and tennis, don't they always go together? After all, it is a wide known fact that Anna WIntour has an obsession with Roger Federer stronger than her obsession with Manolo kitten heels, and aren't tennis players the only sports people deemed 'suitable' to be featured in Vogue and for fashion designers to work with (Can we have an amen for Stella McCartney up in here)? And isn't tennis the only sport that Vogue staffers play, that is, other than running down 10 blocks to catch the Marc Jacobs show after a Rodarte's?  Also, as we go somewhere along the lines of Vogue, there's me, the fashion and tennis loving blogger who feels that he has an obligation to blog about his second love (insert some tiger woods joke here if you wish).

(Because I'm sure all you lovely people reading this would like a little tennis in your life, that's why I shall talk about the fuzzy yellow balls. Don't you all just love tennis, just don't you? There's no need to thank me. *SIMULTANEOUS HURRAYS!*)

Looking back, it really is weird on how something that I loved so much then (and am still loving it) has now been exiled into the deepest darkest pits of god-knows-where. Before Vogues and i-Ds started to dominate my life, I used to look forward to the monthly issues of TENNIS magazine, the same way as I look forward to the September issues. Sad to say, these glossy pages of forehand and backhands have now been sent into the bottomless pits of scrap and crap, along with past math worksheets and ugly fashion sketches that should never be shown to the world. Thankfully, tennis (the sport) wasn't as cruelly banished to death the same way TENNIS (the magazines) were.

Recently, I received tickets to the very first Youth Olympic Games (if you do not know what this is, you should feel very ashamed of yourself. I demand you to google/wikipedia it now.) from the very very amazing Dr Frank Cintamani (did I mention how amazing he is?). It was quite an awesome experience, getting up close to the players themselves, who one day might just be the next Sharapova or Federer. The level of tennis was, as expected, very high given that many of these young players are ranked in the top tens in the junior circuit. Sadly, all good things must come to an end, and I was cruelly expelled out of the grounds after the games ended. Even the incessant pleadings and my desperate offers to be a ball kid for the next five days (I would gladly do it for free) were not entertained.

As this post comes to an end, so has the games. Sigh, maybe when I turn 20 in 2014, I might just look back and remember the time that I carved "I heart YOG" on my school table. Should I cry, maybe I should?

The stalker in me:

The eventual ladies/girls champion

Hey look, Miu Miu paper bag.

August 28, 2010

this post is dedicated to corinne day

Corinne Day / if not for her, there may not be Kate Moss today (and her shots of Kate Moss are the most beautiful photos of her) / high priestess of anti-glamour photography / one of the reason I love the 90s so much (her work for The Face is one of my favourite ever) / one of the greatest, strongest and most beautiful female fashion photographers ever / she will be missed.

RIP Corinne Day.

I love her.

All pictures are via thefashionspot

August 20, 2010

i love multiple-covers or do i?

Rosie Huntington Whiteley

Alessandro Ambrosio-The Angel (with bleached eyebrows)

Gisele Bundchen-The Bombshell

Aggy Deyn-The Rebel

Lauren Hutton-The Heroine

Ms Perfect-The Mannequin

Sienna Miller-The Pin Up

Kelly Brook-The Sweetheart

There you go, the 8 faces of LOVE.

It comes as no surprise for LOVE to have 8 different covers for their Fall Winter issue. After all, wasn't it Katie Grand who started this multiple-covers rage that has since spread to other biannual magazines. Given the hype generated every season over who, or more importantly, what is going to be on the covers, I'm predicting that this will be a permanent fixture for the magazine. However, one thing that I really dislike about LOVE is the overly-sexualised covers-the infamous nude photo of Beth Ditto or the full-frontal shots of the supermodels (complete with nude editorials which makes Terry Richardson seem like an angel). There's about half of these covers here, that I think, will be banned by Singapore's censorship board (ok, maybe just Kelly Brook's. But seriously, how many of these have sex as its theme?). So naturally, my favourites are that of Alessandro Ambrosio's and Lauren Hutton's.

Photos via models.com

August 11, 2010

philo-esque prints

I found myself staring at these clothes for the past hour. They aren't Philoesque-pretty, nor Galliano-theatrical. They aren't of the minimalist streak that designers have been ramming down our throats for the fall season nor aren't they the ones that make you go "What the hell was he thinking?". But somehow they are intriguing, not in that cerebral way but more of one that just stays in your head, in a calm and peaceful manner. Or perhaps I'm too lazy (at least for now, I hope) to allow a collection to wander round my head, annoying my synapses and neurons and what not.

I find these clothes the anti-thesis of prints (bordering on colour-blocking), like a minimalist-print (I know this hardly makes sense, but oxymorons never do, don't they?).

It's like a give and take between the simple (silhouettes) and the rich (images). Somehow everything just blends together and........."BHAM!', a weird and wonderful concoction of shapes and colour tones. Also I don't know if you know that these 'prints' are actually deconstructed images from the inside of the Vatican. There's no altar nor crucifix (maybe 1), and there' hardly any religious influence behind these clothes. But rather the mundane furniture that consists of tables and bookshelves belonging to the Pope have been turned up on its head and given a nice little twist. The images are deceptively simple, and almost mysterious to some extent. Now how do I put this altogether? A mix between The Selby and Phoebe Philo and Philippe Starck and Catholicism and given an Alberto Marani stamp on top of it all.

