Shorts and Sweet

I've been a huge fan of Samantha Pleet's ever since I purchased a pair of her wide-legged denim pants last summer (I truly wear them at least once a week, as evidenced hereherehere, and here), so I'm not sure why it took me so long to invest in a pair of her shorts. They're flattering in the same way (the high-waisted cut is slimming and easy to move around in), but the frills along the asymmetrical sailor hem lend a playfulness that's perfect for summer. A straw hat and navy-striped shirt offered a nautical vibe that would have fit right in at the beach with different shoes, but I wore it for a land-locked day of weekend activities.







I am not into Debra Messing’s frock here, which is severe and boxy and unfriendly, like a Volvo that won’t start. No one in her life spoke honestly when she put this on and said, “This is it, right?!?” It actually made me miss her Smash character’s avalanche of scarves.
But the Will & Grace reunion series… I’m undecided. By and large, I tend to think lightning strikes once, and that we should leave our warm memories untainted. New Gilmore Girls episodes did not add to the show’s legacy. The X-Files was a mess. I have low hopes for the Prison Break stuff that’s forthcoming, and nothing about the 24 London movie or the new Bauerless episodes was promising. Heroes Reborn? No thanks. It puts so much stress on the cast to prove its old chemistry is there, and sometimes a show’s voice and tone is so affixed to its place in history — culturally and chronologically — that porting it to present day can be jarring.
Having said that, I have nothing but praise for the new ANTM on VH-1. I didn’t see the Arrested Development season on Netflix, but I heard it was fine, I think? And Twin Peaks is coming, but I never saw the first one (I know, I know, I’m sorry; I didn’t live here, and then when I did nobody I knew watched it, so I just missed the boat), so I can’t speak to how this version’s previews look. [If you need to talk about Twin Peaks, I am here for you! – J] All of which is to say that I’m sure it’s possible to get it right; the question is, for me, is whether David Kohan and Max Mutchnick can contemporize the characters (they haven’t had the best string of luck themselves with other shows), or whether they even need it. Will the voice feel stale, or prove timeless? And what justifies bringing the characters back from where we left them? Will & Grace’s series finale did a twenty-year flash forward in which their children were marrying each other, and Will and Grace had stopped speaking in the interim, only becoming friends again when their kids met at college. It laid down some bricks that will be tricky to dislodge. Given that the finale was in 2006, and it’s only eleven years hence… well, I’ll be curious, for sure. I’m trying to stop short of optimism or pessimism, frankly. How about you?
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How to Wear Pastels (and Not Look Like an Easter Egg)











We all love the delicate flowers and budding leaves that come with the end of winter. Just like florals, pastels have become synonymous with the spring season, but not always for the most fashionable reasons. Too often, these lighter colors are reserved for juvenile clothing, but they don’t have to be. So, what’s a girl to do with colors like lavender, mint, pale blue and ballet pink? First, don’t get overwhelmed. All pastels are in the same shade group, so they are easy to mix and match. Next, remember that your accessories can (and should) stand out. Consider black, metallics and even deep red in your styling choices. Don’t believe us? Let these examples show you how to wear pastels like a street style pro.

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Fashion point

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCQnBQSagWp8gLCXrWp2oh2w




5 Fashion Trends He Secretly Hates

Every fashion-forward woman loves to play around with trends. Sure, most of us have a certain style that we gravitate towards, but it can be really fun to pick out one or two trendy pieces that revamp your look a little. Whether it’s a new type of shoe with a classic outfit, or a new top to pair with your most beloved pair of jeans, it can be a huge asset to your style to incorporate some trends every now and then. However, men and women are often very different when it comes to style – something that a man thinks is completely hideous can be a beloved, high fashion item in a woman’s closet that all her friends gush over.
Pretty much every woman’s magazine and site has cycled through some of those trends that divide the genders, and there are definitely a few trends that simply baffle men. At the end of the day, though, ladies? You’re rocking that outfit, not him – if you think you look super chic and feel two seconds from busting out a Beyoncé move because you feel so damn confident, then you better keep that item in rotation. What if he hates it? Well, what if he does? You probably look fabulous. You do you.
After all, as Queen B says, who run the world? Girls. And we do it while looking totally on trend.

 High Waisted Jeans/Shorts

What women see as trendy high-waisted jeans, men see as lame mom jeans. They can’t understand why women would want their jeans to ride so high rather than showing off a little skin. Part of the reason the high waisted trend is so hot right now is because of the rise of the crop top – a high waisted pant allows women to wear a crop top without looking a little too Las Vegas for the grocery store. Plus, honestly, high-waisted jeans can just be really comfortable sometimes and give a great retro look. Sorry, guys – this one is probably around to stay.


