Friday, 30 September 2011

New judge on America's Next Top Model

Vogue magazine editor-at-large Andre Leon Talley is leaving the "America's Next Top Model" judges' table at the end of the series' current all-star season, and he'll be replaced by fashion diva and reality TV star Kelly Cutrone.

Cutrone confirmed her new job via Twitter on Wednesday: "It's true! I am joining America's Next Top Model'! Cutrone is already well known to fans of fashion-related reality TV.

She's the tell-it-like-it-is founder of fashion industry publicity firm People's Revolution, and has starred on "The Hills" and "The City," where she employed those show's stars, Lauren Conrad and Whitney Port.
She also starred in her own series, "Kell on Earth," last year on Bravo, and she is currently a correspondent on "Dr. Phil."

Talley, meanwhile, became an 'ANTM' judge in 2010, with the show's 14th cycle, the first season that included an Italian Vogue cover photoshoot for the winning model.

Tuesday, 20 September 2011

Ask me why I love Oscar de la Renta

Well, it’s pretty obvious. With a collection like this, i give my undying love.
Oscar de la Renta appeals to me in every kinda way. Just take a look at this stunning Resort 2012 collection, featuring prints, patchwork, polkadots, quirky hats, chic shift dresses, crisp blazers, everything a girl wants.
The styling is super chic and he offsets the sweetness with edgy shoeboots and interesting cowboyesque hats.
Totally and completely Oscar, totally and completely head over heels in love.



















Monday, 19 September 2011

Michael Sontag Spring/Summer 2012

I started Fashion Week this morning with Michael Sontag's show, a designer I've been following since he first presented his work in Berlin. Michael's signature are the flowing cuts, interesting drapes combined with simple shapes and surprising colors. They varied between muddy browns and shiny greys, pure white, muted lime green, gold and, of course (as it seems to be a color Michael appreciates a lot), pure pink. The collection felt like a rainy summer day, just when the sun is about to break through the luminous grey, when you still need to wear something coat-like but can already feel the warmth of the next days. Very optimistic and very Berlin.







Thursday, 15 September 2011

Start-up Says: Move Over, Vogue

"I like to track StyleCaster's success based on where we sit during Fashion Week," said Ari Goldberg, the CEO of StyleCaster, a three-year-old fashion media start-up, as he took his front row seat at the Tibi runway show at Lincoln Center.

"In the beginning, we were in the top row," he said, referring to the row farthest from the runway. "The next year, we were in the fourth row. Now I'm in the first. It's ridiculous. The front row has always been reserved for celebrities and fashion editors."

Not anymore. StyleCaster launched in 2009 with the editorial mission of bringing "style to the people." In turn, the media start-up has built a site where users, predominantly women ages 18 to 34, can find fashion advice, build personal profiles, share style tips, and discover new "looks." It produces in-house editorial fashion shoots in its studio space, which resides at the back of its 5,000 square foot Manhattan offices, near the Fashion Institute of Technology. And during Fashion Week, its staff of nearly a dozen editorial writers scramble from show to show to report on everything from celebrity sightings to runway trends.
To help people try to understand what StyleCaster is, Goldberg likes to describe it as "Facebook meets Conde Nast." It's site already boasts 2 million unique visitors a month.

Starting a media company in the the throes of an economic recession that hit magazines, newspapers, and media websites hard was a bold move. But in chaos lies opportunity, Goldberg believes. "As the saying goes, when there's blood in the streets, buy real estate."

And beyond the satisfaction of seeing (and being seen) in the front row, Goldberg believes the migration to the first row symbolizes something much larger: Namely, that young media start-ups and tech savvy entrepreneurs are giving old-school fashion magazines a run for their money, lulling away advertisers that are starting to look for digital platforms that just don't exist within brands like Vogue and Cosmo. And if anything, Fashion Week in New York serves to highlight this trend. A complex ecosystem of small companies have emerged in center stage, from blogs to social media start-ups. Even companies like Tumblr and Instagram are cashing in on the action.

