2013年6月28日星期五

On PGA Tour, fashion runs according to script


Viewers of the final round of golf’s U.S. Open two weeks ago might have noticed Billy Horschel’s name near the top leader board. They almost certainly noticed his pants, navy blue with a white octopus print.
Reactions from fans and media ranged from “Where can I get some of those?” to “Who dresses these guys?”
More AT&T National coverage

Jordan Spieth: 19 and he likes it

Jordan Spieth: 19 and he likes it
Too young to remember Tiger Woods’ first Masters win, phenom is tied with Roberto Castro after second round.

It’s Sunday; must be octopus pants

It’s Sunday; must be octopus pants
On PGA Tour, apparel sponsors tell their golfers not only what to wear, but when to wear it.

This ain’t heavy, it’s my husband’s

This ain’t heavy, it’s my husband’s
For Patrick Reed and his caddie Justine, life on the PGA tour as a married couple is a matter of course.

Making things tough in a major way

Making things tough in a major way
With Congressional testing players to their limits, Roberto Castro leads after the first round of the AT&T National.
For apparel sponsors — in Horschel’s case, Polo Ralph Lauren — that’s exactly the point. In a crowded and competitive marketplace, on-course fashion decisions are more carefully orchestrated than ever before, but they’re not being made by the players themselves. Rather, the companies who supply the clothes tell the pros not just what to wear but when to wear it.
In an effort to increase visibility and spark sales, most companies “script” their sponsored players’ outfits for each day of a major championships (the Masters, U.S. Open, British Open, and PGA Championship). Horschel, in fact, had been scheduled to don his cephalopod slacks during Saturday’s third round of the Open, but once he played his way into contention, Polo executives switched them to Sunday, when TV viewership would be highest.
Golf companies have been asking players to wear certain clothes for decades. Greg Norman, the game’s most visible star in late ’80s and early ’90s, said his sponsors “had reports down to the second” of how much airtime he and his apparel were getting.
Scripting outfits, though, traces its roots to April 13, 1997. That day, a 22-year-old in a red sweater with a white swoosh blew away his competition, became the Masters’ youngest-ever winner, and catapulted Nike golf to the head of the golf apparel class.
Nike’s rise in golf “is because of Tiger” said Matt McCabe, Golfsmith’s Vice President of Soft Lines (footwear and apparel) said. “He wears the swoosh, he wins a lot, and people want to wear it.”
Men’s product director for Nike Golf Eric Schendler says the company emphasizes scripting to take advantage of “major moments” and “define what an athlete’s look will be and make a statement as a brand.”
Nearly every other apparel company followed Nike’s lead in recent years, sharing scripts with the media prior to each major.
“Honestly, I think [scripting] is played out a little bit,” said Jennifer Hawkins, Director of Marketing for Greg Norman/Dunning golf, who said her company has been scripting for six or seven years. “You used to kind of stand out, but now all the brands have it. Once there’s that much noise, it sort of loses its impact.”
So companies have had to get creative to establish a niche.
One method is what Hawkins calls “statement dressing”: the use of bright colors, bold patterns, and octopus prints to stand out on the course.
Adidas/Taylor Made employed what Senior Director of Global Marketing Davide Mattucci calls “team scripting” at this year’s Masters, dressing all its sponsored players in the same outfits. Though Mattucci said the company’s Web site was “flooded” with orders for those products, he said the company hasn’t decided whether or not to try it again.
The article is from http://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/othersports/on-pga-tour-fashion-runs-according-to-script/2013/06/28/0686e90a-e015-11e2-963a-72d740e88c12_story.html

3D-Printed Fashion Show Draws Inspiration From Nature


When you think about it, the fashion and tech industries aren't so different. Both create products that people use daily, follow extremely fickle trends and insist upon remaining on the cutting edge.
It's unsurprising, then, that the two worlds would eventually collide. While tech has been a presence in the fashion industry for years, it's only been in the past two that 3D printing has cropped up as a way for designers to rethink their process. This year, Belgium-based 3D printing company Materialise approached fashion designer Melinda Looi, who has won numerous awardsfor her experimental designs, to design a collection for Asia's first 3D-printed fashion show.
"Creating fashion with technology has always been something I wanted to do," Looi told Fast Company. "The collaborative effort involving people from different fields and backgrounds truly reminded me that exciting and beautiful things happen when art and technology meet."

