Fash Mob »

  • Friday giveaway: Countdown to Christmas with the Zip Yard

    December 9, 2011 @ 5:25 pm | by Rosemary Mac Cabe

    So this Friday giveaway is a little late – and I haven’t even pulled the winner for last week’s giveaway*, my bad! – but this one is a doozy: the Zip Yard is offering 10 €30 vouchers for you to nip and tuck your party dresses (or trousers, or tops, or . . . you see where this is going).

    At a time when we’re all spending less, the answer to what to wear tonight might already be in your wardrobe – it just might need an experienced seamstress to give it the makeover it needs! The Zip Yard has 11 locations nationwide and will tend to your every fabric-related need, and with 10 of you in with a chance of winning, making over your wardrobe has never been so easy.

    (For the record, I don’t think Fergie should have altered this D&G numbah!)

    For a chance to enter, simply leave a comment below! Only one entry per person; no correspondence will be entered into regarding the success (or lack thereof) of your entry. Bon chance!

    (And as usual, the competition will run from today until Wednesday, December 14th, at midnight!)

    * I will do this ASAP, I swear!

  • 15-year-old Swede wins Elite’s Model Look contest in Shanghai

    December 8, 2011 @ 1:30 pm | by Rosemary Mac Cabe

    So that’s what Chiara’s up to . . . Julia Schneider was awarded top prize in the Elite Model Look competition in Shanghai on Tuesday. It’s a prestigious competition; past contestants include Gisele and Alessandra Ambrosio (one could be forgiven for wondering if competitors are destined to be Victoria’s Secret models rather than catwalk models – although apparently VS is the ultimate model coup).

    Predictably, the Daily Mail is already incensed by Schneider’s slight frame, and commenters are getting themselves all in a tizzy about how anyone – anyone – could find this “skeletal” figure attractive. What they’re missing, however, is that the fashion world isn’t looking for traditionally sexually attractive women. It’s looking for women who will make clothes hang correctly. In some cases, it doesn’t even really need the women at all.

  • Portland: a vintage shopping Mecca

    @ 11:30 am | by Rosemary Mac Cabe

    I was in Portland a couple of weeks back and, when I returned, a wrote a piece about my vintage shopping experience. It was published in The Irish Times but, in case you missed it . . .

    IF YOU HAVE preconceptions about Portland, Oregon, they may involve hipsters on fixed-gear bicycles, a laid-back cafe culture, handmade everything in various shades of hemp and underground movements which, by the time you hear of them, will have become Europe’s mainstream trends.

    For the uninitiated, know that those preconceptions do ring true – down every street in Portland there seems to be a cyclist, leaning his or her bike up against the railing beside a cafe, dressed head to toe in scruffy, hemp-alike clothing, campaigning for change – but there is so much more to this rainy city than meets the eye, namely a thriving, thrilling vintage clothing selection that would make the best markets of Milan green with envy.

    It stands to reason that Portland, so obsessed with recycling, upcycling and sustainability, would play host to a thriving industry based on the reusing of clothing, but these are no ragged hand-me-downs. Instead, a week in Portland yielded vintage delights better than most ever found in or around these shores, and at, predictably, a fraction of Irish prices.

    Portland is divided into quarters, but those of you visiting need not overly concern yourselves with geography. Grab a bike or, like so many of the town’s inhabitants, put your environmental credentials slightly to one side and drive; either way, on wheels is the best way to soak up Portland’s relaxed, hippy vibe.

    On Mississippi Avenue in northeastern Portland lie many of the city’s best shops, cafes and restaurants – and Animal Traffic (00-1-503-249-4000) should be your first stop. It’s a vintage-slash-western boutique, meaning it sells amazing, authentic vintage dresses, jackets and jeans alongside western-style chambray shirts in all shapes and sizes and, when I visited last week, more Christmas jumpers than you could shake a sprig of mistletoe at.

    Photograph courtesy of the inimitable Annie Atkins, of Tom, the owner of Animal Traffic.

    On the same street, Flutter (00-1-503- 288-1649) houses a delightful collection of odds and ends: bric-a-brac, vintage clothing, furniture, cushions, bird cages, perfumes, postcards, jewellery and the fluffiest, fattest cat you have ever seen. It’s a hoarder’s paradise, a place where you could easily while away an hour leafing through copies of unusual books such as The Moustache Grower’s Guide (one for next Movember, perhaps?).

    If you venture further afield, Flutter has a sister store, Eden (00-1-503- 222-2285) on NW 11th avenue that owner Cindy Rokoff describes as “Flutter’s older, classier, wackier sister”.

