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Posts Tagged ‘clothing’

Britney Spears BCBG Sears Clothing Line

Styles by Spears may soon be invading the racks of a Sears store near you! Word on The Curb has it that pop livewire Britney Spears has teamed up with the Style Gods at BCBG to work on a collection of trendy fashions and accessories for women. Tentatively working under the tagline, Spears for Sears, [...]

Justin Bieber Clothing Store

Listen up, Beliebers: Your Banged Messiah is putting his millions to stylish use. We hear Justin Bieber is in chats to open his own clothing store at Los Angeles’ upscale outdoor shopping center The Grove. Well — we know what that means: Tween Stampede! Run for your life! The team behind the Kardashians’ new Las [...]

“Teen Mom” Gary Shirley Planning Father-Daughter Clothing Line

Think the fashion industry is already riddled with enough ugly graphic t-shirt lines and celebrity-designed collections? You’ve obviously never met Teen Mom baby daddy Gary Shirley. The poor sap who got his wig flipped by an out-of-control Amber Portwood is planning his own Daddy-Daughter clothing line, to be modeled by the portly twentysomething and his [...]

Kardashian Sears Clothing Line “Kardashian Kollection” Hits Racks Summer 2011

Bad news for Celeb Gawkers already up to their eyeballs in all the Kardashian they can stand: On Wednesday, buxom socialite/boutique owner Kim Kardashian announced that a clothing collection with Sears is the latest business endeavor she and equally-overexposed sisters Kourtney and Khloe will be embarking on. The stylish sibs, who previously designed a line [...]

Kardashian Sisters’ Bebe Clothing Line Discontinued?

Bebe’s done trying to “Keeping Up With The Kardashians.” On Wednesday, Kourtney and Khloe Kardashian launched what could very well be the sisters’ final collaborative collection with chic retailer Bebe. After collaborating with the Sisters Kardashian on four collections of designs Bebe president Emilia Fabricant admits fashion bosses are considering moving in another direction. “The [...]

Jessica Simpson Holiday Album Flops On Charts As Clothing Empire Nears Billion Dollar Mark

Jessica Simpson has the Midas Touch when it comes to style, but fashion’s future first billionairess’ knack for designing killer handbags didn’t translate to mayjah sales for her recently released holiday album, Happy Christmas. The album, which only received mixed reviews from music critics, opened to an even more lukewarm reception from fans. Despite a [...]

Beyonce Gives Mom’s “Miss Tina” Clothing Line An Endorsement On “The View”

Tina Knowles — perhaps best-known simply as Beyonce’s mom — got the ultimate plug for her budget Wal-Mart clothing line, Miss Tina by Tina Knowles, when her superstar daughter modeled one of her designs on The View Monday. Many of us have suffered the embarrassment of having to wear our mom’s well-intentioned sewing machine creations [...]

Marc Anthony Jennifer Lopez Kohl’s Clothing Line

American Idol judge Jennifer Lopez and husband Marc Anthony have signed a deal with department store Kohl’s to launch a new line of menswear, womenswear, homewear, the singer-actress and her spouse announced during a presser at the London Hotel in Los Angeles on Thursday. Anthony and Lopez — who shut down her luxury sportswear line [...]

Madonna’s daughter promotes her fashion line through blog

American singer/actress Madonna’s daughter Lourdes Leon is promoting her clothing line ‘Material Girl’ through blogs. Lourdes will launch the fashion clothing in August. “I am totally obsessive about 80s shorts. You know, the kind that makes your butt look kinda big, with a grunge-looking shirt tucked in. It’s kinda nerdy but I love it,” Lourdes [...]

Oprah Winfrey, JK Rowling amongst World’s Richest Self-Made Women

US chat show queen Oprah Winfrey and Harry Potter author JK Rowling have made it to the list of World’s Richest Self- Made Women.
Also in the list was Giuliana Benetton, 72, who originally knitted sweaters that her brother Luciano would then sell on a bicycle.
Rosalia Mera, 66, helped then husband Amancio Ortega make dressing gowns [...]