With the help of Materialise and a few engineers, Looi designed a collection inspired by birds, consisting of winged accessories and patterns that echo natural forms. Designing, printing and fitting the collection took a long time, but once it was complete, the team presented their work in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
3d printed headpiece
3D-printed fashion accessory or new-age Bluetooth headpiece? You decide. Image courtesy of The Photoz
3D printed wing harness
A 3D-printed wing harness. Image courtesy of The Photoz.
The visionaries behind the collection have stated that none of the pieces are actually meant to be worn, but rather to show that fashion and tech can work harmoniously. Still, we think these 3D-printed wedges are pretty fierce.
3d printed wedges
3D-printed wedges. Image courtesy of The Photoz

The article is from http://mashable.com/2013/06/28/3d-printed-fashion-show/

The revolution will be -- stylized? From fashion statement to social symbol


(CNN) -- When Texas state Sen. Wendy Davis made headlines for a filibuster opposing an abortion bill, it was more than her speech that generated buzz. Davis donned hot pink running shoes as she attempted a 13-hour stand against a Texas bill that includes a provision to ban abortions after the 20th week of pregnancy.
As Davis went on, her filibuster became a trending topic on Twitter and the shoe an iconic visual behind the hashtag #standwithwendy.
Davis' footwear joins a long line of apparel that has become symbolic of resistance, from the Trayvon Martin hoodie to Pussy Riot's balaclava face masks.
The shoes were designed for comfort, but Davis told CNN's AC360, "I underestimated how difficult it would be both physically and mentally. About two hours in, I realized I was in for a long day."
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Davis also said she didn't expect her shoes to catch national attention. Mizuno, the makers of the now-famous sneakers, told CNN they were surprised at the sudden hype surrounding the shoe, called the Wave Rider.
"The Wave Rider is designed to give the comfort and cushioning needed whether it's a 5K, a marathon or 10+ hour filibuster," Mizuno spokeswoman Harper Cornell said in a statement.
Cornell wouldn't share sales data for the $115 shoe, but the resulting attention has increased traffic to MizunoRunning.com and the Wave Rider 16 product page, she said. Daily website traffic totals nearly doubled compared to the same day last week. The shoes have garnered rave reviews on online retailer Amazon.com, too.
"We do appreciate Ms. Davis' choice in athletic footwear," the company's statement said. "However, we do not maintain a corporate position related to the topic in discussion."

Cheap, trendy ‘fast fashion’ in demand, despite factory dangers


Cathy Anderson likes clothes — trendy, cutting-edge clothes that look as if they’ve come right off the runway. And she wants them now and she wants them at bargain prices.
Anderson, a 28-year-old District resident, could be a poster child for those who graduated in a down economy but still feel the need to look fashionable.

Have the recent events in Bangladesh impacted your shopping habbits?

U.S. suspends Bangladesh’s trade privileges due to labor concerns

U.S. suspends Bangladesh’s trade privileges due to labor concerns
Move comes after a years-long review of the nation’s working conditions.
Young men and women like Anderson have turned to stores such as H&M, Zara and the Gap. Inexpensive clothing has always existed, but these retailers have racked up huge sales by mastering the art of “fast fashion”: identifying hot designer trends immediately, ordering up inexpensive copies and stocking their stores with the look-alikes, often within weeks of their runway debuts. And they do so at a fraction of the designer price, making them accessible to a broad range of consumers. (These are not knockoffs in the traditional sense because no one is trying to pass them off as designer originals.)
“Fashion used to be . . . really an elite thing to do. Now it’s not,” says Daniel Benkendorf, an assistant professor at the Fashion Institute of Technology.
In April, a factory in Bangladesh involved in producing “fast fashion” collapsed, killing nearly 1,300 people and seriously injuring scores of others. Advocacy campaigns for safe conditions and worker protections swung into high gear. Protests, including one scheduled for Saturday at a Gap in downtown Washington, are part of an effort to urge — some would say shame — retailers into signing a legally binding accord aimed at improving safety conditions and standards in Bangladesh factories. H&M and Zara have already signed on; the Gap has declined and is pushing its own agreement. (On Thursday, the Obama administration also announced the suspension of U.S. trade privileges for Bangladesh, although this action does not apply to textiles.)
Have the revelations about the dangers to faraway workers turned off consumers — often educated and otherwise globally-conscience consumers — from clamoring for the latest peplum top or high-low skirt?
Not really. Although profits for many of fast fashions’ biggest names dipped in the first months of the year, fluctuations in currency and diversion of money for long-term investments seem to be the most prevalent causes. And global sales at H&M have recently bounced back, with a 14 percent spike in the first two weeks of June, reports trade publication Women’s Wear Daily.
“They’re not the best fabrics, they’ll probably last a season, the seams rip, the material balls up, but for the moment we can buy it it feels good,” says Jennifer Baumgartner, a clinical psychologist and author of “You Are What You Wear: What Your Clothes Reveal About You.” “Then we’re bored and we start up again.”
Positive reinforcement for snatching up trendy clothes at bargain prices also drives some consumers. Haul videos — clips on YouTube showing shoppers brandishing piles of new purchases — can rack up hundreds of thousands of views. Public figures such as first ladyMichelle Obama and Catherine, the Duchess of Cambridge, (a.k.a. Kate Middleton) are hailed for wearing inexpensive, fashionable brands including Zara and Asos, along with designer pieces.
The article is from http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/cheap-trendy-fast-fashion-in-demand-despite-factory-dangers/2013/06/28/b10ceb74-d906-11e2-9df4-895344c13c30_story.html

