Saturday, January 30, 2010

Have: Rag and Bone Jeans and Heutchy Boots!

So where is my life these days.  I recently moved to New York and started classes but needed a job.  I surprised myself by landing a job serving at a nice West Village restaurant.  I patted myself on the back on my way back to my apartment with a stop in at Rag and Bone.  I have professed my undying love of Rag and Bone and their effortlessly casual and English/New York fusion design.


While I was buying new jeans I came across a beautiful pair of Rag and Bone boots.  They were a simple leather boot with a black canvas strap up the side of the boot.  It was a stunning turn on the stable black boot.  I looked for the price tag but the lack of one said to me that it was sure to be out of my price range.

IMAGINE my surprise when not two days later I signed on to Gilt for a Heutchy sale (a wondreful shoe company sold at Oak and the likes) with a pair of boots that looked like my Rag and Bone cover to a T.  I quickly snapped up the boots for just $158.

Ah it has been a good week for shopping.

Thursday, January 28, 2010

I Know What Boys Want! FUR at Milan/Paris Menswear A/W 2010


Is it just me or have we all fallen through the rabbit hole to feudal Russia?  Fur was everywhere on the Autumn Winter Milan Menswear runways for 2010.  Gone are the gloomy shunning if of all things luxury of AW 2009.  Come next fall the world's most sartorial minded men will be warm and toasty whether they prefer the slouchy darkness of Rick Owens or the tailored more classic Italian Gianfranco Ferre.



The king of the goths Rick Owens was true to form for winter.  Owens showed slouchy yet structured pieces with touches of leather and fur.  Interestingly the collection had touches of Owen's S/S 2010 RTW Women's line--especially in the long triangular pieces of cloth hanging languidly from the front of outfits.  The standout pieces came in the middle and the end.  The fur pieces were well layered and luxurious while still remaining distinctly Rick Owens.  The truly spectacular pieces came at the end of the show in the form of beautifully crafted cloud-like scarves hung long around the necks demanding complete attention.






 Gianfranco Ferre gave a furry outlook that was quite different.  The house of impeccable Italian tailoring showed fur in a much sexier luxurious light.  The Italian house took a step away from their very typical classic Italian dapper sexy look and more towards a more dangerous (yet still highly sexualized) futuristic street wear.  The collection featured stunning leather chest plates that truly made a statement against light grey checked suits.  Fur was placed almost secretly in places in shawls under longer coats, a vest under a suit, or in full floor sweeping view as a jacket liner.  Ferre continued the 2009 trend of belting men's coats as a good half of the jackets in the show featured casually tied leather straps.  The trend which really took root last season is best done has been done here and by Kris Van at Dior Homme where it is still presented as highly masculine and not as a waist cinching instrument (as it is in womenswear).  Overall the collection is a step in a far more innovative direction from many of the houses' previous attempts, especially following Ferre's 2007 death.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

V The Size Issue: Revolutionary or Reactionary?



Fashion is the extension of our fantasies.  Other worldly fabrics, backdrops, dresses, and of course models that look as if they've just been beamed down from the planet of doe eyed nymphs.

In 2009 seventeen year old Karlie Kloss ruled the runways and the pages of Vogue.  The slim midwestern native with a face that looks straight out of a 1940s mystery was the model.  Yet, perhaps it was not Kloss or Coco Rochas or Raquel Zimmermann that truly captivated the public, but rather the epic mistakes of over photoshopped models at Ralph Lauren and other fashion heavyweights.


Although the 2000s were almost entirely enveloped in the debate of how thin is too thin for models, 2009 seemed a boiling point.


Therefore V Magazine took it upon themselves to start a revolution in the form of a "Size Issue."  The magazine known for its epic avant garde photo spreads began leaking photos from their February 2010 plus size issue.

As the spreads continued to leak questions arose in the fashion industry about the merits of the issue.  Was the issue simply a publicity ploy (a la Beth Ditto shot by Karl Lagerfeld)?  Why were the models at least half naked in almost every spread?  Was it condescending to have a spread where a thin model and a plus size model wore the same outfits side by side?  Does the cover say it all, with one showing breakout Precious star Gabourey Sidibe and the other showing, the now very grown up child star, Dakota Fanning?