Madonna Macy’s Clothing Line “Material Girl”

Madge is adding a new stripe to her illustrious career profile: juniors’ clothing designer.

The trendsetting, pop-singing icon is launching MG Icon LLC — a fashion venture with Iconix that will introduce a series of Madonna-branded businesses, including Material Girl Clothing launching exclusively at Macy’s just in time for Back-to-School sales this August.
The Material [...]

Justin Timberlake launches his clothing brand

Justin Timberlake just launched his clothing brand William Rast Designs.
I’m not trying tohate, I mean it’s really nice but… What’s with the raccoon tails??

Newbie Fashion Tips for Grown-Up Men


Newbie Fashion Tips for Grown-Up Men

Just over a month ago, I ran into a friend at a CES event. While I see this friend around town once in a while, this was the first time I’d seen him in a non-casual setting since Blogworld 4 months earlier. After exchanging the usual pleasantries, he asked me an odd question: “Is this like your conference party outfit?”

Indeed, I was wearing the exact same clothes I’d worn to the event four months earlier. Since he doesn’t usually see me dressed up, it stood out enough for him to remember. But that’s not the real point, here; the real point is that I have few clothes suitable for “adult” gatherings.

I have a suit, of course, for weddings and funerals. (I haven’t had a job interview in 9 years, but if I did, it would be suitable for that, too.) And I have my day-to-day clothes, which aren’t awful but which aren’t anything to brag about, either. Functional casual, basically: jeans and khakis, an assortment of button-front shirts, some cotton sweaters.

As a college professor, there’s not a lot of pressure on me to dress up. If anything, it’s just the opposite. For one thing, I interact regularly with younger people, mostly teenagers (I teach 100-level courses), and being too formal creates a barrier between my students and me. That might be ok in business or law (think John Houseman in Paper Chase) but for my classes and my teaching style, some level of rapport is crucial. For another thing, my fellow professors don’t exactly set the sartorial bar very high – and there’s a certain sense of bohemian “me-against-The-Machine” attitude expressed by violating “corporate” standards of dress.

But mostly I dress the way I do because I’ve never really learned how to dress otherwise. Like a lot of my fellow geeks, fashion just wasn’t on the radar for me. Fortunately I have a brother who has always been very fashion-conscious, and he’d take me in hand every few years when my fashion sense got too out of touch with reason and social acceptability.

Well, my friend’s off-hand comment was a wake-up call for me. I mean, I’m a grown man – I should have more than one pair of slacks and one shirt nice enough to wear to an industry event without embarrassing myself! So I set out to educate myself on some fashion basics – what shoes go with what kind of trousers, how to distinguish various sorts of dress shirts, and so on.

I did what any true-blooded geek does when he or she wants to find out about a new topic: I googled it. But what I found was scattered, often contradictory, and for a newbie like me, downright confusing. A lot of the information out there is tied to specific social contexts: the workplace, the nightclub, and dating, mainly. And a lot of it’s quite vague – the answer to most questions is “it depends on your personal style” which I’m sure it does, but what if you don’t know your personal style yet?!

With some perseverance, a few trips to department stores, and the help of friends on Twitter, I managed to assemble the following rules. As with all rules, they’re meant to be broken – but only by people who know how to break them.  For the rest of us, this is a pretty good primer on basic men’s fashion.

Dress Suits

1. You eventually want to own three suits. Your first suit should be either navy blue or gray, possibly with a light chalk stripe (like a pinstripe, but softer), and in an all-season, medium weight.  Either of these colors will fit into most social settings. Your second suit should be the one you didn’t get the first time around. Your third should be black – not for funerals, but for black tie affairs. If you work in a field where suits are the norm, you’ll probably want more than three; once you’ve covered the basics, you can move on to more distinctive suits (pinstripes, different weights, unconventional colors, etc.).