Also, the Pope sure has great taste in furniture.

Also, these are the works of Alberto Marani. I forgot to mention this, oops.

Also, I have to realise that my thoughts are everywhere. Which explains the many 'also's.

And this reminds me of Fendi's Fall ad campaign. Which I really really love.

August 03, 2010

the day i first stepped into my house which wasn't my house

It was the day I first stepped into a luxury goods store, Miu Miu to be exact. And it still remains the only time I've ever done so. That was 2 months ago, and I wanted the Miu Miu SS10 collar really really badly.

I don't really get it, can someone please explain to me how one obtains luxury high end goods? Because that stuff right over there have never been within the reach of my small little puny piggy bank, and I have never ever owned anything that fancy before. Well of course, a collar with naked ladies couldn't be anywhere fancy as compared to, let's say a Celine bag, but to me, it was the protagonist of my dreams for every goddamn single night.

Honestly, how does anyone below the age of 18 (or whatever is deemed appropriate to spend such amount of money) ever obtain such high end goods? Because as soon as I walked into Miu Miu, I felt like a big fool, like my studiedly uniform schoolboy look (Yes, I went there right after school in my school uniform), and deep knowledge of Kant's Theory and algebraic formulas rendered the well-lit, velvet-floored, flawlessly manicured world of Miu Miu irrelevant. I still remembered that as I took in the sight of shelves and shelves of Miu Miu clogs and heels and rows and rows of Coffers, I was shaking in my legs, somehow realizing that perhaps, I had no place in this store. Perhaps, I shouldn't even be allowed here. Thankfully, Miu Miu didn't employ a doorman, which I swear, even he would be reluctant to hold or even open the door for me.

In the store, I saw those ladies whose hair does what it's told and stay where it should, their sumptuous fabrics, and man servant sales-assistants (note that this is in plural) who were sent scurrying round the store just to find the perfect shoe for her. I saw snobbish sales assistants who were seemingly paid to just stand in a corner, and not do anything (well, at least not anything for me, a 16 year old kid who looked like he was lost in a candy store). Looking back, I think they might be mannequins except they were 10 feet wider and 8 inches shorter (Miu Miu Singapore should seriously not place their broken mannequins around the store, it confuses one.) It was then I realised that I felt like a shabby, ill-bred brute, who had more split ends than hair itself, more blackheads than the inches of Miu Miu clogs combined and more acne than anyone present in the room. I had never felt so ugly before, and I hadn't felt as desperately and despairingly that I did not belong somewhere since primary school.

But I tried to approach the seemingly friendliest sales assistant who seemed to be able to see past the fact that I was only some sad and ugly teenager. She looked like she was in her early 20s, with a bank balance that was slightly more than mine. Politely, I asked her if the store had stocked the collars, and I could hear my voice trembling amidst the stares I realised I was receiving. It was intense. I almost had a panic attack. It was as if the stares could crush me anytime then. She then asked another sales-assistant to help check for stock. but seriously who even bothered? They merely pretended to look and returned with the words, "I'm sorry but we are out of stock." During the time they took to check the database in Italy, check the database in Singapore, running around the store, occasionally double checking that the naked ladies were naked, making sure that the cats were fed, going in and out of what presumably is where they keep their stocks, the awkwardness of waiting could have easily crushed me if not for the eye-candies I was eyeballing (naked ladies, and swallow prints, they were great food for the eyes). To break the awkward silence, the sales assistant asked "if I was getting it for a friend?" I said yes, not wanting to reveal too much nor explain, in the case I start to tremble and eat my words again. And looking even more like a fool than I already was.

In the end, nothing came out of the two trips I made (they suggested that I could make a visit to another store but they didn't tell me that the other location stocked only leather goods and accessories). Disappointed, I banged my head against Lindsey Wixson and tried to pull her ponytails out. Also before I left the store, I tried to steal a pair of Miu Miu pink crystal-embellished shoes, and along the way I told the naked ladies that they should put on some clothes and run out of the store when no one was looking. For three days, I couldn't eat nor sleep and finally decided to set up camp outside the store and write air letters to Miss Prada and scare Miu Miu customers with my drooping eye-bags and torn pages of Miu Miu editorials. And along the way, I used the money that was meant for the collar, and spent it on magazines that had Miu Miu on their front covers (Dazed with Mia, and Grey with Constance on it.)

So yeah, seriously, how does one buy such stuff, how does one be 'fancy'? Someone please explain to me how does luxury, high end consumerism even work? Maybe I should just keep drooling on magazines?

Illustration of Miu Miu AW10 via krisatomic.

August 02, 2010

sequel to the fake-models-on-twitter story

Part 1

I think it is only fair to show both sides of the story. This time round, I'm not taking any sides (as to who the perpetrator is). But one thing stays clear, the accounts are fake and I'm very sure about that.

 

Read only if you want to. I'm really tired of being known as the blogger who exposed blah blah blah. I want to keep this blog purely for fashion.

theclackers. since 2009. powered by onsugar ©
loving.marc.jacobs@gmail.com