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Termites And Mold Have Destroyed Part Of The World's Most Notorious Shoe Collection

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imelda marcosMANILA, Philippines (AP) — Termites, storms and neglect have damaged part of former Philippine first lady Imelda Marcos' legendary collection of shoes and other possessions left behind after she and her dictator husband were driven into U.S. exile by a 1986 popular revolt.

Hundreds of pieces of late strongman Ferdinand Marcos' clothing, including the formal native see-through barong shirts he wore during his two-decade rule, have also begun to gather mold and fray after being stored for years without protection at the presidential palace and later at Manila's National Museum, officials told The Associated Press on Sunday.

The Marcoses fled the Philippines at the climax of an army-backed "people power" revolt which became a harbinger of change in authoritarian regimes worldwide. Ferdinand Marcos died in exile in Hawaii in 1989 and his widow and children returned home years later.

They left staggering amounts of personal belongings, clothes and art objects at the palace, including at least 1,220 pairs of Imelda Marcos' shoes.

More than 150 cartons of clothes, dress accessories and shoes of the Marcoses were transferred to the National Museum for safekeeping two years ago after termites, humidity and mold threatened the apparel at the riverside palace. They deteriorated further at the museum after the fragile boxes were abandoned in a padlocked hall that had no facilities to protect such relics and was inundated by tropical rains last month due to a gushing leak in the ceiling, museum officials said.

Museum staffers, who were not aware the boxes contained precious mementoes from the Marcoses, opened the hall on the fourth floor of the building after noticing water pouring out below the door. They were shocked to see Marcos' shoes and gowns when they opened the wet boxes, officials said.

Workers hurriedly moved the boxes to a dry room and some were later brought to a museum laboratory, where a small team of curators scrambled to assess the extent of the damage, a process that may take months given the huge volume of the apparel. Some items have been damaged by termites and mold beyond repair, according to museum curator Orlando Abinion, who is heading the effort.

"We're doing a conservation rescue," Abinion told the AP. "There was termite infestation and mold in past years, and these were aggravated by last month's storm."

"It's unfortunate because Imelda may have worn some of these clothes in major official events and as such have an important place in our history," he said.

AP journalists saw a badly tattered box at the museum filled with damaged and soiled leather bags and designer shoes belonging to Imelda Marcos. Termites had damaged the heel and sole of a white Pierre Cardin shoe. Other shoes were warped out of shape or badly stained.

About 100 of Ferdinand Marcos' barong shirts were squeezed tightly into another box, some still attached to plastic hangers. A white barong shirt on top, with the presidential seal emblazoned on its pocket, had reddish stains and a sleeve was nearly torn off.

Imelda Marcos, now a member of the House of Representatives, was not available for comment Sunday.

Her massive shoe collection, including top U.S. and European brands, astounded the world and became a symbol of excess in the Southeast Asian nation, where many still walked barefoot out of abject poverty.

Ferdinand Marcos' successor, democracy icon Corazon Aquino, accused him of stealing billions of dollars during his 20-year rule and ordered many of his assets seized.

The clothes and shoes of the Marcoses were not among the assets allegedly stolen by them and sequestered by the government following the dictator's fall, according to Presidential Commission on Good Government official Maita Gonzaga. The government has so far recovered $2.24 billion worth of cash, bank accounts and prime real estate from the Marcoses and their cronies, she said.

After the 1986 revolt, Aquino had Imelda Marcos' shoes displayed at the presidential palace as a symbol of the former first lady's lavish lifestyle. The shoes were then removed from public view and stored in the palace basement when Aquino stepped down in 1992.

Mrs. Marcos once claimed most of her foreign-branded shoes were fake, though that has never been independently verified. But the world's fascination with her footwear, including a battery-operated pair that blinked when she danced, has ensured a hefty price tag. A 1990 U.S. charity auction of one pair donated by her fetched $10,000.

Imelda Marcos claimed many of the shoes were gifts from Filipino shoemakers in suburban Marikina city, the country's shoemaking capital. Marikina officials borrowed 800 pairs of her shoes in 2001 for a shoe museum, which has become a tourist spot.

Unapologetic about the past, Mrs. Marcos said her shoes became her best defense.

"They went into my closets looking for skeletons, but thank God, all they found were shoes, beautiful shoes," she told reporters when she inaugurated the shoe museum.

Massive flooding, however, damaged dozens of pairs of Marcos' shoes in Marikina in 2009.