    Before you leave Mississippi Avenue, be sure to take a trip to Lovely’s Fifty Fifty (00-1-503-281-4060), an Italian salad and pizza joint that does some of the best dough this side of Naples and serves its own ice cream, either soft serve or scoop, in home-made cones. Be prepared to wait for a table, but have faith, it will be worth it.

    NE Alberta Street is another vintage and shopping mecca. From one end of the street, looking down will yield a view not unlike in some western movie – the buildings seem to be on stilts, that good ol’ American Foursquare style that calls to mind scenes from Little House on the Prairie or, at times, There Will Be Blood, although without the violence.

    Alberta is referred to as an arts district with good reason; along the street are all kinds of resourceful individuals, selling their wares, from Ampersand Vintage (00-1-503-805-5458), a gallery, bookshop and archive selling vintage photography, postcards and collectible books to Billy Goat Vintage, where 1940s nightdresses are selling for a song ($15/€11) and vintage sunglasses, as well as, of course, a variety of cloth goods – 1950s prom dresses, anyone?

    Also on Alberta, albeit slightly off the vintage track, is PedX shoes (00-1-503-460-0760), a locally- owned women’s shoe store that sells, well, shoes – including covetable styles from Jeffrey Campbell and Toms – but, more importantly, the counter-top jewellery selection is almost worth the airfare on its own. Hand-beaded friendship-style bracelets (below), pendants and lockers made by local producers may be pricey (bracelets started at the $80/€60 mark), but they sure are beautiful.

    Not to hark on about food too much, but while on Alberta, check out Pine State Biscuits (00-1-503-477-6605). It sells biscuits, but not as you know them – soft, crumbly, savoury – and scones, but not quite scones, with fried chicken, bacon and egg sandwiched in between.

    It would be a sin to be in Portland and not stop by both of the city’s institutions, or, rather, one current institution and one future. The former is, of course, Powell’s (00-1-503-228-4651), arguably the world’s best bookshop, where second-hand and new books sit side-by-side on groaning library shelves. Sections are divided by colour and category, but forget all of that and just get lost wherever you find yourself wandering. The rare books room is quite a treat.

    The latter is Duchess (00-1-503-281- 6648), a custom men’s suit-maker run by a group of friendly, smiling ladies who will look after your every need. If you don’t have the eight to 10 weeks it takes to wait for your finished suit, Duchess will arrange delivery – and it also has a selection of off-the-rack items for sale in-store, including the most beautiful high-waisted trousers, complete with suspender buttons, for a song at $75 (€56). Check out, too, the selection of vintage cufflinks and bespoke handkerchiefs. Perfect stocking fillers.

    One point to note when shopping in Portland is that you’ll soon lose your hurry, as it will be shared by absolutely no one. On day one, a 10-minute queue to pay for a dress seems ridiculous, particularly when standing behind just one person, chatting amiably to the lone woman behind the counter. On day four, however, a 10-minute chat with the lone woman behind the counter about the weather, the bicycle helmet you just bought, the fried chicken biscuit you ate, the weather . . . well, that seems just fine.

  • The perfect man; the perfect website

    @ 9:30 am | by Rosemary Mac Cabe

    There are hundreds of blogs I read on a daily basis, some of which to rile me up good in time for the day, others to keep me updated with what’s, y’know, going on in this tumultuous fashion world – but there are only a couple of blogs that I really, really love. (Incidentally, I catch up on my blog-reading using Google Reader; for me, it seems the most efficient method. What do you use?)

    I’ve waxed lyrical previously about my love of the Man Repeller – but have I mentioned Into the Gloss lately? Run by beauty genius Emily Weiss, it interviews well known and perhaps less well known personalities in the worlds of fashion and beauty about their daily cosmetics routines, and it is compulsive reading. Want to know what those in the know use on their faces, bodies, in their showers? Obviously!

    Posts are really detailed and often accompanied by a picture essay of sorts – plus, Emily frequently takes photographs of models whose make-up and hair she’s done using new and interesting products, which is a nice foil to the wordier posts. And the real reason  you should read? She recently posted this photograph. Is it my imagination or is this the perfect man?!

  • Nigella Lawson covered in salted caramel on the cover of Stylist magazine

    December 7, 2011 @ 2:00 pm | by Rosemary Mac Cabe

    Yes, really.

    Stylist magazine was really the high point of London Fashion Week for me. A high-quality, glossy fashion magazine with amazing fashion shoots and great features, handed out for free in London city? Yes, please.

  • Debenhams S/S – John Rocha in print shocker!