"We’ve built a better mouse trap," says Goldberg, 29, who got his start in the media world as the VP for LeBron James's marketing agency. "We create content like The Huffington Post, but we have the caliber of brand that Conde Nast has built. There was a huge desire for both the reader and the advertiser to move from print to digital, but that experience didn't really exist. At the end of the day, this is a better, faster, cheaper, business."
Although the company does not disclose revenue, StyleCaster has raised $4.25 million in Series A funding from Dan Gilbert (founder of Quicken Loans and owner of the Cleveland Cavaliers), and plans to be profitable by the end of 2011. Among the site's advertisers are Dove, Starbucks, and Diet Coke, which recently launched a new campaign on a Times Square billboard featuring StyleCaster employees.
"We’re closing campaigns that historically never would have gone to a start-up," says David Goldberg, 27, who is Ari's brother and the president of the company.

And unlike a typical fashion magazine, which conjures images derived from movies like The Devil Wears Prada, StyleCaster is arranged more like a typical tech start-up than, say, is Vogue. There are communal tables, an open floor plan, and graffiti on the walls. It's irreverent, too; Last Thursday, the brothers arranged for a crossdresser to pose as Anna Wintour on Fashion's Night Out. And David's pug, Frankie, is one of the first in the office to greet visitors.
"What rules?" Ari says. "There are no rules."
To be sure, Ari and David are consumate entrepreneurs—not necessarily fashion experts. The brothers grew up in Cleveland, Ohio, where their family owned a steel business and a chain of dry cleaners—not exactly glamour industries.

But after moving to New York (and dating one of the founders of Porter Grey, a fashion line) Ari says he began to see the potential within the fashion industry for a new type of digital media company that is both accessible—and glamorous—for women who want to be stylish.

"We’re advertisers, we're marketers, we're sales guys, and we're brand guys," says Goldberg. "'Style to the people' is not only what we believe, but it's a better business model. It's about creating a brand that's inclusive of the reader, rather than exclusive."

He adds, "We're ambitious, and sometimes it bites us in the ass. People get to StyleCaster, and they go, 'Woah, there's a big idea here.' Have we fully capitalized on that? By no means. I think we're just scratching the surface."

Tuesday, 13 September 2011

NEW FACE OF THE WEEK! RENEE VAN SEGGERN


Betsey Johnson wows the crowd with her finale

NEW YORK (AP) — The highlight of Betsey Johnson's fashion show always comes at the end — and it has nothing to do with the clothes. The 69-year-old designer does her cartwheel on the runway, and it brings down the house.
On Monday at New York Fashion Week, she added a split, which brought huge applause from the crowd that included Nicki Minaj.
"I try to go to the shows of people I respect, and when I respect you, I like you," said Patricia Field, the designer, stylist and, most famously, the costume designer for "Sex and the City," from her front-row perch.
Field said her ties to Johnson go back to 1969. "We came up in this industry together," she said.
Relationships seem to count a lot for Johnson. The first model on her runway was daughter Lulu, if you don't count her granddaughters who entertained the crowd before the lights went down with their pink-streaked hair and little dance numbers on the runway.
At the end of the show, Johnson invites models on stage with balloons and encourages them to smile — normally a no-no for the catwalkers at the Lincoln Center tents at Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week.
But they were having fun with prodding: Her collection was an eclectic mix of tongue-and-cheek (really, more cheek) prom-ready sequined dresses, lace babydolls and other assorted lingerie-inspired looks, and tough-girl tight outfits with skull and X-ray motifs.
She also willingly shared with her usual younger fans just how long she's been at this. Several of the prints on T-shirts and T-shirt dresses featured Polaroid shots of Johnson in her younger years. One kaftan was covered with her face and the clear date of 1977.

