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All the Rage

Category: Thom Browne

New York Fashion Week: Thom Browne's sister act

Thom Browne Aw11 Women

Thom Browne's first women's runway show may have taken place here on Valentine's Day, but the collection was no love letter to the female form, offering up dramatic pieces that played with volume:  broadening at the hips like a set of parentheses, wrapping like a fur tourniquet tightly around the  thorax, layering bell shapes to form an almost  Christmas-tree silhouette, and closing with an outfit that looked like the cross between an egg-timer and a tea cozy.

The show itself was exactly what you might expect from a showman like Browne -- before the show, the cavernous, wood-paneled Edna Barnes Salomon Room upstairs at the New York Public Library contained only a pair of altar boys kneeling in prayer and a soundtrack of monastic chanting.

Then the models entered -- each clad in an identical black nun's habit topped with a winged, white Rage_TB_collage
wimple (similar to the headgear sported by Sally Field in "The Flying Nun"). Then, to the tune "How Do You Solve a Problem Like Maria?" the models began to step forward one by one to be literally defrocked by the altar boys, revealing the outfit from the fall-winter 2011 collection underneath.

The first few looks to shed the habit looked like the standard-issue shrunken men's suits Browne is famous for, only with tailoring tweaked to fit the female form and pant legs cuffed so high the garments might technically qualify as clam diggers.

But then Browne's beauties quickly became studies in shape and volume. One gray wool coat sprouted a funnel-neck collar that reached the upper lip, arms that flared in semicircles from shoulder to elbow to mimic the arc of skirt ballooning from hip to thigh. Another gray wool mini-dress had a hem that grazed the thigh, a tall collar reaching mid-cheekbone, and was styled with a pair of gray cable-knit leggings.

Tb99 Some outfits were nipped in at the waist to form a silhouette that "Mad Men's" Betty Draper would feel right at home in, others were designed with an empire waist. Many looks were layered -- skirts, capes, jackets and scarves.

It was this focus on layering -- and Browne's love of capes -- that resulted in the most unusual silhouette of the collection, a closing look that might kindly be called the Humpty Dumpty, which layered a stiff white felt ovoid cape trimmed in red-, white- and blue-striped grosgrain over a white cable-knit pencil skirt.

Avant-garde? Certainly. Wearable? Not so much. But like the three-legged trousers and feather-festooned suits that Browne has been known to send down his menswear runway, it's as much -- if not more -- about showcasing the vision and tailoring talent of the creative team as it is about wearability.

Besides, Browne knows that making an omelet requires breaking a few eggs.

And what we saw here during New York Fashion Week was merely his first crack at it.

RELATED:

Thom Browne women's collection fall-winter 2011 runway show gallery

-- Adam Tschorn in New York

Photos: Looks from Thom Browne's debut women's wear runway collection on Monday. Credit: Jonas Gustavsson and Peter Stigter / For The Times


Paris Fashion Week Highlights

Galliano

When the Paris menswear shows come around every year it's tempting to ditch the real world, hop on a plane, excitedly touch down at Charles de Gaulle and sneak in a couple Laduree macaroons before the Louis Vuitton show. It's a fine idea to flirt with and ah... a girl can dream, but most of us can't catch a jet to Paris on a whim. Lucky for fashion lovers on our side of the world, we don't have to. Adam Tschorn gives us the best that Paris Fashion Week has to offer, bringing readers the drama, glitz and glamour happening on and off the runways. This week he gives readers an exclusive front-row seat, with the best highlights from the Paris shows. Don't miss looks from your favorite designers with our photo galleries showcasing everyone from Thom Browne to Mugler.

-- Jenn Harris

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Photo, top: A model presents a creation by John Galliano as part of the men's fall-winter 2011/2012 collection shown during Paris Fashion Week. Credit: Jonas Gustavsson and Peter Stigter.

Photo, bottom: A look from the Thom Browne runway collection shown during Paris Fashion Week. Credit: Jonas Gustavsoon and Peter Stigter.


Paris Fashion Week: Thom Browne's Mad Hatter runway suits him to a T

Thom Browne AW11 Menswear Photos
The stage -- and the table -- had already been set by the time guests arrived at Thom Browne's runway show on the last night of men's fashion week here.

