Fearless Fashion: Paul & Joe | Paris Fashion Week Fall 2017

Paul & Joe | Paris Fashion Week Fall 2017

Sophie Mechaly understands the individualistic young girl who shops Paul & Joe — she has a range of lifestyles, where not just one type of look will satisfy. From a casual get-together with friends to an elegant dinner out, she wants luxury, comfort and impeccable style.

The first look — a green corduroy two-piece suit — stuck us right in the ’90s, with a bit of a ’70s feel in shape and shag. The H-shapes in the collection felt reminiscent of Chloe staples.

She kept a few tenets of luxury chic from last season, but brought them more down to earth and onto the city streets, just as fashion has taken a turn to more lived-in looks. Look #11 paired a luxe pink velvet bell-bottomed suit with an oversized cozy knit, nailing the high-low approach. Even the hit of silk lapels added a fleeting moment of splendor.

High-Low Luxe

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Pearls were shown in high and low ways, too — on denim, handbags, and onto lace (younger than Ingie Paris, and easily adapted). We saw Nicholas Kirkwood and Givenchy adding pearls onto shoes last fall, and now Paul & Joe take pearls to the heart of the outfit equation. The pearl Canadian tuxedo is top of my list. J’adore.

Having Olivia Palermo in the crowd draws attention to the fact that Paul and Joe stresses good, clean silhouettes, and likes to have fun while doing it. The perfect example of this is my personal favorite, look #10, a wonderful deep-v magenta dress with flounce and feminine vibes. To me, it’s as though Maison Valentino and vintage YSL had a baby.

It’s as though Maison Valentino and vintage YSL had a baby.

Nothing in the collection was fussy or done in bad taste — and the Paul & Joe girl clearly loves a bit of fusion between pieces that look and feel luxurious, and others that are plainly comfortable and easy to throw on. Look #36 embodied this to the “T,” with the heavy, down, quilted coat layered on top of a velvet midi dress. I also loved the decadent velvet jumpsuit worn with velvet creepers, which showed a shabby but clean look, donned with a nonchalant expression. The few metallics, seasoned reds, and moldy greens seen throughout showed little care for color narrowness, but still presented a cohesive collection.

What an excellent end to another season here at Paris Fashion Week. Now that fashion month is over, we hang up our heels and prepare for the spring — through the weather and our wardrobes.

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Learn More

www.paulandjoe.com

With love,

FWO

Talking With Your Money: How to Support Equal Rights While You Shop

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International Woman’s Day

Whether you’re joining in the International Women’s Day strikes today, for the Day Without A Woman, or you’re at work head-to-toe in red, it’s a good day to shop from women, minority- or female-minority owned businesses.

If you’re looking for somewhere to start, here’s a starter list of where you can shop in solidarity to equal rights. (Plus you can ANY day!)

Your clothes are as influential and vocal as your words. Shop online at these stores and support their mission and work.

Your clothes are as vocal as your words.

 
The Wing / the-wing.com

The owners of this New York co-working space created by women and for women, Audrey Gelman and Lauren Kassan were tired of the lack of “chill space” to work in, so they created one for women.

The space is decorated with art by female artists and a bookshelf specially-curated to feature all-female written books!

Shop their empowering shirts, totes, socks, and more. (And maybe apply to join if you’re in the area.)

 
Otherwild / otherwild.com

Operating as a studio, store, event space, and more in both NYC and LA, Rachel Berks opened Otherwild to have a space for her graphic design and also extra revenue from a retail store.

They grew exponentially fast and, due to her passion and respect for the artists who provide her retail items, has even had to deny some artists that request space to sell.

Shop many things here, including: “the future is female” t-shirts, jewelry, other clothing, accessories, undergarments, home items, apothecary items, and more!

 
Zady / zady.com

Soraya Dorabi and Maxine Bédat founded Zady to fill a niche in the fashion industry, that of sustainable fashion. They’re interested in transparency and creating timeless pieces that are made from raw and sustainable materials.

Emma Watson, well-known for her dedication to sustainable garments, even designed a line with them (that I must say is chic beyond belief, plus your conscience can rest.)

Shop online for an excellent array of classic pieces.

Of course, you can choose to dress without applying makeup (and it makes you no lesser but just as equal!) or you can choose to wear as much as you like (and it makes you no lesser but just as equal!)

 
Bahi Cosmetics / bahicosmetics.com

bahi

Besides having excellent handmade cosmetics (the highlighters here aren’t messing around) and succulent skincare, Bahi is black-owned by Danielle Bahi. On top of all of that, it’s cruelty-free and vegan.

Check out their products and order quickly! It all goes very, very quickly.

