
Model: Kate Moss
Magazine: Vogue UK
Issue: April 2010
Editorial: Basic Instinct
Photographer: Willy Vanderperre
Stylist: Miranda Almond

Model: Kate Moss
Magazine: Vogue UK
Issue: April 2010
Editorial: Basic Instinct
Photographer: Willy Vanderperre
Stylist: Miranda Almond

Model: Anastasia Kuznetsova
Campaign: Topshop
Season: Spring/Summer 2010
Stylist: Katie Shillingford
Photographer: Ben Toms
Miuccia Prada: “It’s not that I don’t want to embrace the Internet, but I don’t want to just throw random answers out there. In that case, I’d rather not answer.”
Patrizio Bertelli: “You don’t get it, do you? Communications move fast and fast communication compromises quality. It’s inevitable, and you have to accept that.
via Fashionista

Blake Lively; Victoria Beckham
Recently, Blake Lively was spotted wearing this black dress from Victoria Beckham's line of dresses to an event held in New York; while the designer chose the same dress for an evening out in Paris.
Who wore it best?


Eva Longoria Parker wore this asymmetric red strapless dress at The Noble Gift Gala at The Dorchester hotel yesterday.
I'm not so keen on this look but what do you think?

Donna Karan has noticed something: There are too many seasons, some of them faux, in the fashion calendar. And that means that stores often lack the weather-appropriate clothes their customers want, as in when bathing suits hit the shelves when everyone really wants to buy parkas. Because, she says, we now have seasons like pre-fall. And because fashion shows turn out spring styles in September and fall styles in February. The point is, Karan sees a lot of problems with the twisted way we buy and sell clothes, and she has ideas about how to fix the system.
"I hate to say it, somebody’s got to take the leap of faith and deal with the June, July market," Karan said to WWD. "Pre-fall shouldn’t exist, I’m sorry. Wrong. Let’s start there. We’ve got to bring clothes into season." Karan compares our fashion gluttony to actual gluttony, adding: "You eat all of the food, more, more, more, more and more. It’s an abundance of nausea. It’s too, too much until pop! It’s going to pop. All of this stuff, stuff, stuff, stuff; it’s going to obliterate each other. The whole thing has to be rethought, completely."

Image courtesy of Jak & Jil
Whilst it's overwhelmingly exciting to see the latest trends as they happen on the catwalks at New York, London, Milan and Paris, another highlight of the twice-yearly fashion month is the abundance of street style photography that takes place. And so it should be. Consider each fashion week as a gathering of the most stylish, the most outrageous and the most elaborately dressed people of the land - however this season it seems we experienced a famine.
One of our favourite ways to spend the little spare time we have during the fashion weeks is to trawl the latest findings of The Sartorialist, Facehunter, Jak & Jil and co, however this season it seemed there were fewer original street style photography published. “There’s a famine of street style this season!”, Tommy Ton declared on Twitter, who shoots for both his own site Jak & Jil, and Style.com. Phil Oh, of Street Peeper, however insists that it's not so much a lack of street style, but moreso the cluttering of new and inexperienced photographers that has caused the scarcity.