On one side of a banquet table that ran the length of the ballroom at the Westin Paris Hotel sat 20 behatted, bewigged and bespectacled Johnny lookalikes (let's call them "Depplicates," shall we?). Facing across a table loaded with a bounty of real food and a menagerie of once real but currently taxidermed animals, sat 20 men wearing white ponytailed cable-knit hats that resembled powdered wigs. An additional pair of stern-looking hatters sat at opposite ends of the table.

There was no doubt about it: Thom Browne was about to take us down the runway rabbit hole to a Mad Hatter themed affair -- but he certainly wasn't in any hurry to do it.

One by one, to the strains of chamber music, each model stood up and did a double slow-timed lap around the table -- twice -- before sitting back down. Although the nearly glacial place made for a long show (and one that felt even longer thanks to the bounty of food, including whole roast turkeys and corn on the cob, sitting just out of reach) the sluggish pace and extra lap that pushed the run of show north of 20 minutes (most last barely 10) was the perfect way to show a runway collection that was crammed with details like convertible trousers with lower pant legs that unbutton (instead of unzip), short coat tails that fold over and button to create a bow-like effect or the longer coat tails designed to button at the jacket cuff to create a batwing look.

In addition to Browne's usual assortment of pieces (which includes capes, blazers with contrast tipping and the occasional man skirt) there were a lot of new options in the trouser department including argyle plus-fours and a pair of maroon and white horizontal stripe trousers that bloused at midcalf. 

Some of the Depplicates were accessorized with with chunky argyle or cable-knit headbands (they also had button closures, which, if you think it through, seem kind of unnecessary), and others wore a range of more formal hats -- top hats and pork pie hats among them -- also from the Thom Browne label.

Which kind of makes him the mad hatter of menswear, doesn't it?

-- Adam Tschorn, reporting from Paris

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Photos: Looks from Thom Browne's Fall and Winter 2011 men's runway presentation on Jan. 23, 2011, on the last night of Paris Fashion Week. Credit: Jonas Gustavsson & Peter Stigter


Something to look forward to -- at the men's fall-winter 2011-2012 European collections

Men

If you think there's not much excitement about the men's shows coming up in Milan and Paris (other than some more wacky suit lengths from Thom Browne), well, think again. Our very own  Adam Tschorn reports: "Based on the lineup of new and returning labels on the European calendar, one gets the distinct impression that the economic malaise of the last couple of seasons -- which saw luxury brands pairing down, scaling back, and opting for less expensive presentations, or in some cases, forgoing a spot on the schedule altogether -- may be waning."

Think Jimmy Choo for men. Think Thierry Mugler menswear ... and, of course, think Thom Browne.  And look for  Adam's regular blog posts from the shows, starting this weekend.

-- Alice Short

Photo: A look from Phillip Lim 3.1 spring-summer 2011 men's runway show in Paris. Credit: firstVIEW.com


2010 Divine Design Gala to honor Kelly Osbourne, Brooks Brothers

Get ready to brandish those checkbooks, bargain-seeking stylish ones! Project Angel Food's annual Divine Design event is getting ready to drop-kick you through the goal posts of another holiday shopping season.

The benefit will be returning to the former Robinsons-May space in Beverly Hills, where it will run Dec. 1-6.

Rage_osbourneAs usual, it will kick off with a first-night gala event, and this year's honorees are Kelly Osbourne (chosen as Divine Design's 2010 woman of style), interior designers Mitchell Gold and Bob Williams (being honored as interior design pioneers) and Brooks Brothers, which is receiving a corporate humanitarian award.

Which makes Black Fleece by Brooks Brothers' spring/summer 2011 collection an appropriate choice for the evening's runway presentation. We're told that fashion designer Thom Browne (who collaborates with Brooks Brothers on the line) will be in attendance as well, and that Brad Goreski (late of "The Rachel Zoe Project") will be introducing the catwalk collection.

To date, the list of designers and labels whose wares are to be available -- at a deep discount and for a good cause -- includes Barbara Tfank, Monique Lhuillier, Perry Ellis, Trina Turk., Marc by Marc Jacobs and Tom Ford.