 
The Lip Bar / thelipbar.com

lip bar merlot

Melissa Butler quit her job on Wall Street to follow her dream of creating a vegan, cruelty-free, and paraben-free lip line. This minority-owned business has reasonably priced lip colors in a myriad of gorgeous shades.

(Personally, the gold lip is one of the better ones I’ve seen on the market.)

 
Glossier / glossier.com

After her successful foray with “Into the Gloss”, Emily Weiss started her own beauty bland titled Glossier. It started with a mere collection of skincare products, but its widely-praised Boy Brow and emphasis on the millennia love for “fresh-faced” looks made it iconic.

Add Glossier’s fresh and classic products to your makeup bag and shop online.

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With love,

FWO

Paris Fashion Week Locations: Grand Palais to Hotel de Ville

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Paris Fashion Week is a big, far-flung thing. Okay, well, let’s put it this way: central Paris is fairly small. But unlike in New York — currently centralized in a few big venues — a Paris fashion show can happen in any number of historical monuments, galleries, museums, nightclubs, or gardens. In that sense, it’s more akin to New York Fashion Week pre-Tents.

Of course, the paramount thing will always the designs themselves — um, and the various invited fashion dignitaries, and the hip after-parties that may only make a tantalizing appearance on IG. But the venue still has to bring magic.

(Note: The guide below is also an excellent resource for all you street style photographers out there. We’re also working on a Paris Fashion Week venue map, to help you out.)

The venue that a designer chooses could either promote his or her products or demote them. Although most of central Paris is at play, location-wise, lately the plurality of shows seem to happen in the 1st, 4th, 7th, 8th, and 16th arrondissements. Specifically: the Carrousel du Louvre and Palais Royal (1st), Hôtel De Ville and Pompidou (4th), Invalides (7th), Grand Palais (8th), and National Museum of Modern Art and Palais de Tokyo (16th).

Having said that, last season the 3rd arrondissement hosted designers such as Estrella Archs and Sophia Kokosalaki. The Espace Ephémére des Tuileries near the Louvre is ever popular, and the Impasse de la Defense has hosted many shows. Dévastée even displayed his youthful summer collection in Le Showcase nightclub.

The Epicenter of Paris Fashion Week

Many designers play it safe, and showcase at the Carrousel du Louvre. This is the epicenter of Paris, filled with photographers trying to capture the faces of celebrities … not to mention tourists trying to squeeze past the guards to get a look at the action. There is a chic upstairs lounge there that offers coffee and other kinds of drinks. This year, a number of designers were hosted in the Carrousel, including Elie Saab, Wunderkind, Collette Dinnigan, Léonard, and Alena Akhmadullina, among others.

Other Designers Choose Grandiose Venues

Other designers choose venues like The Palais de Tokyo, which hosted Gareth Pugh, Agnès B., and Yves Saint Laurent. Chanel blasted off in amazing style at the Grand Palais, while the Jardin de Palais Royal was occupied by Dries Van Noten. Espace Eiffel was very popular this year with shows from Giambattista Valli, Hermès, and Lanvin, as well as other designers.

The bottom line is that even though the venue plays a significant role, every designer’s show stands or fails on the merit of their imagination, sartorial presentation, and skill.

If you want to know more, check out the Paris Fashion Week schedule. We’re also working on a map of popular Paris Fashion Week venues.

So stay tuned.

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Suit’s On: Veronique Branquinho | Paris Fashion Week Fall 2017

Veronique Branquinho Fall-Winter 2017

(Main image: NowFashion. Full pictures pending)

For Fall-Winter 2017, Veronique Branquinho saw to it that a man’s left-hand twill suit from 1943 was at the very center of the season’s collection.

She deconstructed — and reconstructed — the bare bones of what makes a suit, to reinvent it in a range I haven’t seen before. The first look was a seemingly traditional vest and jacket, with the subtraction of long pant legs — replaced by bermudas, no less. Being a fall collection, she added thick white stockings: the kind as little girls we were forced to wear to church on Easter Sunday.

She deconstructed what makes a suit.

Fables of the Deconstruction

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There were blazers redesigned to a cape and poncho, which really grapples with the reinvention question. A pant is a pant, and you can only change so much. But to reinvent the standard garments a woman wears is the difficult task every designer faces season after season. In that respect, the designer succeeded. She even took the same suiting fabric and deviated into overalls and an accordion skirt.

Something I have seen at many of the shows this week (including AALTO and Ingie Paris) is massive, voluminous sleeves. Here we see them with sleeve garters, to give them extra texture and character, and in a nod to 19th century men’s fashion.

