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To make a name for yourself in fashion, especially a household name, there’s a lot to learn about timing, trends, egos. Vera Wang has mastered many of those lessons in the 20 years she’s led her own namesake company.

Wang made a list for the Associated Press of 20 nuggets of wisdom she’s gained in her career, not only as her own boss but reaching back to her time competitive ice-skating (she was a contender for the 1968 Olympic team), as a Vogue editor, and as a designer at Ralph Lauren.

vera wang

She’s still on alert for new tricks and strategies — guess that’s tip No. 21.

1. It’s not just about what you design, it is who you dress.

Wang tackled the red carpet long before she launched her runway collection. She was, however, already making bridal gowns and competition skating costumes, so it wasn’t a huge leap.

“I jumped into celebrity dressing when it was pretty new. There had been a moment of Scaasi with Barbra Streisand and Bob Mackie with Cher, but not in more recent times, so I jumped in with Valentino and Armani, and there was an article in Women’s Wear about how I was dressing Sharon Stone,” Wang says.

Stone’s 1998 Oscar-night combo of a purple skirt by Wang and white button-down shirt was publicity Wang never could have bought. Wang still has a strong awards-show presence, but, she says, it’s tougher now. “Now it’s the fashion Olympics to get people to wear your stuff. … The Oscars are killer.”

2. Timing is everything.

Even though her preference was for sportswear, the opportunity in fashion in the late ’80s-early ’90s was evening wear and bridal because those were big, expensive show-stopping pieces in the spirit of Christian Lacroix. Now, Wang says, in this era of Theory and Topshop, she’d probably do the reverse and start with contemporary, everyday clothes.

3. Luck helps too: It’s better to be lucky than smart.

Sometimes the big break comes from something out of your control. Wang points to Jason Wu, designer of Michelle Obama’s inaugural gown and many more outfits since then. He’s a young talent worthy of all the hype and praise, but there are other still-undiscovered designers who are, too.

“Smart” comes into play when you recognize the lucky break you’ve been handed and make the most of it, Wang says.

4. Nothing is new in fashion; its about how you reinterpret it.

There are only so many ways a garment can be sewn to be functional and flattering, Wang says. The challenge for the designers is to twist it and make it their own.

5. It’s not about the money. It’s about the money — always.

“We creative people don’t like worrying about it, but to be in business today, you have to face the reality of the business climate,” Wang declares. “I’ve redefined my business model constantly.”

Wang’s current partnerships include more affordable lines at Kohl’s and David’s Bridal. Business deals that make sense — and maintain integrity — allow her to let the creative juices continue for her primary collection, which is costly, she says.

6. Relevance is relevant.

Right now, in 2010, women want clothes that move seamlessly within their lifestyle — and budget. If you can’t mix a collection piece with something from a mass retailer, it’ll rarely see the light of day.

“Women don’t run around in ballgowns, I’m sorry to say.”

7. Everyone deserves true fashion at any price.

No matter how much something costs — high or low — it’s an investment on the part of the shopper, and she should be getting something that looks good. Style should be democratic, Wang says.

8. Fragrance is about the most personal thing a person can wear.

“Fragrance makes a statement about who you are,” says Wang. You want to be a girlie girl? There’s a scent for that. Rebel rocker? There’s a scent for that, too. City sophisticate? Check.

“Girls can attain fragrance and incorporate it into their daily lives and not spend a fortune.”

(And the messaging incorporated into fragrance ads really helps define your brand to a larger audience, she adds.)

9. A pair of shoes or boots can create attitude in a second.

You aren’t wearing the same persona in ballet flats as heels, and clunky Uggs create a different aura altogether, says Wang.

10. Fashion is expressive.

Building on the shoe-attitude theory, use accessories to change your outfit depending on your mood, but keep the core pieces classic. Change proportions, wear fine jewelry with T-shirts or a chunky necklace with a gown, she advises. But then keep those pieces and wear them a new way next year.

“Twenty years ago, fashion was all about rules: You wore a pump to a luncheon and a certain Hermes bag. Now it’s about what works for you — be preppy, downtown or Goth, or be all of those on a given day.”

11. In design, all people have is their own barometer to guide them.

Yes, there are larger cultural trends that designers need to be aware of, but Wang says if she isn’t “feeling” a particular colour or silhouette — no matter how popular — it won’t work in her collection. If she doesn’t believe in something, how can she convince others to?

