Showing posts with label Jeans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jeans. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 06, 2007

Kylie Minogue steps out in 'boyfriend' jeans

Ladies, if you've been wanting proof that it's OK to ditch those skinny jeans and don something a little looser, then look no further than Ms Minogue here.

Kylie arrived back at her West London home on Saturday night wearing 'boyfriend' jeans. No, not her boyfriend's jeans- not unless a) that was where she was returning from, and b) her boyfriend is a midget - but that much-touted style of comfy jean that's been seen on the likes of Kate Moss.

The Tiny One teamed hers with a black leather jacket, grey top, grey silver scarf and sunglasses. Yes, at night. Thank goodness all those paparazzi flash bulbs were around so she could see where she was going, eh?

Friday, October 05, 2007

Jeans for Genes Day - are you wearing your denim today?

Today is Jeans for Genes Day - the perfect excuse to get away with wearing denim to work! This year, the worthy cause is being backed by Ted Baker who is selling Jeans for Genes stick-on patches to wear on the pockets of your jeans - stylish! The patches cost £1 each from all of Ted Baker's 27 stand-alone stores.

Not quite your cup of tea? Then why not try a Lee Cooper 'I've been deminised' t-shirt available at all Lee Cooper stores. Or Howies, which are offering customers 10% off selected jeans for all you ethical fashion supporters out there.

Otherwise, you can simply donate your precious pennies to the Jeans for Genes day official website - helping children with genetic disorders.

Sunday, August 26, 2007

Fergie takes on her jeans nemesis: skinny fit, high waisted and bright purple!


Ah, Fergie, you gotta love her! Well no, you don't, but personally I'm definitely pro the Fergster simply for having the guts to give this outfit a go! High waisted skinny fit bright purple jeans aren't high on my list of future purchases I'm afraid, although if I was as tiny as her I too might be tempted to give it a try. I love the understated black top but it's the belt that really causes me difficulty; I'm just not sure whether wearing it low-slung on a pair of high waisted jeans really works. What do you think?

[Images: Source]

Friday, August 24, 2007

In or Out?

Denim Sales Dip, But Have True Blues Really Lost Their Cool?


If you've walked around Adams Morgan on a Friday night over the past five years, you've seen the fashion formula: dressy top, strappy heels, killer jeans. Predictably, the jeans are designed by an obscure brand (Seven? Try Sass & Bide), but they bear a subtle pocket stitch that says to the savvy, "Why yes, these did cost $275."

A couple of years ago, the uniform started looking passe; even the neighborhood's glam girls moved on. Nationally, women's denim sales have taken a nose dive. U.S. sales were down 6.2 percent for the 12 months through June, according to market research firm NPD Group. In the coveted 18 to 34 demographic, they plummeted 15.5 percent.

So, is denim really fading out of fashion?
It depends on whom you ask. Many area stores say their business is as strong as ever. But to some industry watchers, there is a problem, and it may start with premium denim -- those fastidiously faded, hand-whiskered blues that promise to perfect your posterior for $200 to $500 a pop.

"Premium denim doesn't seem to be so elite as it once was," says Jackie Flanagan, owner of D.C. boutique Nana. Indeed, high-end jeans are so ubiquitous that it's easy to forget that Sevens didn't even exist 10 years ago. Now the brand shares shelf space with Blue Cult, True Religion, Citizens of Humanity, Paige and a dozen more labels most shoppers would struggle to distinguish.

Though many brands were once sold exclusively at swish boutiques, now you can add Rock & Republic jeans to your shopping cart at Costco along with Kirkland Signature sheets and a 24-pack of mac and cheese. Shoppers have never been exposed to so much designer denim -- and some of them, overwhelmed by options, are buying less. "People are more educated and more selective," Flanagan says. "They are not blindly consuming the trends."

The trends themselves have proved problematic. "The product has been kind of dull," says Eric Beder, retail analyst at Brean Murray, Carret & Co. By contrast, the late 1990s offered a dizzying array of options: The ultra-low rise seemed new and exciting (much to the chagrin of parents nationwide), and embellishments were extravagant, be they Gucci's feather-trimmed jeans or denim strewn with chunky grommets and tough zippers.

