The Second Chapter: The North Face X Gucci Collaborative Collection

The Second Chapter: The North Face X Gucci Collaborative Collection

For the second chapter of this collaborative collection, a new campaign shot by French twins Jalan and Jibril Durimel features Gucci’s intrepid explorers, hiking across the Nordic island of Iceland set against a backdrop of volcanic black sands, rolling green hills and glaciers. 

Whether literal discovery of places or cultures or the more metaphorical kind of adventures, this new #TheNorthFacexGucci collection addresses the curious drawing from values of self-discovery and self-expression that define both brands. 

SWOW SHOP/SHARE

Gucci Women’s Pilot Urban Web Block Aviator Sunglasses, Gold/Green

#TheNorthFacexGucci collection comprises ready-to-wear, soft accessories and shoes, including many pieces like hiking boots and warm, padded jackets that powerfully reference the outdoor world of @thenorthface. Embodying the commitment of both brands to support eco-sustainable activities, 100% of the down insulation is certified to the Responsible Down Standard by Control Union.

Sign-up to be the first to hear the latest news from Gucci on the latest collections, events and more.

ICYMI

Meet Two Women Shaping The Next Generation Of The Twin Cities Food Scene

 

Lakes Makerie: A new shop, a new website and a Minneapolis sewing meet-up!

Lakes Makerie: A new shop, a new website and a Minneapolis sewing meet-up!

Paper Theory Patterns have landed at the shop and they are beautiful! – Sarah

Join a Class

About

Lakes Makerie: We’re in Residence at The Resonance Box, a lovely little space at 5255 Chicago Ave, Minneapolis. Our new home is shaping up quite nicely, if we don’t say so ourselves. We’ll be here until Springtime, so we have lots of time to get acquainted. We have beautiful fabrics and tools, independent and European patterns, supportive instruction, and lots of fun things in store. Now all we need is for you to join us.

ICYMI

Pantone’s 2022 Color of the Year, Very Peri, Embraces Strangeness

 

Pantone’s 2022 Color of the Year, Very Peri, Embraces Strangeness

Pantone’s 2022 Color of the Year, Very Peri, Embraces Strangeness

Chet Lo Spring 2022

Photo: Alessandro Lucioni / Gorunway.com

RUNWAY: Can a color predict the future? After the many uncertainties of 2020 and 2021, many are looking for signs from any source. The Pantone Color of the Year 2022 is a new shade, Very Peri, one that, according to Leatrice Eiseman, the executive director of the Pantone Color Institute, and Laurie Pressman, the vice president of the Pantone Color Institute, embraces the uncertainty and cautious optimism of our moment. “It is a color that really places the future ahead in a new light,” said Pressman on a Zoom call earlier this week. “We feel this was the perfect color to get those feelings about the future across.”

Image may contain Clothing Apparel Human Person Pants and Costume

Xüly Bet spring 2022

Photo: Ismaël Moumin / Courtesy of Xüly Bet

Image may contain Clothing Apparel Evening Dress Fashion Gown Robe Human Person and Costume
Iris van Herpen haute couture fall 2021
Photo: Courtesy of Iris van Herpen

 

Image may contain Clothing Apparel Shoe Footwear Suit Coat Overcoat Human Person Brick and Costume

Saint Laurent men’s spring 2022

Photo: Courtesy of Saint Laurent

Image may contain Clothing Apparel Suit Coat Overcoat Tuxedo Sleeve Human Person and Long Sleeve
Balenciaga haute couture fall 2021
Photo: Courtesy of Balenciaga
Image may contain Clothing Apparel Pants Footwear Shoe Sleeve Human Person Long Sleeve Dress Fashion and Robe
Louis Vuitton men’s spring 2022
Photo: Courtesy of Louis Vuitton

The new shade of periwinkle is a result of almost a year’s worth of research and trend forecasting from the Pantone Color Institute, which begins looking at color trends in the late spring. “We look at so many areas, from sports to fashion, to see what people are talking about,” said Eiseman, emphasizing that increased interest in the metaverse and gaming platforms helped inspire 2022’s Color of the Year. “There is just no question that gaming influenced the continued usage of Very Peri,” Eiseman said as screenshots from video games that use the shade flashed on the screen, “and we really want the Color of the Year to be reflective of what is happening in the world around us.”