The borderline morose facial expressions some models wore reassured me of the zombie-like, drab, punk schoolgirl vibe the clothes were intended to convey, as with the cowlicked hair we saw with Yohji Yamamoto last season.

There was a massive presence of Swarovski rhinestones, stuck overtop sheer shirts, that recalled a ballroom dancer’s costume. It gave a crazy, incomprehensible contrast to the borderline boyish punk/Victorian message everything else was suited up to convey.

In spite of some mixed messages, one standout corduroy oxblood suit in particular kicked ass and took names, showing that although deconstruction is in Branquinho’s vocabulary, construction is at the core of her talent.

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Learn More

veroniquebranquinho.com

With love,

FWO

Paris La Nuit: Ingie Paris | Paris Fashion Week Fall 2017

Ingie Paris Fall-Winter 2017

The gold moldings were everywhere, and grounded just a touch with a large assortment of candles on mantles. With windows looking down to Place Vendôme, I wouldn’t have minded staying in this room for days. And so began a story of elegant fall evenings and nights in this beautiful city of Paris, both cruel and loving.

Designer Ingie Chalhoub has always been at the forefront of high-end style, having brought the first-ever Chanel boutique to the Middle East in 1983, even as she continues to work alongside storied houses such as Chanel, Valentino, and Ralph Lauren.

A Night in Paris

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Her Fall-Winter ’17 collection brought out a number of beautiful designs, although looks #5 and #6 might have been my favorites. First, a strong, voluminous copper sarong-like skirt paired with a midnight blue blouse. It showed that excess fabric, done in a sumptuous way, can give a woman strong presence without distracting. The depth of that blue recalled a night in this city, with lights reflecting through the fenêtres françaises into a stunning Parisian salon.

The jacquard suit in the skirt’s same fabric conveyed neatness and cool-girl vibe as if in an afterthought. The jacquard suits were strong, gleaming in that sexy autumnal light.

Look #12 was a sweet, light knit suit that showed simplicity, but mastery in design because of drape and proportion. Its comfort and cut on the bias were two contrasting elements that delivered the experience of Ingie.

Also notable were the small touches of an older elegance in pearls and diamond pins, where the pearl earring felt eerily young, designed for a fresh look, now accessible for a younger crowd.

There was a bit of a weaker black sub-collection sprinkled in, but carefully designed, probably bound for certain segment of Ingie’s target market.

Throughout, the “strong women” message was clear and varied. She even showed some boyish shapes in the looser gowns. The designer makes bold statements in silent, small details like the power sleeves with bows on them, stunning in their ease.

Throughout, the “strong women” message was clear and varied.

There was a small sequin presence in the collection, important because of its rough glamour contrasted with oh-so-gentle silks, especially captured in look #25. The dress looked so comfortable and moveable — easy to wear, but the sleeves posed a constraint of fragility and class.

The winning aspect of this season’s collection was volume, executed with light fabrics that exuded that same decadence and elegance of the venue. The fabric’s light weight didn’t prevent them from having that beautiful, monumental size. Throughout, I felt the presence of the massive shapes she designed, which are only huge in their appearance, and are ever-so light. Unfortunately, the pictures don’t do their sizable presence proper justice, and I am simply so happy to have been in the room for such a moving collection. It felt like a mark in the brand’s history.

I am simply so happy to have been in the room for such a moving collection.

I loved being able to detect the designer’s passion in the collection, delivered in profound packaging. You really have to pay attention to what’s before you and look past the Instagrammable moment. It’s about reading into — and feeling — the passion and hard work that was breathed into each individual garment.

This one is a winner.

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Learn More

ingieparis.com

With love,

FWO

Manish Arora | Paris Fashion Week Fall 2017

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Manish Arora FW17

The only surprising thing about seeing traditional African style at Paris Fashion Week is that we don’t see it more often.

Africa is, after all, the original home of technicolor textiles in genius combinations.

Up Close

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(Photos: Clara Abi Nader)

The trick is to bring something fresh to the conversation, which is a bit like adding a meaningful footnote to Hume and Kant, or some other venerable dialogue. Although the nature of meaning and existence may not be at stake, the success or failure of it depends on having something real to say in the first place.

Fortunately, fashion expresses itself directly to the senses, so the merit of a collection will be subjectively judged, and transmitted directly to the occipital. (Less chit-chat there.)

 
The Continental

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In the case of Manish Arora’s Fall-Winter 2017 collection, taking Africa (and various Near East inspirations) into outer space is anything but non à-propos. Far from it. A trip to the African continent can be a bit like Star Wars, with people of many cultures co-mingling in a world that’s still a bit like America’s Wild West. It’s a place of endless sky, real danger, and — at its most positive — unlimited possibilities.

