W Magazine: 30 Years of Fashion

W Magazine: 30 Years of Fashion

 

by Stephanie Eckardt

The Best Fashion Films to Stream Right Now | W Magazine

Native MN Fashion Designer Showcase: Maria Stanley SS/20

Native MN Fashion Designer Showcase: Maria Stanley SS/20

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Meet Sydney — Made from Organic Cotton with delicate handwork detailing thanks to some incredibly talented artisans in Delhi, India. Honest moment : I’ve been holding off on releasing our new cotton and linen pieces. Coincidentally, they were ready on March 15th, the exact day it was suggested we start staying at home (at least here in Minnesota). The world just felt too heavy to talk about them for me. Now, over two months later, now that the air smells like flowers, I find myself reaching past my sweatpants to these sweet Spring pieces, and now feels like just the right time to share. Enjoy my friends. Thanks for following along on this little journey with me. Enjoy 20% off site-wide with code : TOGETHER

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Must Link & Read: The Age of Instagram Face

Must Link & Read: The Age of Instagram Face

Top TC Creatives Capsule S/S 2020 Style/Mode

Top TC Creatives Capsule S/S 2020 Style/Mode

Minnesota Monthly: 7 Spring Fashion Looks That Embrace Color

Model: Dana Johnson; Hair and Makeup: Fatima Olive

Model: Dana Johnson; Hair and Makeup: Fatima Olive

PHOTO BY LAUREN KRYSTI/STYLED BY CLAIRE NEVIASER

Sweet Green

Diff Eyewear sunglasses $85, Nordstrom – Mall of America

Short pearl earring $5, Urban Outfitters

Long pearl earring $58, Anthropologie

Mara Hoffman “Edmonia” dress $650, shopbop.com

Model: Dana Johnson; Hair and Makeup: Fatima Olive
Model: Dana Johnson; Hair and Makeup: Fatima Olive

PHOTO BY LAUREN KRYSTI/STYLED BY CLAIRE NEVIASER

Witty in Pink

Celina Kane “Amphora No. 3” hat, $650 (and read our profile on the fantastical hats of Celina Kane)

Silver hoop earrings, $10, Urban Outfitters

IORANE bodysuit, $330, shopbop.com

Eliza J pants, $128, Nordstrom – Mall of America

Model: Dana Johnson; Hair and Makeup: Fatima Olive
Model: Dana Johnson; Hair and Makeup: Fatima Olive

PHOTO BY LAUREN KRYSTI/STYLED BY CLAIRE NEVIASER

Lilac View

MSGM dress, $440, and Jeffrey Campbell “Fluxx” sandals, $130, shopbop.com

Sunglasses, $10, Urban Outfitters

Model: Dana Johnson; Hair and Makeup: Fatima Olive
Model: Dana Johnson; Hair and Makeup: Fatima Olive

PHOTO BY LAUREN KRYSTI/STYLED BY CLAIRE NEVIASER

Stay Yellow

Celina Kane “Fusilli” hat, $650

Pearl drop earrings, $10, Target

Rhode “Ella” dress, $375, shopbop.com

Manolo Blahnik ”Maysalebi” mules, $745, Nordstrom – Mall of America

Model: Dana Johnson; Hair and Makeup: Fatima Olive
Model: Dana Johnson; Hair and Makeup: Fatima Olive

PHOTO BY LAUREN KRYSTI/STYLED BY CLAIRE NEVIASER

Big Red

Madewell earrings, $32, Veronica Beard blazer, $645, Rag & Bone mockneck, $195, and Habitual pants, $158, Nordstrom – Mall of America

Model: Dana Johnson; Hair and Makeup: Fatima Olive
Model: Dana Johnson; Hair and Makeup: Fatima Olive

PHOTO BY LAUREN KRYSTI/STYLED BY CLAIRE NEVIASER

Kinds of Blue

Monse blouse, $296, Akris Punto pants, $595, and Rebecca Minkoff purse, $298, Nordstrom – Mall of America

Alevi Milano heels, $752, shopbop.com

Model: Dana Johnson; Hair and Makeup: Fatima Olive
Model: Dana Johnson; Hair and Makeup: Fatima Olive

PHOTO BY LAUREN KRYSTI/STYLED BY CLAIRE NEVIASER

Wear White

Tibi blazer, $595, and Rag & Bone pants, $295, Nordstrom – Mall of America

Rhinestone earrings $20, Free People

Tie dye socks $10, Urban Outfitters

MoMA “Color Wheel” umbrella, $50, store.moma.org

 

by Minnesota Monthly

Manolo Blahnik Debuts a Fantastical Coloring Book…

Manolo Blahnik Debuts a Fantastical Coloring Book…

…With a Philanthropic Twist

Tortura spring 2000
Tortura, spring 2000Illustration by Manolo Blahnik / Courtesy of the artist

 

During quarantine, many people have become reacquainted with some of the simpler pleasures in life: puzzling, board games, and the like. Now Manolo and Kristina Blahnik are contributing the chicest coloring book imaginable into the mix as part of the company’s SMILE project, launched last year. “Smiling has many proven health benefits and we wanted to share some of what we have found is helping us,” writes Kristina from her dining room-turned–home office in Sussex.