Tickets for the Dec. 1 opening-night gala, a Dec. 2 VIP cocktail shopping party, as well as general admission to the six-day shopstravaganza (and a coupon worth $10 off admission) can be found by clicking here.

Divine Design, Dec. 1-6, 9900 Wilshire Blvd, Beverly Hills. Hours, ticket prices and additional information available at divinedesign.org.

 -- Adam Tschorn

Photo: Kelly Osbourne, who will be honored as Divine Design's 2010 woman of style. Credit: Lucas Jackson / Reuters


 
 

 


Mr. Peanut gets a wardrobe makeover -- and a voice

Peanut_collage
You have to admit, as advertising mascots go, Mr. Peanut is one darn dapper fellow -- what with his monocle, top hat, cane, white gloves and spats. Hardly the type in need of a wardrobe overhaul.

 So I was surprised when I caught a segment on this morning's TV news.

Although the topic was the fact that -- after 94 years -- Planters' peanut-shilling shell had been given a voice -- and that it just so happened to be the voice of Robert Downey Jr. (OK, that IS nuts, I'll admit it) what I couldn't believe was the tiny little ensemble our familiar little nutty buddy happened to be wearing.

In the holiday-party-themed, animated ad (embedded below for your viewing pleasure) the luxe legume was seriously bringing it -- kitted out in a gray wool, notch lapel three-button suit jacket accented with white piping, gray trousers, a white dress shirt with French cuffs and light green necktie. And Mr. P was rocking a crisply folded triangle of white pocket square to boot.

Could it be that Mr. Peanut was wearing a Thom Browne suit? The style sure seemed spot on -- the shade of gray, the piping, the shrunken silhouette of the short jacket. To get the skinny on the salted one's sartorial switcheroo, I made a couple of calls.

The folks responsible for the updated look are Kris and Alisa Wixom, creative directors at advertising agency Being (in conjunction with Smuggler and Laika House) and Kris Wixom told All The Rage that Mr. Peanut's new threads weren't modeled after any one designer specifically. "It's based on the aesthetic of Savile Row custom tailors -- I wanted him to look like he was in a high-end custom suit."

Kris Wixom said there was some connection to real-world style. "I was inspired by some of the suits at Freemans Sporting Club in New York City," he said. "We wanted a look that felt both classic and modern."

But why re-garb the goober in the first place? For that we turned to Jason Levine, Planters' senior marketing director. "This is all about contemporizing Mr. Peanut. He's one of the best-loved advertising icons in America but we'd found that people didn't really connect with him beyond nostalgia."

That's why depictions of Mr. Peanut 2.0 have ditched the banana-yellow hue of his previous incarnation in favor of the new authentic textured-shell peanut color, and appear more to scale (that would be actual peanut size and not human size). It also explains his new found powers of vocalization. "It's another way to get him off the package and get to know him," Levine said.

(Another way of engaging and contemporizing Mr. Peanut apparently includes giving him a Facebook page --astrological sign: Virgo, location: Suffolk, Va.)

Being's Alisa Wixom gave us the low-down on why Downey was the right choice of voice to crack the nut's 94 years of silence: "He can pull off classic roles like Charlie Chaplin and also be Iron Man," she said. "He's got an everyman quality but he's also got the kind of suaveness that can pull off the top hat and the cane."

Speaking of which, while the Wixoms hinted that while Mr. Peanut's wardrobe could well expand in future ads (depending on the occasion, of course), they said it would only do so in a way that fit Mr. P's new look.

And Planters' senior marketing director answered our most important question before we could even ask it.

"That top hat, cane and monocle keep him true to who he is," Levine said. "Anything he wears and any situation Mr. Peanut is in is going to involve those elements."

 -- Adam Tschorn

Photos: The nattily garbed Planters' Mr. Peanut mascot circa 2004, left, and as he appears in new advertisements unveiled Nov. 9, 2010, right. Credit: Planters.



