Showing posts with label Duchess of Cambridge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Duchess of Cambridge. Show all posts

Saturday, 22 December 2012

Kate Middleton Diamond Earring... NOT REAL!!


As sales of her imitation jewellery range soar, Belinda Hadden is the latest to profit from 'The Kate Effect.'


While you might raise a glass to your son's graduation or the birth of a first grandchild, you'd be forgiven for splashing out on a vast crate of Moet if the Duchess of Cambridge endorsed your jewellery business.

Like every belt, bow and perfectly poised fascinator, the Duchess's choice of earrings she wore to celebrate the Queen's Diamond Jubilee caused a figurative (and literal) diamond rush. Thing is, they weren't real.

The Duchess's £48 pearl and cubic zirconia earrings were part of Belinda Hadden's online range of convincing, imitation jewellery. The owner of Heavenly Necklaces enjoyed a stratospheric rise in profits once internet whistleblowers www.whatkatewore.com had identified the site.

Sunday, 16 December 2012

Zara is Flying High


High street fashion retailer Zara saw a 27 per cent rise in profits, opened 360 new stores and created 6,598 new jobs in the nine months to October 31, 2012.



The Duchess of Cambridge has been spotted in Zara pieces a number of times, which goes some way to explaining it's huge rise in popularity over the last 18 months. In December 2011, she wore a £69 lace-print dress from the shop which proceeded to sell out country wide. She also chose a cornflower-blue dress from the brand for her appearance the day after her wedding.

Zara owners have announced £1.3 billion profits.. Not bad at all ;)




Wednesday, 19 September 2012

Karl Lagerfeld offers his view on ‘sexy’ Carole Middleton

While Chanel creative director Karl Lagerfeld is no great fan of Pippa Middleton, he thinks her mother is 'very sexy'.

Karl Lagerfeld is full of praise for Carole Middleton Photo: REUTERS/ PA


While Chanel creative director Karl Lagerfeld is no great fan of Pippa Middleton, he thinks her mother is 'very sexy'.

While we all know what Karl Lagerfeld makes of the Duchess of Cambridge's sister Pippa Middleton - he famously remarked that she "should show only her back" - he has much admiration for her 57-year-old mother Carole.

"I think Carole is very sexy" he told Grazia. "I think the mother is sexier than the daughters. There is something full of life about her. For a woman who must be 50 or so, I think she's great. She's full of energy."

Not so full of praise: Pippa Middleton. Photo: Getty

The spotlight was on mother of the bride Carole at last year's royal wedding, where she looked elegant amid the royal guests in a powder blue creation by Catherine Walker and especially trim thanks to a rumoured stint on the high-protein Dukan diet.

Duchess Kate and Carole are even known to share clothes, with Kate recently borrowing a royal blue dress by Reiss from her mother's wardrobe for a public outing.
"I Love Kate Middleton" added Lagerfeld. "Kate can try anything. For make-up, she has no limits."

The Duchess of Cambridge. Photo: Reuters

The multi-tasking designer also tried to explain the venomous comments he made towards 28-year-old Pippa. "I only meant I don't think her make-up is right," he said, adding: "she has a roundish face and round eyes and should pick another make-up for the eyes." However he did conclude with: "Her sister's more beautiful."

Wednesday, 5 September 2012

The 10 most powerful people in fashion


Mert Alas and Marcus Piggott, both 40


The photography duo have made waves with their glossy, digitally manipulated images. Their oeuvre spans shooting Lara Stone on a bed of violets for Tom Ford's Violet Blonde fragrance advert to depicting Kate Moss as David Bowie for French Vogue. An image by Alas and Piggott is the 21st-century equivalent of a court portrait, with subjects portrayed as glamorous, powerful and otherworldly - as stars including Angelina Jolie, Madonna and Rihanna can attest.

