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MEREDITH WENDELL
I have been admiring Meredith Wendell's accessories ever since my mom turned me on to their things on Net-a-Porter. At the time they had done a square leather bag with a blue suede patch on the front that seriously brought me to my knees. It was unlike any other bag out there. That's what I love about their bags!My mom and were lucky enough to meet Meredith and Wendell, a husband and wife design team based out of New York, when they were passing through Dallas last week. It was so exciting to meet designers I admire so muchthey were so fun and sweet! Meredith Wendell was extremely kind to give us a few of their beautiful accessories..the green, gold, and brown drawstring tote my mom is carrying is exquisite! Meredith designs every kind of accessory imaginableI immediately fell head over heels in love with her abstract plexi-leopard necklace. How cool is it???
Below is the python and white purse I've been carrying with everything lately!
Above are Meredith's cute Miu Miu mules and a gorgeous turqoise and pythn bag of her own design. I can't wait to share some of the other things from Meredith Wendell! I'll be back soon ;) |
SNEAKERS??
I can't remember the last time I had sneakers onprobably the last time I went to the gym, so centuries ago. I needed to run to the store and had left my usual Zara flats at my mom's place, so I went digging around in my closet and came up with these Purcells sneakers. I can only assume they belong to my sister and I have no idea how they wound up at my place. I ended up wearing them to go pick up some sandals at H&M at NorthparkI was glad to have them on!! Why didn't I get sneakers sooner? Wearing them with some neon shorts sent to me by Notify, a Herff Christiansen tank top, and my trusty Lucky belt.
PB&J at the Mermaid Bar is the best!!
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2 SHADES OF WHITE
White and grey-white looks great together, I absolutely love mixing the different shades of the same color in one outfit. Sometimes I also add a creamy white sweater to these pants and jacket, instead of the the orange top. Jeans and bag by Calvin Klein, leather jacket by Acne, top by Tibi, necklace by H&M, sunglasses by Selima. |
Stevie Dance, Styl...
“My approach to beauty has always been about not adding on layers on top of what I already have, but building layers within. I’m really into a holistic approach: I’m really into diet, I’m really into acupuncture; I practice transcendental meditation. I think it’s the inner workings of yourself that can make you look beautiful, feel beautiful. It’s only recently, like the last two months, that I started wearing makeup, which is probably absurd. My parents are really holistic. Beauty is something that gets handed down to you. My mother has never worn makeup in her life…I think now, at sixty-three, she sometimes puts a bit of rouge on her lips, but she’s always been about using Sorbolene cream, which is a natural wool fat cream from Australia. And my grandmother is the same. They both have been so pure in terms of their sun exposure, and they don’t wear makeup, and they’re the most beautiful women I know. That’s the way I’ve been brought up—it’s always been about absorbing what’s around you and letting that make you beautiful, whether it’s the sea or the fresh air. When I moved to America, I really noticed that the conditions here are different. In Australia, if you want to feel good, all you have to do is swim in the sea and let your hair dry naturally and have a glass of water, and you look great—you really don’t need to do much because the standard of living is so high. And when I moved to New York—and I adore it here, don’t get me wrong—it’s a harsher condition. The water on my hair alone was something I had to get used to. I never even used to care about what I did or didn’t wash my hair in, and all of a sudden I had to start seeking advice from all the hair specialists I work with on set because my hair looked terrible. It’s the same with skin. It’s only recently I started dabbling in makeup, and I had all my lessons from this amazing makeup artist called Chiho Omae. I’ve always admired her approach to beauty on herself and also the models we work with, so she’s given me some tips. She recommended Rose-Marie Swift’s products, which I adore. I use her coconut cream every day, and I love the Un-Coverup Foundation…but I never knew for a second that you had to put makeup on your hand first. Chiho told me if you’re using a foundation, you rub it and warm it on your hand, and then you apply it to your face. I appreciate that delicacy—it’s very Japanese, her technique. I use Armani High Precision Retouch under my eyes, in 4.5 and 3.5 and mix the two. Chiho’s all about cheap mascara, so I’m using fun easy mascara—Maybelline Volume Express Waterproof. I have to use waterproof because my eyelashes are really short; I’m half Chinese, so I have quite short and straight eyelashes, and if I don’t use a waterproof mascara, it leaks on my face. I think when you come to New York what you absorb around you is so hectic, you definitely need to invest more in yourself, and that’s been a fun process for me. I just turned twenty-nine, and that whole side of grooming has been fun. I never got to feel like I was doing all those womanly things, and it’s nice to have some