Milan Men’s Fashion Week, the Sun Also Sets


“In Italy,” the Master wrote, “we see a charm in things which in other countries we should consign to the populous limbo of the vulgarities.” Case in point: last weekend’s GQ party honoring Jim Nelson, the style bible’s editor, on his 10th anniversary on the job.
In New York, trade parties celebrating personnel milestones properly fall under the heading of line-of-duty. (As the decorator and socialite Robert Couturier once remarked, “You go to leave.”) In Italy, and specifically in this fortresslike city of high walls and hidden gardens, palaces concealed behind blank facades, sheer beauty dispels all thoughts of vulgarity’s limbo. So inured are Italians to the beauty around them that they tend to take it for granted. Wide-eyed Americans do not.
“I kind of can’t believe this even exists,” Mr. Nelson, the editor, said before a thronged cocktail party that was a social high point of the men’s Fashion Week, an evening that was like being set loose in a petting zoo of fashion celebrity.
Mr. Nelson was referring to the location, the gardens of theVilla Necchi Campiglio, a modernist masterpiece constructed from 1932 to 1935 by the Milanese architect Piero Portaluppi for Nedda and Gigina Necchi, sisters who had inherited a vast fortune built on sewing machines.
Invisible from the street, the villa is an intact historic monument surrounded by wide lawns, a swimming pool and tennis courts. GQ guests crunched down paths of white pea gravel beneath mature chestnut trees flanked by pots of carmine geraniums. They gathered poolside under trees strung with fairy lights and a rare super-moon, which hung so low and shone so brightly, it seemed like a theatrical prop.
Designers in this sober city of industry are not the collegial group you might imagine. Except for Dean and Dan Caten of Dsquared, they are not even partyers in general.
Luring Giorgio Armani from his palace apartment on the Via Borgonuovo, where he lives quietly with his beloved black cat, Angel, is an accomplishment. Getting him out to mingle with a crowd that includes Frida Giannini, Tomas Maier, Diego Della Valle, Gaia Trussardi, Thom Browne, Ermenegildo Zegna, Italo Zucchelli, Stefano Pilati, Neil Barrett, Umit Benan, John Varvatos, Kean Etro, the soccer stars Hidetoshi Nakata and Henrik Lundqvist and many others is a feat.
“The crowd is amazing,” said Claudio Castiglioni, the chief commercial officer of Tod’s, adding that probably only GQ, with its editorial power, could wrangle such a guest list.
“Look who’s coming!” hissed another guest, the model Hanneli Mustaparta. Nudging a companion, Ms. Mustaparta pointed toward Domenico Dolce and Stefano Gabbana, whose card readings cannot have been too positive lately, given that days earlier an Italian judge had handed them a 20-month suspended sentence and levied a heavy fine on the pair for hiding hundreds of millions of euros from tax authorities in a dummy company.
Far from seeming perturbed, the tanned and bespectacled designers appeared relaxed as they air-kissed friends and spoke of their haute couture show in Venice. The theme is a masquerade ball. Invitations in the form of individualized masks have already been delivered. Guests are expected to dress accordingly. Don’t even think about come-as-you-are.
A RECURRING THEME in Milan involves talk of the “fashion system,” made to sound like a planetary group formed in the remote past around a central sun and subject to immutable laws. In reality, the Italian fashion system is fairly scattered, decentralized, factional and altogether as recent an innovation as the notion of capital-F fashion itself.