Thom Browne shows Paris the right stuff [video]

Rage_Browne_Paris

It wasn't easy to steal the thunder of the European designers this season: Dolce & Gabbana had Annie Lennox singing to the crowd at its 20th anniversary menswear show, Raf Simons staged a 15th anniversary show that revisited some of the themes in his collections over the last decade and a half, and Italian textile maker and clothing label Ermenegildo Zegna celebrated its centennial with an exhibition and gala shindig at Milan's Trienniale that traces the company's history.

But on Sunday, at the second to the last scheduled runway show on the final day -- and a posterior-numbing 47 minutes late -- American designer Thom Browne didn't just debut his eponymous menswear line here at Paris Fashion Week, he picked their pockets, cleaned their clocks, ate their collective lunches and ushered in the new era of the American designers' dominance.

The show was held in the Oscar Niemeyer-designed French Communist Party headquarters, a building that has hosted fashion shows by the likes of Prada and Dries van Noten, and no description can accurately do the scene justice.

Continue reading »

Your morning fashion and beauty report: World Cup style. American Apparel controversy

Shakira world cup Fergie, Shakira and Alicia Keys look hot, kick off the World Cup in South Africa. [InStyle]

Don't care about soccer/football? Then pay attention to the styles of the players' WAGs. [Shop It To Me]

Carly Fiorina's style is more Pelosi than Palin. [Financial Times]

The winners of this year's NEWGEN fashion awards. [Vogue UK]

Are you a "Twilight" fan? Here are the details on Bella's engagement ring. [InStyle]

Most popular? Best dressed? Here's Hollywood's class of 2010. [N.Y. Daily News]

American Apparel apparently doesn't want to hire unattractive employees. [BlackBook]

Veteran models still rule fall campaigns. [The Cut]

Video: Victoria's Secret's first fashion show. [Huffington Post]

Plus-size model Kate Dillon is pregnant. [People]

WSJ on J. Crew chief executive/retail wunderkind Mickey Drexler. [WSJ]

Thom Browne on why he loves short shorts. [WSJ]

Uma Thurman is the face of this year's Saks Fifth Avenue Key to the Cure breast cancer awareness campaign. [InStyle]

How to make your makeup hi-res friendly for video chatting on the new iPhone. [Allure]

-- Whitney Friedlander

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Photo: Shakira at the FIFA World Cup kickoff concert in Johannesburg, South Africa. Credit: Jewel Samad / AFP/Getty Images


New York Fashion Week: Thom Browne thinks big

Thom_Browne_AW10

When I saw Thom Browne's fall/winter 2010 runway collection would be showing at the Park Avenue Armory this season, I immediately envisioned the immense, 55,000-square-foot Wade Thompson Drill Hall with its soaring barrel-vaulted ceiling where most of the fashion events take place (last season Yohji Yamamoto and French soccer player Zinedine Zidane memorably kicked soccer balls toward runway photographers at the culmination of a Y-3 show there).

But once again, Browne was playing with proportions -- and expectations -- and attendees found themselves sequestered in small groups in one of four 19th-century-period reception rooms off to the left and right. (The room I was seated in, known as "The Veterans Room," is apparently one of only two remaining interiors in the world designed by Louis C. Tiffany Associated Artists.)

Continue reading »

GiltMan launches with Phantom of the Opera Halloween masks -- picture Gerald Butler, not Lon Chaney

Gilt Man_Masked Crusader Sale_image1Gilt.com is an invite-only e-commerce sample sale that incites mini-frenzies with its 36-hour steep markdowns (up to 70%) on “it” labels and accessories. If you snooze for even one minute before clicking "buy," you’ll probably lose that Marc Jacobs shirt priced within “please don't overdraw my debit card" range.

Gilt Groupe, the company behind Gilt.com, is launching this week a dedicated men’s site GiltMan.com.

GiltMAN aims to be a more of a regular guy’s retail destination offering such items as Alexander McQueen dress shirts, New Balance sneakers, Adidas Porsche Design sportswear and Outdoor Research hiking gear. But if you need a killer suit, Thom Browne’s Black Fleece Collection for Brooks Bros. will be on sale starting Monday, Oct. 26.