2. Suits are made of wool or cotton. Higher thread counts signify higher quality, but are ironically not as durable, so stick with something mid-range. Ask the salesperson to help you with this. (Yes, ask the salesperson. Suits are not self-serve.) Synthetic fibers need not apply.

3. You never button the bottom button. Apparently, Edward VII got fat and couldn’t button his vest over his belly, so now nobody does. On a three-button jacket, you button the middle; the top button is optional. If you have a jacket with 4 or more button, you obviously know what you’re doing already.

4. A gentleman carries a handkerchief in his front breast pocket. You don’t have to get fancy, just fold it square to fit and have 1/4” to 1/2” sticking out the top. Then proffer it as needed. And wash it after.

Shirts

1. Don’t wear your sleeves too short or too long. 1/4” to 1/2” of cuff should show beyond your jacket sleeve.

2. Shirts with button-down collars are not dress shirts. They’re sports shirts, so wear them with a sports coat. Polo players used to button their collars down so they wouldn’t flap up in their face while they played. (Are you beginning to sense a theme here? Fashion rules are largely dictated by what English gentleman and nobility did generations or even centuries ago. Sports coats? You wore them during sport, i.e. hunting. Regimental stripes on ties? They indicated your regiment in the British military. And so on.)

3. If you unbutton your collar, remove your tie. You can wear a suit or sports coat without a tie – just ask Obama – but wearing a tie with an unbuttoned shirt looks sloppy.

4. You can unbutton the top button always (provided you’re not wearing a tie), the second button usually, the third button only on disco night at the Rollerama.

Trousers

1. Wear your pants at your natural waist. Too high and you look like Grampa, too low and you look like a high school kid. Your waistband should sit 2-3 inches below your belly button.

2. Pants should almost touch the ground without your shoes on. Jeans can be a little longer, since they shrink a bit when you wash them.

3. One pleat, maximum. If you’re a big guy, like I am, you learned somewhere along the line that pleats are slimming. They’re not. At best, they look like you’re a big guy trying to look slimmer; at worst, they actually make you look heavier because they pull out across you, broadening your appearance. In any case, the job of a pleat is to maintain that crease sown the front of your pants. For pants without that crease (and many with it), pleats are unnecessary; for pants that need the pleat, they only need one.

4. 1” to 1 1/2” cuffs. Or not. There’s nothing wrong with cuffs, there’s nothing wrong with no cuffs. They are understood, however, to be an older man’s style – not in a bad way, think sophisticated, experienced, distinguished, and conservative. For younger men, a cleaner line is generally preferred.

5. A useful piece of trivia for the American abroad: in British English, “pants” are underwear. So if, for instance, you are in London and get invited out and maybe your trousers are dirty from work, don’t say “I’d love to go out, I just need to go home and change my pants first.” And if someone should ask, “Why, are your pants dirty?”, don’t say, “Yeah, I always get my pants dirty at work.” You will be laughed at. Er, I assume.

Shoes

1. Pay attention to your shoes. Everyone else does. It’s hard for the non-fashion-maven to tell a more expensive suit from a less expensive one, a high-quality shirt from a medium-quality one, and so on. But everyone can tell cheap or poorly cared-for shoes. Buy the best ones you can afford, and take care of them. Polish them regularly (a few swipes with a wax-infused polishing cloth is often all it takes) and store them covered if you won’t be wearing them for a long time. Shoe trees, it turns out, are important: they not only hold the shape of the shoe but the cedar ones absorb moisture (and thus odors) which helps preserve the leather. (Aside: women tend to pay a lot of attention to men’s shoes. Keep that in mind when a) dating, and b) interviewing for a job.)

2. Shoes are made of leather (besides sneakers). Anything not made of leather you can consider a non-shoe. Leather breathes and adapts to the shape of your foot. The soles don’t have to be leather, but the uppers do. (True story: as a young man, my brother was a car salesman here in Vegas. In the summer, the tarmac could get well over 150 degrees F. Standing out there with leather-soled shoes could give you second-degree burns! So they wore rubber soles, which melted after a month or two and had to be replaced.)