About 765 pairs, including famous brands like Gucci, Charles Jourdan, Christian Dior, Ferragamo, Chanel and Prada, survived the Marikina floods. The shoes, size 8 1/2 to 9, still look remarkably new due to meticulous museum care, which includes displaying them in airtight and dust-free glass cabinets in an air-conditioned gallery, away from direct sunlight. The shoe collection draws a daily crowd of 50 to 100 Philippine and foreign tourists, who almost always leave in awe, museum manager Jane Ballesteros said.

"The first word they utter is 'Wow,' followed by the question, 'Was she able to wear all of these?'" Ballesteros said. "When I say, yes, look at the scratches on the soles, the next reaction is, 'Really?'"

"It's amusing," Ballesteros said. "Her shoes never fail to astound people years after."

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Here Are The Crazy Paychecks Celebs Get To Attend Fashion Shows

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Fashion Week runway show

During this week's Paris Fashion Week and New York Fashion Week earlier this month, celebrities and socialites took up all of the prime front row seating during shows.

But what most people don't realize is that celebs are being paid to simply sit here and watch the roughly 10-minute-long runway show.

The Hollywood Reporter put together a quick list of celebs who use their presence to get a pay day during Fashion Week.

Cameron Silver, the owner of LA's high end vintage boutique Decades, was the only fashionisto in the article to go on the record about what insiders already know: "[Brands] fly [celebs] out and put them up, and offer a nice Paris or Milan holiday, unless they're contractually obliged to attend. Others pay them an appearance fee."

Here's what some A-list names get to attend the shows, according to The Hollywood Reporter:

  • Beyoncé: Fashionista.com published a fee list in 2010 indicating that Beyoncé received up to $100,000 to appear in a front-row seat.
  • Rihanna: one unnamed British publication reports she was paid about $97,500 to attend Karl Lagerfeld's fall 2012 show in Paris.
  • Jessica Chastain: It's rumored she was paid $800,000 to do photo ops at last year's Armani Privé show—but a stylist insider says, "Of course, a lot of shows do pay, some more than others —$800,000 is totally exaggerated." (The fee likely was closer to $80,000.) Other Armani loyalists include Anne Hathaway and Cate Blanchett.
  • Chloe Sevigny's $65,000, per a U.K. pub, is in keeping with industry averages.
  • Blake Lively and Kim Kardashian are in the $50,000 range.
  • "High-end deals usually are exclusive; if a star goes to just one show (like Jennifer Lawrence, seated next to Harvey Weinstein, at Dior in July), bank on them having been paid in kind or as part of an ad contract requiring their attendance."

While New York Fashion Week is very social, Paris tends to be a bit more contractual.

"Don't be surprised to spot some Dior faces (Marion Cotillard, Natalie Portman, Mila Kunis or Charlize Theron) in the label's front row," explains THR. "Expect Salma Hayek at the hottest show, the first women's collection by YSL's new creative director Hedi Slimane, in support of husband Francois-Henri Pinault, who runs parent company PPR."

And now it's fashion bloggers, too, who are getting huge pay days to show face and post photos on their social media networks with huge followings.

According to a recent New York Times article about fashion bloggers getting paid to wear designer's clothes, "Branding consultants estimate that popular bloggers and other so-called influencers can earn $2,000 to $10,000 for a single appearance in their wares ... During Fashion Week, Socialyte, through its marketing arm, Trendsparks, is managing about 200 placements, he said, for 18 fashion brands and retailers."

SEE ALSO: Check out Kelly Osbourne's $250K manicure >

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Three Big Obstacles For Facebook's Gift Shop

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facebook gifts

Facebook launched a gift store interface last week. Its 1 billion users will soon be able to select gifts from a store to send to friends. 

It's not the retailer's first attempt to make money through retail. The social network allowed retailers to have store fronts on the site last year, but those stores were closed because of a lack of demand. 

Facebook also had an unsuccessful gift-giving business several years back, but many of the gifts were virtual goods and social games. 

There are three big reasons to be pessimistic about Facebook's latest gift shop, Sharon Edelson at Women's Wear Daily reported. 

The roadblocks in front of Facebook could keep its commerce business from being successful: 

  • Facebook faces a ton of competition, especially from Amazon and eBay. Those brands have had year to build credibility, attract vendors and perfect their business models. Google also got in on the game Friday, launching its Google Shopping site. 
  • People don't see Facebook as a place to shop. "Right now, people go on Facebook to trade pictures," Victor B. Anthony, an analyst at Topeka Capital Markets, told WWD. But, he conceded, "as consumers learn that they can do a lot more on the platform than look at someone’s status, they’ll shop.”
  • Facebook is charging a fee to shop. That's the "deadly concern," Forrester researcher Sucharita Mulpuru told WWD. “Facebook is such a nominal source of sales right now. According to all of our data, any social network links are not terribly effective." she said.

