Monday, June 29, 2020

Affordable Slides That Have Just Enough Whimsy



I’ve been finding simple joy in being able to get dressed each day and, as a result, I’m looking for clothes that strengthen that drive. An accessory refresh is a great way to update an otherwise uninspired outfit. These whimsical, happy shoes from Tabitha Simmons fit the bill perfectly. These woven slides are well-made, sturdy, and at just over $100, they’re an affordable option from a luxury brand.

These easy slides are just enough to be a balanced transition from quarantine hibernation to real life—and to look good while doing it. The thought of wearing them to a socially-distanced al fresco dinner brings me so much happiness. They bring brightness to a simple, casual denim look as much as they do a breezy summer dress and fit seamlessly into the casual, elegant aesthetic I try to achieve in warm weather months. Even if I am just on Zoom, it is amazing what the power of feeling out together can do.

As an added bonus, I’ve found these through the Vogue x Amazon: Common Threads shop which supports younger designers whose businesses have struggled throughout the pandemic. I’ve found that now more than ever, I want to be thoughtful about the way I shop and consume. To me, that includes supporting independent designers whose vision I love, like Tabitha. Ultimately, these easy slides are the kind of shoe I look forward to wearing summer after summer.

Tuesday, May 26, 2020

Saint Laurent Steps Off Schedule for Its 2020 Fashion Shows

The novel coronavirus, its related lockdowns, and the cancellation of major fashion weeks in June and July has the fashion industry to intensely questioning its status quo. Saint Laurent is the latest brand to try something new: Today the Parisian house announced that it would move off schedule for the remainder of 2020. While Paris’s menswear fashion week was already canceled in June, many have assumed that fashion weeks could resume, in some form, in September. If they do, Saint Laurent won’t be there. In a release, the brand noted, “Saint Laurent will take ownership of its calendar and launch its collections following a plan conceived with an up-to-date perspective, driven by creativity.”




Speaking to WWD, artistic director Anthony Vaccarello and chief executive officer Francesca Bellettini painted a picture of physical-digital hybrid shows that would operate outside of the traditional bounds of the fashion calendar. “This season, I want to present a collection when I am ready to show it,” Vaccarello said in an interview. The pair stressed the importance of brand building and slow fashion, suggesting smaller aesthetic shifts between seasonal collections and a stronger core product offering. “It’s not a complete change season after season. Everything is intended to be mixed with previous seasons. It’s always about the attitude of the same woman or man. In the show, you can really see what’s from last season. More image pieces will always be there, as it’s not the time to be boring. It’s time for even more creativity,” the designer continued.

Saint Laurent is the first major label to officially leave the traditional fashion calendar as a result of the coronavirus pandemic. In Milan, men’s fashion week has been pushed to September, to coincide with women’s, with all the usual headliners expected to participate. Ditto for Paris Fashion Week, which put its menswear and couture weeks on pause, but is expected to make a digital-facing announcement soon. London Fashion Week, meanwhile, has gone all digital, inviting its designers to contribute content during the time earmarked for London Fashion Week: men’s in early June.

Will others follow suit and step outside the fashion week system? The idea of large brands of staging pre-collection style extravaganzas on their own timelines could seem appealing as a way to monopolize the digital news cycle and create stronger brand initiatives, however Saint Laurent stresses that in doing its own thing, it is not pulling its support of Paris Fashion Week. “Saint Laurent’s announcement that we will not hold events in 2020 according to the usual calendar does not in any way diminish the role or importance of Paris Fashion Week—which is, very simply, the best in the world,” Bellettini said to WWD. Still, the decision has the potential to set off a chain of events that changes the concept of Fashion Week forever.

Friday, April 24, 2020

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge Give NHS Workers a Royal Salute in Shades of Blue


The importance of essential workers during the COVID-19 crisis can’t be understated, and around the world, people have been finding ways to celebrate their contributions. In the United Kingdom, the weekly Clap for Carers tribute honors the doctors, nurses, and caregivers of the National Health Service. Every Thursday across the country at 8 p.m., citizens take to the streets to applaud the heroes on the front lines. This week, the initiative received a royal boost when the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge joined in from the steps of Anmer Hall in Norfolk. Dressed in shades of blue—Pantone 300, a bright cobalt serves as the NHS’s official color—Prince William, Kate Middleton, and their three young children George, Charlotte, and Louis cheered on the efforts of the nation’s health care professionals.