rituals. I put almond oil all over myself and take a cold shower, or at least end my shower with cold water—it’s so good for the glandular system; that’s what the Yogis teach you. I don’t blow dry my hair. The one thing I have started using is this Japanese product on my hair because my hair is Asian hair, and it’s obviously a different texture. It’s called Nano Amino Mist. But I like to be in bed with my hair wet, and I do think brushing your hair is good to stimulate natural oils. And then I’m really into supplements. MSM is actually something someone I know who had really crazy acne got me on to; it’s what people use to clear the skin structure. I have an amazing acupuncturist called Pamela Yap—she has been my saving grace since moving to New York. She’s amazing in terms of healing advice, especially if, as a woman, you’re feeling like you need some nurturing, whether your body feels strange, or it’s an emotional thing. She’s changed my life. I originally went for my back, but all of a sudden I was seeing her for my skin, for my hair. Physically, I always look really run down after travel, so she put me on this Chinese herb called the Free And Easy Wanderer, and it changed everything: I didn’t feel sullen, my eyes didn’t feel dry, and my hair didn’t look dull from all the flying and the air conditioning. I actually was a free and easy wanderer.” Stevie is also the founder of the new online zine Shop Ghost. |
madison and moma (Acne blazer, Alexander Wang men’s tshirt, Ksubi shorts, Carven shoes) photos by Colin Sokol I’m in New York City all this week for a project I’m working on with Samsung for their new wifi-ready ‘Smart Camera’ – today had me running all over the city, actually correction, being driven in a party bus all over the city. Complete with a stripper pole and communal whiskey on hand. I even got to intermittently play street style photographer and spend a couple hours at the MoMA. Made sure to text my mom photos of all of her favorite pieces. Got rained on, had Céline take a little bit more of my soul, made friends with a cop. Definite flats day. And it starts all over again tomorrow with new destinations. I must say party busing around is an ideal means to explore a city, as long as you don’t ask the driver what happened within its confines the weekend prior. But we all make mistakes sometimes. |
TEA GARDEN
Snapped these at a neat little alcove at my friend's place yesterdaya real secret garden!! I just got these metallic brocade print jeansthey are Seven For All Mankind. Shiny pants seem to really get people's attention, I have been chased down the street to be asked about them. Worn with a StyleNanda faux fur top and Martin Margiela patent leather sandals. |
work work work
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MOTHER'S DAY GIFTS...
1. IKEA Kid's Circus Tent 2. Yves Saint Laurent Studded Easy Rock Bag 3. Carven Linen and Patent-Leather Slingback Heels 4. Teddy Bear Tote 5. Greatest Mom Chihuahua T-shirt 6. Weston Printed Silk Journal 7. Current/Elliot ikat printed jeans 8. Miu Miu cotton-canvas printed mini bucket bag 9. Chloe pony hair and leather ankle boots 10. Meredith Wendell braided belt 11. Balmain large Greta cuff
Happy Mother's Day to everyone and their moms! I hope you all have a wonderful day together tomorrow! |
back to spring (Lover top, Topshop scalloped shorts, Isabel Marant wedges) photos by Colin Sokol So happy to be back in LA for a couple days! Celebrating returning to spring with some nice flimsy silk on silk..I’m obsessed with the lace detailing on the sleeves of this Lover top that I got on my first trip to Australia back in March. Shorts are ancient and the Marant wedges are just…back. |
WAH Nails: New Yor...
The menu at downtown eatery Jack’s Wife Freda included some unusual specials during a recent happy hour. The team from WAH nails, former stylist Sharmadean Reid’s nail art shop, descended on New York to promote their new book, and swung by to offer Into The Gloss friends (Leandra Medine, Natalie Joos, and Eniko Mihalik among them) custom manicures. Mihalik went with silver glitter diamonds in honor of pal Constance Jablonski’s birthday weekend in Las Vegas, while technician (artist, really) Simona Davidikova dreamt up a 1920’s style—a red base with white half moons—to complement Joos’ lilac Carven dress for the FiveStory dinner that evening. Here’s a little peek at our nail party, just in time for that weekend mani/pedi. |
I WENT TO THE MET ... I was so lucky that Calvin Klein invited me to join them at The Met’s Costume Institute exhibition, Schiaperelli and Prada: Imopssible Conversations. I was wearing a custom made dress by Francisco Costa. The process of designing the dress was incredible, we had two fitting over a couple of weeks and seeing Francisco at work is really exceptional. Walking up the red carped I had to zigzag my way up between the photographers on each side, and Italo Zucchelli who’s the Calvin Klein mens wear designer and I agreed it was a lot of fun. Elsa Schiaperelli and Miuccia Prada’s shares so many similarities, the quirk mixed with chic in their designs. Schiaperelli designed from the 1020′s and I loved getting to understand that people liked quirky at that time too, which is something I had never thought. Of course I brought my camera and my pictures are up at Calvin Klein’s Tumblr blog here. |
Carolyn Dylan Murp...
