Monthly Archives: October 2008

Sneak Peek at Charlotte Ronson’s JCPenney Line


Photo: nylon.com

You might actually want to go shopping at JCPenney for your spring wardrobe. Oh, we’re serious. Images of Charlotte Ronson’s diffusion line for the chain (called I [Heart] Ronson) are out, and it’s actually pretty cute. Items retail for just $15 to $65, while Ronson’s namesake contemporary line wholesales for $70 to $130. We’re glad this diffusion line turned out so well. We’re still dismayed by how inappropriate Kimora Lee Simmons’s junior line for JCPenney was, but this batch of clothes more than makes up for it. Nylon has more photos of the new I [Heart] Ronson line.

FIRST LOOK: CHARLOTTE RONSON FOR JCPENNEY [Nylon]

Do Drool Over This Collection of Vintage Avant-garde With Us


Vintage Norma Kamali.
Photo: Courtesy of Christie's

The owners of Resurrection Vintage are auctioning off their private collection of vintage avant-garde fashion at Christie’s today. The pieces have been amassed over twelve years and include iconic works by Paco Rabanne, like a rare aluminum tunic dress from 1934, which the Resurrection owners have never offered in stores. The lot also includes Vivienne Westwood’s Sex Collection from the seventies. We don’t imagine we’ll be able to afford pieces like these anytime soon, but girls can dream (and drool) so we pulled some of our favorites for the slideshow.

Lux Q & A: Resurrection’s Mark Haddawy and Katy Rodriguez [Luxist]

Inside Catherine Malandrino’s New Book


A look from Malandrino's spring 2008 collection
Photo: Wendelien Daan

Catherine Malandrino’s celebrating her tenth anniversary in the fashion biz by opening a new L.A. boutique and releasing a coffee-table tome. What, you thought she’d have cake and streamers? Mais non! The tome is by Pascale Richard as part of Assouline’s “Memoires de Mode” series ($18.95) and features photos and sketches of Malandrino’s designs throughout the past decade, from her iconic American flag-print shirtdress in fall 2001 to her draping, jewel-toned cocktail frocks of fall 2008. Click ahead for a look inside.

Botox and Breast Augmentations Down; Eve Wears Barack on Her Nails


He's looking at your bad hair.
Photo: WireImage

PLASTIC SURGERY
• There is a 12 percent decline in Botox injections since this time last year, and boob jobs are down 60 percent. Fine by us. [NYT]

HAIR
• Curly-haired Isaac Mizrahi says that the most common style error is bad hair: “People have no excuse for bad hair … Women should be encouraged to spend a lot of money on their hair. You’d think I had a chain of hair salons, but I don’t.” [CNN]

NAILS
• Eve painted her nails in honor of Barack Obama, pasting on a sticker of the presidential hopeful on her thumb. A girl’s gotta express herself. [BellaSugar]

• China Glaze’s spring collection, Romantique, features all pearlized shades of pastels, divided into two sets of six for warm and cool tones. So far chrome is a commenter favorite, so the gray trend could carry over to spring. [All Lacquered Up]

FRAGRANCE
• Brooks Brothers introduces their new perfumes this weekend. The men’s is described as “ever so slightly forward-edge if the edge in question is the front door of a co-op on Park and 76th,” and the women’s “unfortunately reiterates a pretty but rather bloodless modern American feminine.” [Moment/NYT]

Move Over, My Pretty, Ugly Is Here

The repulsive and the simply unattractive are getting a philosophical and political makeover.

Random 13-Year-Old Girl Has Worn Favorite Pucci Jacket for ‘Years’


Peaches Geldof
Photo: WireImage

Meet Scarlett Lesley. “I travel extensively and I need a wardrobe that can take me anywhere,” she told the Daily Mail. “Last year I was on the red carpet in LA for the premiere of George Clooney’s film Leatherheads, I partied all summer in Ibiza, skied in St Moritz and swam in the Maldives.” No, she’s not an actress you should know about. She’s a 13-year-old. A burgeoning Peaches Geldof! Recently she attended the opening party for a gallery wearing 200-pound Lulu Guinness shoes and carrying a Chanel handbag. In case you’re not annoyed yet, read this:

‘I first fell in love with designer things when I started playing dress up with Mummy’s quilted Chanel bag,’ says Scarlett. ‘I just loved the feel and the look of it. I got my own Marc Jacobs bag (around £5,000) when I was 12 and my friends were like: “Oh my God! That is so fabulous!”

They all knew what it was, immediately. ‘I love my designer bags and shoes with a passion — they are like my babies. My most expensive item of clothing is probably a £650 Pucci jacket from Harrods. But I have worn it for years!

I mix and match my really expensive designer items with High Street shops, such as Topshop and Urban Outfitters, to create a really eye-catching and individual look.’

Oh God. When we were 13, we probably shopped at Gap and swam in pools at summer camp. And instead of “fabulous,” we used “cool.” We really don’t want to know what young Scarlett’s dressing up as for Halloween.

Meet the designer obsessed teens who don’t think twice about spending thousands (of their parent’s money) on shoes and handbags [Daily Mail]

Fug Girls: America Ferrera Ups the Ugliness on ‘Ugly Betty’


Two Americas, divided.
Photo: Courtesy of ABC; Getty Images

Not so long ago, America Ferrera and her scrappy, poncho-toting, brace-faced alter ego were the toast of broadcast TV. Ugly Betty blended soap and sass into a smart fashion-industry parody, and the refreshingly normal Ferrera gave the show surprising heart by seamlessly inhabiting the frumpy central role. But now, two seasons later, the antics of Betty Suarez feel both tired and tiring — and the lead actress herself is arguably the worst part of the show.