As always, Kate Middleton looked polished. Her floral ruffled dress from the High Street brand Ghost sold out moments after she was spotted wearing it. But the duchess’s fashions wouldn’t have been as impactful if her entire family didn’t get on board. Their coordinated color scheme was a subtle show of solidarity with the British people. Recorded as part of BBC Children In Need and Comic Relief’s The Big Night In, they joined celebrities like Sam Smith, Stephen Fry, and Leona Lewis in helping to to raise money for the U.K.’s most vulnerable workers. The event and the Clap for Carers initiative are a statement of unity in the face of the pandemic and the challenges it has caused. Those on the front lines face the most significant risks, but right now, it’s essential that everyone—even royals—do their bit to support, uplift, and inspire.

Thursday, March 12, 2020

Paloma Elsesser on Her Boundary-Breaking Supermodel Season

Fashion may be forward-looking, but when it comes to inclusion and diversity, the runways of Europe have long been lacking. For many of the world’s biggest brands, the vision of luxury represented within their collections has remained unchanged for decades; models are still predominantly white, thin, and under the age of 20—but during the fall 2020 shows, there were significant signs of improvement. Awakened to the idea that women of all ages and sizes should be celebrated, Old World houses have begun to broaden their concept of beauty. The shift was embodied by modeling star Paloma Elsesser who, after four years of booking magazine covers and high-profile campaigns, is experiencing her first big season. “It’s a profound honor, my section of the modeling industry has largely been excluded from these sorts of opportunities,” she shared on the phone from New York. “We weren’t considered, and if we were it wasn’t for “high fashion,” so to do a show in Milan or Paris is super-new, exciting, and scary. I experienced a whole different set of emotions.”


At Fendi’s liberation-themed collection, Elsesser broke ground with her Milan Fashion Week debut, walking alongside legends like Liya Kebede and Carolyn Murphy. Her winning streak continued in Paris where she made appearances at Alexander McQueen and Lanvin. Such accomplishments would be impressive for any model, but Elsesser’s position in the industry is unique. As one of the few stars over a sample size to feature prominently within the luxury sector, she regularly books the kind of prestige work that has traditionally been reserved for her straight-size peers. In a business where eating disorders are prevalent, weight is taboo, and size often dictates a model’s trajectory, her achievements are radical, a fact she’s keenly aware of. “In every aspect of my career thus far it’s been about being focused but also being provided with opportunities and leaning into them,” she says. “I have to tap into the service element. If I have complaints about the way the runway has historically operated and I’m being provided with these opportunities [to change things] I have to take them on, despite my fear or lack of experience. I want to do this work so that one day I won’t have to complain.”

That mindset emboldened Elsesser this season. Directly booked for Fendi, she headed into Milan with the knowledge that she would be a part of something special. “They wanted the whole cast to just be models that they absolutely loved,” she explained. For casting director Piergiorgio Del Moro, Elsesser’s presence was essential. “Paloma was one of the first models we discussed as soon as the concept of the show’s casting was defined,” he says. “We knew immediately that she would be key to the casting. The entire show was about beauty and femininity and the atmosphere during the fittings was quite amazing. Each woman felt very empowered and comfortable in their looks and they brought their own confidence and beauty on the runway.”

Behind the scenes, Elsesser was pleased to find that the team was equally inclusive. “It wasn’t a situation where you go in, and the cast is diverse, but everyone on the backend looks the same,” she says. “It was amazing to be surrounded by curvy women who work for the company, whether they’re designers or in the marketing department. Women who all wear Fendi and believe in the force of change. It was truly an authentic and caring moment.” That feeling of unity and female-driven progress was exactly the vibe creative director Silvia Venturini Fendi was going for. “In a moment where we talk more about feminism than femininity, it made me want to analyze the concept of the feminine wardrobe,” she says. “It’s liberating for me to portray these clothes in a different way, on different sizes.”