Most women likely know what peplum is, but in case someone needs a refresher, peplums are the extra piece of fabric on a dress, skirt, or even shirt, that flares out in a little ruffle. They started popping up like wildfire a few years back, mostly because of how they flattered a woman’s figure. Simply put, peplum emphasizes the smallness of your waist while simultaneously disguising any problem areas you might have in your lower stomach (you know that little pooch that many women have? Yeah, peplum will take care of that for you). While it seems like a trend men should love in theory – after all, it emphasizes your curves – in reality, they just think it looks a little weird and too ruffle-y.


08. Wedge sneakers

Wedge sneakers are one of those fashion trends that guys just don’t get. Most men love a woman in sneakers – it shows she’s not afraid to be a little casual every now and then. However, wedge sneakers are a totally different beast. First of all, even though wedges are a godsend for ladies (so comfortable!), guys tend to find they look clunky and strange on a woman. And honestly, most men are just baffled by the fact that sneakers, a shoe they normally recognize, gets a little lift with a wedge heel. Is it casual? Is it dressy? Can you run in them like a normal sneaker? They just don’t get it.

 Floppy hats


Floppy hats are definitely a fairly strong look, and most women bold enough to rock them have a definite boho-chic vibe to their personal style. However, it seems that men just aren’t really a fan of this particular type of chapeau. In the words of a regular guy surveyed by thefashionspot.ca, “there are really only 2 places where this hat works: at the beach, and at a horse race.” So, he might cheer your foresight if you bring a floppy hat to the beach to protect your gorgeous face from sunburn, but if you rock it on a regular date downtown? He might try to get you to take it off indoors. Manners, you know?

 Bandeau bikinis



Okay, many women are huge fans of the bandeau bikini top. First of all, it’s great for tan lines – you’re not stuck with those white strips near your shoulders that most bikinis leave you with. Second, many women find them fairly comfortable, given that they’re essentially just a stretchy strip of fabric. However, let’s be honest for a second here ladies – the bandeau bikini is not always the most flattering look. While regular string bikini tops lift the ladies a little bit, and many even have some padding for those who want a little more curves, it takes a certain body type to rock a bandeau, and guys just aren’t digging them.


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FALL 2017 READY-TO-WEAR
Alexander McQueen
It was young people who raised the curtains on Sarah Burton’s fall show for Alexander McQueen. In an almost ceremonial moment, perhaps not quite registered by the crowd, she asked the black-clad junior members of her teams, and students from local schools in Paris, to hoist the woven hangings alongside the runway. Their taking part, however unnoticed, had a resonance which ran through a powerfully evocative show; her first which brought a down-to-earth sense of young womanhood to the magic of McQueen.





Sarah Burton has always had an affinity for nature, and for tuning into history. Whilst she worked for Alexander Lee McQueen—he took her on as his first and only assistant when she was a Central Saint Martins textiles student—she grew into his trusted researcher and a fanatical archivist of all his work. As soon as she stepped up to replace him, her own interest in celebrating the mysterious powers of nature has been behind much of her work. Her creative breakthrough has come now she has decided to get out in the open air of landscapes and communities in far-flung corners of Britain. “I felt this sense of groundedness, of needing to feel the land, and tradition,” she said.
This season, she took her team to Cornwall, the southernmost county of the United Kingdom. It’s a landscape which inspired the sculptor Barbara Hepworth, and has ancient stone circles, medieval churches and—if you look hard enough—a surviving subculture of paganism and healing witchcraft.


















Discovering a Cloutie tree, on which people tie rags and ribbons as wishes and mementoes, triggered the beginning of the collection. Back in London, where Burton works in seclusion with the couture-level team which made Kate Middleton’s wedding dress, imagination took flight. Evolving ideas with the incredible hand-embroidery and textiles teams, they wove ideas from the memento ribbons into tweeds, and thought about self-determining women, women who sewed messages into samplers centuries ago.
The result was a show which staggered the audience with its dense imagery—dresses beaded with silvery trees; white lace figured with kissing doves, medieval tapestries of flora and fauna, trailing threads, witchy symbols of stars and suns traced in jet. Still, the thing which really made it was the believable youthfulness: long, tendrilly “undone” hair by Guido Palau, and flat studded bootees or McQueen trainers.
Sarah Burton was wearing a pair when she ran out to give her bow, a pincushion still tied to her wrist. She is a hands-on worker. For the first time, she had fully articulated her own vision, whilst fully honoring McQueen’s. She dealt out terrific black gray pantsuits, with long, belted coats and jackets; some in leather, and some with asymetric folds flying elegantly off to one side—shapes McQueen started, but with none of his armour-clad rigidity. Touchingly, she had her team painstakingly stitch his name and date of birth into the decoration of a dress, in a centuries-old style. It was inclusive: of the British past, of female power, and of the energy of youth. Excellent.


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