Henley Oxfords fall 2018.
Henley Oxfords, fall 2018.Illustration by Manolo Blahnik / Courtesy of the artist

 

This is not an all fun-and-games project, though. Like COVID-19, mental illness is an invisible affliction, and this effort is designed to support the valiant efforts of England’s Mental Health Foundation and, says Kristina, draw attention to the organization’s “specific guidance on how to deal the mental health impacts that the pandemic is having, from management tips to acts of kindness.”

Blahnik, that magician of shoes whose creations filled Carrie Bradshaw’s closet, has selected the shoe drawings available to download and color himself. Yes, there are some of his famously slender stilettos. “I chose sketches which are very personal to me and meaningful, in light of such an important cause,” the designer explains. “They all encapsulate different inspirations and memories of mine, locations which I am very fond of.” The Acanthus model, for example, makes reference to a plant from his native Canary Islands.
Acanthus spring 2012
Acanthus, spring 2012Illustration by Manolo Blahnik / Courtesy of the artist

Currently in residence in Bath, Blahnik is maintaining his longstanding practice of drawing every day. “Everything starts with a sketch!” he exclaims via email. “Sketching is the act of me drawing my imagination.” His drawings are indeed fantastical, with whooshing, fluid lines, that give energetic form—and personality—to shoes that delight and tell stories.

 

This shoemaker extraordinaire patronized Chelsea’s art suppliers Green & Stone for the pads of paper, brushes, and Dr. Ph. Martin’s inks he draws with, but magic markers, crayons, chalk, pencils, work too. And it doesn’t matter if you keep within the lines or stray, either. It’s the act of coloring, the pleasure of doing something with your hands, the small break from work or the news that this activity can provide that is the point here. That, and not to lose hope.

 

Manolo Blahnik.
Manolo Blahnik.Photo: Zac Frackelton / Courtesy of Manolo Blahnik

 

On that topic Blahnik addresses you directly. “Dear Vogue readers, I hope you are all keeping safe in these uncertain times. We have to remain positive and take care of one another. We will get through this and we will come out of it more united and stronger than we have ever been before.”

We must remember that we will get through this—one step at a time.

Download one of Manolo Blahnik’s coloring pages here, or continue to manoloblahnik.com for the full selection. And don’t forget to post with the tag #ManoloBlahnikSmile.

 

vogue.com

TRUST ME, NOW IS NOT THE TIME TO EXPERIMENT WITH DIY BANGS

TRUST ME, NOW IS NOT THE TIME TO EXPERIMENT WITH DIY BANGS

Dakota Johnson, a perfect-bang-owner, asking you with her eyes to put down the scissors. Photo: Theo Wargo/Getty Images

 

Although TikTok has become my preferred escapism method of choice these days, there is one trend taking over the app which has seriously disturbed me. It’s not teen girls doing overly-sexualized dances (can we do stuff less…air-humpy?) or hot young men doing POVs where they pretend to be serial killers (though that is disturbing and I am going to call your mothers) — no, it’s all the people who are using this time of social isolation to pick up scissors and cut their own bangs.

I’m not talking about handling your touch-up trims at home, which is something I can fully endorse as a former bang-owner myself. No, I mean going from no bangs to hella bangs, armed with your own hands and a false sense of hairstyling confidence. I know it seems like a good idea because if you f..k up, no one will see you — no one, that is, but the people on Al Gore’s Internet who will make your bad bangs go viral — but unlike a lot of other beauty experiments, bangs are best left to the experts. Trust me on this.

 

When you go to a professional stylist, they should walk you through this and help you find a version that is both what you had in mind and what works best for you. It’s not as simple as holding hair in front of your face and chopping off a bunch at once. There’s an art to this! There’s gentle layering at the side to blend them in with the rest of your hair, a light dusting at the ends to keep them from looking too blunt. Your run-of-the-mill kitchen shears ain’t gonna do the job, sweet thing!

 

But I digress. My point here is that, while we might not be venturing back out into society any time soon, we’re going to be seeing people again in some way eventually, and you’re going to emerge from your cocoon with blunt hair that hits your cheekbones like you’re a member of a ’90s boyband. I don’t think that’s what you have in mind! (If it is though, that’s cool and absolutely no judgement, you do you.) If you still want bangs when salons are open again, go forth and prosper, my friend. I loved having bangs. Hell, I still get the urge to have them cut in again.

There are plenty of other things you can do with your hair at home to scratch that itch. Shaving your hair off is extreme, sure, but you can be sure you’ll do that uniformly and if you’ve always wanted to try it, why not now? While that will also take ages to grow out, at least it’ll be months before your hair hits an awkward period, unlike bangs, which take a matter of weeks to go south. Why not try a fun hair color? Professionals would advise you to step away from any kind of bleaching, but you could certainly experiment with slightly darker shades, especially in semi-permanent dyes. (I recommend red, since it fades super fast regardless of whether you hate or love it.)

 

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