At  9 a.m. Saturday, GiltMan will offer exclusive Halloween masks from costume designer Claudia Hapeman as the site’s inaugural weekend special. If you really want to make a debonair impact on the Halloween party circuit, you can become a suave Phantom of the Opera (picture Gerald Butler, not Lon Chaney) in one of Haperman’s Venetian-style guises ($100 to $600) crafted from leather, gold leaf and Swarovski crystals.  

And if you’re not already a member, you can join GiltMan and Gilt.com by clicking this link through Nov. 23.

-- Max Padilla

Photo: Claudia Haperman mask. Credit: Gilt Groupe


Black Fleece bows on Bleecker -- can Beverly Hills be far behind?

Rage_fleece52 Brooks Brothers' Black Fleece label opened its first stand-alone boutique today at 351 Bleecker St. in New York's West Village, an appropriately tiny 800-square-foot space, considering the line is designed by Thom Browne, whose appreciation for the shrunken suit has influenced the silhouette of today's menswear.

The Black Fleece by Brooks Brothers store on the corner of Bleecker and 10th showcases the entire men’s and women’s line of clothing and accessories in a space appointed in gray flannel upholstery with black-lacquered antique details. Until now, the line, which launched in 2007 as a collaboration between the staid clothier and the 2006 CFDA Menswear designer of the year, had been available in only 30 Brooks Brothers flagship stores.

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Rage_fleece32 Company spokesman Arthur Wayne told us that though there are currently no concrete plans to roll out additional stand-alone stores (this one was a long time in coming, originally slated to open last fall), the new space will be used as a template and laboratory for other possible stores.

But a West Coast outpost would seem like a logical next step. "Our Rodeo Drive's flagship is one of the biggest sellers of Black Fleece," Wayne said, noting that celebrities such as Zac Efron, Jimmy Fallon, the Jonas brothers and Jon Hamm wear the collection.

Until then, if you guys feel the need to get your dapper Don Draper on -- or for any of you ladies who need to Betty up -- the Spring 2009 collection, each piece worthy of a Sterling Cooper office mixer, can be found at the Beverly Hills store.

--Adam Tschorn

Photos:  Computer rendering of the new Black Fleece by Brooks Brothers store, and Spring 2009 looks from the collection, all courtesy of Brooks Brothers.


Fall 2009: Thom Browne gets tangled up in Bleu

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Everybody's favorite "just gotta be me" design wonder boy Thom Browne has been taking the continent by storm as of late. Last week he was a guest designer at Pitti Immagine Uomo, a men's fashion trade show in Florence, where he treated guests to a cadre of identically clad office drones clacking at their typewriters and eating their lunches in unison.

Today he showed Moncler Gamme Bleu ("Gamme Bleu" means "blue range"), a collaboration with French outerwear maker Moncler, on a fir-tree lined, indoor, faux snowslope at La Triennale di Milano, accompanied by the strains of "The Lonely Goatherd," a song from the "Sound of Music." Although the capacity and crowd and a narrow space the width of a bunny slope prevented me from getting runway adjacent to the collection, the above photo should give you a rough idea of the snow globe acid trip that was going on amid a flurry of faux flakes and swirling clouds of dry ice.

The collection was presented in three color groups: gray, which included suits, sport coats and more technical cold-weather gear in Browne's favorite shade with tweeds and camouflage mixed in; navy, which made for a more Ivy League-inspired look; and white, ostensibly inspired by the uniforms of the Berlin Olympics.

Browne is a designer whose own aesthetic is off-puttingly severe, and his Black Fleece collaboration with Brooks Brothers, which sounded like a nonstarter from the get-go, is now a toddler with the best traits of both parents, so we can't wait to get our mittens on the Moncler pieces for a closer look.

And despite a few crazy pieces here and there, what convinced me that the city that loves its shiny nylon Moncler puffer jackets might shrug into Bleu were the two fellows guarding a fir tree next to me, clad in matching gray cordura nylon -- pieces from the Browne collection. It wasn't until I asked one of them for any press materials on the collection did I realize I was chatting with a couple of models who had simply gone apres ski.

-- Adam Tschorn

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Photo: Moncler Gamme Bleu Fall/Winter 2009 at Milan men's fashion week.




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