The machinery to generate the global fashion juggernaut we all now know was devised here in the 1950s by a nascent trade group that came to be called the Camera Nazionale della Moda Italiana. Over the decades, though, that group seemed to lose some sense of its original mission, and the city its luster as an incubator of the new. Yet, because so much production remains centered here, buyers had little choice but to keep Milan on the radar. Its advertising power insured that editors did the same. Even so, many agreed that Milan was no longer the creative powerhouse it had once been.
“Go back to the ’80s, when you had Versace, Armani,” said a major American retailer who, reluctant to compromise business relationships, would speak only anonymously. “In those days, you had to come to Milan.” Cities like Paris or London seemed like “secondary places,” he added. Still, they came.
Now that is beginning to change. If a full-scale alarm was not set off by the recent decision by Burberry and Alexander McQueen to quit the Milan calendar and show in London, the buzz generated by London Fashion Week surely jolted the Milanese awake.
At an impromptu news conference early last Sunday, a group seldom seen in one another’s company announced emergency plans to revitalize Milan as a fixture on the fashion map. Some of the most famous names were represented: Mr. Zegna, Patrizio Bertelli, Angela Missoni and Mr. Della Valle, the owners, respectively, of Zegna, Prada, Missoni and Tod’s.
“Without Italian fabrics, Italian know-how, there would be no fashion,” Mr. Bertelli said.
Whether or not this is so, there is no doubt that the multibillion-dollar fashion industry here, one employing roughly one million workers, direly needs infusions of creativity and youth.
In New York, the Council of Fashion Designers of America, and the Vogue editor Anna Wintour, mobilized early to recruit and support a new generation of designers — and also to build out Fashion Week’s presence on the Web and across social platforms. The Camera Nazionale, meanwhile, continued to operate like a club with vague governance, a wobbly institutional message (what does “Made in Italy” mean, anyway, when so many Italian goods are manufactured in Eastern Europe and sent back across the border to have a label sewn on?) and a tendency to communicate by fax.
“London is a reality,” Mr. Zegna said in a phone interview. “Paris is strong. We have to be competitive. For the first time, you have a group coming together and putting up our own money to defend our position.”
Already the new body has collectively pledged five million euros (about $6.5 million) to the cause, he said.
In an e-mail message, Mr. Bertelli added that what matters most is innovation: “I think this concept should apply not only to the collections, but also to all the aspects of the fashion week.” Mr. Della Valle said, accurately if to no particular end, that, in Italy: “there is beauty all around us. We should dust off the beautiful things.”
Leave it to Mr. Armani, who has refused to join the group, to take a hardheaded approach. “To my mind, all Italian brands should go back to holding their fashion shows in Milan,” he wrote in an e-mail. “This ‘return’ to Milan would be seen as a strong signal, strengthening the concept and value of Italian fashion worldwide.”
A FINAL WORD on fashion innovation in Milan: Japan.
Everywhere you looked in the city last weekend there were Japanese men in blousy white shirts over black hot pants worn with white bucks; in drop-crotch trousers accessorized with lug-soled Prada shoes; in Prince of Wales checked shorts-suits worn with crisp white shirts and Grenson oxfords; in vintage overalls shorts from Gap (yes, ’90s Gap is now vintage).
“The Japanese have really gotten it together recently,” said Scott Schuman, the street photographer of The Sartorialist. “There’s a new, younger generation of guys that loves fashion and pushes it,” though not to the point where they look like a punch line.
The article is from http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/30/fashion/milan-mens-fashion-week-the-sun-also-sets.html?pagewanted=all