12. “I have spent my entire career styling, dressing and designing only for women. Never underestimate the client.”

Wang says she doesn’t give a thought to what men will think of women wearing her clothes. If the woman feels pretty and sexy, she is pretty and sexy. Winning her over is all that matters.

13. Ready-to-wear: always out of my comfort zone.

The runway is Wang’s chance to show off who she is and her esthetic. (Think artful and dramatic.)

She says: “Designing this is a torturous process. It’s never easy for me, but that’s been good. I always push myself out of my comfort zone. I don’t see a reason to do it if I don’t.”

14. Bridal: conservative, flamboyant — you never know.

The bridal collection has to have much broader appeal and be targeted toward the client’s tastes, Wang says. Most brides aren’t as influenced by fashion trends as they are the vision of the wedding dress they’ve always dreamed of. She considers herself more of a costume designer in the spirit of Edith Head than a tastemaker when it comes to bridal.

15. It takes courage to put yourself out there.

Reviews can be hard to read, she says, because the reviewers are ignoring the bravery it takes on a designer’s part to churn out collection after collection — on a strict schedule — to an often fickle audience. A filmmaker, for example, often can reshoot something or extend a deadline when something isn’t working. A designer doesn’t have that luxury.

16. Dressing athletes is a crazy winning — and losing — sport.

Skating was such an important part of her own life that she gets very emotionally wound up with the skaters she has dressed, including Nancy Kerrigan, Michelle Kwan and Evan Lysacek, she explains. She wants the clothing to contribute to a performance instead of hamper it, which could happen if things aren’t cut perfectly.

17. You’re not always successful.

“I had to learn to dust myself off and try again. That’s my real story. I went to Vogue and I was not getting the big jobs and then I went to Ralph Lauren. I didn’t feel like there was much more I could do at the time there — and I think that’s given me the opportunity to struggle. You have to struggle to appreciate the successes in your life. It’s not real otherwise.”

18. You are only as good as your team.

No one can do it all, Wang says, herself included. Fashion is not unlike a team sport, where there are a handful of people who get the glory, but it took many to get them where they are.

19. Keep fighting. Don’t sit on your laurels.

If you hang back, even just one season or one awards show, someone else is waiting to take your place, she says.

20. Everyone’s journey/route is different.

Wang says she tries hard not to compare herself to other designers, businesswomen, wives or mothers. Everyone makes choices based on their own situation and no one else will ever fully understand those decisions, she says, they can only second-guess them.

“I’ve tried to create a life for me that is complete. The truth is, everyone’s route is different. It doesn’t mean one is better than the other, they’re just different.”


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2011 Wedding Dress Trends

Posted by admin On October - 12 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS Subscribe here

It may seem a little early to start discussing the upcoming trends for 2011, but in the design world, often trends are upwards of 18 months out. We’ve been doing a lot of reading and researching of the topic, and believe we’ll be as close as anyone else in discussing what’s possibly coming.

carolina herrera wedding dress

For one thing, the time has passed as far as inexpensive dresses go. Vera Wang and others scaled back most of their ensembles for 2009 and 2010 because of a weak economy, but they’re not staying there. Feeling that the economy might turn for the better, or at least isn’t still getting worse, wedding gown prices will be going back up, which means the best materials will be returning once more. Not that the materials used before weren’t good, but the best of the best will be back in fashion, lots of tulle and expensive lace, as well as extensive embroidery.

Next, simple fashions will be out of style. A bride can still get an A-line silhouette, but it will be embellished and bunched and styled such that no one will look at her and think “simple”.

Vibrancy will be back, which means dresses with lots of colors and patterns. As a matter of face, dresses like the Carolina Herrera we’re exhibiting here with a trumpet silhouette, which is a modified mermaid only without the waist cinched as tight, highlights the type of styles that wedding dresses will be highlighted with. But there will be dresses of all sorts of colors, and not necessarily muted autumnal colors.

One trend that will continue will be the strapless sleeveless wedding dress, as brides will continue to show off their arms, necks, and shoulders. There will be more flair in bodices and probably less cinching, which means brides will be breathing better than this past year. But elegance will still be the standard, especially for those brides who have the income to afford very nice wedding gowns.