Carolyn: Since I was a little bit younger than Dylan, every Sunday was beauty day: my mom and I would do masks, and we would do our nails. I have a cool mom. So, Dylan took off her three-week-old nail polish today, and when she was sitting on the bathroom floor, we realized that today is Sunday beauty day! Dylan: I had on Essie Turquoise and Caicos. My favorite colors are turquoise, aquamarine, and purple. Carolyn: Dylan is more fashion forward than I am. She has a lot more style. She really wants a pair of wedge sneakers, and I said, ‘Dylan, you’re already 5’4” at eleven years old. You don’t need to have any more height.’ She’s very opinionated, about her products as well. Dylan: I like my banana-scented detangler [Circle of Friends Bonita’s Banana Detangler]. It takes out knots. You do it when you get out of the shower; you let it sit for like five minutes and then you brush it. My mom got it for me. We went to the store together and she said, ‘Oh, you need any of this?’ and I said, ‘Yes,’ and then I picked out that. They had chocolate and raspberry and banana. I love banana. Carolyn: For Dylan, most of the things I want her to use are natural or kid-friendly. I gave her that Bigelow lip balm [C.O. Bigelow Merry Mentha lip balm] last week. But it’s all about a balance. You know, there are these things that are geared toward children, like the detangler, and it smells yummy. But then, she loves the Bumble and bumble Seaweed Shampoo. Dylan: I like it because it smells good and I love seaweed. [Emily: Really? That’s like saying ‘I love broccoli.’] Dylan: I love broccoli! Carolyn: She does. [Laughs] She’s a green baby! Dylan: I wear makeup sometimes. Carolyn: Be honest about that. When are you allowed to wear makeup? Dylan: I’m not allowed to wear makeup out unless it’s a really really really really special occasion. Carolyn: And then, only lip gloss. Dylan: And sometimes sparkly eye shadow, but not too sparkly. When we went to New York, my mom bought me this palette thing-y—I’m wearing the pink one. It has purple and blue and white. It was gift from the lady at the makeup counter. Carolyn: I was buying Estée Lauder, which is funny because the woman then recognized me and said, ‘…Why are you buying this cream?’ and I said, ‘Because I’m so dehydrated!’ Where were we coming from? Dylan: Australia! Carolyn: I bought Re-Nutriv Crème. She kind of looked at me after a minute and said, ‘Aren’t you…?’ There was a picture of me in there. Most of the time, people don’t recognize me, but then they think that they know me from somewhere, and then all of sudden they see the credit card and they go, ‘Oh, no, wait a minute!’ But for Dylan, when we’ve gone into duty-free, she gravitates more towards the lip glosses. Dylan: I just love lip gloss and lipstick. I have one in my purse that I stole from my mom a few years ago. It’s Nude Rose by Estée Lauder. And my uncle Ivan bought this for me—Stila Sparkle Waterproof liquid eyeliner. Carolyn: I don’t think she’ll be allowed to wear makeup out of the house until she is sixteen. I wasn’t allowed until I was sixteen. Dylan: I always wear stuff in my hair. Whenever I go to J.Crew, I usually get a new headband. I love wearing headbands, especially the big poufy ones. I guess I was inspired by Lady Gaga. At Zitomer, they have this whole section where they have headbands that are really big. Carolyn: We love Zitomer pharmacy and Bigelow Pharmacy. Zitomer’s is in New York, uptown, around 79th. It’s just so easy to get lost in there. She got a wide-tooth comb from there that she uses to comb through conditioner. Dylan: And I use the Tangle Teezer with sparkles. Carolyn: I brought it home from the salon and knew she would love it. You’re supposed to start from the bottom and work your way up. Tracey Cunningham does my hair, from Byron & Tracey—but this was a gift from Michael Canalé. I see Tracey for color. I love her; she is such a character. I was there last week and she said, ‘You have to be more blonde because blonde sells!’ But I saw Charlize Theron in there the other day, who was just drop-dead beautiful. So beautiful. Dylan: These are some of my chapsticks. I have a Skittles chapstick [Tropical Skittles Strawberry Starfruit], I have a vanilla chapstick [Carmex Vanilla], I have a Fun Dip chapstick [Fun Dip Razz Apple Magic], and I have a watermelon chapstick [OraLabs Watermelon Lip Rageous]. I keep them next to my bed, with my lavender oil. It helps you go to sleep. Carolyn: I swear, every time we go into a pharmacy or a grocery store, she’s like, ‘Can I get a chapstick?’ I mean, that’s the fun part about representing a company like Estée Lauder—they send me all the goodies. You know, I grew up with the brand—my Nana, who’s quite chic and still around, had a blue and white vanity area, and she wore White Linen, she had the Youth-Dew, so I had this nostalgia. Working with them has truly been an honor. I knew by the summer of 2001 that they were signing me, and it was huge. It’s like the Holy Grail of the industry. I get to play and I get to be a guinea pig for their products; I’m just always trying new stuff. When the company said they were bringing Tom Pecheux on, I was so excited. He’s modern, and he’s creative. I think you’re always trying to separate yourself from the pack. When it comes to the beauty industry, there is so much out there, there is so much for us to choose from. They’re an iconic brand, and I think that they’re just getting better and better. In general, I try to keep my skincare routine simple. I’ve been using Cetaphil for years, and I’ve also been using the Weleda Almond Soothing Cleansing Lotion, which works really well. I have to use a cream cleanser because I have super sensitive and dry skin. Cetaphil is definitely not natural, but I’ve gotten used to certain things, and I believe everything in moderation. I also really believe in keeping everything super hydrated. I sleep with a humidifier by the bed; I think it makes a big difference. But, you know, I didn’t always take care of my skin. Surfing killed it—I’ve had to spend the last two years trying to repair that damage. I believe in Estée Lauder’s Advanced Night Repair. If I had to choose one product that I think is my number one, can’t-live-without item, it would be that. I swear to God, it’s the best. After thirty-five—and I’m almost thirty-nine—I think it’s about being aware and paying attention. Not that I was careless before, but I definitely had other things on my mind. Skincare wasn’t a priority because I had great skin; I maybe took it for granted a little bit, too. So now I wash my face at night, and in the morning, I splash it with cold water and that’s it. Then I put on the Advanced Night Repair—morning and night—and Re-Nutriv or Olio Lusso. And what Dylan and I are using right now in our hair and on our skin is this: Spectrum Coconut Oil, unrefined. We just finished a tub of it. I swear by coconut oil, and even raw olive oil. I’ve even been known to take it on the plane with me and slather it on, and people think I’m weird, but who cares? I slather it on my body, and on the tips of my hair. I’m also really into the Oribe hair mask, because my hair is bleached, and it’s curly, so every Sunday I sleep with this on. But more than anything, I believe that beauty comes from the inside out, so I’m very diligent about supplements. I travel with this kit, and I take the Omega-3s, I take Biotin and BioSil for skin and hair. I take vitamin D, which I think is super important if you can’t get 15-20 minutes a day in the sun. I take magnesium at night, which is also really great for the skin. But, you know, I’m debaucherous. I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t debaucherous from time to time—I have a drink every now and then—but I just think it’s a balance. I’m realistic; I don’t want to be extreme on anything. If I’m eating well and basically supporting my body 99/98% of the time, when Friday night comes, or Saturday, or whatever, I don’t feel so bad about it. I don’t usually wear makeup during the day, but I always want to have blush. I like the Estée Lauder Signature blush because it’s creamy; I’m not a huge fan of powder. I’m not a huge fan of foundation or even concealer, but I want a creamy blush, and I always travel with Clinique Black Honey lipstick because I think if you put that on and just have really clean skin, it’s beautiful. I use the Sumptuous Extreme Mascara. For night, the smoky eye thing is kind of new to me. It’s something that I think looks good in photographs—you know, for shoots—but I don’t know about it in real life. I feel like it makes my eyes look super small. Blazing Bronze eye shadow is the one I love; it’s my go-to. I’ve worn it for years. Or sometimes, for fun, I’ll wear Coral Chic lip gloss for a pop of color. But the most beautiful I felt was when I was pregnant. Literally the most beautiful I felt in my life. I was big—I went from 118-120 to 183—but I was glowing. The only picture I have of myself, a fashion picture of myself, hanging in the house is from when I was pregnant. Anna Wintour from Vogue was really curious about my living in Costa Rica at the time, and said, ‘I want to do an article on Carolyn, and Mario Testino is going to photograph it.’ So I show up, and Camilla and Mario, or I guess Mario, who I adore, had this bright idea that he would have me in a bikini coming out of a limousine. I said, ‘No. You’re not going to have me getting out of a limousine in a bikini and I’m seven-and-a-half months pregnant. I wouldn’t even want to get out of a limousine in a bikini anyway, even if I wasn’t.’ So, you know, leave it to Mario—foregoing the bikini was one thing, but I end up naked, just completely naked, in his room at the Mercer Hotel, in Manolo heels and Harry Winston diamonds and that’s the shot. It’s not your conventional pregnancy portrait—it’s not like I have the romantic long hair whisping over my breasts, and cradling my belly. I like that it’s rock and roll. —as told to ITG |
PINSTRIPES
I picked up these jeans at Free People yesterdayI've been on the hunt for a pair like this for a long time! I know I have a denim hoarding problemthese are seriously great. Worn with a Style Nanda blouse, my trusty Lucky belt, and some Alaia gladiator heels.
