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TABLE OF CONTENTS

DFR: Daily Fashion Report is THE FIRST FASHION BLOG to be published on the Internet -- click below links to access over 900 articles archived on a monthly basis going back SIX YEARS:

February 2002 March 2002 April 2002 May 2002 June 2002 July 2002 August 2002 September 2002 October 2002 November 2002 December 2002 January 2003 February 2003 March 2003 April 2003 May 2003 June 2003 July 2003 August 2003 September 2003 October 2003 November 2003 December 2003 January 2004 February 2004 March 2004 April 2004 May 2004 June 2004 July 2004 August 2004 September 2004 October 2004 November 2004 December 2004 January 2005 February 2005 March 2005 April 2005 May 2005 June 2005 July 2005 August 2005 September 2005 October 2005 November 2005 December 2005 January 2006 February 2006 March 2006 April 2006 May 2006 June 2006 July 2006 August 2006 September 2006 October 2006 November 2006 December 2006 January 2007 February 2007 March 2007 April 2007 May 2007 June 2007 July 2007 August 2007 September 2007 October 2007 November 2007 December 2007 January 2008 February 2008 March 2008

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Shirts
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Formal shirts
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Jackets
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Womans fashion
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PAST FEATURES:
Favorite past reports, articles & reviews:

2008 Oscars: The Final Word

Fashion Intelligence #3: Fashionless Oscars?
Fashion Intelligence #2: Review of "The Diana Chronicles"

Fashion Intelligence #1: Introduction of New Column"

2007 Oscars: The Final Word
March of the Innocents
Volunteering for 7thonSixth
Review of 'The Devil Wears Prada'
The 2006 CFDA Awards: Celebrity Report by Diane Clehane
The 2006 Oscars: The Final Word by Diane Clehane
American Master's of Interview with Iris Barrel Apfel
Feature: Hawaiian Vintage Shirts
Interview: Ty Yorio of Citadel Security
Fashion, Sex & Lesbianism
Book reviews: gross on lauren
Other voices: get invited to shows
Roundtable: 3 black journalists
Roundtable: 3 top fashion models
Interview: industry legend paul cavaco
Profile: photographer dan lecca
Survey: ny restaurants for fashionistas
Editorial cartoons: "circus maximus"
Photo/glamour libraries
Feature Report Archives



PAST VIDEO REPORTS:

american master of fashion series: interview with ny fashion designer ralph rucci 56k & isdn

american master of fashion series: interview with publisher of fashion calendar ruth finley 56k

american master of fashion series: interview with new york times photographer bill cunningham click here

american master of fashion series: interview with style icon elsa klensch 56k-100k

american master of fashion series: interview with ceo of burberry rose marie bravo conducted by Grace Mirabella 56k-100k

american master of fashion series: interview with photographer arthur elgort conducted by Grace Mirabella 56k

the betsey johnson/playboy bunny runway show 56k isdn Broadband


OTHER SITES:

The Good:

whowhatweardaily.com celebrity fashion

fashionableliferadio.com fashion radio
prcouture.com thinking pr
Myfashionlife.com hip fashion blog
Style.com vogue & 'w' online
Zoozoom.com a great fashion e-zine
Mediabistro.com for the media pro
Annabayle.com supermodel's blog
Hintmag.com popular fashion ezine
Nogoodforme.filmstills.org daily blog
Fashion.net long running portal
Dailycandy.com a daily heads-up on hip
Coutorture.com online fashion community
Fashionclick.com a great spanish e-zine
Fashionlines.com la fashion site
Thread.com a new zealand e-zine
Gawker.com manhattan weblog magazine
Fashionwiredaily daily fashion reports

The Bad:

fashionweekdaily.com running amuck

& The Ugly:

Lucire.com so awful it's not to be missed!






Google
 
Web lookonline.com
Tuesday, March 25, 2008
The Fashion Institute of Technology's Great Designers Symposium

The Symposium schedule was something worth attending,
allowing the audience to learn so much about so many fashion
designers, past and present, encompassing many periods of fashion
history. Lectures and conversations were hosted by talented designers
and notable speakers.