DON'T MISS: Urban Outfitters Says It Will Never Buy Another Cash Register Again >

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Legendary Designer Yohji Yamamoto: 'Brand Advertising Is Making You Crazy'

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yohji yamamotoAt his recent Y-3 10th anniversary show in New York City, legendary Japanese fashion designer Yohji Yamamoto slammed the current state of the fashion world.

Yamamoto is a critic of the fast-fashion business — retailers like Zara and H&M that bring the latest fashion trends to stores as quickly as possible.

He has a bit of a rebellious streak, and doesn't hold back when he has something to say. 

Now, he has some straightforward advice for young folks: fashion isn't all it's cracked up to be.

From an interview with Amanda Kaiser at Women's Wear Daily:

"Let me talk like an old man. Young people, be careful. Beautiful things are disappearing every day.

Be careful.…You don’t need to be [shopping at fast-fashion stores], especially young people. They are beautiful naturally, because they are young. So they should even wear simple jeans and a T-shirt. It’s enough.

Don’t be too much fashionable.…The brand advertising is making you crazy. You don’t need to be too sexy. You are sexy enough."

NOW SEE: Why The High Fashion World Will Never Take Kanye West Seriously >

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4 Ways That Social Fashion Startups Are Changing The Retail Industry

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snapette social fashion site

In October 1995, the phrase “fashionista” burst onto the national scene in an Associated Press article calling fashionistas “the fashion mafia”—people who fly to New York each year for Fashion Week.

In a follow up story days later, The Washington Post added “(A fashionista is) the cranky son-of-a-gun in the Gucci loafers who wields clout and attitude like a silver stiletto.”

As women around the world started connecting with each other using social networks such as Facebook and Pinterest, the influence around fashion became more democratic.

Women began to share their own opinions and could now follow and inspire one another.

The term “fashionista” grew to be more positive—and reflected anyone who influenced fashion through sharing their own style and opinions. “Fashionista” was mentioned 4 times in 1995 in major media, and more than 2,600 times so far in 2012 (according to Factiva).

Algorithms vs. Inspiration

In some areas of our life (what movies to watch, or books to read, electronics to buy…), technology or algorithms have helped us make decisions, but in the fashion world algorithms don’t seem to be enough. Fashionistas want to inspire and be inspired by others.

Startups enabling the fashion discovery have a new way of thinking. Instead of focusing resources on building the perfect algorithm (to say "if similar users like item X you might also like item Y because you have similar preferences") they focus on providing the infrastructure so that users are empowered to find their natural recommenders. The platform provides the means, users get the goal.

With these new platforms, people and data are classified naturally by the social network mechanisms (followers, leaders, popularity ranking, automatic categories, user-created categories like Pinterest boards, etc.) and rewarding schemas for active users.

The 4 Groups Of Social Fashion Startups Enabling Discovery

Internet entrepreneurs have largely ignored the fashion industry, but this has started to change. As fashion brands release more online metadata of their products (images, descriptions, tags, prices and links to buy the products), it is becoming more obvious that fun and useful services can be built on top of that data.

These new services are raising people's scarce attention and beginning to change the way we make decisions. Some examples are:

1. Personal inspiration: At Chicisimo.com we are building a social fashion community of girls that inspire each other, sharing pictures of what they wear daily. Using gamification techniques and different types of categorization, we try to enable you to find the people who will inspire you. Go Try It On and Fashism also operate in this space. Fashion bloggers have proven to be an incredibly effective fashion recommendation tool.

2. Aggregation and curation: Another interesting group of startups, like Lyst.com, Stylight.de or Nuji.com, combine automatic aggregation and user curation. Here, users can interact with previously aggregated products and build their profile of favorite products. Their friends can then discover new fashion products that other users like. 

3. User-generated content: Other startups (such as Polyvore or Snapette) follow a similar approach, but content is submitted by the community, instead of automatically aggregated. In most cases, here and in the examples above, the pattern that you can see is the birth of a new cataloguing system: user-catalogued. It does not matter how a company catalogues content, what matters is to be part of the catalogues (boards, sets…) created by users in their respective social networks.

4. Discovering young designers: A fourth type of startups is represented by Look.com and Muuse.com, who help fashion lovers discover young, emerging designers. Designers publish their new design and then the discovery process takes place. 

Others in the fashion industry use algorithm-based traditional recommendation vendors, that have proven effective in other sectors, see a Nordstrom product page as an example. Even some startups are taking the algorithm approach. Chic Engine for example has developed a visual search engine to help you find "similar items."