Friday, 2 September 2011

Fashion Week Scheduling NotesFashion Week Scheduling Notes

In the wake of an eleventh-hour hurricane and persistent economic turmoil, this season's Fashion Week calendar has been reshuffled and revised like never before.
Marc Jacobs was the first—and most formidable—to change his time slot, postponing the runway show for his main collection from September 13th to the 15th, to close out Fashion Week. Partner and company president Robert Duffy blamed the delay on Hurricane Irene, claiming to WWD the staff lost precious time preparing the collection. However, with rumors of Jacobs' imminent succession to Dior reaching fever pitch, the last-minute change put industry watchers on high alert.
If Jacobs can do it, then so can Olivier Theyskens. Theory announced it would move the Theyskens show, also originally scheduled for Monday, September 12, to the next afternoon after being held up by the hurricane. 
Meanwhile, both Catherine Malandrino and Isaac Mizrahi are skipping this season altogether, while Vena Cava is scaling back to a closed "friends and family" showing for their spring line.
A Malandrino rep told Page Six that the company “is in a time of transition. We’re refocusing, and we’ll be back in February.” Mizrahi, though he shared the news himself in a video on the brand's blog, was a bit more cryptic in explaining why there would be no show for the spring collection, half-joking that it felt "modern" to them. Vena Cava's camp didn't offer up a hint of insight into their motivation to go private.
The calendar is also missing the GreenShows this September — a note to a fan on the official Facebook page indicates that they will not be holding their semi-annual sustainable-fashion runway shows, but to "stay tuned" for an announcement on their "plans to launch a retail distribution platform for the sustainable fashion movement."
That seems to be the latest, with less than a week until official kick-off. We're still marking our datebooks in pencil.

Thursday, 1 September 2011

London catwalk designer to show new collection at Norwich Fashion Week

Fashion label Silk & Sawdust took to the London catwalks earlier this year as one of the hot new brands on the fashion scene. Now, the Norwich fashion designer behind the brand is bringing her new autumn collection to Norwich Fashion Week next month. Emma Harrowing reports.

  The Silk & Sawdust fashion label has been around since October 2009, with an online collection of 1920s to 1970s vintage inspired day dresses, evening dresses and separates.
Then, earlier this year, the label made it to the London catwalk at Pure London’s Next Generation, a national platform for hot new labels to present their original collections on the runway.
For fashion designer and founder of Silk & Sawdust, Claudia Orrell, this was the moment she had been waiting for all her life.
“I was about six-years-old when I made my first frock,” says 36-year-old Claudia as she sits in her modest design studio, otherwise known as the spare room in her flat on Wensum Street. Next to her is her computer with the Silk & Sawdust website on display ready to flick through. A well-used mannequin stands in the corner and some of her designs hang around the room.
“It was in the very early eighties when white was all the rage. I relieved my mother of an old sheet that was a little threadbare in places, snipped away, nipped, tucked, ran over it with her hand-powered sewing machine and hey presto, I had made a cute little straight white dress, finished off with a red ribbon at the waist. Sadly, I don’t think Mummy Orrell could quite get over the idea that it was, in fact a sheet, and was slightly mortified by me wearing it to school.”