The schedule started with a great introduction to "The Great
Designers" by Valerie Steele as always an interesting and enriching
moment. It was followed by Ms Steele engaging in a conversation with
Isabel Toledo. If anything, Ms Toledo is a legend of her own, with her
husband and associate of many years, Rubens Toledo. A highly creative
and charismatic couple, Isabel and Rubens Toledo are among the most
respected in both the fashion and the art community.

Along with photos of some of her designs showing on the screen behind
her, Ms. Toledo explained how she find herself unable to sketch any
design. She needs to visualize the 3 dimensional form in order for her
to create. The way in which the fabric is going to conform to the
body, and inversely, how the body will relate to the fabric is what
preoccupies her the most. Isabel's design creations are a testament to
that pursuit. The incredible fluidity of her designs as well as the
harmonious union of fabric and body are outstanding. She reminds many
of the talented and extraordinary Madame Gres, with a modern and
decidedly incomparable edge.

Then Patricia Mears, deputy director of The Museum at FIT, highlighted
Madame Gres and her unique and most revered designing sense with a
great lecture. It was a captivating one, a very well documented
retrospective of her life as a Haute Couture creator. Many wished to
know more about the secretive and incredibly talented Frenchwoman. Ms.
Mears met our expectations in a flawless way . Alix Gres and her
designs were always standout creations, innovative and ahead of
everyone else with their structural quality and innovative design
construction.

Drifting from the sinuous and graceful drapes and plisses of Madame
Gres, we then listened to Anna Sui in conversation with Andrew Bolton
(curator at the Costume Institute of the Metropololitan Museum of
Art). Miss Sui is undoubtedly one of the most celebrated and liked
fashion designers of our times. Her colorful and intricately stylized
clothes reflect the enriching and extremely focused creative path she
likes to follow.

Anna Sui spoke simply and with passion about her passion (it is an
"obsession" she told Mr Bolton and the audience). As she explained,
she is drawn to History past and recent, as well as the richness
offered by diverse cultures around the world. Each and every time,
Anna Sui goes through an intellectual obsession for a specific culture
and historical references. Once she is focused (err.... obsessed), she
explained us, she becomes obsessed and thrives to draw inspiration
from the singular cultural source to get her imagination and creative
sense in full swing.

To start the afternoon, Caroline Evans (professor of fashion history
and theory at Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design)
revealed many details about the life of Jean Patou, one of the first
fashion designers at the turn of the 20th century. Jean Patou's legacy
to the world of fashion is notable, as explained Ms. Evans: he
invented the first designer label, with his pockets outlined with a
"J" and "P". Like his fellow fashion designer Poiret, Jean Patou was a
brilliant public relations man. His clothes were marketed mostly to
wealthy American women who enjoyed his avant-garde mind and creations.
Jean Patou was fortunate in having many friends and family members who
worked with him and kept him in touch with Parisienne life. His sister
Madeleine, who was 7 years younger than he, was his main source of
inspiration. Mr Patou considered his sister to be his ideal. She
influenced her brother immensely. Nowadays the Jean Patou house is
mostly producing perfumes, all made with expensive, rare and natural
ingredients. "Joy" is a world-known rare and exquisite perfume.
One little note: the American women were the ones that "made" and
helped Mr. Patou in becoming a famous and wealthy fashion designer.
Oddly enough, the house of Jean Patou is located Rue St Florentin in
Paris, right across from the American Embassy....

Maria Cornejo is an interesting fashion designer: her approach to
designing clothes is all her own. Born in Chile, she travelled and
lived in places like Peru, England and Paris, France, before settling
in New York City. Her resolute and almost minimalist designs reveal
the influences brought by her past: she worked for many designers,
notably Comme des Garcons in Paris before moving to the USA in 1996
and starting her own line. Today, she creates for her two Manhattan
stores, one in Nolita and the other in the West Village.

Ms. Cornejo has a mind of her own, and a great one at that: she
designs clothes that fit in a sleek and flattering way on women. What
looks like simple patterns is much more: Ms. Cornejo pursuit in
designing clothes reveals a complicated and thoroughly
intellectualized approach to the way a specific fabric should be cut
in order to appear as a flattering counterpoint to the woman who wears
her clothes. Her creations appear to lack pretension, yet have a high
sense of refined sophistication. Listening to Maria Cornejo speak
about her past and present, her dreams and passions was a real
pleasure: she is down to earth, a mother and wife who manages to live
and succeeds doing many different things and doing them well.