That sensibility carried into the Paris collections, where Elsesser reunited with stylist Carlos Nazario, an early champion of her career, at Lanvin. “He’s been a major advocate, not just for me but for a lot of girls who are the minority within the fashion industry,” she says. Creative director Bruno Sialelli proved equally encouraging. “He just has this truth to his perspective; when we met I felt like we already knew each other.” At Alexander McQueen, immersed in Sarah Burton’s poetic femininity, Elsesser experienced an a-ha moment. “I just felt so honored and so lucky,” she says. “To be a flash in her vision and in everyone else’s vision. Sarah was so warm, involved, and meticulous, and everyone else came to it with the same level of dedication.”

The statements of Venturini Fendi and Del Moro speak to the changing perspective on size within fashion circles. The strides made by the body-positivity movement have impacted all aspects of culture, and consumers are no longer content with the tokenism of brands including larger models in ads while excluding them from the runway. It’s a shift that Elsesser’s agent, Mina White, has seen firsthand. “Having Paloma walk for Fendi, McQueen, and Lanvin this season brought the conversation around size inclusivity in luxury to the forefront and we’re extremely proud of her,” says White, who also handles stars at the center of the movement like Ashley Graham and Alessandra Garcia. “All women want to see themselves represented and should have the same access to luxury brands. IMG has been pushing this conversation forward for many years by de-bunking misconceptions around the plus-size consumer and educating brands of the opportunities presented by the plus-size market.”

Elsesser has done her share of teaching, her visibility putting her in positions where—fairly or not—she’s had to represent an entire community. “My identity is that of a plus-size woman. Putting me on a runway isn’t a cop-out because I’m not just slightly larger than the other models, I am a size 14 woman. [Still] there needs to be a spectrum of diversity,” she says. “I can’t represent everyone or speak for everyone but that isn’t the point. I hope to speak for someone, to allow people who have never seen themselves in this context to see a representation of who they are.” Ultimately the responsibility falls to brands, who will have to evolve to remain relevant. For Elsesser, those that fail to embrace different sizes are sending a message. “What this month taught me is that if they want to do it, then they can do it,” she says. “Which was also painful to realize because the past four years when I haven’t been included, it’s been an unconscious yet conscious choice.” Still, Elsesser remains optimistic about the future and fashion’s ability to include everyone. “Gone are the days when you can have a show with one black model and claim diversity. I hope that we don’t go back on this progress. I don’t want this to be a flash in the pan,” she says. “Whether it’s me having a successful season or a whole other range of body sizes that can be represented it would be such a disservice to go backward.”

Monday, January 20, 2020

Priyanka Chopra Steps Out in This Surprising Airport Shoe



Flying is not fashion-friendly. You need a no-frills outfit and an even more practical shoe. Chic stilettos make little sense in the airport, even though stars like Rihanna have teetered towards their private plane in them. But most well-dressed celebrities have found the perfect balance of comfort and style for air travel: supermodel Kate Moss, for instance, recently deplaned in cowboy boots (they are flats, after all). But one star who’s making her own rules? Priyanka Chopra, who arrived at the Newark airport in New Jersey yesterday in a more surprising footwear choice.

Chopra, who will star in a new Amazon Prime series titled Citadel, chose a quirky shoe shape for her chic plane look: square-toe boots. Her white boots by Wandler had a thick block heel that was more comfort-oriented than a pin-thin heel. She styled them with a light blue suit by Prabal Gurung and a white tee. Her carry-on of choice was a sleek black Jimmy Choo tote bag, which was roomy enough for one’s snacks, water bottle, and a book. Chopra’s controversial shoe choice follows that of fellow risk-taker Victoria Beckham, who this winter wore peep-toe boots to JFK. The takeaway? Sneakers don’t exist in the world of trendsetters. Perhaps rules of practicality don’t apply when you have VIP status at the terminal.