Image may contain Clothing Apparel Human Person Fashion Footwear and Runway

Marques’Almeida spring 2022

Photo: Ugo Camera / Courtesy of Marques’Almeida

Image may contain Human Person Blouse Clothing Apparel Fashion Jing Wen and Runway
Isabel Marant spring 2022
Photo: Filippo Fior / Gorunway.com
Image may contain Human Person Fashion Clothing Apparel and Runway
Lanvin spring 2022
Photo: Filippo Fior / Gorunway.com

Aside from being a tone used in the high-contrast games popular among Gen Z, the shade also has roots in the natural world and in wellness, with lilac, lavender, and periwinkle plants offering a calming sense during a chaotic time. Very Peri also appears in a lot of beauty and fashion trend forecasts—Pantone’s official presentation of the color includes looks from Lanvin, Chet Lo, and Louis Vuitton men’s.

Image may contain Human Person Toy Doll Clothing and Apparel

Valentino haute couture fall 2021

Photo: Filippo Fior / Gorunway.com

Image may contain Human Person Clothing Apparel Fashion Racket and Tennis Racket
Valentino spring 2022
Photo: Alessandro Lucioni / Gorunway.com
Image may contain Clothing Apparel Runway Human Person Sleeve Fashion Long Sleeve and Coat
Valentino haute couture fall 2021
Photo: Filippo Fior / Gorunway.com

Still, a warming purple tone might come as a surprise as the shade of 2022 after the more obvious colors Pantone chose for 2021: Ultimate Gray and a shade of yellow called Illuminating. In a release, Pantone explained that 2021’s duo was meant to signify the light at the end of the tunnel after 2020. But as many continue to battle the Omicron variant and the world enters yet another phase of uncertainty … well, can Very Peri save us? If anything, the color offers a new perspective; as my colleague Kiana Murden wrote to me this morning, “At least it’s a new color!” After two years of sameness and struggle, we are all feeling for something new—and the runways reflect this with tenor-shifting brands like like Threeasfour, Iris van Herpen, Xüly Bet, and Tomo Koizumi embracing the color.

Image may contain Clothing Apparel Evening Dress Fashion Gown Robe Dress Cape Human Person and Purple

Alexis Mabille haute couture fall 2021

Photo: Marievic / Courtesy of Alexis Mabille

Image may contain Clothing Apparel Evening Dress Gown Robe Fashion Human and Person
Thom Browne spring 2022
Photo: Courtesy of Thom Browne
Image may contain Clothing Apparel Human Person Scarf and Feather Boa
Tomo Koizumi haute couture fall 2021
Photo: Courtesy of Tomo Koizumi
Image may contain Human Person Fashion Clothing Apparel and Runway

Threeasfour spring 2022

Photo: Alessandro Viero / Gorunway.com

Image may contain Clothing Apparel Human Person Footwear Shoe Sunglasses Accessories Accessory Sleeve and Jacket
Tod’s spring 2022
Photo: Alessandro Lucioni / Gorunway.com
Image may contain Human Person Fashion Evening Dress Clothing Gown Apparel Robe and Runway
Missoni spring 2022
Photo: Filippo Fior / Gorunway.com
Image may contain Clothing Apparel Evening Dress Fashion Gown Robe Sunglasses Accessories Accessory and Human

Gucci spring 2022

Photo: Courtesy of Gucci

Image may contain Clothing Apparel Evening Dress Gown Robe Fashion Human Person Shoe and Footwear
Alberta Ferretti spring 2022
Photo: Daniele Oberrauch / Gorunway.com
Image may contain Clothing Apparel Evening Dress Gown Robe Fashion Dress Human and Person
Lutz Huelle spring 2022
Photo: Courtesy of Lutz Huelle

ICYMI

Explore Ice Castles in Minnesota – New Brighton, MN

 

The Most Iconic Fashion Films of All Time

The Most Iconic Fashion Films of All Time

All photos courtesy of Everett Collection / Collage by David Vo

FASHION: There are few creative mediums that go together quite like fashion and film. Whether it’s a  director’s knack for capturing the dramatic movement of a gown on screen, or the contributions to the movie world made by fashion designers over the decades, the symbiotic relationship has created some of the most memorable on-screen moments of all time.