Dreams of becoming a fashion designer diminished when on ‘growing up and having to pay the bills’, Claudia began a career in publishing in London and her love of dressmaking became a hobby.
“I used to make prom dresses for my friends in my spare time. It was like having an illicit love affair on the side of my publishing job,” laughs Claudia.
“I made lots of little outfits for mine and my friend’s wardrobe and I knew that this is what I wanted to do full time. I signed up to some short courses in fashion drawing and design at St Martin’s in London. The problem was how to make enough money out of it.”
Like many, Claudia came to a crossroads in her life when she was faced with redundancy from her job in London. With the prospect of yet more spreadsheets and a desk job that would bring in a regular income on one hand and the opportunity to take voluntary redundancy and try something new, Claudia choose the latter and went to work in Bangkok with Voluntary Service Overseas.
It was here that her fashion career began.
“It’s strange to think about it now, but amongst all the humbling scenes I witnessed, I also met some incredible people with so much creativity and dress making skills,” says Claudia.
“They work with stunning fabrics and it wasn’t about fancy modern equipment, it was all about highly-skilled people cutting patterns, pinning fabrics and working with old-fashioned machines.
“Experiencing this magic swung me back into dressmaking.”
Within two months of setting up Silk & Sawdust, the orders came in and the workload meant that Claudia could finally follow her dream. She now spends most of her time working on her fashion designs in Norwich (she moved here from London in April this year) while supplementing her income with freelance publishing work in London.
“The name Silk & Sawdust came from sitting in a pub with a friend who I had made a dress for from silk chiffon,” says Claudia.
“We were trying to come up with a name for the label when my friend dropped her dress on the floor. The floor of the pub had a kind of sawdust mesh on it, so when she picked the dress up it was covered in sawdust shavings. We looked at each other and said ‘silk and sawdust’ and the name was born. It’s been an incredible journey and a huge amount of work, but it continues to be fun.”
Claudia has currently designed four collections for her Silk & Sawdust label. Each piece is inspired by vintage patterns, old fashion books and original vintage dresses, coats and tops; all made from fabric sourced worldwide. Each piece is available in limited quantities and hand tailored by some of the highly-skilled dressmakers in Bangkok who Claudia met while on her travels. Currently, Claudia is working on her fifth range, an autumn collection which was half launched at Pure London and which will be launched in its entirety at Norwich Fashion Week next month.
“The idea behind Silk & Sawdust is simple,” says Claudia. “To bring back the glamorous fashion from years gone by using modern fabrics that will make each item wearable and the wearer feel stylish.”
As she talks with passion about her new designs, a quick glance around her studio reveals a few clues as to what will be in her final collection. A fabulous 1930s dress hangs on the hook on the door and a beige ruffled midi skirt seen on the London catwalk is joined by a 70s-style satin blouse.
A sneak peak inside the makeshift hanging space in her studio reveals other 30s and 60s inspired finds, plus a military style blouse, all very much in keeping with next season’s trends and all made to a high quality and in fabrics and designs you could just fall in love with.
Says Claudia: “Primarily, I make my designs for women over 30 who want a feminine, sexy and stylish look, but with a quirky twist.” And you can see Claudia’s new designs for yourself as Silk & Sawdust’s full autumn collection will be launched at the Open Store event during Norwich Fashion Week. Claudia will open the door to her studio so that you can see, touch and try on her latest designs and perhaps order a piece or two. Says Claudia: “As each item comes in a limited number, there is a good chance you can pick up a dress or top that no one else has. You can own a piece of original fashion, and I might even put together some goodie bags too!”
You can see Claudia’s new collection at her studio at 23a Wensum Street from midday until 8pm on Tuesday, September 27, as part of the Open Store event at Norwich Fashion Week.
Open Store showcases the work of Norfolk fashion designers who will be showcasing their latest designs at Ethika on Timberhill, Verandah on Upper St Giles and at various locations on Wensum Street.
Norwich Fashion Week takes place from Thursday September 22 until Thursday September 29. For more information about Open Store and the other events taking place throughout the week click on the Norwich Fashion Week link at the top right of this page.

Fashion Trends 2011 Clothing Styles From Miley Cyrus

Miley Cyrus Cool Style







Monday, 29 August 2011

cintia dicker

Cintia Dicker (born December 6, 1986 in Campo Bom, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil) is a Brazilian model of German descent.

She has appeared in many fashion advertisements including Ann Taylor and Yves Saint Laurent and has been on the covers of magazines ELLE, Madame Figaro and Brazilian Vogue/Teen Vogue magazine.

She has paraded through many fashion shows including Gucci and Baby Phat. Her most recent campaign is the H.I.P. cosmetics line for L'Oreal Paris, and she is rumored to be one of the candidates to walk in the next Victoria's Secret fashion show.

Her trademarks are her red hair, pouty lips, and freckles.
Fellow Brazilian models Caroline Trentini and Bruna Erhardt are her roommates and best friends. They live in New York City.


(Source: Wikipedia)

Fashion Mistakes And How To Rectify Them

At about 4:30pm on a Friday, very typical of my friend Dupe to call to find out if I’d be interested in either hanging out, going clubbing, going for a fashion show or something of that sort. Just like every other lady who wants to steal the show or be the girl every good-looking responsible guy would drool over by merely looking at, and as they say “first impressions last” the first thing that comes to the mind is “what will I wear?”.
The quest begins, looking through my closet, turning it upside down; in fact I don’t even bother arranging it back till the weekend is over. Finally, I try on numerous outfits including underwear just to make sure it doesn’t affect the look of my outfit. Right after I find a suitable one do I begin to ask anyone around for their opinion – HOT or NOT?? Yea or Nay? This is the most difficult aspect of getting dressed owing to diverse opinions of different people.