The afternoon proceeded with Clare Sauro's "Head over Heels : The
Seductive Style of Christian Louboutin". (Clare Sauro is assistant
curator at The Museum at FIT).

The Museum at FIT is showing a rare and beautiful display of Mr. Louboutin until
April 19, 2008. The result of a great collaborative work between the
graduates students at the Fit, Dr. Evans, Dr. Steele and Dr. Zucher,
the exhibit showcases some of the best shoes the French born
mastermind has created over the years. Ms. Sauro' s lecture
encompassed all about Christian Louboutin and what makes him today the
world's best shoe designer, as well as discussing the pieces shown at
the exhibit.

Valerie Steele sat down with Linda Fargo, Women's Fashion Director
and Store Presentation at Bergdorf Goodman, and Michael Fink, Vice
President and Women's Fashion Director at Saks Fifth Avenue. Both
represent major stores that have been able to keep offering their
customers the best designs available in fashion. Both Ms. Fargo and
Mr. Fink are well known to have an impeccable and discerning sense of
fashion. Attending fashion shows throughout the world and keeping on
top of the ever changing trends that will be the requisite of the
next-to-come season are also factors that make them both the valuable
fashion executives they are. Listening to them in conversation with
Valerie Steele was a plus, the counterpart of the fashion designers
and the retrospectives that had taken place before they stepped on the
stage.

-Muriel Triffaut

+ 3/25/2008; Ernest and Permalink | 0 comments

Sunday, March 16, 2008

Christian Louboutin Exhibition



The Fashion Institute of Technology is offering us a beautiful
exhibit: from March 13 throughout April 19, the FIT will display some
of Christian Louboutin 's renowned shoe designs. . Kudos and thanks
are conveyed to Dr. Joyce Brown, D.r Valerie Steele and Dr. Steven
Zucher for a very well put together exhibit.

Mr Louboutin is without any doubt the most celebrated shoe designer
and maker nowadays. His designs burst with a unique sense of
creativity and haven't met their match so far. The exhibit is a superb
display of unique pieces, with photographs of icons like Marilyn
Monroe to explain part of the creative process. All the shoes are
amazing, in the sense that they are unique. Mr Louboutin's superb
sense of artistry is perfectly highlighted.



The exhibit plays along with Christian Louboutin 's sense of
discretion about his personal life: narrow beams of light showcase the
shoes, and around, semi darkness. The written signs and panels
informing the viewers are few: the exhibit has us enjoying beautiful
works of art, yet our knowledge of the designer remains scarce, even
mysterious. Christian Louboutin is like a magician, bringing to
reality shoes that in a sense, seem to belong to dreams or rather to a
fairy tale... the most extraordinary mix of creativity, ideas, and
knowledge.



The exhibit allows us to glimpse at the Fetish Ballerinas, shoes with
heels as high as the length of the sole. They were created for a 2007
exhibit entitled "Fetish" in collaboration with David Lynch. The Piet
Mondrian Platform is a beautiful and iconic homage to both the Dutch
artist as well as Yves Saint Laurent 's 1965's dress based on
Mondrian's work. The Guiness Pump addresses recycling issues as well
as the Trash Pump does. The delicate design of a beautiful pair of
lilac-colored shoes adorned with a flower of the same color reminds us
that Mr. Louboutin is not merely a modern designer with sometimes
eccentric ideas but a very gifted and talented man.

The designs displayed at the FIT are masterworks. The selection of
shoes shows very well the various influences that help the designer in
his creative work. Inspiration draws from historical references, his
own environment as well as his personal experiences. The Fetish
shoes allude of the times spent at the famed Parisian lounge "Le
Palace" and the Mondrian shoes celebrate a long collaboration with
Yves Saint Laurent. Christian Loubourin is an extraordinary person
who creates extraordinary shoes.

- Muriel Triffaut

+ 3/16/2008; Ernest and Permalink | 0 comments

Thursday, March 13, 2008

DianeClehane.com

Diane Clehane lookonline's entertainment editor has launched her own blog. She will be blogging on media, entertainment and fashion oriented topics. as well on her many conversations with A-list members of the entertainment and fashion industries.

+ 3/13/2008; Ernest and Permalink | 0 comments