So whether to satisfy your curiosity about an industry so often wrapped up in mystery, to provide the backstory to some of the most important moments in fashion history, or simply to indulge in a little sartorial escapism, here, find all the most iconic films about fashion you can watch now.

Audrey Hepburn in Funny Face.
Audrey Hepburn in Funny Face. Courtesy of Everett Collection

Funny Face (1957)

As far as fashion films go, they don’t get much more joyous than Funny Face. Audrey Hepburn stars as Jo Stockton, a shy New York City bookshop assistant who dreams of studying philosophy in Paris. Her aspirations are realized through the unlikeliest of means after she becomes a muse to the celebrated fashion photographer Dick Avery, played by Fred Astaire. Packed with gorgeous Parisian set pieces, delightful tunes by George and Ira Gershwin, and exquisite dresses crafted both by legendary costumier Edith Head and regular Hepburn collaborator Hubert de Givenchy, it’s a perfect ode to the joys of haute couture.

Vanessa Redgrave and David Hemmings in BlowUp.
Vanessa Redgrave and David Hemmings in Blow-Up. Courtesy of Everett Collection

Blow-Up (1966)

One of the more sinister entries on the list, this darkly glamorous thriller directed by Italian auteur Michelangelo Antonioni is set within the heady heights of Swinging Sixties London. It weaves an unlikely tale of intrigue centered around David Hemmings’s lusty fashion photographer Thomas, who believes he has accidentally photographed a murder taking place. With hindsight, the complicated protagonist’s attitude to his female subjects is very much a product of its time—but the film’s menacing thrills are leavened by a number of fabulous cameos, from Veruschka to Jane Birkin. Blow-Up today serves as a fascinating document of a pivotal moment in fashion history.

Models in Who Are You Polly Maggoo
Models in Who Are You, Polly Maggoo. Courtesy of Everett Collection

Who Are You, Polly Maggoo? (1966)

Who Are You, Polly Maggoo? may have been released in the same year as Blow-Up, but its vision of the Swinging Sixties is altogether more surrealist and willfully satirical. Directed by the American photographer and filmmaker William Klein, the film pokes fun at the excesses and frivolities of the fashion industry in a way that manages to be both glamorous and grotesque. Come for the costumes—which offer as a brilliantly realized time capsule of 1960s style and have since inspired Jean-Paul Gaultier and Marc Jacobs—and stay for the brilliant performance by Grayson Hall as Miss Maxwell, an imperious, Diana Vreeland-esque fashion editor whose pithy remarks can make or break a career.

Diana Ross in Mahogany.
Diana Ross in Mahogany. Courtesy of Everett Collection

Mahogany (1975)

As far as portrayals of fashion designers on-screen go, they don’t get more decadent than Diana Ross’s turn as the American design student Tracy Chambers, whose clothes become an unlikely hit in the salons of high society 1970s Rome. Directed by Motown Records’ Berry Gordy, the film’s celebration of fashion at its most flamboyant and excessive also features a political message that remains relevant to this day, as Tracy is torn between her love for a Black activist fighting gentrification in her hometown of Chicago, and the glamorous but ultimately empty promises of her modeling career in Europe. Also featuring a soundtrack for the ages, Mahogany is a campy—and surprisingly conscientious—fashion fantasy.

doitinnorth shop/share

CINEMA SOUNDTRACK – CLASSIC HITS FROM ICONIC MOVIES [VINYL]

Marcello Mastroianni and Sophia Loren in PrêtàPorter.
Marcello Mastroianni and Sophia Loren in Prêt-à-Porter. Courtesy of Everett Collection

Prêt-à-Porter (1994)