But for the past few seasons, dark, straight-leg, unadorned denim has dominated the racks. The style is classic and generally flattering, infinitely more tasteful than flashing your thong to the world. But in its simplicity, it lacks the razzle-dazzle some consumers have come to expect from denim. "There's been no real reason to shop," Beder says.

If basic denim styles haven't impressed consumers, neither have flashier trends. Consider the skinny jean, a style that gave women everywhere a new reason to hate their hips. It was splashed all over fashion magazines and sported by swizzle-stick stars, but it didn't do well at certain stores for a simple reason: "The skinny denim look doesn't work for most women," Beder says.

"I think people wanted to try it, but not necessarily wanted to buy it," Flanagan says.
There's also the celeb factor. "If you look at what young
Hollywood is wearing, it isn't Seven jeans anymore," Claire Brooks, president of brand consulting company ModelPeople, wrote in an e-mail. Sienna Miller, Keira Knightley and other starlets du jour have all but abandoned denim on the red carpet in favor of dresses -- long, short, sparkly, sleeveless. And what the A-list wears, everyone else wants. "It was the spring of the dress, and then the summer of the dress, and now it's just the year of the dress," Flanagan says.

It may not be the year of the jean, but most trend watchers are confident that denim will get its groove back. "Denim has had an iconic staying power since James Dean," Brooks wrote. Many local stores seem unaffected by the national sales slump. "No matter what, every change of season, we're always selling a ton of denim," says Jessica Baca, store manager and buyer for Wink in Georgetown. "Even when people don't really like the trends."

As it happens, this fall brings looks that retailers believe shoppers will like, such as 1970s-inspired wide-leg styles and the revamped skinny jean, souped up in rainbow-bright hues. But whatever you choose, don't ditch those basic blues quite yet. Thanks to an ever-quickening fashion cycle, with one perfect paparazzi shot a style can go from "out" to "in" overnight.

Sunday, August 19, 2007

Heidi Klum takes over from Elizabeth Hurley by rocking Jordache ads


Barely a month has gone by and there are more semi nude photos of Heidi Klum making the rounds. This time however it's not Claudia Schiffer who needs to feel inadequate along with the rest of us mere mortals but Elizabeth Hurley instead. Looking fantastic in nothing else but a pair of Jordache jeans and brandishing a riding crop to represent the brand's horse head logo, you do get the feeling that Liz (who was replaced by Klum as the face of Jordache) wouldn't have brought quite the same level of sensuality and high fashion to the camera.

Maybe she had the same problem with Helena Christensen replacing her over at Monsoon. Not to worry Liz, not many women can compete with someone who looks like Klum after three kids. After all, they don't call them supermodels for nothing!

Damien Hirst for Levi's preview

Fashionista have the first look at Damien Hirst's work for Levi's Warhol Factory X label and as many predicted he has turned to his most recent work - a $99 million human skull encrusted with diamonds - for inspiration. Hirst's design for Levi's features miniature crystal skulls on black denim; what CQ's Isabelle would refer to as blingtastic!

The entire collection is expected to be unveiled at New York Fashion Week in September before hitting stores including Barneys New York, Fred Segal and American Rag.

But has the skull trend had its day?


What do you think of Damien Hirst's design for Levi's?

The end is in sight

Yes, those jeans do make your butt look fat.

But rather than hear it from your best friend, boyfriend or mom, take a look for yourself on the Butt Cam, the first of its kind - and in Scottsdale, of course.

Stationed outside the dressing rooms at Hub Clothing at Scottsdale Fashion Square, a video camera points toward the customer's posterior and displays the rear view on a flat-screen TV attached to a giant mirror.

At Hub, which sells dozens of jeans for men and women (most pairs fall between $135 and $250, but some go as high as $900), the Butt Cam underscores that the most important test of a great pair is how they look from behind.

And with the price of premium denim rising to rival a car payment, women and men alike are feeling extra pressure to find "the perfect jeans" (one of fashion's toughest undertakings, just behind the hunt for "the perfect swimsuit"). The Butt Cam was the buzz at the denim boutique Thursday night, when Hub celebrated its recent relocation and expansion at Scottsdale Fashion Square with a grand-opening party.

"It gives you a perspective that you can't find any other way," said Kip Merritt, a 50-year-old interior designer who checked himself out in front of the camera at the party. "What other choices do you have? A three-way mirror?