Well, I had to call her back to give excuses that I wouldn’t be able to make it and I eventually took a rain check…but within myself I gave up due to indecision.

It suffices to say here that we actually make the “littlest” and “silliest” mistakes in deciding what or what not to wear… To mention a few;

Most of us would agree that when we go with other people’s opinions, which sometimes are contrary to ours, we DO NOT feel comfortable when we go out. This is the utmost mistake we make and this is how to rectify it- you must feel comfortable in what you are wearing before stepping out or else you’ll end up feeling uncomfortable and actually stepping out as someone else and not yourself.

Another is unpardonable mistake is wearing what does not suit our body shapes. Please ladies, not everything you see on Kim Kardashian or Rita Dominic will suit you. Its okay to “copy” their style but make sure it works with your body shape. If you’re on the big side, minis are a “no no”. You can still be big, stunning & very beautiful. You do not have to be a size 8, or even now that 12′s are sexy, to be the hottest lady at a party. Please, wear what suits your body shape, you won’t just look stunning but also feel confident. And trust me people can see through you. We all love confident women, don’t we?
Also, you don’t always have to follow the trend. You can be a trendsetter by creating your own style by wearing what you’re most comfortable in.

Furthermore, when buying your clothes, always remember; firstly, the designer did not see you before making the clothes, they would not always fit “perfectly”. Secondly, do not settle for less, remember that you’re paying for it hence you deserve the very best from your money (even if it’s free!). Thirdly, don’t buy tight clothes with the hope that you’ll lose weight. If u can’t find your size, buy a size bigger provided it fits the biggest part of your body. That way you can always get a good tailor to take it in for you to your perfect size and re-adjust in the future if you gain a few pounds.
Again, you can never go wrong with at least 4 pairs of jeans; the black jeans, deep blue, white pants, and a lighter shade of blue jeans. These four go with any pattern of tops and I am sure we all have that one pair we put on almost all the time. Well I do, and trust me on this it’s very much allowed, rock it as much as u like.

I personally do not believe in “one size fits all”! It does not; really it fits one size better than the other. I’m sure you’ve heard this several times, no pattern on pattern, please!
This season, colour blocking is very much allowed, but be sure to have the lighter shade as the top and the darker as the bottom to produce more flattering figures.
Please ladies, it’s not cool to buy fake bags or “1st grade bags” all in the name of “rocking” the latest designer. Sometime ago, a friend of mine bought a Hermes Birkin for 50,000 NAIRA equivalent to about 330 dollars. I’m sure Thierry Hermes is not aware of its existence. With that amount you can get a classy and chick bag from Zara, River Island or even dune; all 3 for that price and you’ll still get that feeling as though you’re carrying a designer bag. It is not by force, is it?
Furthermore, if you’re going to expose your boobies be careful to cover your thighs. Please leave the fellas curious and, you know, keep them wanting more.
Another is the make-up issue; ladies, be very careful! No matter what you’re wearing or how stunning you look in your limited edition Herve Leger number, bad make-up will ruin your entire look! When you’re wearing red lipstick, ensure that your eye-shadow is not loud or no eye-shadow at all, you can work with really good eye-liner which gives that extra classy look. Some professional make-ups are as affordable as 3000 naira only. Better safe than sorry!


Also Ladies, underwear is “under” wear, be sure to keep those bra straps and thongs “under”. For those of us who like full panties or granny pants, please be sure to conceal your panty lines. We don’t want no VPL – Visible Panty Lines = Tacky + Huge Turn-Off!!

Chipped paints are a turn off and they just make you look unkempt.  Invest in nail polish removers and at least one colour of paint just in case the need arises

BE CAREFUL OF BODY ODOUR!!!! use your deodorant or spray and if you can afford it body splash and perfumes will do no harm!