I wrote a story on my mother's style over at MyHabit's The Fixit is almost Mother's Day after all! I also curated a sale at MyHabit full of amazing things--go check it out, they're selling out! |
bye bye bondi
photo by Colin Sokol Ok I haven’t been the best at posting while here in Australia but I’ll definitely have a massive post to make out of this trip. We moved over to an apartment in Bondi after fashion week for a change of scenery and have tried to make the most out of every minute since. Hopefully you guys are following me on Instagram (my username is rumineely) for updates! Now time to head to the airport and back to LA. |
Olivier Caroline...
“My attitude toward evening [dressing] is a little bit weird now,” Olivier Theyskens confessed yesterday afternoon. “I don’t believe it’s nice to wear something that is too traditional. But a couture thing with a fresh attitude, that looks really modern? Yes.” Theyskens is standing in the music room of painter (and friend) Ron Ferry’s aerie off Fifth Avenue—the former home of Museum of Modern Art co-founder Lillie P. Bliss—and the evening being pondered is, appropriately, the annual MET Costume Institute gala. His date is longtime muse Caroline Trentini, fresh off her honeymoon in Bali. The pair hadn’t been apart for very long: the model’s wedding dress was a love affair between the two, from initial fittings in New York to final tweaks before she walked down the aisle. It was during that process that Theyskens popped the question, “Will you be my MET date?” The answer, naturally, was yes. The duo agreed on softly shaded makeup and an easy (but “super chic”) up-do to compliment the “tee shirt-y” feel of her one-of-a-kind Theyskens’ Theory washed denim dress. Hairstylist Jordan M relied on a ¾ inch curling iron (“I’m in love with this size; you can do everything with it—from Brigitte Bardot to beach curls”) and Bumble Thickening Hairspray to give Trentini’s long blond hair some movement and hold, but left the final arrangement to the model herself. “Last year, a hairstylist put some product in, and said, ‘Just tie your hair.’ Sometimes it looks the best when you do it yourself—you know your own head shape.” Theyskens’ signature mane got a quick freshening up with Prep spray, a paddle brush, and a blast of hot air, the designer’s only request being, “Just give it some shine.” NARS makeup artist Cindy Rodriguez “worked off the subtle 1920’s wave in the hair, and the bejeweled top” from Trentini’s look, focusing on textural eye shadows and an emphasized brow. “Makeup is about balance. I didn’t place color on the entirety of the brow,” she said, alternately brushing single shadows in Blondie, Bali and Coconut Grove through for a natural look. Lids took on a finger-painted, three-dimensional quality with a base coat of cream shadow in Corfu, followed by a layer of Nepal and “topped off with a little Portobello, keeping the shape rounder and a bit diffused—truer to that 1920’s smoky eye.” With ten minutes to go, Trentini slipped a tube of Gold Digger lip gloss into her clutch and retrieved a pair of well-worn Louboutins from her carry-all. Theyskens, taking one last sip of champagne, nodded his head in approval: “That’s the best choice, you know? To have shoes you know are comfortable.” Rules to live by, for any formal occasion. |
COUNTRY LIFE
I thought I had lost my Country Life t-shirt during the move to my new place, but was happily reunited with it when I was digging around some boxes last week. Phew!! Wore it to dinner last night with my red satin Rugby skinny parachute pants, a thrifted moto jacket, and Giuseppe Zanotti buckle heels. The sunglasses are Ray Ban aviators.
