Monday, December 19, 2011
Sunday, December 11, 2011
Saturday, December 10, 2011
W Magazine January 2012 | Best in Class
We Love W Magazine " Best in Class " Editorial by Photographer Emma Summerton and W Magazine Fashion Director Edward Enninful.
Best in Class
Models: Jourdan Dunn, Lily Donaldson, Cara Delevingne and Nyasha Matonhodze
Photographer: Emma Summerton
Stylist: Edward Enninful
Hair: Odile Gilbert
Make-Up: Miranda Joyce
Best in Class
Models: Jourdan Dunn, Lily Donaldson, Cara Delevingne and Nyasha Matonhodze
Photographer: Emma Summerton
Stylist: Edward Enninful
Hair: Odile Gilbert
Make-Up: Miranda Joyce
Thursday, December 8, 2011
Chanel Pre-Fall 2012 2013 | Métiers d’Art Paris-Bombay
For their Paris-Bombay collection, Chanel and Karl Lagerfeld transformed a shabby wing of the Grand Palais into a delicately faded Maharajah’s palace. Guests who included actresses Freida Pinto, Sonam Kapoor, Sandrine Kiberlain and Joana Preisswere seated at two long tables that faced a sumptuous buffet spilling over with a tempting display of exotic sweets, fruit and Jasmine flowers.
Lagerfeld unveiled a luxurious collection that was inspired by British colonialismand traditional Indian men’s costumes – “since they are easier to wear than the woman’s clothes,” he opined. Presented by models like Stella Tennant, Yasmin Le Bonand Audrey Marney, a few highlights included pearl-laden tweed suits, Nehru-collar silk tunics teamed with soft leather legging-cum-boot and sari-style sweaters. Kiberlain described it as “magnificent,” while Pinto was “impressed by the non-gimmicky Indian elements and the strong French feel.”
Text : Natasha Fraser-Cavassoni
Lagerfeld unveiled a luxurious collection that was inspired by British colonialismand traditional Indian men’s costumes – “since they are easier to wear than the woman’s clothes,” he opined. Presented by models like Stella Tennant, Yasmin Le Bonand Audrey Marney, a few highlights included pearl-laden tweed suits, Nehru-collar silk tunics teamed with soft leather legging-cum-boot and sari-style sweaters. Kiberlain described it as “magnificent,” while Pinto was “impressed by the non-gimmicky Indian elements and the strong French feel.”