Granted, titular characters have it tough because the audience never gets a break from them. Call it Dawson’s Creek Syndrome: Main character becomes overly omnipresent; writers have more fun creating quirkier secondary characters, giving them all the best lines; fans clamor for more of them and less of the insufferable lead actor with clawlike man-bangs and vast-prairie forehead; writers realize it’s too late to rekindle viewer interest in the lead. It’s ironic to see DCS infecting Ugly Betty, considering James Van Der Beek’s amusing guest-star turn last season, but maybe that’s how the disease spread. Because just as Pacey overshadowed Dawson and Jack and Karen ran roughshod over Will and Grace, so do the wickedly catty Marc, Amanda, and Wilhelmina outshine self-righteous Betty at every turn.

Indeed, after a promising, award-winning beginning, Betty seems to be losing her very Betty-ness — though never actually ugly, she’s officially moved from Mildly Awkward Betty to Cute and Increasingly Svelte Betty Who Is No Longer Believably the Butt of Anyone’s Office Jokes, Especially Since That Dress She’s Wearing Is DVF. This makes Ferrera’s recent shrieky, broad-strokes performances even more problematic. When you stop being able to relate to — or root for — Betty, she becomes kind of a shrill pain, and frankly, a raging buttinski. And when your lead actress has hinted to the press that she wants to lose the braces and has appeared in a series of increasingly flattering wigs despite the lack of a “Betty Discovers Frizz-Ease” B-plot, you start to wonder whether she’s protecting Betty’s essence anymore or just trying to escape from it.

Muddying the mix are frequent rumors that Ferrera is, to use our favorite Hollywood euphemism, difficult. Sources from the Traveling Pants sequel whispered that America resented being there because she (allegedly) felt Ugly Betty elevated her above it. During a Pants junket, she memorably delivered a snotty eye roll while co-star Blake Lively discussed Gossip Girl, followed by a Seventeen interview where Ferrera declared that Blake’s show “conditions us to be mean,” despite the fact the she herself acts opposite popular comic-relief characters who are essentially Mean Girls themselves. (Plus, it’s at best hypocritical to go behind a friend’s back and accuse her of turning other women into unsupportive backstabbers.) And now rumors persist that guest star Lindsay Lohan’s arc on Betty was truncated because Ferrera didn’t like her; while those have been denied, we tend to suspect that where there’s smoke, there’s usually at least a tiny fire, especially when we’ve already seen Ferrera act publicly dismissive of a co-worker.

Obviously, we know TV isn’t real — except for A Shot at Love With Tila Tequila, of course — so God knows we don’t expect Ferrera to run into the Coffee Bean on weekends wearing a poncho, performing random acts of kindness. However, much like Tom Cruise’s crazy fits of passion over Katie Holmes ruined both Top Gun and Dawson’s Creek, it’s hard to lose yourself in a fictional world when the back of your mind is chock-full of unflattering real-life stories about the people inhabiting it. Perhaps if Ferrera’s performance were subtler or stronger — let’s start with 65 percent less whining — we’d be able to lose ourselves in it again. But we can’t. And it’s starting to make Ugly Betty just plain ugly.

Indians Scoop Up Luxury Goods in New Delhi


Photo: Shanna Ravindra

Hermès just opened a new flagship in New Delhi, and they’re not having trouble selling $6,400 saddles with matching gear. The luxury sector is thriving there despite the economic downturn. Cartier, Christian Dior, Louis Vuitton, Armani, Dolce & Gabbana, and Versace all have outposts in New Delhi. The number of Indians with more than $1 million in assets has grown 22 percent since last year. They’re prospering because wealth in New Delhi depends on India’s domestic economy rather than the stock market. And the more other people can’t afford stuff, the more the people in India want to flaunt their stuff. [Time]

Dress Codes: Looking Good: The Sequel

A fashion moment from 1978 is bringing sexy (and stylish) back.

Will ‘Mogue’ Cut Back to Two Issues Per Year? Or Fold Altogether?

Condé Nast publications will have to cut staffs and budgets each by 5 percent within weeks, the New York Observer reports. No titles are exempt, which means even Vogue will have to downsize. Horrors! Maybe Anna and her posse can stay at the Holiday Inn for Fashion Weeks in Europe? A scary thought, but Men’s Vogue’s situation is even more perilous. The Observer reports the Condé Nast bigwigs don’t know what to do with Mogue, but folding the title is a possibility. Indeed Perez Hilton is reporting the title has already folded. But the Observer reports this could also happen:

One Condé Nast source said that it’s likely that the magazine will scale back from publishing 10 issues a year to running only twice a year and it will give up its entire ad sales staff, with Vogue business staff handling the work.

“It’ll be a small, small, small version of what it is,” said a 4 Times Square source. “And the small version will exist for nothing more than for Anna [Wintour] to save face.”

Anna is the editorial director of Mogue, which has been light on ad pages lately. Also, as we previously noted, most of the ads are for watches. We thought that was a good thing since we enjoyed ogling the sexy men in those watch ads so much. But according to a source at Condé Nast, having all your eggs in one ad basket is dangerous and not sustainable. Yeah, we would have liked to see more, oh, underwear ads.

We’re awaiting confirmation from Condé Nast on the fate of the title.

Empty Nast Syndrome: Condé Nast Cutting Five Percent of All Magazine Staffs; Future of Men’s Vogue In Doubt [NYO]
Another One Bites The Dust! [Perez Hilton]

Related: Check Out These Hot Men in Watch Ads