In fashion more than in other sectors, people look at people to receive inspiration and discover new products, instead of trusting machines or industry experts. And you… what other fashion startups do you think are changing the way we make decisions?

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Chanel Sent This Bizarre Handbag Down The Runway At Paris Fashion Week

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Chanel's Karl Lagerfeld turned heads when he sent this bizarre shoulder bag down the runway during this morning's show at Paris Fashion Week. It appears to be made of white quilted leather suspended between two black hula hoops.

While there's no price on this lookand no official word about if and when it will actually hit shelveswe're secretly hoping to see someone smashing into fellow subway passengers with it sometime this spring.

chanel hula hoop bag

SEE ALSO: The 10 Worst Looks From New York Fashion Week >

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How Tory Burch Created A $2 Billion Empire In Less Than A Decade

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tory burch

This is part of our series on The Sexiest CEOs Alive.

In only eight years, Tory Burch's eponymous fashion line is ubiquitous. 

The designer's bags, sunglasses and shoes are flying off the shelves at Bloomingdale's, Nordstrom and Saks. She's competing with more established brands like Coach and Kate Spade—and winning.

Burch's company is now valued at more than $2 billion. 

Burch started as a fashion copywriter and now has one of the most successful fashion lines in the world. She achieved her dream through hard work, talent and a very important celebrity endorsement. 

We mapped out how she got there. 

Tory Burch grew up in Philadelphia.

Her mother is a former actress, while her father was an investor. She graduated high school and attended the University of Pennsylvania. 



Burch had a series of writing jobs before starting her fashion line.

She worked for Vera Wang, Ralph Lauren and Harper's Bazaar. 



In 2004, she launched her New York City flagship boutique.

It's located in the retail mecca of NoLita. Pictured is her Madison Avenue store.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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The 10 Craziest Looks From Paris Fashion Week

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Celine shoes, Paris fashion week

Paris Fashion Week ends today, which means that spring trends have been set and sales have been made.

And while there were some gorgeous designs sent down runways this week, not all of the looks were so successful.

Fashion designers are creative people who can produce wonderful and beautiful designs. But sometimes that creativity can cross the line into just plain weird.

We've culled through images from Paris Fashion Week and have come up with the ugliest, oddest looks both on and off the runway. 

Chanel normally stands for simple elegance, yet these hula hoop-inspired bags are anything but that.



This odd, frumpy-looking backwards jean dress from Chanel is very un-Chanel.



Yves Saint-Laurent's collection was an homage to '70s rock 'n' roll, but this number seems to be more inspired by Zorro.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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Custom Suit Company Makes It Easy To Shop For A Work Wardrobe

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proper suits

A custom-made suit can radiate pretentiousness. But a new custom suit maker aims to change that.

"When a customer goes to be fitted for a custom-made suit, there's this stuffy feeling and pretentiousness around the experience," said McGregor J. Madden, co-founder of Proper Suit. "That pretentiousness has nothing to do with the final product. We wanted to take that away and just make great suits."

Madden and his co-founder Richard Hall partnered up while working for a clothing manufacturer in China about four years ago to form Proper Suit, a custom-made suit business that covers about 12 cities nationally.

Their clients range from Washington, D.C. lawyers to stylish grooms across the country. The company currently has a customer base about 1,000 people deep.

They've also become a big hit among the Silicon Valley crowd: clients there include Square founder Cameron Walters, Facebook software engineer Abe Land, and Sebastian Turner of Twitter.

Proper Suit also counts Chicago Fire soccer player Daniel Paladini, Jefferson Smith, who is running for mayor of Portland, and 16 Handles founder Solomon Choi among its clients.

"Eighty percent of our business is word of mouth and through referrals," Hall said. "Once our customers get the product in their hands and feel the difference—it's hard to explain—a lot of suit wearers out there don't understand a good suit until they have one."

So what makes the company different than other custom suit makers?

Proper Suit is a six-man operation of specialized tailors, who each cover a specific region of the country. Clients make an appointment for when the Proper Suit tailor will be in town at a pop-up shop. They reserve a time slot with a $150 deposit.

That $150 eventually is applied toward the purchase of the client's suit. Proper Suit has a range of customization options and materials to choose from. Prices for a suit start at $750 and can run to $1,850. Most of the fabric is imported from Italy and then sent to China, where the suits are made.

The most popular starter colors for suits are navy and charcoal. Customers can expect their duds to arrive in four to six weeks. 

Another way Proper Suits stands out from its competition is the company uses a computer-based measurement and template system to design the suites. If you've been measured once, you don't really need to come back again for countless measurements. Just call up Proper Suit, explain what you'd like, or send an email of a photo you've seen as inspiration, and Proper Suit will get to work.

