The five factions of men’s fashion
2014 January 9. | Szerző: shannon
Nowhere else do men in challenging tracksuits mingle more freely with men in three-piece suits than at the masculine fashion shows in London.
Today (Wednesday January 8) the male showcase – formally titled London Collections: Men – comes to a close with a schedule that veers from experimental knitwear at Sibling and goth-tinged sportswear at KTZ to luxury ‘heritage’ fashion at Burberry and impeccably made, incredibly priced English shoes at John Lobb. This dizzying spectrum is reportedly worth £10 billion a year to the national economy. It is also tricky to unravel. So here, from the ostentatiously loopy left, via a safely tasteful centre, and through to the creative conservatives, we present a guide to the factions of men’s fashion.
1 THE NEW RADICALS

Imagine it: you’re male, under 25 (or at least you wish you were), and you want to stand out from sad old squares and suits. Skinny jeans and logo T-shirts are mainstream, and demonstrations are so last century; so to really mark your generational territory, what you need is hard-to-credit conceptual clothing.
If you’re older and wiser, you might splutter, then mutter that things just aren’t what they used to be. You’d be wrong to, though: from punks back to Bowie and beyond, dressing in a way calculated to confuse your elders has become a time-honoured trope of radical teenager-dom.
KEY DESIGNER: Craig Green
This young Londoner became the poster boy for “What are you on about?” radicalism when, last season, he presented a series of wooden sculptures as clothes. This time round, Green tempered his grand gestures a little, mixing monkish silhouettes (above) with a painted rose window pattern and some alarming harnesses.
Bobby Abley (above right), who shows in the Topman-funded MAN show alongside Green, trumped his peer this season by getting his drooling models to wear mouth-retainers (“so McQueen 20 years ago”, sighed an unshockable veteran as he watched). They topped off a collection of mohair and sportswear in which Abley daringly played with Disney-style decoration – very daringly indeed if it was done without permission.
WEAR IT IF: You’re an enfant terrible.
2 THE LADIES MEN
Fifty years after the sexual revolution, fashion is catching up. After all, if traditional gender roles are shifting so fundamentally, why shouldn’t their traditional clothes change too? At the women’s shows, you see plenty of ‘masculine’ looks: minimalist tailoring, ‘boyfriend’ trousers, and even the odd tuft of artificial facial hair. Thus, at the men’s shows there are ever more flashes of lace, jauntily swung handbags and one-shoulder numbers to smoulder in. Are you man enough to slip into one?
KEY DESIGNER: JW Anderson
Ever since this young Northern Irishman started showing in London a few years ago, his agenda was to disregard gender. Later, Anderson showed to the women’s crowd and became an instant darling. He still shows menswear – and yesterday unleashed elegant tabards, carefully proportioned platform heels, backless blouses, and ruffles aplenty (above). It was held in the home of the University of London Officers’ Training Corps, and afterwards the men in uniform looked heartily baffled. Anderson insisted: “I find the idea of looking into what is right for a woman or what is a right for a man really stale. It’s a dated concept. Instead, I work with an idea of a shared wardrobe.”
Also flavoured by femininity is the work of Jonathan Saunders (this season: Arts-and-Crafts trousers and satinate tracksuits), and Richard Nicoll (pastel skinny-fit frills, inset) – both known for womenswear.
WEAR IT IF: You don’t mind it being borrowed from your wardrobe.
3 THE STYLISH CENTRISTS

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Not too old and not too young. Not too out there – but not boring either. Defining the centre ground of fashion without becoming dull is the hardest niche to fill in the spectrum of nattiness. A theme can be fun, but these clothes have to be practical, and rugged, too.
KEY DESIGNER: Oliver Spencer
Harrogate-born Oliver Spencer’s show today will feature a flash of tartan, a few veiled references to architecture and plenty of chin-stroking prints (right). But, he said: “The key is that we always try and make clothes that a man will want to wear over and over, time and time again.
“The more you wear it, the more you will appreciate the fit and the material – my favourites in this collection have come from mills in Lancashire and been used in coats made in Bow. We are a label that concentrates more on making clothing that will suit your life, rather than on more extreme show pieces that barely anyone would ever wear.” Other designers who overlap with this stylish centre include Lou Dalton (from the left), Margaret Howell (bang in the middle, pictured below) and Sir Paul Smith (from the suity side).
WEAR IT IF: You’re bothered, but you don’t want to give the appearance of being so.
4 THE EMINENTLY CONVENTIONAL

