Pandora x NaNanette Lepore for New York Fashion Week

This season was all about collaborative creativity and celebrating the creative process. For the Spring/Summer 2016 season, International Danish jewelry manufacturer Pandora Jewelry partnered with international lifestyle brand, Nanette Lepore, showcasing jewelry at Lepore’s fashion presentation during New York Fashion Week. Pandora collaborated with Nanette Lepore earlier this year with a vibrant fashion runway show and expert … Read more

Anti-corrosive niche supercar ‘Marine Edition’ BAC Mono

BAC launched Marine Edition Mono easy winching onto a luxury yacht.
Completely customizable inside and out to compliment the colour scheme of your yacht.
Anti-corrosive ‘Marine Edition’ BAC Mono - custom designed for life on board the world's premier superyachts-2015

Luxury British carmaker BAC, the automotive company known as a unique British brand in the top tier of the global luxury market, unveiled its latest iteration of the popular Mono – The Marine Edition. Built-to-order, the luxury BAC Marine Edition Mono is based on popular single-seater Mono supercar, powered by 305bhp 2.5-litre Mountune engine.

Weighing only 580kg this ultra-lightweight supercar built to order at £500,000 is powered by a new 305hp normally aspirated engine delivered through a Hewland FTR gearbox, as found on current F3 race cars. Awarded Stig’s Car of the Year, Mono boasts a 0-60mph time of 2.8 seconds and a top speed of 170mph. Marine Edition comes complete with a carbon-fibre crane arm designed for Mono and to be used with all yacht crane systems.

BAC Mono outside Zadig & Voltaire 2013  Anti-corrosive Bac‘Marine Edition’ supercar --

Launched in collaboration with yachting company Camper & Nicholsons, the ‘Marine Edition’ will feature anti- corrosive ultra-high specification components to keep the car protected in salty climates, proprietary lifting system for safe and easy hoisting, an Environmental Control Container System for on board storage in climate- controlled environment, and bespoke interior and exterior design custom suited to yacht styling and owner preference, announced the ultra-luxury manufacturer.

“I have always wanted to combine my love of marine and automotive design. The ‘Marine Edition’ Mono represents the ultimate drive-and-arrive experience with great purity of purpose and style,” commented BAC co-founder Ian Briggs.

With a new dedicated factory in Liverpool, BAC is able to produce four cars per month.

Anti-corrosive Bac‘Marine Edition’ supercar - custom designed for life on board the world's premier superyachts Anti-corrosive ‘Marine Edition’ BAC Mono 2015 Anti-corrosive ‘Marine Edition’ BAC Mono - custom designed for life on board the world's premier superyachts

“Today’s super-yachts are paragons of exquisite taste, exceptional design, and the ultimate experience possible. It is only fitting that owners should be able to extend that experience beyond the vessel upon arrival,” said Andrew Whitney, Director of Strategy & Corporate Development at BAC.

“The Marine Edition Mono is uniquely qualified, with unparalleled design, performance and driving sensation, while its low mass of only 580kg allows vessels to carry even a brace of Monos for a little over a ton. What better way for friends to arrive?”

BAC Mono on the track 2012

 

Moleskine Kiss the Past Hello: Only Coke red, black and white

The Moleskine team invited designers from the “Mash-Up” project to use the notebook cover as their canvas to create a new Limited Edition Collection: Coca-Cola bottle’s 100th Anniversary on Moleskine.

Coca-Cola bottle's 100th Anniversary on Moleskine

Moleskine joins artists, designers and illustrators from around the world to participate in the Coca-Cola “Mash- Up” project for the 100th Anniversary of the iconic Coca-Cola contour glass bottle. The result is five representations of the iconic bottle on the front of the legendary notebook.

In addition to the Collection, Moleskine also invited German director/producer Tilman Singer to provide a short film exploring the notebook and iconic bottle.

MashupCoke

Coca-Cola bottle's 100th Anniversary on Moleskine notebook-4 Coca-Cola bottle's 100th Anniversary on Moleskine notebook-2 Coca-Cola bottle's 100th Anniversary on Moleskine notebook-1

American designer David Schwen created a photographic representation of eight bottles arranged in a pinwheel formation, dripping with fresh Coca-Cola Red paint. This image is stark on a white, hardcover canvas notebook. Available only through Moleskine Stores online and at Moleskine Retail Stores worldwide, it is printed in a limited run of 5,000.

The other covers are different illustrations of the bottle. Designers are Matt Allen, Chris Weston (for people design), Hitomi Watanabe and Iku Oyamada (HI(NY) design) and a team for Ogilvy & Mather Paris.

All Coca-Cola 200 mashup posters can be found on Instagram.