"We don't try to hard sell any of our clients," Madden said. "We don't cold call them. When you come into the office, you're going to have a hour conversation with our fitting specialist, who knows the type of suits that look good on you, and can talk about your needs. You'll also enjoy shooting the breeze for an hour with us."

DON'T MISS: Go Inside The Factory Where $10,000 Hermès Purses Are Crafted By Hand >

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proper suits

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12 Screwups That Made People Hate Urban Outfitters

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urban outfitters white model

Urban Outfitters has had more controversies than any modern retailer (with the possible exception of American Apparel).

It's possible that the uproar is intentional and that the company is trying to project a hip, rebellious image. 

Some of the company's controversial moments have gone beyond edgy social commentary, and into offensive territory. 

From racist board games and T-shirts, to potentially exploiting a 15-year-old model, Urban has had to do damage control more than a few times. 

There have also been accusations of design plagiarism. And one celebrity spoke out against Urban for being bigoted. 

Featuring a 15-year-old in a "spreadeagled" on a t-shirt.

The parents of teen fashion model Hailey Clauson sued Urban Outfitters, as well as photographer Jason Lee Parry, over a "blatantly salacious" T-shirt that featured their daughter. The case is still in litigation. 



Selling "Ghettopoly."

Urban's retailing of the classic board game was incredibly insensitive and mocked leaders like Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X by intentionally misspelling their names. 

The game had "playas" acting like pimps and game cards reading, "You got yo whole neighborhood addicted to crack. Collect $50." Black leaders were enraged and Urban pulled the game off the market. 



Advertising booze-themed shirts to kids.

Urban released a T-shirt line with slogans like "I Drink You're Cute" and "Misery Loves Alcohol."

Mothers Against Drunk Driving told the New York Daily News that the shirts sent the wrong message about alcohol.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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A Portfolio Of Erotic Drawings By Late Designer Yves Saint Laurent Has Gone Missing

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yves saint laurentPierre Bergé, the former partner of Yves Saint Laurent, claims that a portfolio of works by the designer was stolen by one of his former lovers.

It seems the house of Yves Saint Laurent can’t keep itself out of the headlines.

Following the seemingly never-ending feud between journalist Cathy Horyn and YSL’s new creative director Hedi Slimane, Pierre Bergé, the long-term business partner of the house’s eponymous founder, has now claimed that a 400-item portfolio of works by the late designer was unlawfully taken by one of Saint Laurent’s former lovers.

The portfolio includes some 290 sketches - some of which are erotic - a journal, personal letters, a self portrait, a painting by Andy Warhol of YSL’s dogs and a Helmut Newton photograph, and is said to be worth up to €12 million.

Bergé claims that Fabrice Thomas, who worked as the designer’s driver before later becoming his lover, stole the collection of works from Saint Laurent’s Paris apartment in the Nineties, later part-gifting, part-selling it to an unidentified German businessman who gave him “a job, a car and a new life” following the end of his relationship with YSL. The German businessman now wants to exhibit or sell the works, to which Bergé objects.

READ: Hedi Slimane's Saint Laurent debut

Thomas, the accused, says that when he and Saint Laurent ended their relationship, Saint Laurent told him he could keep the works as long as they were no longer needed be the atelier.

Bergé does not believe this explanation. “Believe me, it would have been impossible for Yves to have given someone 300 sketches. Maybe one or two, but 300? Surely not,” Bergé told WWD . “The point is, they were stolen.”

Ludwig Geiger, a Swiss-based representative for the German businessman who claims to be the collection’s current owner, insists that Thomas legally transferred all rights and ownership to his client and that everything was done above board. “The collection was not stolen. Pierre Bergé told that story, but it is absolute nonsense. He knows very well it was not stolen,” Geiger said. “It’s bad theater, what they do.”

Bergé filed a police report last November claiming that the portfolio was stolen. He has allegedly been approached a number of times by a number of different parties - including Fabrice Thomas - about buying the works, but refuses to do so. “I am not willing to pay for something that was stolen. But I intend to empty every possibility I have to avoid any exhibitions and publication of the sketches,” he said.

SEE ALSO: The 15 Wealthiest People In Fashion >

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How Angela Merkel's Pantsuit Alienates Her From The EU

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Angela Merkel

Angela Merkel was greeted by protesters when she arrived in Greece today.

Strangely enough, her ever-present pantsuit could have helped fuel the firestorm.

Merkel is known for wearing the same Bettina Schoenbach pantsuit every day. You can see a gallery of all the colors she's worn here

But Merkel's plain fashion sense is indicative of her disagreements with the EU, according to a Wall Street Journal article published in May.