"Suddenly, even that dressing room staple seems obsolete.

Hub co-owner Tom Simon, a 30-year veteran of the retail industry, came up with the Butt Cam after watching customers twist and turn in front of mirrors to check out their derrieres. He applied for a patent after research showed no others like it, he said.

"They want to look good to other people, not just themselves," Simon said. "And even though it seems ridiculous, there's nothing you wear more than jeans.

"Something like this could only fly in Scottsdale, right? "We do live in a town of people who like to look at themselves," said Jennifer Mumford, who co-owns Hub with Simon.

Still, Mumford insists that utility, not vanity, was the motive for the Butt Cam.After emerging from a dressing room Thursday in a pair of $200 Diesel jeans, Tempe guitarist Joshua Kennedy, 26, was shocked to see how far the back pockets fell.

"This is amazing," Kennedy said of the rear view. "This should be installed everywhere. Everybody should know what their butt looks like in jeans.

"The Butt Cam setup allows Hub employees to display you on three more flat-screen TVs behind the cash registers, if you want to share with the world, or simply change the channel altogether if a customer is uncomfortable with the tush shot.

Hub sales associate Alyssa Rodriguez, 19, said the Butt Cam has been just as popular with men as with women.

"Everybody's been coming in to look at it. They get a kick out of it," Rodriguez said.

Among the amused: Scottsdale Mayor Mary Manross, who saw the Butt Cam for the first time when she stopped by Hub's party.

"It seems like it would be very useful," Manross said, adding with a laugh, "I'll come back and try on jeans when no one's around."

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Katie Holmes is a huge fan of the new trend for wide-legged jeans


A few months ago I certainly wouldn't have predicted that I'd be saying this, but out of all the different takes on the wide-legged jeans look so far, Katie Holmes seems to be working the trend particularly successfully - which is lucky really, because she is hardly photographed not wearing a pair at the moment!

Mrs Cruise herself favours J Brand Joplin jeans, and if you want to get your hands on a pair they're actually reduced to US$172 in indigo at the moment (click here to take a look). To imitate Katie's style on a budget, you can pick up these Lux wide legged jeans from Urban Outfitters UK for £48, Topshop's military jacket for £55 and the 'Far' red patent peep toe heels from Barratts which are £30.
What do you think?
[Image:
Just Jared]

The Butt Cam highlights your best assets


Finding the perfect pair of jeans is a seriously arduous process for a girl, unless you just happen to be lucky enough to be the body Topshop cut theirs to. But is the best way to put a smile on your face really to show you a big close up of your rear? Shoppers at Hub Clothing in Scottsdale seem to think so. They've installed what they've cringingly titled The Butt Cam to allow their lady shoppers to check out their bums while trying on jeans. Okay, so I do check that out in the mirror before buying, but on a screen?!

Only three days on the shop floor and the new improved mirror replacement is already a hit. Just what Simon had hoped for, and you never know, this idea may spin off into another: "We're even thinking of doing a best of and putting it on DVD for the year, 'Best Butts of '08' or whatever, yeah," Simon says.

Thankfully he's either crazy or doesn't understand cameras, no one's recording these close ups just yet.

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Jennifer Garner Slips Into Pine IV Jeans

Ah, mon chérie. J’taime.

Today’s fashion find is none other than my personal favorite celebrity, Jennifer Garner. A sassy tipster spotted Garner slipping by in a pair of Pine IV Jeans. The green spin is that for each jean sold, the company will make a donation to one of several different conservation organizations who will plant one tree on that customer’s behalf. The program comes at absolutely no cost to the consumer, but you’ll definitely be shilling for the jeans. Each pair sells for a cool $200.

But what’s so great about Pine IV Jeans? Here’s what one reviewer had to say,

“Girls who want great-fitting jeans should check out Pine IV, a line of denim out of Redmond. First, the jeans aren’t too low; they come to just four fingers below the belly button. Second, they’ve got just the right amount of stretch to be comfortable, but they don’t bag out. Finally, they seem, well, accommodating, whether you’ve got a little excess junk in the trunk or an abdomen that isn’t perfectly flat.”

Interested? You can grab a pair here — and Jennifer: Keep wearing the green. I don’t mind telling the world at all.