Coca-Cola bottle's 100th Anniversary on Moleskine notebook- Coca-Cola bottle's 100th Anniversary on Moleskine notebook-3 Coca-Cola bottle's 100th Anniversary on Moleskine notebook

 

Stealth Electric Bikes – a hybrid vehicle like nothing you’ll see on the roads

High-end off-road Stealth Electric Bikes, a big name in the professional action sports arena, packs a punch and delivers an unbelievable grin factor. With a top speed of 80km/h and a recharge time of just 2 hours, Stealth Electric Bikes deliver heaps of fun on any terrain. Handcrafted in Australia, Stealth Electric Bikes is home … Read more

Fashion makes an exhibition of itself to pull in the public

In a disused building in London, the French Louis Vuitton brand is offering a blockbuster experience

New York Fashion Week: Michael Kors cuts loose on the catwalk

Michael Kors Spring Summer 2016 show New York Fashion Week-kendaljenner Michael Kors Spring Summer 2016 show New York Fashion Week catwalk backstage-front row Michael Kors Spring Summer 2016 show New York Fashion Week catwalk backstage


Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “New York Fashion Week: Michael Kors cuts loose on the catwalk” was written by Hannah Marriott, for theguardian.com on Thursday 17th September 2015 10.21 UTC

Michael Kors is a master of the fabulous. A star-packed front row is a given for a mega brand of his calibre, but the presentation of spring/summer collection, in New York City’s light-filled Spring Studios on Wednesday, offered an elevated level of celebrity management: one front-row seat was cordoned off with a rope and guarded by two bouncers to ensure nobody sat in it by accident. It’s intended occupant turned out to be Naomi Watts, whose shiny blond bob nestled between Mario Testino and Olivia Wilde.

It was all pretty fabulous on the catwalk, too. As ever, the clothes in the US designer’s premium line (renamed Michael Kors Collection this season, having previously been known as Michael Kors) were luxe and evocative, conjuring up an irresistible, aspirational lifestyle.

A model backstage at the Michael Kors spring/summer 2016 show
A model backstage at the Michael Kors spring/summer 2016 show. Photograph: WWD/Rex Shutterstock

Clothes that were loose and flowing, with billowing silk georgette poet’s blouses half-tucked into soft, fil coupe skirts, or linen duster coats worn over loose, lightweight trousers. Long straps of fabric and ruffles added more texture. Even when there were straight lines – tailored jackets and neat little sky-blue dresses – they were decorated with rough-silk applique flowers. This loose, unstructured sexiness was in line with fashion’s current vision of the ideal woman right now: it is not enough simply to be glamorous; one must also appear to be carefree, quirky and intelligent.

Speaking before the show, Kors said that the collection was elegant “outdoorsy” and “earthy”, inspired by two outstanding women: artist Georgia O’Keeffe and jewellery designer Elsa Peretti, whom he described as “smart, successful, creative and chic”.

A model on the Michael Kors spring/summer 2016 catwalk
Applique flower power: a model on the Michael Kors spring/summer 2016 catwalk. Photograph: WWD/Rex Shutterstock

One show-stopper was a mid-calf, straw-coloured perforated suede jacket which, Kors said: “You could put on over your yoga clothes – because, sadly, people leave their house in their yoga clothes all over the world – and suddenly you would feel a million dollars. And it would cost you a million dollars, too.”

Kors was exaggerating about the price by a zero or two, but this collection will certainly be expensive – a dress could easily cost £3,000. It’s a world away from the more affordable luxury that has made Kors a household name over the past few years: the £300 handbags from his cheaper “Michael Michael Kors” range, with golden “MK” logos, that have become ubiquitous on the high streets. Those bags filled the gap created when brands such as Mulberry hoiked up their prices; the brand’s £250 watches – chunky metal bands; diamante-encrusted faces – offer a similar shot of pay-day luxury.

A model on the Michael Kors spring/summer 2016 catwalk
Long straps of fabric added texture: a model on the Michael Kors spring/summer 2016 catwalk. Photograph: WWD/Rex Shutterstock

Though that democratic approach has pleased customers worldwide, many financial analysts have recently urged caution, arguing that, in the luxury industry, a sense of exclusivity should be cultivated at all costs. Some have even started warning of impending doom for the brand through overexposure. Sales have been slowing for more than a year, although in the first three months of the current financial year, revenue rose by 7.3% to a better than expected $986m (£636m).

Juggling the two ends of the business will be the continuing challenge for Kors, who made the Forbes billionaires list in February this year, and is currently worth around $915m.

Certainly, there has never been a more important time to mark a line in the sand between the rarefied end of Kors’ business and the more populist handbags and watches. Today’s show – packed with celebrities and staggeringly expensive fabrics, with the brand subtly but significantly renamed – should help.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010

Published via the Guardian News Feed plugin for WordPress.