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An Even Bigger Lif... "You're a waratah!" exclaimed Jenny Kee as I went into "Awwww….shucks" mode, shuffling along next to the whirlwind of this red-robed maverick at her comeback presentation at MBFWA last week. This was to be the the second chapter of my encounter with this half-Chinese, half-Italian, Australian-born designer, who has lived |
3 Easy Hairstyles,... I had so much fun watching the Kérastase Diary contestnow that its over I wanted to show a few of the new styles I tried for mine ;) I got so inspired looking at everyone else's entries!
SOFT AND ROMANTIC CURLS I started with the Kérastase Cristalliste Bain and Lait Cristal, allowed my hair to air-dry, and finished with the Lumiére Liquide (for the extra shine). I love the new Cristalliste formula, as it doesn't weigh down my hair. I used a Sultra Bombshell one inch clipless curling iron, wrapping small sections of hair OVER (rather than UNDER) the curling iron for more of a forties wave, brushed through with a soft bristle brush, and pinned one side away from my face.
SCHOOLGIRL BOW This was a no-brainer. After I did the romantic curls hairstyle, I raked the front part of my hair back with fingers and clipped it with a BIG chiffon bow. I pulled out my bangs and played with them a little bit to make it a little more grown up, and added more of Kérastase's Lumiére Liquide for that extra shine.
SOCK BUN SOCK BUN A fashion favorite at the moment ;) Probably because it's cute and EASY! I'm going to give you a basic run-down of it and link you to a Youtube video. Brush your hair into a high ponytail and secure with an elastic. Cut the toe off of a sock and roll it into a doughnut. Or, you could buy a 'hair doughnut' at Sally's Beauty Supply. Pull your ponytail through the sock doughnut, and then start wrapping your ponytail ends under the sock doughnut. Repeat until you've reached the base of your ponytail, and secure with bobby pins! Nowto announce the winners! Thank you so much for everyone who took the time to enter, I loved seeing what everyone did! Congratulations to the gorgeous ladies below, you will all be treated to the full Cristalliste Collection and a Kérastase in-salon visit! |
NET A PORTER CELEB...
Yesterday Net A Porter celebrated Frieze with a dinner at Hotel Americano here in New York. My table mates were with Anja Rubik and her husband Sasha, which made it had such a fun evening. Lace dress by Lover |
FLAVORS OF THE WEE... Happy Saturday, everyone! Hope you had a good week. I've been busy working on some projects and fighting off a clingy coldhopefully it's on its way out. Below are a few of the highlights of a busy week.
The beach sweater got here a few days ago! I love it so much!
As you can see, I am going quietly mad in my sick bed. You know what that meansonline window shopping!! Net-a-porter, stop breaking my heart.
1. Philip Lim cotton twill jacket 2. Meredith Wendell tassled drawstring shoulder bag 3. Current/Elliot cropped tie-dye print skinny jeans 4. Martin Margiela python ankle boots 5. Dolce & Gabbana lace-insert patent leather sandals 6. Alaia studded suede sandals 7. Rochas mint green platform sandals
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WHAT ARE THE ODDS
I got this camera in a vintage shop in a tiny village in Denmark this Wednesday, the day after I went to Copenhagen where I wanted to get a notebook I had been meaning to get for a while. The notebooks are handmade by the french brand Astier De Villatte and all the books are different. As I got back to New York I searched online to learn more about the camera and found this amazing Kodac Instamatic commercial from the 1960′s. And I’m just saying, look closely at the floor. |
Mary Charteris, Mo...