2013年6月27日星期四

Asian designers centre stage at Paris fashion


AFP - Asian designers on Thursday took to the catwalks at Paris fashion week with the sharp lines of South Korea's Wooyoungmi's scorched desert-inspired collection vying for attention with young Japanese designer Yusuke Takahashi's colourful exploration of traditional dyeing techniques for Issey Miyake.
In a collection described as a departure from Wooyoungmi's "steady focus on her ideal man as a source of inspiration" the South Korean drew on winter thoughts of a "scorched desert landscape".
Working with denim for the first time, Wooyoungmi -- who was the first South Korean designer to venture into menswear - offered offered sharply tailored jackets, button up shirts and stiff-bodied t-shirts in cactus green, sky blue, sandy beige and python print.
The 27-year-old Yusuke Takahashi meanwhile presented a collection using handmade traditional techniques of dyeing.
Long flowing coats and Nehru jackets, in intricate irregular patterns, stripes or large checks were teamed with shorts or wide-legged trousers and caps.
Explaining one of the techniques, the label said that after dyeing fabric black using the itajime method, blue and red were then printed on top by silkscreen printing.
In another, the batik dyeing technique involved many layers of anti-dyeing glue being printed on cloth which was then hardened and broken by hand.
"The dye penetrates between the cracks, leaving individual complex patterns," it added.
Later Thursday, influential Japanese designer Yohji Yamamoto will also present a collection while Friday will see shows by two more Asian designers -- Juun J. of South Korea and Junya Watanabe of Japan.
Juun J. is known for his oversized garments layered together in one piece, with military references said to be inspired by his national service in the South Korean army.
Junya Watanabe, meanwhile, likes to experiment with cutting edge fabrics and usually bases his collections around deconstructing and reconstructing a single concept.
A show by another Japanese designer, Miharayasuhiro, who first made his name in footwear with a collection created while he was still a student, is also scheduled for Saturday.
Noted for a muted, monochromatic signature style, Miharayasuhiro launched his first store SOSU (prime number) in Tokyo in 1998 before expanding into menswear.
Dozens of men's collections for spring/summer 2014 are being shown over five days in Paris this week.
They wind up on Sunday when men's fashion will give way to four more days of haute couture for autumn/winter 2013/2014.
The men's fashion highlight is expected to be Hedi Slimane's Sunday show for Saint Laurent while Christian Lacroix's return to Paris fashion after a four-year absence will undoubtedly be the must-see show of next week.
The article is from http://www.france24.com/en/20130627-asian-designers-centre-stage-paris-fashion

‘Future Beauty’: High fashion as high art at SAM | Art review


The mannequins in Seattle Art Museum’s fascinating exhibit “Future Beauty: 30 Years of Japanese Fashion” stand on the balls of their feet, heels up, as if poised on the edge of a cliff. In a sense, they are: These dozens of garments, unique and beautiful and strange (sometimes all three), represent a shift in the fashion world — a moment when innovative Japanese designers began to make an international impact, changing the way we think about clothing.
Beginning austerely, with a grouping titled “In Praise of Shadows,” the exhibit immediately takes us back 30 years, when Rei Kawakubo’s landmark early-’80s work shocked the fashion world. These garments, standing quietly in a row, are made in a tattered rainbow of black and cream — early, controversial signals of the now-common sight of intentionally torn or unfinished garments, and of black as a default “color.”
These garments, and most in the exhibit, do not hug the body, but drape it (the kimono was a strong influence) and reshape it. A Rei Kawakubo black skirt and top — the second garment in the exhibit — looks like the fabric just dropped onto the body from above and elegantly puddled there, creating its own landscape.
Standing nearby, like distant acquaintances, are four more recent black garments, including perhaps the exhibit’s most conventional-looking dress: a stunning full-skirted silk taffeta ball gown by Yohji Yamamoto that would look perfectly at home on a red carpet — and yet, beneath its folds peeks a polka-dot underskirt; the garment’s playful exclamation point, reminding us to look for the details.
Moving through the exhibit, we see more experiments with color, fabric and shape, some remarkably innovative. Issey Miyake’s short, spiky cocktail dresses look startlingly modern on the body; folded up on the floor, they appear to be intricate origami shapes, representative of an ancient art. Junya Watanabe’s “Techno Couture” collection, made of polyester intricately folded and pleated into honeycomb form, seems to hover around the wearer like an electric cloud; you wonder if they’ll float away. A Kawakubo “wedding dress” is made from what appears to be quilt batting; a Jun Takahashi black dress has a conventionally form-fitting silhouette, but is covered with patches from which long red threads trail, like scars dripping blood. Koji Tatsuno’s golden brown nylon dress is wired in dramatic swoops and swirls, both embracing and entrapping the woman inside it.
Later in the exhibit, rooms are devoted to several individual designers: Miyake, one of the first Japanese designers to establish a Paris presence; Kawakubo, with examples from her famously controversial 1997 “Body Meets Dress, Dress Meets Body” collection (complete with shape-distorting pads sewn into the garments; it was less charitably called the “Lumps and Bumps” collection in the press); Yamamoto’s romantic deconstruction (a cream satin gown seems to meander adventurously around the body, twisting as it goes); Takahashi’s fascination with all-over pattern; Watanabe’s playful takes on classic shapes, including a hoop skirt that seems to be escaping its wearer.
This is SAM’s first exhibit focusing entirely on fashion, and there’s no question, as you walk through the exhibit and take in the details, that these garments are works of art. Seeing them gathered together, as if assembled for some marvelously avant-garde party, is a rare opportunity to see a page of fashion history; don’t miss it.
The article is from http://seattletimes.com/html/thearts/2021280992_futurebeautyxml.html