One final trend that’s being predicted is “bunched”, as in bunched tulle, bunched lace, bunched silk… you name it, you’re going to have a lot more of it. Fabric is in, probably because one can do so many different things with more fabric, whereas going minimal usually means a wedding dress that might be classic, but somewhat boring in many eyes.


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The fairy Godmother of wedding dresses, Vera Wang, spoke to “The Insider” on Tuesday night about one of her latest headline-making masterpieces–Chelsea Clinton’s stunning gown. The names behind the designer labels stepped away from the drawing board to attend “Fashion’s Night Out: The Show” in Lincoln Center.

Vera said Chelsea and her new husband Marc Mezvinsky are “an incredible couple and I was very proud to [make] the dress. I’ve known her since she was a young girl.”

chelsea clinton wedding dress

The fashion industry’s queen bee, Vogue editor-in-chief Anna Wintour, set out on a mission to make lofty trends accessible to not just the elite few that get the golden ticket to the Fashion Week tent. “We wanted to really get the woman in the street, the man in the street excited about shopping, excited about fashion, and we feel it’s a very democratic event,” she said. “Tonight is a consumer fashion show open to anyone who bought a ticket. It’s not just about the insiders.”

Vera supported this groundbreaking catwalk as well, which features clothing of all different price points, available in stores now. “I also think it brings fashion to where it should be, which is with the arts,” she asserted. “That’s arguable, but to me fashion is an art form. It’s expressive, it’s interactive…”

The event brought out the girly-girl side of model Bar Refaeli. She said, “As a girl, I like to every day get dressed up. Every night there’s a different event, a different party, so I get to wear all kinds of designers and get made up, makeup, hair.”

The brainchild of Vogue, major cities worldwide are hosting Fashion’s Night Out events on Friday, September 10 with special in-store promotions and celebrity appearances. “Project Runway” judge and style maven Michael Kors implied, “I think simplistically, it’s turning shopping and fashion into a holiday. Last year it was more exciting than Halloween.”

Didn’t make it to the runway to catch the action live? No worries. Tune in to CBS on September 14 as the buzzed-about fashion show is broadcast on television.


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Top Wedding Designers

Posted by admin On July - 26 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS Subscribe here

2010 wedding dress

Beautiful Styles form Amsale Aberra

With a degree from the Fashion Institute of Technology and after having a frustrating time finding her own wedding dress for her 1985 wedding, Amsale Aberra, who is today one of the top wedding designers in the world, began her career custom making wedding dresses. A simple stage at first, a mere advertisement in the back of a bridal magazine, however, the orders did begin. And, today Amsale is renown around the world for her quality and craftsmanship.

Many celebrities have taken advantage of Amsale Aberra artistic creations such as Trista Rehn aka the Bachelorette and Alyson Hannigan. Others that have enjoyed her creations include Julia Roberts, Lisa Kudrow, Halle Berry, and Salma Hayek.

Amsale Aberra is noted for a classic yet modern style. From the small advertisement in the back of the bridal magazine, today Amsale Aberra has developed into four lines – Amsale Bridal, Christos, Amsale Evening, and Kenneth Pool all featured in her New York showroom.

Amsale Aberra’s wedding dresses cost between $3000 and $12000 and found at Saks Fifth Avenue, Bergdorf Goodman, and Neiman Marcus.

Beautiful Styles from Alfred Sung

With a background of studies in Paris, Alfred Sung- a Chinese-born Canadian, has become one of the top wedding fashion designers in the world.

With a beautifully tasteful style Alred Sung has created a stunning crafted signature bridal collection that is comprised of silhouettes from classic elegance to romantic bridal gown. Materials include silk essence chiffons, Angel Tulle, chiffons, and organzas. The gowns are absolutely stunning and can be found at many bridal boutiques.

Beautiful Styles from Vera Wang

With a past of sixteen years at Vogue as Senior Fashion director, and a period with Ralph Lauren, Vera Wang, set into the bridal industry creating her own fashions. And, beautiful at that.

In 1990 she opened a luxury salon, showcasing her bridal collection. Quickly, the world took notice and Vera Lang was on top in the bridal industry.

Today Vera Wang has expanded her brand to include jewelry, shoes, eyewear, fragrance and a home collection with Wedgewood. All marked with her elegant and sophisticated style. Most of her dresses range from $2000 to $7000 and can be found at upscale bridal salons, and department stores including Neiman Marcus, Barney’s and Saks Fifth Avenue.