“I’ve had long hair my whole life, basically, and I don’t do much to it. I’m naturally blond and the sun helps. I might do a haircut soon…I’m thinking I might just cut it off. I’m trying to think, because every time I put on a t-shirt and it gets stuck in my t-shirt, I quite like the way that looks. I just want to do something different. There is a hairdresser I go to in London whenever I have a party to go to and feel like having it up or doing it braided—French braided—called Paul Edmonds. It’s really super swanky and fun. In general with beauty, I don’t believe in spending money on things where you don’t know what’s working. I’ll spend money on something because I’ve heard from a friend it’s good; just word of mouth. I go to this place called Face to Face in LA, to this really nice woman called Marianne who Liberty Ross actually told me and Robbie about—my boyfriend goes with me. And Liberty has the prettiest skin, so I was like, ‘I want to do whatever she does!’ [Laughs] And I drink a lot of water and exfoliate. I actually got that that little vibrate-y brushy thing, the Clarisonic. I love that! I’ve only just gotten into facial stuff; I like Shu Uemura Cleansing Oil for taking off my makeup because it’s like a moisturizer as well, so it makes your skin very oily which is great because my skin is so dry. Every day I use a moisturizer, Bliss Fabulous Face Lotion with SPF 15. If I use this oil, the Shu Uemura Oil, I don’t really use a moisturizer after because it feels so moist already. I don’t want to overload. I get paranoid about overloading my face with products, you know what I mean? Clogging it up so that it can’t breathe. My cover up is Laura Mercier Secret Camouflage, and I just got into MAC Studio Finish. It’s not really a foundation, it just makes your skin glow. And there’s another thing that Liberty Ross told me about: NARS Illuminator in Orgasm. She uses Super Orgasm because she’s more tan. There’s Orgasm, Super Orgasm, Copacabana…she’s a Super Orgasm girl! I’m too pale for that. You rub it in with some moisturizer and put it on. And I use Maybelline Volum’ Express The Colossal Mascara. That’s pretty much it. I don’t really do eye makeup, because I’m bad at it. But a lot of mascara on me, because I have lots of lashes, ends up looking like eyeliner. I want to have lessons so I can be really good at doing eye makeup—I’ve found loads that are like eight-week courses about learning about skin types and blah blah blah. I literally just want to do eye makeup. I just need to find someone who will teach me. It is just like painting—painting your face. I’ve been worrying about how I want my hair and makeup done for my wedding. It’s only four months away now! My dress is still very much a work in progress. Pam Hogg—she’s a Scottish lady, super sweet—is making it. I’ve always been obsessed with French braids, so I’m going to try to incorporate that into the beauty look. I think they’re so sweet. But, who knows if that will work. We’ll see. I’ll have a veil and a train—got to have that. I think it’s a necessity. It’s the only thing I know I want, actually, are those two things. [Laughs] The rest of it is all very up in the air. I guess I want natural makeup. That’s quite obvious…I guess everyone does that. I’m going to go as natural as I possibly can. But, that is really hard. Natural makeup is harder to do sometimes than intense makeup. So, hopefully, I’ll have a makeup artist.” By Rachel Chandler Guinness for ITG |
GIVENCHY HEAD TO...
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Gray Gardens
>> When I was an Australian Fashion Week noobie three years ago, I basically could only recognise groups of people by certain trailblazing figureheads. Harper's Bazaar Australia gang would be repped by Christine Centenera's chic and severe ensembles. The Russh girls could by spotted a mile aw |
mbafw catchup
Yesterday, wearing Kahlo’s Jonas dress as a pinafore sort of thing over a Sea NY top with Karen Walker Super Duper Strength sunglasses. Oh and some Céline SS10 wedges I scored on eBay recently. Smirk smirk. Finally! The seats at Ellery, each equipped a full bottle of Belvedere and an oversized book of posters. Sorry to everyone I accidentally smacked with this thing on the way out. I swear I didn’t mean to use it as a weapon. Beautiful Kym Ellery after her stunning (major highlight of the week) show. Volume, stiff fabrics, silver headbands with ears. Tunnel with plant life growing on it’s walls = photo op. A visit to see Lover’s new collection. Standing around talking to Nic and Susien was easily the most entertaining hour of this entire trip. At one point Nic took a photo of Susien’s and my phones next to each other, each displaying our most prized cat photos. That should sum the vibe up for you. Also, their cat is named Potato and looks like it can speak English. photos by me and Colin Tuesday as the sun was going down on the Opera House, wearing a silk Theyskens’ Theory shirt with leather Maje skirt and Carven creepers. Now off for the second to last day of shows and events! |
Lippmann’s Lates...