SHAVE/WAX YOUR ARMPITS! You don’t want to wear an armless with hair sticking out from your arm. Whether you decide to shave the hair “down there” or not is up to you

Finally, before stepping out draw the curtains and take a look at the mirror with the sunlight refection just to make sure, for indoor lights can be very deceitful.


Thursday, 25 August 2011

Princess Polly

Skirt, $70, top $65 – Princess Polly Adelaide St, The City

Brisbane Fashion Festival


As spring fashion starts to blossom in stores, the temptation to banish the bulk and black of winter to the back of the cupboard and shop up a storm for brand new looks is strong.

But every intelligent woman with a head for fashion and economics knows new seasons do not have to equate to expensive new wardrobes.

Instead, identifying a few key trends and investing sensibly is a practice that offers most satisfaction in the long run, both in terms of style and spending.

The Brisbane Fashion Festival offers a great opportunity to preview the core looks for summer, showing collections from leading Australian and international designers, styled by experts.

Here's our guide to what's coming up this spring/summer.

Hair

Hair stylists continued their love affair with curls when it came to designing catwalk looks for this year's festival, with tousled, carefree locks featured in most of the parades.

Bob styles were also popular, though that doesn't mean a trip to the hairdresser to chop off long tresses.

Head stylist Geoffrey Herberg showed us how to create a beautiful summer look with the help of a few bobby pins, some hairspray, hot tongs and lots and lots of teasing.

Colour

Designs from Tengdahl, retailer Lylah, Paul Hunt, and Francis Leon show off this season's hottest hue: blue.

Blue, blue, blue, with splashes of green and tangerine, were the hottest hues on the catwalks this year, delivered by way of punchy blocks or clever digital prints.

Strong colour can be daunting for those who favour muted tones, but full specturums were on show meaning there's space to find the right shade for you.

Scanlan & Theodore, Easton Pearson, Akira and Pia du Pradal all used variants of the key colour orange in their collections.

Basic black and white remained strong, as it tends to do when designers create with conservative spending in mind, and the array of feminine neutrals we saw come on strong last summer will be popular again.

Paul Hunt, Aurelio Costarella, Tengdahl and Talulah all used neutrals to great effect.

Make-up

All the make-up for the festival was designed by Australian cosmetics king Napoleon Perdis, though you can recreate the looks without having to buy their full range of products.

Beautiful skin returned as one of the key features of this season, with the look dewy, youthful and fresh. You'll need a good cleanser, moisturiser, sunscreen, and primer to make sure your make-up doesn't slip off.

Minimise shine and keep skin in good condition with a mineral-based powder applied to set light foundation and keep you looking satiny throughout the day.

Spend time priming and preparing the skin before applying make-up, which was kept relatively minimal save for bronzer and shimmer cream used to highlight cheeks, jaws and eyes.

Look one, as featured in the Brisbane Arcade parade

Prime · Using Artist Foundation/Base Brush 19b, apply Auto Pilot Pre-foundation Skin Primer to the face. · Prep lips with Auto Pilot Lip Service. Buff the lips if needed using a clean mascara wand. · Apply your first coat of Peep Show Mascara Madame Curl Curl. Base · Using Stick Foundation, apply a small amount onto the ‘feature focus’ area of the face and blend well so it disappears into the jaw line. For best results, use Artist Foundation Brush 19b. · Conceal with the Pro Palette Concealer. Either mix Deep Sand and Light Amber, or layer the shades on the under eye area to conceal darkness/discoloration. Use Eye Priming Brush g10 for best results. · Mix the appropriate shades from the Pro Palette Concealer to match the skin tone and apply to blemishes. Be sure to warm the concealer into the skin with your finger tip or a sponge. · Apply a touch of concealer across the entire eye lid from the lash line to the brow bone and set with a touch of the Mattifying Mineral Primer, creating a base for your eye shadow. · Lightly set the foundation across the ‘feature focus’ area of the face with the Mattifying Mineral Primer. For best results use Polishing Brush 50r. Eyes · Using Sculpting Brush 10r, sweep a blend of Color Disc Trench Coat and Prismatic Eyeshadow Quad #2 Grey through the socket of the eye. For a beautiful blend to the eye, sweep back and forth into the socket and inner bridge of the eye. · Pat Color Disc Trench Coat over the mobile lid using Flat Shader Brush 10b. · Line the inner rim of the eye with Eye Pencil White On. · Apply one coat of Peep Show Mascara Madame Curl Curl to the top lashes. Brows · Comb the brows and define with Eyebrow Pencil Pale Rider. · Hold brows in place with Peep Show Mascara Madame Crystal. Cheeks · Apply the Ultimate Contour Palette Contour shade in the hollow of the cheeks to create definition. For best results use Reflective Contour Brush 20b. · If necessary, apply the Ultimate Contour Palette to the temples, chin and jaw line. Lips · Ensure the lips have been hydrated well with Auto pilot Lip Service. · Wipe or pat off any excess Auto Pilot Lip Service and pat Front Row Red Lip Gloss onto the lips. · The effect is a ‘stained’ lip, so you can use either Flat Shader Brush 10b or a fingertip to apply the gloss and achieve this result.