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Wedding dresses have been at the center of focus in many movies. A wedding dress is meant to make a bride look great, and has a special significance of beginning a new life as a married woman in grandeur. In many Hollywood movies, wedding dresses have been paid special attention and the styling has been borrowed by many of the top wedding dress designers today.

Hollywood Movies beautiful wedding dress

The fabulous, cocktail-length white satin wedding dress worn by Jennifer Lopez in The Wedding Planner, designed by Vera Wang, stole the show among all the gowns that were featured in the movie. The dress had a strong Givenchy influence from the early 1960s, which was the preferred style of Jackie Kennedy. The simple, street-length satin outfit is the perfect inspiration for an older or second-time bride.

The wedding dress worn by Keira Knightley in Love Actually is a true reflection of the 21st century bride. The netted portion of the dress that reveals Keira’s stomach was designed escpecially to show off her navel piercing. Several dress designers have adapated the illusion-netting design after seeing Kiera show off the design in the movie. The delicate dress designed by Joanna Johnston, the lace gown looks more like a slip dress than a wedding dress.

Julia Roberts, in Runaway Bride, wears a wedding gown by costume designer Albert Wolsky. The popular getaway gown features off-shoulder bodice and short puffed sleeves. Julia does well to carry off the design with her height. The sheer length of the skirt and train added to the romantic appeal of the setting.

The long-sleeved gown made from cream and taupe crocheted lace was a classic medieval wedding dress created by John Sruscott that won him an Academy Award for best costume design. The wedding dress worn by the Vanessa Redgrave in Camelot captured the mood of the 1960s and at the same time portrayed much of the designs from the medieval period.

French designer Hubert de Givenchy has the distinction of desigining Audrey Hepburn’s wedding dress in real life and in Funny Face as well. The elegant wedding dress of close-fitting bodice with chiffon overlay and white satin cap sleeves was perfect for Ms. Hepburn’s long and graceful arms. The dress featured a nipped waist with a full white tulle skirt that is ideal for any delicate figure.
There are several wedding dress designers that showcase some of the best designs and styles in the industry. Many move on to becoming famous costume designers in Hollywood as well.


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Every one wants to sell a style statement of their own and when it comes to weddings we all love to be unique.

Celebrities and stars also love to publicize their lavish wedding celebrations and related ceremonies. Designer bridal gowns, exclusive diamond rings, innovative hair styles and make up, exotic locations and so many other splendid things related to celebrity weddings and parties become the talk of the town for months together. Whether these weddings stand the test of time or not, the ceremonies and the hype surrounding it are never forgotten by fans and the public all over the world.

This year 2010 began with the wedding of the ‘Bachelor’ couple Molly Malaney and Jason Mesnick in the Rancho Palos Verdes’ Terranea Resort in California on February 27. When Molly walked down the aisle with her father, Jason Castro an erstwhile American Idol performed the classic ballad ‘Over the Rainbow’ which also featured in the ‘Song of the Centuries’ list. Her $45,000 strapless bridal gown, jewelry and Blahmik shoes topped all fashion charts for weeks.

The next party in queue is the third time marriage ceremony of Mariah Carey and Nick Cannon who get married every year. They celebrate each wedding anniversary by tying the knot every year and re-strengthening their vows. Their actual wedding in 2008 was a fiesta in the Bahamas and the highlight was the $2.5 million wedding ring the groom presented the bride. Carey gets a new ring every year on their anniversary from Cannon.

Last December saw the winter wedding of Kevin Jonas and Danielle Deleasa that happened at the Oheka Castle in the presence of four hundred guests. The aisle was decorated with shimmering snow flakes and Swarovski crystals and the bride looked just breath taking in a strap less Chantilly lace Vera Wang gown. The first dance was for Keith Urban’s ‘Only you can love me this way’ which was followed by cutting of the splendid seven tiered wedding cake with Swarovski crystals.

The ‘Bachelor’ and ‘Dancing with the Stars’ contestant Melissa Rycroft married Tye Strickland before two hundred esteemed guests in Isla Mujeres, Mexico. Melissa walked down the aisle bare foot wearing a stunning gown designed by Alfred Angelo. ‘Monday Night Football’ which was the theme song was played soon after the traditional vows were exchanged. Celebrity weddings, proms and parties become trend setters for the manner in which they are organized and for the clothes and fashion ideas they launch.


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