Let’s give some credit where credit is due: Deborah Lippmann put glitter nail polish back on the map. When the superstar manicurist and entrepreneur (her collection of lacquers includes shades named after Kate Winslet, Reese Witherspoon, and Penélope Cruz) rolled out Happy Birthday—a “party in a bottle”—a few years ago, the nail art trend was just gaining momentum and girls were embracing the possibilities beyond the crème color du jour. Rather than taking your run of the mill, arts-and-crafts glitter and shaking it up in a bottle, Lippmann went full-on and churned out a brew so thick with oversized metallic sprinkles, you almost have to chip it off (she’s the first to admit that glitter polish is not a quick change situation; recommends her Stripper to Go remover mitts). Season after season, she ups the ante with new variations on the theme. Boom Boom Pow, a bottle of multi-sized gold flakes floating in a clear base, was an early ITG favorite, and Glitter in the Air, a smattering of baby blue and pink flecks in a milky translucent base, was my nail obsession for a good three months after seeing it backstage at a show. Never one to sit still for long, Lippmann is now exploring “3D Holographic nail lacquer”. The pink (Sweet Dreams) and blue (Ray of Light) polishes, on the nail, look a little like a child’s Jelly sandal: sheer but with some volume, heightened by subtle flecks of glitter. Equally impressive is the new hyper-pigmented crème On The Beach—a “rich Riviera blue.” “Whether you wear one shade on your nails, the other on your toes,” she says, “or use a glitter polish on one nail and a crème color on the other four, the creative options are endless.” Spoken like a true innovator. |
FIVE MINUTES TO GL...
I might have mentioned this a few times before, but I'm a bit of a make-up and skincare freak, and I'm constantly trying to pick up new tricks. Recently, a makeup artist taught me to use powder sparingly and strategically, rather than sloppily dusting it all over and hoping my makeup stayed put. When you obliterate shine all over your face, it can end up looking a little dusty and old-ladyish. No matter what your skin type is, that is never a good look for anyone!! Working with shine and not against it makes for a much fresher face. I like to amp up the shine with some tricky highlighter and luminizer to give some extra dimensionality and glow. First off, before I get started I should start with some skin basicscommon sense, mostly!
Perfecting your base
Nowamp up the glow! I hope my silly diagram is helpful.
I find after I put on blush and shine, I don't want too much else! I throw on some mascara and a thin liner on top, and that is the most I'll ever do. The finished product is supposed to be pretty natural!
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Hollywood hills REMEMBER WHEN I was in LA a couple of weeks ago? We stayed in this amazing house and did some shoots for STYLEBY. One of them are out in this issue right now, here are a few pics. Love how Martha is working it! Woke up at 5 am today, but I don’t mind that, LOVE to wake up early. Now i’ve seen the sunrise over sydney and are getting ready for my first meeting. See you at Instagram! |
bleached out
(Phillip Lim silk trench coat, T Alexander Wang men’s tshirt, Zara shorts, Céline heels and sunglasses) What I wore the first day of MBFWA here in Sydney. I can never get enough of basics with a twist. The shorts were originally these gumpy looking jeans, I promise they’re much less offensive abbreviated. |
Look closely…
Is that a red lip or a pink lip? “Red” lipstick, as we know, runs the gamut from MAC’s Ruby Woo to Tom Ford’s Smoke Red, can have blue undertones or lean towards orange, and turns many a visit to the makeup counter into a multiple choice test for which no one—I’m convinced—knows the answer (I shake my head ruefully anytime a friend asks for a personalized recommendation). I say: if you like it, if you feel like you look good in it, go for it and wear that color with confidence. Buzzing around a makeshift backstage area at the Plaza hotel in March, Diane Kendal told me that “Thakoon wanted to focus on the lips this season. We’re using a fuchsia pink, which is not an obvious color for a bold lip.” To achieve the ultra-vibrant hue, she hand-painted NARS’ Heat Wave semi-matte lipstick (a “bright orange-red”, in fact!) onto models’ lips, then patted an intense pink pigment powder on top. Oh, makeup geniuses and your magical layering tricks. What struck me about this look [shown here on French beauty Othilia Simon, who posed for an impromptu photo shoot in one of the hotel’s gilded hallways] more than anything is how a pink (red? Orange-red?!) lip should be worn: with clean, sheer, glowing skin. Any more foundation or concealer would have taken it into “uptown” territory, but Kendal, ever the minimalist (and modernist), kept the face totally fresh and bare save for that intense pop of color. In a copycat move, I’ve been wearing MAC’s Girl About Town and NARS’ Funny Face—two of the most famous fuchsias around—with a tap of Eight Hour Cream on my eyelids, brow bones, and brows, and long, feathery lashes. Now all I need is Odile Gilbert Kérastase-ing my hair into a sleek updo, and one of Thakoon’s gorgeous fall party dresses… Othilia is wearing her own Alexander Wang sweater. |
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