A political style expert tells the Journal about the pitfalls of Merkel's practical style:

"While that sartorial consistency may have been an asset earlier in her career, it could become a problem as Ms. Merkel pushes the unpopular message of austerity to European Union members and faces a restless electorate at home, says Robb Young, author of "Power Dressing: First Ladies, Women Politicians & Fashion." "Her static wardrobe can be perceived as an honest reflection of her political persona—a no-nonsense, rational woman," says Mr. Young. "But the same unwavering resolve to maintain this habitual, signature style could be a liability among certain voters aching for signs of change."'

Merkel is unpopular in European countries like Greece and Spain because she opposed financial aid to those countries and argued for austerity.

It's possible that her pantsuit is a symbol of her no-nonsense mentality.

DON'T MISS: Kate Middleton's Dress Designer Has A Secret For Avoiding "Marilyn Moments" >

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Uniqlo's Brilliant Strategy Is To Totally Ignore Fashion

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uniqlo

Uniqlo had a revolutionary strategy for an apparel company — ignore fashion. 

The Japanese retailer is expanding fast in the U.S., after totally dominating in Asia. The chain is planning a worldwide expansion and is gaining on other similar chains like Gap and H&M. 

Uniqlo's parent-company CEO, Tadashi Yanai, recently spoke to Wired about how Uniqlo expanded so quickly. 

Uniqlo went where no other retailer had before and totally ignored fashion trends.

The chain focuses on innovative designs and technology for clothing, instead of chasing fast-fashion trends that H&M and Zara rely on.

For instance, Uniqlo released slim down jackets and extra-warm thermal clothing. 

From Wired: 

But where other global fashion brands like Zara and H&M zig, Uniqlo zags. Where the other guys focus on winning at the old game of fashion, churning an array of styles through their stores ever more rapidly, Yanai is acting more like a tech executive, nurturing long development cycles in which clothes and advanced materials are carefully iterated. Uniqlo partners with high-tech suppliers like carbon-fiber-maker Toray and cuts 10-year deals with Chinese manufacturers. The model draws as much on Intel and Toyota as Gap.

"We don’t chase trends. People mistakenly say that Uniqlo is a fast-fashion brand. We’re not. We are about clothing that’s made for everyone," the CEO says. 

Ignoring fashion means that sales remain steady through different trends. It's an interesting strategy that's worked for the retailer so far. 

DON'T MISS: The Mega-Trends That Are Changing Retail Forever >

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Luxury Fashion Brands Want Nothing To Do With Amazon

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raise cache 2011, nyc, tech start ups, charity, fashion, runway, november 17 2011, bi, dng

Amazon has entered the fashion world with some fanfare, hiring an expert to set up an online store with swanky brands like Kate Spade and Rebecca Minkoff. 

But the big luxury heavyweights want nothing to do with Amazon, according to an article by Barney Jopson at the Financial Times. 

While the website is one of the most powerful retailers in the world, many of the luxury fashion brands Jopson interviewed were hesitant to get involved with the brand.

Menswear giant Hugo Boss told the FT that any of its products sold on Amazon aren't sanctioned by them and they're looking for ways to control where their brand is sold. 

Alexander McQueen's CEO wouldn't rule out future involvement with Amazon, but barbed to the FT that the brand is "increasingly aware of the importance of brand identity online and maintaining it at the highest levels."

But perhaps the worst zinger came from Louis Vuitton. 

"Amazon will never sell Louis Vuitton, because we are the only ones that sell it," said Louis Vuitton chief executive Yves Carvelle. "This is a model of direct control thay we pioneered, and I think long term it is the direction that most luxury ecommerce will take."

Amazon has made a name for itself as a place to find bargains, and that doesn't jive with luxury fashion. Still, these fashion houses can't ignore the exposure that a partnership with Amazon would bring them. 

DON'T MISS: The Most Valuable Brands In The Retail World >

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Watch A Model Try To Walk In The Most Terrifying Shoes We Have Ever Seen

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As part of her thesis for a fine arts academy in Amsterdam, South African designer Leanie Van der Vyver envisioned a pair of high heels that take the standards of beauty and perfection to a strange new level.

Called Scary Beautiful, the sky-high stilettos have been making the rounds on the internet, as has a video of a model attempting to walk in a straight line while wearing them (at the end of this post).

With the shoes, Van der Vyver said she attempted to explore "what lies beyond perfection" given today's unattainable standards of beauty.

"Scary Beautiful challenges current beauty ideals by inflicting an unexpected new beauty standard," she wrote to us.