Prime· Apply Napoleon Complex Skin Renewal Serum to the face.· Using Artist Foundation/ Base Brush 19b, apply Auto Pilot Pre-Foundation Primer to the face.· Apply Mattifying Mineral Primer to feature focus area of the face using Artist Foundation/ Base Brush 19b.- Prep lips with Auto Pilot Lip Service.· Curl eye lashes with the Lash Curler. Start by pressing the curler close to your lash bed, and then slowly walk the lash curler out.Continue to press the lashes as you walk the Lash Curler out.· Apply your first coat of Peep Show Mascara Madame Prep.· Start at the base of the lash and then work the wand out towards the end ofthe lash in a wiggling motion to distribute product evenly.· Follow with the application of Mesmer-eyes Mascara.

Base· Using Advanced Mineral Makeup, apply a small amount onto the ‘feature focus’ area of the face and blend well so it disappears into the jaw line. For best results, use Artist Foundation Brush 19b.· Conceal dark circles with Pro Palette Concealer. Mix the appropriate shades, or layer the shades and apply to the under eye area to conceal darkness/discoloration. Use Eye Priming Brush G10 for best results.· Apply a touch of concealer across the entire eyelid from the lash line to the brow bone and set with a touch of Camera Finish, creating a base for your eye shadow.· Lightly set the foundation across the ‘feature focus’ area of the face with Camera Finish.

Eyes· Apply Color Disc Clean Slate from lash line to brow bone using Contour Brush 16b.· Pat Color Disc Clean Slate onto the mobile lid using Flat Shader Brush 10b to create a more opaque shade on the lid.· Line the inner rim of the eye with Eye Pencil White On.· Apply Loose Dust Holy Smoke to the lower lash line. Apply using Flat Shader Brush 10b.· Apply 2 coats of Mesmer-eyes Mascara to the top lashes.

Brows· Comb the brows and define with Eyebrow Pencil Pale Rider or a suitable brow product.· Hold brows in place with Peep Show Mascara Madame Crystal.

Cheeks· Add Mosaic Blushing Powder onto the apples of the cheeks and blend up towards the temple using a Chisel Blush Brush 22b. · Highlight the top of cheekbones using Pro Palette Concealer Light Amber.

Lips· Coat the lips with Divine Goddess Lipstick Hess using Lip Brush 2b.· Line the lips using Lip Pencil Nude Awakening.· Finish with Love Bite Lip Plump.



Tuesday, 23 August 2011

2011 Hairstyle Trends

Review about hairstyle 2011 and latest styles. Of course, a pride of having the hair or the hairstyles trend that became a new style in 2011. Can not deny the style in the hair can make someone become more confident and increasingly looking fashionable. Thus the trend of hair styles for some people is mandatory. So for my friend who like to change hair styles 2011 hairstyle trends 2011 accordi

ng hopefully this article can be a buddy referral all.