3. You need more than one pair of shoes, but not too much more. Black oxfords (lace-up dress shoes), black loafers (slip-on shoes), brown oxfords or loafers, and you’re set (not counting your athletic shoes, of course). A pair of ankle-high boots in black or brown can substitute for the loafers. Ox-blood (burgundy) shoes are harder to find but in theory go with everything. You can pretty safely ignore white shoes.

4. The shinier the shoe, the dressier. Matte-finish shoes – nubuck (that pebbly leather), suede, and distressed leather shoes are automatically compatible with jeans or khakis; shinier shoes might still go with jeans but it depends on the rest of your outfit, the dressier you are the shinier your shoes can be. If you can wear them with a suit, you probably can’t wear them with jeans, and vice versa.

5. Shoes should be the same tone or darker than your pants. This is all the rule you need to know when trying to figure out what shoes to wear. This is why you never wear brown shoes with black trousers, but you can usually wear black shoes with brown trousers. When in doubt, wear black.

Accessories

1. Match your belt to your shoes. It doesn’t have to be a perfect match, as long as you wear a black belt with black shoes and a brown belt with brown shoes.

2. Match your socks to your pants. Again, it doesn’t have to be a perfect match – a little lighter or darker is fine. If you don’t have socks to match your pants, you can match your shoes, or just wear black socks.

3. White socks are for sports. Only. Unless you are a) wearing sneakers, and b) doing something athletic in them, avoid white socks.

4. Your tie should reach your belt. Anything short of your belt makes you look like a rube.

5. Try a front-pocket wallet or money clip. This will save wear-and-tear on your back pocket (helping to avoid the heartbreak of “buttsquare”), help avoid pickpockets (a little – the good ones know…), and save your back. Plus: classy!

6. You’re allowed one affectation. A fedora. A pocket watch. A bracelet or class ring. A vest (if you’re not wearing a three-piece suit). An expensive wristwatch. Pick one, but no more – give your whatever-it-is space to say whatever-it-says.

If it feels like these rules are arbitrary and stifling, they are. Think of it like learning how to paint: first, you do a still-life (arbitrary) using just one color (stifling). Eventually you move up to two and three colors, then maybe a warm or cool palette, and your subjects might expand to include figures or landscapes. Once you’ve mastered the basics, you can begin to press against the rules, juxtaposing non-complementary colors or painting unconventional subjects.

In fashion as in art – style emerges not from a lack of rules but from a mastery of them, from making them serve you instead of the other way around. If you’re a geek like me, you need to dial a fresh start – clear your closets of all those conference freebie t-shirts, put a shine on your shoes, and burn your butt-crack pants. Ultimately, these rules are not at all about tamping down your personality but about learning how to express it. And unfair as it is, people will take you more seriously when you dress with a modicum of style.

Anyone else have tips for the newcomer to the world of style? Give us your best advice in the comments.

QUICK UPDATE: Comments are coming on this post faster than I can get them modded in. If your comment was sent but doesn’t show up, don’t send it again – it’s in my moderation queue and I’ll get to it as soon as I can. Thanks – loving all the great comments on this post!


Dustin M. Wax is a freelance writer and project manager at Stepcase Lifehack. He can be reached though his freelancing site at DustinWax.com</a., where his various projects can be viewed. When he's not writing, he teaches anthropology and gender studies in Las Vegas, NV. He is the author of Don’t Be Stupid: A Guide to Learning, Studying, and Succeeding at College.

Follow him on Twitter: @dwax.

Only 20 Fans Turn Out For Pamela Anderson A*Muse Clothing Line Launch

Pamela Anderson new clothing line is a bust! The aging pin-up won the booby prize when just 20 fans showed up for the launch party for her new A*Muse Collection.
Although tickets for the event sold for just $25, less than two dozen people showed up to watch the three-time divorcee unveil the frocks, designed in [...]