As usual, we think anyone who screams “cultural appropriation” is missing a very important larger point: the human adventure is our adventure, just as we belong to one another.

This was a human show. A show that strove for aesthetic perfection in every detail, and executed it at the highest level, with Henri Rousseau-luminosity and magic.

It was a salute to imagination, and a future of endless optimism and possibility.

a salute to a future of endless optimism

Or, as the show program said, “a stellar forecast, full of cosmic love.”

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Learn More

manisharora.com

With love,

FWO

Daily Glam: Pascal Millet | Paris Fashion Week Fall 2017

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Pascal Millet Fall-Winter 2017

The world’s fanciest couture will fall flat if the silhouette is off.

If Dior has one legacy in modern fashion, it’s in drawing our attention to silhouette: that ghostly specter that hovers behind, and defines, every outfit.

Gallic Glam

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The French, of course, are masters as it: whether it be a sheath dress with a chunky belt, a wrap dress with a wrap, an X-line with a hat, or any other combination that would look well defined in shadow. Even “hipster” styles rely on silhouette, with their skinny pants, just-so jackets, and clunky shoes.

Like it or not, silhouette reigns supreme: and all the MK- or LV-branded handbags, Swarovski crystals, and rose-gold watches in the world are helpless to improve an ill-defined one.

For Autumn-Winter 2017, Pascal Millet took us on a tour of modern and classic French styling, blending some flapper chic with glammed up boho styling, keeping precise attention to silhouette.

Whereas many designers present collections that live in an otherworldly plane — and may only rarely see the light of day on a consumer — Millet instead created a casual yet glamorous collection: as such, one eminently wearable, and unmistakably French.

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Learn More

pascalmillet.com

With love,

FWO

AALTO Paris Fashion Week Fall 2017

Tuomas Merikoski

Intensity.

The “reception music” usually tries to set the stage for what you’re about to experience. I always take a close listen to see if what the designer offers in the form of a preview successfully represents the collection to come.

At AALTO’s Paris Fashion Week presentation, the music was unusual and romantic, which made me think of a dry summer day, driving through the deserts of New Mexico with cast members of Napoleon Dynamite.

Coat of Many Colors

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(Photos: Guillaume Roujas)

Designer Tuomas Merikoski kicked off the show with immediately loveable pieces. As a sucker for menswear and box shapes, look #1 was already an A+. As more models emerged, it was evident that Merioski was creating a Le Smoking-meets-poorly-suited Italian gangster vibe. Only it worked. It was elegant. Sexy.

With the suits, Merikoski showed how a designer can easily recharge those easy, French-style layers and French-style elegance with newness and excitement.

The designer left loose chunks of fabric flying about, suggesting an easy-going, youthful, and decidedly unstiff approach to suiting. They were very career-oriented — in a gloomy way — but with a sort of ironic air, superimopsing easy and nonchalant on traditionally meticulous styles. The color-block stripe suits seemed less successful to me, seeming forced into the collection. One particular detail that stood out under the suiting was a very high collar in a pinstriped shirt, which created an-ever-so brief Victorian moment.

Then there was fur, in conjunction with Saga Furs. Big fur. Fur as dresses, and fur designed exclusively for pockets. There was even fur around necks and elbows. Fur. I typically love anything with fur, but the designer used it in such unexpected ways. It was exaggerated at times without ever being vulgar, and in others, subtle but present.

The designer used fur in such unexpected ways.

Later on we found a bit of that desert fantasy I recognized before the start of the show, in the couple of (godforsaken) cowl necks and an elbow patch. This is where the designer shows his range: from starting with a strong, high statement of a killer suit and fur, — very luxe — to an angsty desert chaser.

Was it too much?

I think the AALTO woman is a traveler looking to take her experiences with her, but there may be some experiences — such as nights in a New Mexican desert — that should stay as a memory. There were some ill-fitting pieces that were just plain awkward. I refer to the dresses that were made with not-so-fabulous ’90s cowl necks in literally AALTO’s #1 color last season. I suppose there is some appeal to them, but it wasn’t immediate for me. It was a bit of a reach. They look a bit frumpy together, but may work if restyled with more focus on proportion.

A personal favorite was look #10, a gorgeous, pinstriped, high-waist velvet pant paired with a militia green blouse, designed with those utilitarian-chic panels. (These same panels are what the designer used to create those ever-inventive exterior pockets in other looks. The designer understands very clearly that women love their pockets. They make us feel at home in an outfit.)

A personal favorite was look #10.

