'Be the energy you want to attract.' I always say that here, because in our business we have to deal with a lot of different personalities and egos. We have to deal with bullying. We have to deal with rejection. Teamwork here is so important. | | Rehearsal. Katama by Garrett Neff, Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week Resort, May 16, 2017. (Brendon Thorne/Getty Images) | | | | “'Be the energy you want to attract.' I always say that here, because in our business we have to deal with a lot of different personalities and egos. We have to deal with bullying. We have to deal with rejection. Teamwork here is so important.” - | David Todd, DT Models founder |
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| rantnrave:// For speed to market, how fast is too fast? That's the question posed in CHAVIE LIEBER's stellar feature on British fast fashion retailers for RACKED. The piece places retailers BOOHOO and ASOS in line with the history of MANCHESTER's textile industry—a center of the industrial revolution—and the cultural pastime of shopping the high street in the UK. Our imagining of #tech in fashion moves with the times. Fast fashion has altered how we experience clothes, regardless of whether one is for or against it, and it's placed an entirely different onus on design. A key word Lieber uses to describe Boohoo's design: reactive. Companies like Boohoo use a constant stream of customer feedback and sales data (Boohoo sales numbers are updated every 20 minutes) to inform design and production. The feedback loop is incredibly efficient, while placing little to no value on originality. That's not to say it isn't inventive—the "inspired by" genre of clothing definitely takes some ingenuity. Yet it's the most risk-averse approach to design out there. Another way fashion expresses the times, no? The process isn't limited to clothing. It can be found in beauty—this BLOOMBERG podcast reveals how companies like GLOSSIER are doing it. The forefront sits with projects like STAR CITIZEN, which sells parts of the video game before they've been developed. Fast, dynamic feedback from customers, and how quickly that can be integrated into product development is the latest game. Think about how companies like INSTAGRAM and SNAP benefit (or don't)... CARLA SOZZANI's 10 CORSO COMO will be opening a location in NYC's SEAPORT DISTRICT, now set to open in 2018 after originally announced for mid-2017. I've always loved 10 Corso Como for how it lives up to being a "living magazine" or "virtual narrative," rather than paying lip service. There are like-minded boutiques all over NYC in KIRNA ZABETE, FIVESTORY, DOVER STREET MARKET, and many more temp/pop-up boutiques. The Seaport location and Sozzani's conceptual imagining of the store are what will set it apart... Was waiting to hear more from VIRGIL ABLOH's RISD lecture, so thanks RAE WITTE for making the journey... Keeping a tally of how many brands have said "I'm sorry" this year? CHANEL is the latest... Shoppers today see straight through their initial purchase to resale. Does it increase the initial price people are willing to pay? If THEREALREAL has its way, revolving closets will be the norm. These handbags are holding value. | | - HK Mindy Meissen, curator |
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| ASOS stocks 85,000 styles on its site. Boohoo turns around collections in two weeks flat. And competitors are freaking out. | |
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An American ‘sewbots’ start-up has become the symbol of a new industrial revolution in garment manufacturing. What does the rise of automation mean for the business of fashion and the wider world? | |
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The artistic Italian entrepreneur partners with the Howard Hughes Corporation on a concept store for New York’s Seaport District. | |
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The mall's inventor, Victor Gruen, envisioned thriving hubs of civic activity, rather than bland, asphalt-enclosed shopping centers. Is his original vision now being realized - or further corrupted? | |
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Is Walmart building a reputable competitor to Amazon or will it flame out like Yahoo, the last company to acquire its way to nothing? Looking at its strategy alongside Amazon's gives us some clues. | |
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The French brand is the latest company to be called out on social media for cultural appropriation. Is this the new normal? | |
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Appropriation. It’s the word of the moment following a big blow-up from a little-read editorial in a little-known magazine that called for an “Appropriation Prize.” | |
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The managing director of KCD's digital arm got her very first job out of college - as an assistant publicist at KCD - by calling the front desk. She hasn't slowed down since. | |
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The beauty industry is on fire, thanks in large part to technology. Prestige beauty sales in the United States grew 6 percent to $15.9 billion in the year ending in February, according to the research firm NPD Group. Makeup alone rose 11 percent to $7.3 billion. | |
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Cristóbal Balenciaga is the subject of a new retrospective at the Victoria and Albert Museum. Tamsin Blanchard looks inside the display cases ahead of its opening. | |
| "It's not enough just to have a voice or to be creative." | |
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| Brooklyn Fashion + Design Accelerator |
The Copenhagen Fashion Summit looks to the circular economy and industry-wide collaboration for the fashion industry to succeed with a regenerative economy. | |
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Luca Benini’s ability to imbue products with cultural meaning has made Slam Jam - a diverse enterprise that includes distribution for Stüssy, Carhartt WIP and Nike - a powerful force in streetwear. | |
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A consignment expert on what's worth your money. | |
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The British couture shoe brand Jimmy Choo is up for sale, and this Chinese billionaire is in a good position to buy it. | |
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His designs will be featured in a ballet by dancer and choreographer Sébastien Bertaud in June. | |
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Today (May 16)nInstagram Stories adds a more subtle and mature but error-prone copycat of Snapchat's beloved augmented reality selfie filters. | |
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The boxes, which became a trend several years ago, help Conde deepen relationships with advertisers, drive e-commerce revenue and hold the lines of print circulation. | |
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| Sportswear International.com |
Read here what was the mission of Nina Faulhaber and Meg He who met while working together at Goldman Sachs and founded the label Aday out of a need. | |
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As Sears retreats from one of its most promising locations, Seritage says it can triple the rent by turning the space over to the new tenants. | |
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