Clothes as batteries: Plug-in garments

Clothing could become a source of electrical power

PERSONAL electronic devices are becoming smaller and more ubiquitous every day, but no one has yet managed to realise the dream of incorporating them seamlessly into clothing. Yi Cui and his colleagues at Stanford University may, however, have taken the first step: they have designed cloth that can transmit and store electricity. They achieved this trick by dipping the cloth into ink made of carbon nanotubes—cylindrical carbon molecules with excellent electrical properties.

As Dr Cui explains in a recent issue of Nano Letters, when the ink dries, the nanotubes bind to the mesh of fibres in the fabric (it works for both cotton and polyester), making it conductive. The fabric remains flexible and retains its electrical properties even when stretched and folded. Laundering does not seem to affect its conductivity much either. …

Disney child star’s clothing line dubbed too racy

Disney child star Emily Grace Reaves’ new clothing line has been criticised for being too racy.
The Ooh! La La, Couture designed by the 8-year-old star along with Miley Cyrus’ little sister Noah, boasts “versatile styles that can be worn with sweet ballerina slippers, casual sneakers or paired with lace stockings and boots for more of [...]

Danni Minogue launches clothing range

Australian singer Danni Minogue has launched her own clothing range in collaboration with a top British designer.
The “X Factor” judge has teamed up with Tabitha Somerset Webb, founder of luxury accessories label Tabitha, to create her fashion collection, dailystar.co.uk reports.
“I’m so excited. I’m selling my new collection of dresses – pinching myself that the dream [...]

China Sports unit is official distributor of Fifa football clothing, accessories in China

China Sports International, the sports fashion footwear and apparel company, says wholly-owned subsidiary Yeli Sports (China) Co., has signed an agreement with Global Brands Group to become the official distributor of Fifa football clothing and accessories across China.

Read more…

Conservation: In wolf’s clothing

Wolves are being blamed for damage actually done by dogs

FARMERS have never liked wolves. That is why wolves are rare where farmers are common. Fashion, though, is swinging round to the wolf’s point of view in many places where town-dwellers are even more common than farmers and the big, bad wolf is just a fairy tale, rather than a sheep-rustling reality.

How much sheep-rustling actually goes on is a moot point—and a pertinent one when the town-dwellers are prepared to put their money where their sentiments are, to compensate farmers for the damage done by wolves. Such is the case in Spain, where about €1.5m ($2.3m) a year is paid out to farmers in compensation for damage those wolves are alleged to have done. During 2003 and 2004, for example, 432 farm animals were attacked in 154 incidents in Spain’s Basque country. Almost 95% of these attacks were blamed on wolves. …

Protests at Sudan woman’s trial

Lubna Hussein

The trial of a Sudanese woman charged with wearing "indecent" clothing is due to resume in the capital, Khartoum.

After an initial hearing last week journalist Lubna Ahmed Hussein left her job at the UN which would have given her immunity from prosecution.

Ms Hussein, who claims she was arrested for wearing trousers, said she wanted carry on with the trial because she wanted to get the law changed.

Under Sudanese law she could face 40 lashes if she is found guilty.

Ms Hussein invited more than 500 people to the initial hearing on 29 July.

"I wish to resign from the UN, I wish this court case to continue," she told a packed courtroom.

Generating publicity

She was arrested in a restaurant in the capital with other women earlier this month for wearing "indecent" clothing.

She said 10 of the women arrested with her, including non-Muslims, each received 10 lashes and a fine.

Ms Hussein and two other women asked for a lawyer, delaying their trials.

She says she has done nothing wrong under Sharia law, but could fall foul of a paragraph in Sudanese criminal law which forbids indecent clothing.

"I want to change this law, because hitting is not human, and also it does not match with Sharia law," she told the BBC.

The BBC’s James Copnall in Khartoum says Ms Hussein is intent on attracting the most attention possible to her case.


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