The fashion world is torn about the V Size Issue with many calling it a gimmick to up readership.  The reality of the debate is that the spreads are, largely just as stunning and interesting as normal V spreads.  One particular spread pits plus size star model Crystal Renn posing in similar ways and wearing the same outfit as new runway standout Jacquelyn Jablonski.  It must be noted that Renn appears vivacious, sultry,  and truly like a seasoned model in Proenza Schouler.  Yet despite Renn's obvious advantage the spread still comes off as condescending and gimmicky.


Is the image the fashion world wants' to return to the voluptuous images of human perfection we saw in Christy Brinkley in the 1980s and Naomi Cambell in the 1990s?  For young girls flipping through a fashion magazine is it any better to see a busty Victoria Secret model than a quirky seventeen year old from the midwest?

Perhaps the debate the fashion world is embroiled in should focus more on the fact that today's model's by classic facial standards are far outside the norm.  The new look each season seems to go beyond classic standards of beauty to redefine what is interesting and stunning.  In the mid 2000s we saw a sweep of doe eyed angelic almost alien like girls in the Prada invasion (think Sasha Pivovarova).  Is it not the job of parents to look at these images and decide what is truly acceptable for their daughters and then frame it in a way that helps girls love themselves?  Looking at todays models parents should be encouraging that their daughters that the women are interesting and unique--a characteristic that all women possess.


With their heavy handed message the V Magazine Size Issue suggests that today fashion is not simply about beauty in the traditional sense, but rather in the most stunning and interesting way we can find it.  So if this is the aim, women of more varied sizes can be used for true fashion spreads.  Renn and Burlesque dancer Miss Dirty Martini prove the idea that perhaps thin models do not need to be banished, but rather placed next to equally stunning Botticelli beauties.

All images copyright V Magazine

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Have: Wish List Realities

Considering our blog's name, I feel that we here at The Wish List missed some crucial blogging opportunities during the holidays. After all, during what other time of the year is a good part of the world meticulously compiling their own wish lists? And no matter what holiday you celebrate, it's hard to ignore the emergence of new exciting gadgets and shiny, happy retail commercials.

Luckily, one of my resolutions this year is to be more positive, so I've found the silver lining in the situation: a heap of new "haves" to post about.

Here are my top three Christmas additions:

1. Garmin Nuvi® 1300 — I have an awful sense of direction so this is a godsend (by way of my parents).



2. Free People Scandalous Lace Top — Sexy, edgy, and sweet all at once, this layering piece has already debut at work and on the weekend. And rest assured, I am not wearing it alone.

3. Lush Angels on Bare Skin Cleanser — Finally, I used some of my Christmas cash to try out some Lush products. (Sam did a little holiday-help work there, heehee). My skin feels softer and looks brighter than ever after using this cleanser. And considering the amount of chemicals we slather on ourselves daily, it feels great to move toward more natural choices.

I hope everyone had a great holiday season and got to cross a few wants and wishes off.

New year, new wishes, wants, and haves—we look forward to carrying out our resolution to share more of them all!

Monday, January 4, 2010

New Year New Resolve! Rodarte for MEN?!

Is it true?  Can it be?  Have my beloved Sisters Mulleavy finally started designing for men?

The answer is yes and no.

The Rodarte for women's beautiful foray into broken down slightly gothic (synonym for Rodarte at this point) knitwear has found it's way over to the men.



What I really appreciate in this is that Rodarte did not make a full hearted toned down foray into menswear.  It's as if they said this is our aesthetic and we're not toning it down and making it wide market for men.  They took an inspiration they had for women and said, why can't the same woman's boyfriend put on a similar sweater?




Yet, alas with a price tag of $2760 these sweaters are far out of my price range.  They must remain a wish for 2010.  If unlike me you can afford any of these 4 offerings go immediately to Opening Ceremony and snatch one up.  We're sure they'll be gone as fast as you can say Mulleavy.