Sarah Andelman, 36 


Andelman is the creative director of Colette, the chic Paris concept store famed for championing new designers. Named after Andelman's mother, Colette Roussaux, the shop's quirky elements - such as a bar devoted to mineral water - were revolutionary for a designer boutique when it opened in 1997. Andelman also pioneered the idea of designer collaborations; recently she's persuaded Hermès to create special Colette scarves and Burberry to design a trench-coat with a Swarovski-studded collar.


Bernard Arnault, 63 


The luxury-goods mogul - and world's fourth richest man, with a net worth of £26 billion, according to Forbes - holds the reins of the LVMH empire, whose fashion brands number Louis Vuitton, Céline, Marc Jacobs and Givenchy. Arnault also holds a controlling share in Christian Dior. Skilled at granting often mercurial designers the space to create blockbuster brands, Arnault is said to be currently mulling over which designer will take over the role John Galliano abruptly left vacant at Dior.


Christopher Bailey, 40


Since he became chief creative officer of Burberry in 2001, Bailey has transformed the brand with his romantic, windswept and quintessentially British vision. Along with its former chief executive Rose Marie Bravo and her successor, Angela Ahrendts, Bailey has led the charge in turning Burberry into a global brand, which made record profits of £206.3 million in 2011. Bailey, who previously worked for Tom Ford at Gucci, has also heightened the label's cool quotient by recruiting young British stars such as Emma Watson, Eddie Redmayne and Felicity Jones to star in its campaigns.

Sarah Burton, 37 


When Alexander McQueen died in 2010, many doubted that the label could continue without its founding designer at the helm. However, his righthand woman, Sarah Burton, has proved the sceptics wrong. Since she became creative director, Burton has retained the label's design rigour while revealing a more feminine side to the house's creations. She stamped her mark on fashion history when she created the Duchess of Cambridge's wedding dress

The Duchess of Cambridge, 30 


Kate may not be the world's most adventurous dresser, but since her grand coming-out in an Alexander McQueen wedding dress, she's started to push the style envelope, wearing Erdem, McQueen and Roksanda Ilincic alongside her high-street staples. But no matter how fashion forward she is - or isn't - her style has struck a chord with women. Whatever Kate wears - from a Reiss cream dress to a Whistles silk blouse - often sells out within hours of her being snapped in it.

Samantha Cameron, 40 


Cameron was already a major figure in the fashion industry when her husband became Prime Minister, thanks to her role as creative director at the leather-goods label Smythson. But now as châtelaine of No 10, Cameron has wasted no time in promoting the industry. From opening up her home to fashion soirées, to sporting Erdem or Peter Pilotto on official occasions, Cameron's position as an ambassador for the British Fashion Council means homegrown style is now showcased at the most stately of occasions.

Katie Grand, 40 


This stylist is a master of subverting a celebrity's image. Under Grand's direction, Elizabeth Hurley donned fetishstyle ballet shoes for the cover of Pop magazine, while Abigail Clancy, the wife of the footballer Peter Crouch, went from tabloid fodder into a Bardot-esque siren for Love magazine, a title Grand founded. Acting as a consultant to Louis Vuitton, Grand has an often kooky, left-field take on luxury, meaning she is one of the most in-demand image-makers.

Marc Jacobs, 48 


Marc Jacobs is the creative force behind his eponymous label and the house of Louis Vuitton, two of the most watched collections of any season. Together with his business partner, Robert Duffy, an early fan of Jacob's student designs back in the 1980s, they have overseen the opening of a string of Marc Jacobs stores from Vietnam to Hawaii, and a revitalised Louis Vuitton. There Jacobs introduced ready-to- wear to the luxury luggage label and turned the notion of logos on its head by commissioning artists such as Takashi Murakami and Richard Prince to rework the iconic monogram.

Lulu Kennedy, 42 


As the founder of the Fashion East initiative to support young designers, Kennedy seeks out the rare sparkling jewels among a sea of young fashion graduates. It's thanks to Kennedy that designers such as Roksanda Ilincic, Jonathan Saunders and Richard Nicoll all got their start. In recognition of her talents Kennedy was named an MBE in this year's New Year Honours list.







Popular Posts