Lady Gaga's "You & I" Video to Premiere on Aug. 18 Tue

Lady Gaga's new video for "You & I," which is her fourth single from Born This Way, will debut on MTV on Aug. 18. That's Thursday and it's set for 7:50 PM. The Mother Monster tweeted two photos of herself –one in a white dress, one of her feet in a pair of killer stiletto heels- which are presumably from the video. We never see her face, but we can assume it's her in the shots.

Gaga filmed the video for the epic track in Nebraska, since the song references the state in its lyrics; her once and former boyfriend Luc Carl is also from the Cornhusker state, so leave it to Gaga to make Nebraska in vogue with one of her songs

Victoria Beckham Ordered to Wear Flats During Fashion Week

Poor Posh.

The notorious publicity lover has been out of the picture since giving birth to a daughter recently, and as it turns out, the reason is that she has been in excruciating pain from a slipped disc.

But the news only gets worse from there.

Doctors have ordered her to only wear flats, in order to avoid aggravating her injury ...

... even during New York Fashion Week, when she's set to debut her Spring/Summer 2012 collection.

What's a stylista to do?!

This is definitely going to be difficult for Victoria, who wears some of the highest designer platform stilettos that I've ever seen. I wouldn't be at all surprised if she opts to skip Fashion Week altogether.

Besides, who'd want to go anywhere at all with a slipped disc? Better to rest and mend quickly so that she can be back to her old self (and in her old heels) for good.

According to London's Mirror, Victoria has been quoted at various times saying that she hates the gym because she can't wear heels there, that she's "beyond hating" ballet flats, and that she "can't concentrate" unless she's wearing six-inch heels.

Being ordered to wear flats must be the worst punishment she can think of!

Victoria is rumored to be frantically searching the web right now, looking for flats suitable enough to be worn on her uber-stylish feet.

Friday, 19 August 2011

stockholm emma ahlund elite street



coat -- Danish brand, Storm and Marie
top -- Majestic

‘World’s prettiest boy’ bares it again

Gender bending Serbian-Australian model Andrej Pejic does it again — this time with smoky eyes, rosy pout and a chiselled topless body. Pejic, a 19-year-old male model, has spurred frenzy in the fashion world by posing topless for the cover of New York magazine’s Fall 2011 fashion issue. The
magazine carries an article on him with an more interesting headline: ‘The Prettiest Boy In the world’.

The doe-eyed androgynous model, with his enviable blonde locks and a sensuous pout, is also earning adulation of netizens for his comments about his gender choice. “I’ve left my gender open to artistic interpretation,” he said in an interview to the New York magazine.

David Ahen-bec Fuentes posts on facebook, “I like when things get challenged in fashion in a fab way.” While Rakhsha on autostraddle.com posted, “I wish the popularity of models like Pejic meant there was a growing acceptance of the diversity of gender expressions.” On the same website, Madeline posts, “It’s good to see someone in the mainstream bending the binary gender rules that society works so hard to enforce.”

Closer home, fashion designers are voting in his favour. “Pejic is being true to his own creativity. He is doing it so beautifully that he has made the world sit up and take notice. It takes a lot of courage to do something like that,” says fashion designer Neeta Lulla, who says she is open to work with an androgynous model. Designer Ritu Beri says, “It would be interesting to work with someone like that. It hardly matters if it’s a guy dressed as a woman, if he beautifully takes the message of my show across.”

Lawyer Shashi Bhushan of Naaz, a LGBT organisation, believes that Pejic’s growing popularity could pave way for effeminate gay men and transgenders in modelling. “We have such pretty gay men and transgenders with great bodies. They can be absorbed in a big way by the Indian fashion industry.”

Pejic in the news


He had earlier stripped for the May 2011 cover of Dossier Journal, a New York-based magazine. The shoot evoked mixed responses from people — some voting for his gender-bending act, while some calling it ‘offending and unacceptable’. The androgynous model defended his picture as ‘art and not porn’ opposing a ban on the cover by a few US book chains. This January, Pejic created a buzz across the fashion world by hitting the runway dressed as a bride for Jean-Paul Gaultier at his Spring/Summer 2011 haute couture show in Paris. He recently shocked FHM magazine when he was named the 98th sexiest woman by its readers.