Lapels may narrow and trousers widen. Collar shapes change constantly while jacket lengths go down as well as up. But a suit is a suit is a suit – however much you mess with it, this garment has longevity because it is both flattering and forgiving. So-called “sartorial” dressing – fashionese for suit and their sundries – is now about lustrous fabrics, restrained pattern (if any), and blue-chip back stories. The suit isn’t nearly the power it once was but it marches on with majesty undiminished.
KEY DESIGNER: Hardy Amies
Hardy Amies may have dined out on his tales of dressing the Queen, but this couturier’s real meat and drink was menswear, specifically suits. From Alberta to Adelaide, Amies licensed his designs across the Commonwealth, making a mint. Its founder is now dead, but this brand has been revived from its old base on Savile Row, and is again pitching Amies-labelled suiting to department stores around the world. Designer Mehmet Ali said that his new season collection (above) of suits, bags and more was partly inspired by Amies’s war work in intelligence. “He was very outspoken, but had that covert existence too. We wanted to balance that aesthetic – elegance and style – with a real functionality.”
Gieves & Hawkes and Ede & Ravenscroft are two suit specialists on the London Collections register. Marks & Spencer presented its Best of British collection here this week, along with Hackett (inset).
WEAR IT IF: You want to play it safe in style.
5 THE DADDISH DANDIES

His jacket has one button undone on the sleeve, half-an-inch of shirt cuff showing at the wrist, and is fitted just so. He is either older in years but younger in outlook, or a youngster who wants to look grown up. Both age groups flirt with pulsating colour in the summer, mismatched old English patterns in the winter, and double-breasted jackets all year. Simultaneously fuddy-duddy and dandified.
KEY DESIGNER: Richard James
“When we set up in a shop the size of a cupboard on Savile Row 20 years ago,” said Richard James before his show yesterday, “it felt very fusty; a street for old people. None of the tailors had windows [whereas] ours was brightly lit, and we sold ready-to-wear [off the peg], which alarmed them.”
Two decades later, James represents the new Establishment in menswear. David Cameron wears his suits, while Mayfair is strewn with well-heeled Peter Pans in eye-catchingly bright jackets, open-necked shirts and pocket squares. So successful has the look become that a conservative clique of 20-somethings now apes it, even if they don’t have the investment portfolios to match. Modern British tailoring, as cut by James, has provided a template for companies like Rake and Kent & Curwen – as well as many European tailoring companies – to combine decadent decorative touches with soberly cut silhouettes. Tom Ford is the king of this particular niche.
WEAR IT IF: You’re a party-loving alpha male (or want to be one).
Pimple After Shaving: Home Remedies
2014 January 7. | Szerző: shannon
Shaving is one of the basic grooming essentials a man has to follow. A man would look unclean and go unrecognised if he goes out without shaving for more than 3-5 days. That is why, a man has to shave whenever required. ADVERTISEMENT Shaving however causes some skin problems like skin irritation, razor cuts and burns and red bumps. Some men complain of getting acne or red pimples the next day after shaving. Well, this is not an unusual skin problem which only you face. There are a lot of men who get acne or pimple one day after shaving.
Well, the small red balls are not actually pimples. It is the ingrown hair or the body’s reaction to the injury of shaving. Do not treat it by squeezing or pricking. This can leave permanent marks behind so, always be careful if you suffer from pimple after shaving. Here are some simple remedies to treat pimples after shaving.
Home Remedies For Pimples After Shaving:
1. Use a good quality razor. Make sure you do not use the same razor after 4-5 shaves. Always clean the razor well and dry the blades after washing.
2. There are a lot of people who use electric razors to save time. Moreover, these razors make shaving an easy grooming task. If you are using an electric razor, then make sure you change the blade after 2-3 shaves. However, it is advisable to use a new single-blade razor every time you shave.