The two closing outerwear looks literally yielded “wows” from the audience. They were so smart: a fantastic winter color, designed to be reversible and gloriously puffy, but dramatic enough for the runway.

The two closing looks literally yielded “wows.”

The collection overall was very conscious of silhouette, and hit the nail on the head in this fundamental factor. They were lean, boyish and young, recalling a woman who lives on the skirts of the subculture but still dresses to kill.

The collection presented a new breath of fresh air in these very noticeable creative details. It was a strong one, though I’d say the color range needed work. I think the designer should have phased out the singular red piece and left the orange-peach of last season’s collection.

Show Credits

Casting: Alexandra Sandberg
Music: DJ Dactylo
Hair: Joseph Puljate for L’Oréal Paris
Make-Up: Karim Rahman for L’Oréal Paris
Set design: Kim Harding

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Learn More

aaltointernational.com

With love,

FWO

Wearable Wonder: Gemy Maalouf FW17

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From Red Carpet to Ready to Wear: Gemy Maalouf FW17

Staying true to the brand’s DNA, for FW17, Gemy Maalouf presented a collection full of fluttering gowns in ultra-feminine cuts and intricate embellishments.

The color palette was clean and neutral, giving room for the lace appliqués and beaded motifs to shine through. The intricate beading and embellishments created dazzling textures, sharply contrasted with the delicate sheer linings and silk fabrics. The light from the chandeliers in the Bowery Hotel danced off of each metallic stitch and sequin, although these details would be much more appreciated in an atelier.

Red Carpet Ready

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Voluptuous gowns with seductive cuts were broken up by adding a few looks that were more ready to wear than in the brand’s past. Most refreshing were a brocade jacket paired with shorts, a nude two-piece look with flared bell bottom pants, and short cocktail dresses … wearable pieces for the everyday client.

Our favorite look was a black and white ethereal printed deep V-neck gown with an umbrella waistline, covered with lace appliqué and slick beading sprinkled throughout the appliqué. The few looks that incorporated this printed fabric were among the most successful.

Some numbers are sure to be seen on some of Maalouf’s celebrity following like the artists 5th Harmony and Carrie Underwood this awards season.

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Learn More

gemymaalouf.com

With love,

FWO

Style Icon: Invicta Comes to NYFW

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Interview with Simone Di Stasio

Italian brand Invicta was founded in 1906. Its history is long and storied, making their recent New York Fashion Week debut with FTL Moda just a little extra special. Not to mention the fact that the presentation happened completely in virtual reality. We spoke with Simone Di Stasio about the evolution of the brand.

 
 

 
Virtually Amazing: Invicta

Q: This is the first time Invicta has been a part of NYFW. But it isn’t your first time in New York?

Indeed, we are not new in the U.S., but our participation in NYFW brings INVICTA to the next level in this market.

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Q: How do you feel about being a part of fashion week this year?

NYFW has been an emotional experience that Invicta couldn’t miss. We found there was a great interest in the brand. This means participation can really bring great results.

Q: At Pitti we already saw you embracing VR, to let customers paraglide over some pretty impressive mountains. How do you feel about seeing your collection in virtual reality?

We cannot deny that a product should be seen and touched. Today, through new technologies, it is possible to contextualize the product and make it yours in its dimension.

Today, through new technologies, it is possible to contextualize the product.

Q: Invicta celebrated its 110th birthday. What are you most proud of?

We are proud to be one of the brands with a lot of experience in the fashion outdoor world. Invicta is always contemporary, across different generations, as few other brands in the world.

Q: Can you tell us more about the origins of the brand?

The Invicta brand was born in England in 1906, and in 1921 opened its first artisan workshop in Italy. Thanks to continuous research on materials, features, and design, in the ’80s Invicta became a cult brand for an entire generation of youngsters and a real fashion and cultural social phenomenon, and we continue to work with the same enthusiasm of the founders.

in the ’80s Invicta became a cult brand for an entire generation of youngsters

Q: What’s coming next? Where is the brand heading?

The Invicta brand will continue, through its values, to bring its heritage to life: exploration, enthusiasm, emotion, thrill, color. These values will continue to be applied to everything Invicta is doing: contemporary products able to satisfy the needs of a global market.

Invicta’s famed Jolly Backpack

Q: What was the most impressive / emotional / funniest moment during the whole Invicta journey so far?

No doubt it was during the ’80s, when the Invicta Jolly Backpack became a worldwide Italian icon for traveling youngsters. More than 10 millions units were sold. We can also say that the Jolly Backpack has been the first not-virtual “social wall,” on which young people from all over the world have impressed their personal emotions.

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Learn More

invicta.it/en

With love,

FWO