    @ 12:30 pm | by Rosemary Mac Cabe

    Last week’s Debenhams trip yielded some pleasant surprises – one of which is, obviously, that Benefit’s brow bar is amazing – among which, a sneak preview of John Rocha’s S/S 2012 offerings. A very Marni-esque print goes through the collection, which is really interesting and very wearable. I love the idea of wearing the print dress to a spring / summer wedding, actually, if I ever got invited to one!

    What do you think? I’m quite excited (although probably by the time S/S rolls around I’ll be yearning for A/W again . . . them’s the breaks!)

  • In which I show you a picture of my feet: pedicure at Essentials Beauty

    December 6, 2011 @ 12:30 pm | by Rosemary Mac Cabe

    You still have, oh, approximately 12 hours to enter my most recent giveaway, so have at it – on which topic, I went to Essentials yesterday to avail of a pedicure and, oh my was I impressed.

    I won’t go through what the pedicure entailed because really, it’s not that complicated – but Gemma, my therapist, and I had a great ol’ chinwag about Halloween, Christmas and everything in between, and my feet were well and truly scrubbed and buffed to perfection.

    Behold, my feet! (I did warn you.) The only downside was having to wear flip flops in possibly minus weather to stroll down to the Shelbourne for a glass of wine . . . what Budget?!

    I got a lovely, Christmassy ruby shade, feeling very festive! I’d been meaning to have a pedicure for a while so was particularly pleased that this one was so good, and so thorough! Are you a pedicure person or would you rather no one went near your tootsies? Do share!

  • Clear out your closet at Andrew’s Lane Theatre, December 10th

    December 5, 2011 @ 3:30 pm | by Rosemary Mac Cabe

    I know I’m always banging on about clothing sales, but there’s nothing like a good clear-out to help you get over bad boyfriends, bad fashion decisions, bad periods (period!). Seriously. The next one is on this Saturday coming in Andrew’s Lane Theatre and it’s bound to be a good ‘un, organised by Corina Gaffey, fashion editor of Stellar and Kiss magazines – the former having just been named Ireland’s magazine of the year!

    So seriously – put it in your diaries. I’m not selling this time as, well, I’m all out of clothes to sell, but I will definitely be popping along to check out who’s selling what and (hopefully) snap up some bargains. Plus, I’ll be (obviously) getting my hair done on Saturday as the 10th is my annual night out with my gals from secondary school. Woot!

  • Karlie Kloss naked in Italian Vogue

    @ 12:30 pm | by Rosemary Mac Cabe

    This is the kind of post that I wonder about whether I should put “NSFW” in the title. (For those of you who, y’know, don’t love the internetz like I do, NSFW = not suitable for work.) It seems as if it should be self-explanatory. But in any case, on the off-chance that the photograph right below these words hasn’t given the game away, this post is not suitable for work. Unless your work is totally awesome*.

    Karlie Kloss has been big, big news for the past couple of seasons. She walked for Victoria’s Secret this year for the first time, as well as, y’know, doing normal American high-school teen things such as going to prom and, obviously, working out a lot. She’s one of the hottest models around, so it’s no surprise that Steven Meisel chose to get her clothes off for Vogue Italia, although the whole concept of it confuses me. Surely, if you’re going to do a shoot focusing on a very athletic human body, you don’t really need clothes. Are the clothes just there to give variety between nearly-nude shots?

    Vogue has removed the above image from its website – rumours (online rumours, obviously) are that it was deemed too photoshopped, although, that said, this video on the Vogue site shows Kloss looking pretty much exactly the same as she does in the photos, moving around on set. There’s no doubting that Meisel is super talented, and that the photographs are eye-catching, but is it because she’s naked or because they’re great photos? We’re still so unused to seeing nudity this starkly, it takes us by surprise and it’s difficult to know where the emphasis should be. More pics after the jump – and let me know what you think about nudity in fashion. Good or bad? (Here’s another example, if you’re, y’know, curious and, crucially, not in the office.) (more…)

  • Is it just me who doesn’t see the point of the Victoria’s Secret ‘fashion’ show?

    @ 10:30 am | by Rosemary Mac Cabe

    Or are there other people out there who really don’t understand what the point of having a multi-million-dollar fashion show for a “line” that sells, basically, underwear and fluffy cushions, is? Please, speak up. I feel as if I’m drowning in a sea of Swarovski bras and feathery wingpieces.

    In any case, I understand that, in the fashion world, Victoria’s Secret – or, at least, the show itself – is kind of a big deal. We get excited about who’s been cast, about who will perform (Maroon 5? Hardly exciting), about who will get to wear the bra, about their diets in the run-up, about their diets afterwards, about who’s done the fastest baby-to-bikini turnaround . . . etc. So for that sake, here are some pictures (after the jump, in case you really, really just don’t care). Enjoy! (more…)


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