In Robert Altman’s sprawling, starry, and very much satirical ode to the fashion industry, nothing is quite as it seems. Employing the filmmaker’s signature mockumentary style, there are celebrity cameos from the likes of Julia Roberts, Sophia Loren, and Lauren Bacall, all playing various fashionistas descending on Paris Fashion Week in the wake of the death of Olivier de la Fontaine, the head of the city’s fashion council. While the film was both a critical and commercial bomb, the initially bemused response of the fashion industry has softened over the years into affection. As a document of the thrilling heights of the 1990s runway show, there’s no better film to watch,

Anne Hathaway Meryl Streep and Emily Blunt in The Devil Wears Prada.
Anne Hathaway, Meryl Streep, and Emily Blunt in The Devil Wears Prada. Courtesy of Everett Collection

The Devil Wears Prada (2006)

As far as bringing the rarefied, secretive world of fashion media into the spotlight goes, few films have been as successful as The Devil Wears Prada. Starring Meryl Streep in a thrillingly vicious, Oscar-nominated turn as the editor-in-chief of Runway magazine, we follow the journey of Anne Hathaway’s initially style-illiterate Andy Sachs as she enters this cutthroat world as Miranda’s assistant. An endlessly quotable and uproariously funny insight into the obsessive nature of those who work in fashion, the film also benefits from brilliant supporting performances by Emily Blunt and Stanley Tucci. But could the real villain of the film in fact be Andy’s boyfriend? It only takes a quick scroll through Twitter to see that debate roaring to this day.

Image may contain Human Person Clothing Apparel Audrey Tautou Glass Hat Furniture Couch and Goblet
Audrey Tautou in Coco Before Chanel. © Sony Pictures / Courtesy of Everett Collection

Coco Before Chanel (2009)

If you’re looking for a dose of fashion history, you can’t go wrong with Audrey Tautou’s sublime performance as Coco Chanel in her early years as a seamstress, before she would go on to found her eponymous house that would redefine the modern woman’s wardrobe. With the help of elegant cinematography and art direction—and perhaps most memorably, stunning style moments courtesy of the French costume designer Catherine Leterrier, whose work on the film earned her a César Award—it’s the rare fashion biopic that goes deep below the surface, offering a moving insight into the inner world of the designer it profiles.

Elle Fanning in The Neon Demon.nbsp
Elle Fanning in The Neon Demon.© Broad Green Pictures / Courtesy of Everett Collection

The Neon Demon (2016)

You may need a strong stomach to sit through some of the more grisly moments of Nicolas Winding Refn’s psychological horror The Neon Demon, but you’ll get your reward through plenty of eye-popping fashion, too. Elle Fanning’s young modeling ingenue soon gets swept up in the scene’s darker underbelly, resulting in demonic possessions, serial killer photographers, and a particularly horrifying final sequence involving an exorcism, necrophilia, and a lot (a lot) of blood. While its sideways swipes at the darker corners of the fashion industry may be a little heavy-handed, The Neon Demon makes for a bracing and gloriously gory guilty pleasure.

Vicky Krieps and Daniel DayLewis in Phantom Thread.
Vicky Krieps and Daniel Day-Lewis in Phantom Thread. © Focus Features / Courtesy of Everett Collection

Phantom Thread (2017)

Few films capture the obsessive, exacting nature of haute couture as deftly as Paul Thomas Anderson’s claustrophobic and brilliantly eerie Phantom Thread, which charts the relationship between the high society designer Reginald Woodcock—loosely based on Charles James—and a young woman he meets at a seaside café who becomes his muse. Daniel Day-Lewis’s Oscar-nominated performance is more than matched by his co-stars Vicky Krieps and Lesley Manville, bringing this dark fairy tale to vivid, believable life. Phantom Thread’s window into the world of post-war fashion is an intoxicating, beautifully woven fairy tale—but one that ultimately feels closer to a nightmare.