One thing's for surethese contraptions give new meaning to the saying "beauty is pain."

scary beautiful shoes


scary beautiful shoes


scary beautiful shoes


Scary Beautiful (Leanie van der Vyver) from Lyall Coburn on Vimeo.

SEE ALSO: The 10 Craziest Looks From Paris Fashion Week

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Online Retail Sales Are Booming Because Men Don't Have To Shop At The Mall Anymore

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guy shopping dressing room self pic

Fashion is the fastest-growing segment of online commerce, and it’s being propelled by an atypical source: men.

Men who have had to live with department stores designed primarily for women are flocking to websites such as Bonobos and Thrillist that push convenience and a fast shopping experience.

And these sites are capturing a growing part of the $41 billion fashion e-commerce market by providing services like recommending items based on personality or shipping trunks of clothes to a guy’s home so he can pick.

“Men don’t hate fashion, they just hate shopping the way it’s designed for women,” said Ben Lerer, founder of Thrillist, which gives men tips for activities or products and then sells them. “The young generation of guys love to shop, they love to talk about the brands they like and they really care about how they look.”

While women’s share of the online clothing market is still more than double men’s, the men’s market is growing faster, at a 13 percent annual rate compared with 10 percent for women, according to NPD Group, a consumer tracking service. And that growth gap is seen by many as about to get wider.

“It’s an area of e-commerce that companies are only just now starting to really figure out,” said Joshua Goldman of Norwest Venture Partners, who specializes in retail deals.

Competing for Share

Male-focused online fashion startups are competing with established brands like Gap Inc.’s Banana Republic and J Crew Group Inc. for a slice of the fashion e-commerce market. The market for clothing and accessories is expected to grow 78 percent to $73 billion by 2016, according to EMarketer. That’s faster than categories like electronics or music.

Frank & Oak, a Montreal-based men’s site that gives personalized recommendations each month, said last week it raised $5 million from investors. The site launched in February. Thrillist raised $13 million in August from venture capitalists, valuing the company at $150 million in its first round of funding.

Lerer, founder of Thrillist, acquired clothing site JackThreads to get in on the trend. Now, he said, his users snap pictures modeling new clothes and post them on Twitter, bragging about getting them delivered to their doorstep.

The boom in men’s fashion follows by a couple years the success of companies that started out catering to women, like Gilt Groupe and Rent the Runway. Men may be a better target because they are more likely to make big purchases in one swoop to get shopping done quickly, while women often browse recreationally and may not buy, said Jeremy Liew of Lightspeed Venture Partners, which invests in Bonobos.

“Because of that relatively high basket-size, that makes it quite an attractive transaction if you’re talking about several hundred dollars,” Liew said.

More Income

Men are also staying single longer, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, meaning they have more income to spend on themselves during their early careers. Gilt Groupe, a high-end sales site that started out focused on women, added a men’s section in 2008. The typical shopper is 35 years old and single, living in an urban coastal city and making a bit more than $100,000, said Keith George, who heads up the division.

Still, there are risks. And not every idea pans out. Frank & Oak first tried out the market as Modasuite, which made personalized men’s clothes. Gilt has stopped investing in its separate men’s site, Park & Bond.

Yet there’s been enough success for the companies to attract investments from Silicon Valley’s venture capitalists. Brian O’Malley of Battery Ventures said he’s attracted to a more stable revenue stream than most technology startups, like ad- supported social networking companies.

Shipping Clothes

The menswear sites are testing business models like personality-based recommendation or shipping clothes to a guy’s home so he can pick, a service offered by Trunk Club Inc. Although they’re not typical technology companies, investors like O’Malley are attracted to the growth potential.

“Day one you’re getting real revenue from the product,” said O’Malley, who invests in J. Hilburn, which sends representatives to measure men at their homes and make customized clothes. “A lot of the other companies are reliant on venture capital and don’t make a lot of money from advertising until they have a ton of users.”

‘Finance Guy’

Andy Dunn, the founder and CEO of Bonobos, says after one or two questions his retailers can tell whether a customer fits into one of six categories, which include “metrosexual or gay,” “finance guy” and, more recently, “hipster.” Depending on the label, they’ll be pitched a different kind of pants.

“I hear about a new menswear e-commerce thought every day,” Dunn said. “But to know that this could work in 2007 was really a leap of faith.’

Because they don’t require intensive computer engineering to start, many of the companies are based outside of the San Francisco Bay Area. Thrillist and Bonobos are based in New York, where they can take advantage of its fashion network.

“Think of the computer programmer, and then think of the banker,” Lerer said. “Fashion is much more likely to be a top focus here in New York.”