Emma Stone in Cruella.
Emma Stone in Cruella. © Disney+ / Courtesy of Everett Collection

Cruella (2021)

While Disney’s fantastical take on the world of fashion may be a little far-fetched, it gets more right than it does wrong. It tells the origin story of 101 Dalmatians’ infamously stylish villain Cruella DeVil, here played in her youth by Emma Stone. Her beginnings as a renegade fashion designer—when she pushes back against the florals and frivolity of 1960s London style and introduces something darker and more dangerous to the mix—has plenty of parallels in real-world figures such as Vivienne Westwood and John Galliano. The costumes may be ahistorical (albeit intentionally so), but the tale of egos and excess in fashion is undoubtedly timeless.

ICYMI

Glow Holiday Festival: Now a Walk Through Experience – Minnesota State Fairgrounds

 

Fashions’s Ever-Growing Obsession with Skiing Shows No Sign of Slowing Down

Fashions’s Ever-Growing Obsession with Skiing Shows No Sign of Slowing Down

FENDI

Highsnobiety: We’re flying through December, which means that the holidays are inching closer day by day – and so is ski season.

Personally, I’ve not been skiing since the humble age of 12, but will be making my anticipated return to the slopes in January. I may not be the best skier, but at least, I can be zooming down the snow in the best outfits.

I’ve spent the past few days researching my optimal snow steeze. This season, it seems as if brands have jumped headfirst into the snow, with multiple collections and must-have items available.

In terms of equipment, Saint LaurentPradaCELINE, and Dior all offer skis as well as snowboards, each priced way above a regular set, but arrives with logos and added luxury. Some even do helmets. Imagine queuing for the lift next to someone in a helmet decked out in Dior’s Oblique pattern.

Retailers such as Mytheresa have also jumped on the trend, partnering with Isabel Marant to create a “snow capsule” collection that features 33 80s-inspired pieces that work just as well in the slopes, as they do at the aprés ski with a cheeky aperol spritz in hand.

For something less subtle, look no further than Fendi. The label has continued to embrace logomania all year, especially with its Fendace collaboration, and has jackets, overalls, and more printed with its recognizable logo print.

Of course, we’ve also got the streetwear labels. A quick browse on StockX will generate plenty of snow-appropriate GORE-TEX jackets and Supreme collaborations with The North FacePalace fleeces that are perfect for layering, and you can also wear your Arc’Teryx whilst hitting the slopes – not just on your hikes.

doitinnorth shop/share

Prada Heritage PR 32PS 1AB5W1 Black Plastic Square Sunglasses Grey Gradient Polarized Lens

It goes without saying that winter fashion has drastically changed over the past few years, and skiwear has become yet another industry that has been luxury-fied by the big fashion players. I mean, can we talk about those Chrome Heart ski goggles?

But, if you’re still not convinced that the fashion giants do it best, classic ski labels such as ColmarPeak PerformanceHelly HansenColumbiaPatagonia, and The North Face will serve you well. They’re the true champions, and have been doing this for years.

Don’t forget to also get your hands on some Uniqlo heat tech, and some great goggles. At the end of the day you can look fantastic with your slope-appropriate steeze, but if you’re freezing, no one will envy you.

North Design: Askov Finlayson’s Ever Green is Inspired by the Dense Boreal Forests of the North

North Design: Askov Finlayson’s Ever Green is Inspired by the Dense Boreal Forests of the North

The Winter Parka is back, just in time for the cold. Drawing inspiration from the natural landscape of the North, this season’s parkas are now available in the following colors: Pitch Black, Superior Blue, Ever Green, Bear Brown, and Cardinal Red.
Ever Green is inspired by the dense boreal forests of the North’s rugged landscape. It’s the color of getting lost on purpose. It’s the color of nature itself. And it reminds us to remain firmly rooted.

The Winter Parka comes with a signature Afield Pocket for your phone that features Present Mode technology to block all cell and WiFi signals. Because sometimes we need to unplug from it all in order to recharge our own batteries.

 

The Winter Parka is constructed for maximum performance with minimal impact. It features 3M™ Thinsulate™ 100% Recycled Featherless Insulation and is rated warm all the way down to -20F to keep you warm, safe, and ready to embrace the season.

ICYMI

North Style: BlackBlue – St. Paul, MN

Pin It on Pinterest