—With assistance from Sapna Maheshwari in New York. Editors: Rick Schine, Stephen West

To contact the reporter on this story: Sarah Frier in New York at sfrier1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Nick Turner at nturner7@bloomberg.net

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There's A Reason Michelle Obama And Ann Romney Wore Matching Outfits

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pink dress michelle obama ann romney

Michelle Obama and Ann Romney showed up to last night's presidential debate wearing dresses in the same hue of bright pink. 

Viewers of the debate took to Twitter to analyze the matching dresses. The Daily Beast tweeted that the twin dresses were "awkward." 

But Charlotte Cowles at New York Magazine has a perfectly reasonable explanation for why both First Lady candidates chose the same color. 

October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month, and pink is the color used to symbolize it. 

But according to Cowles, one of the ladies wore the color better. 

She gives her vote to Ann Romney, whose "modern" glass bead necklace and tailored fit made the outfit. 

Michelle's dress was "boxy" and "not the most flattering," Cowles writes. 

DON'T MISS: How Angela Merkel's Pansuit Alienates Her From The EU >

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White Mountaineering Leather-Trimmed Multi-Pocket Backpack

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Meet the leather-trimmed multi-pocket backpack by White Mountaineering.

Why We Love It: This is utilitarian design at it's finest. Perfect for your daily commute, this rugged backpack puts your grade school version to shame. With a width of 17'', a height of 19'', and a depth of 6'', it will easily fit your 15'' MacBook Pro, and any other devices, books, and gadgets you need to bring with you.

The bag is made in durable olive canvas with leather accents. It also comes in black cargo with black leather accents, too.

White Mountaineering Backpack

White Mountaineering Backpack

Where To Buy: Available through MR PORTER with free shipping.

Cost: $950.

Want to nominate a cool product for Stuff We Love? Send an email to Megan Willett at mwillett@businessinsider.com with "Stuff We Love" in the subject line.

Don't Miss: Autographed Authentic Yankee Stadium Seat Barstool

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Why The Fashion Industry Wrongly Snubs Ann Romney

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Ann Romney Connecticut

Ann Romney, wife of presidential candidate Mitt, is always beautifully dressed in top designer gear. 

But while First Lady Michelle Obama is lauded as a style icon, Romney has been largely ignored by the fashion industry. 

Hayley Phelan at Fashionista says she receives press releases from designers saying that Michelle Obama wore their designs, but hasn't received one about Ann Romney. 

Phelan explains: 

When Ann wore a stunning red Oscar de la Renta to the RNC, there was not a peep from his PR team, while we received several notices about Michelle’s DNC wardrobe from Tracey Reese and Laura Smalls respectively. When Romney wore a printed Diane von Furstenberg wrap dress, DVF’s PR team not only ignored it, but effectively distanced themselves from her saying they were “not quite sure how she obtained the dress.

There's no questioning that Ann has great style. New York Magazine even said she put together a better debate outfit than Michelle. 

But there are a few reasons the industry snubs Ann, according to Phelan: 

  • The fashion industry leans left. According to Women's Wear Daily, 53.9 percent of fashion industry campaign donations went to Obama, while only 45.9 percent went to Republicans.
  • Everyone is afraid of making Anna Wintour mad. The editor of Vogue is one of Obama's biggest supporters and getting on her bad side could mean your brand isn't featured in the magazine. 
  • Designers don't want to miss out on Michelle Obama wearing their stuff. If the First Lady wears a dress, it's a guaranteed sell-out. 
Even though the fashion industry has snubbed her, Ann doesn't seem to mind. She's more "feminine than high fashion," her designer, Alfred Fiandaca, told the New York Times


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McDonald's Is Suing Milan For Kicking It Out Of A Luxury Fashion Plaza

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mcdonald's milan

Fast food chain McDonald's has sued the city of Milan after it was evicted from a prime spot among luxury retailers Gucci, Prada and Louis Vuitton in the picturesque nineteenth century Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II.

The restaurant was the third busiest in Italy and had been trading in the busy shopping arcade for 20 years, but it will now be replaced with a second Prada store.

More than 5,000 people queued outside the restaurant for its final day on Tuesday as staff handed out free food and drinks. "We wanted to say goodbye to the Galleria with a smile," said spokesman Paolo Mereghetti.

The decision to evict the restaurant came after a public tender for the location, which McDonald's claims was "unfair". It has now filed a lawsuit against the city demanding €24m in damages.

The business estimates that the eviction will cost €6m in lost sales, but that no jobs will be lost.

The restaurant claims that the tender called for a "business showing excellence in innovation, technology and communications" to take the spot, which essentially ruled it out. The city denies that the tender was unfair.

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