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3. Avoid using double and triple-edge blades. It pulls out the hair from the follicle which is actually below the epidermis. As the hair finds it difficult to grow out, it can lead to pimples and inflammation.
4. One of the home remedies to reduce pimples that pop up after shaving is, apply rubbing alcohol. You can either apply some aftershave as ti contains alcohol which can reduce the chances of getting red bumps and pimples after shaving.
5. Applying ice cubes on the pimple can be a relief. This is a simple home remedy to treat pimples after shaving. Rubbing ice cubes is also a remedy for other skin problems that can occur after shaving like razor cuts or burns.
6. Exfoliating before shaving is one of the ways to prevent pimples that can pop up after shaving.
7. Always shave in the downward style. Shave down instead of coming up from the neck. This will prevent skin rashes and razor bumps.
8. To prevent pimples or razor bumps after shaving, it is best to rinse the face with warm water. This dilate your blood vessels and bring more blood to the area that you are about to shave. That is why, shaving in hot shower is always considered best!
Try these remedies to reduce pimples after shaving.
Cara Delevingne’s New Mulberry Campaign is Quirky Perfection
2014 January 3. | Szerző: shannon
Behold an ad that’ll make you wish you were in spring. 2013’s most-searched model knows how to quirk for the camera, and Miss Cara Delevigne’s latest Spring Summer 2014 collaboration with Mulberry is no exception. After achieving success with Delevingne in its Fall 2013 campaign rife with allusions to Tippi Hedron in Hitchcock’s The Birds, Mulberry signed Delevingne for another season with a wildlife motif. The concept? A topsy turvy tea party occupied by an array of farm animals.
Delevingne’s Spring ad campaign for Mulberry is twee with a twist, featuring a grazing pony, a pelican, cockatoo, tortoise, and a host of disobedient dogs. Mulberry’s eccentric concept behind the shoot is not a stretch for the model, whose signature kooky expressions and outlandish campaigns define her career as much as her sought-after eyebrows. Delevingne’s previous idiosyncratic projects include a punk Marie Antoinette-themed Chanel campaign, a neon sportif shoot for DKNY, and a shimmering Disco throwback campaign for Blumarine.

Photographed by Tim Walker, the shoot took place at an 18th century Oxfordshire home where climbing vines of vibrant blooms and a messy table of treats set the stage for Mulberry’s sleek bags and streamlined floral ensembles. Mulberry’s handbag collection took shape in a number of reinterpreted classics, such as the Bayswater tote, in a range of neutral shades, punctuated by pops of crimson and persimmon. The clothing took a subtly feminine route, an interplay of muted brocade and neutral stripes with punchy patterns.
Winter weddings rare but distinctive
2013 December 30. | Szerző: shannon
Matt and Emily Skoronski prayed for snow on their wedding day.
The Perryman couple chose Dec. 28, 2012, to get married because they love winter. Snow would have made the day perfect.
“I wanted it to snow, because what’s a winter wedding without snow? But it ended up being a sunny 40-degree day,” Emily says. Her bouquet was adorned with acorns and snowflakes, and personalized snowflake wedding ornaments were given to guests as wedding favors.
“My husband grew up in Massachusetts, and I love the cold and snow, so having a winter wedding was a no-brainer for us.”
The Skoronskis aren’t alone — but they’re close to it. Winter nuptials account for just 5 percent of all weddings nationwide. In Maryland, that statistic is 2 percent, says Jamie Miles, editor at The Knot, an online wedding resource. Still, they offer upsides such as lower costs and distinctive visuals.
“It’s even less popular in Maryland than the rest of the U.S. The number has stayed relatively flat since 2009,” Miles says. “We are predicting for 2013 it will remain pretty steady.”
Cold weather makes travel difficult, and the unpredictability scares brides off from winter weddings. Insurance, agreements with vendors and a backup plan are necessary for winter weddings.
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“If we’re in Baltimore and there’s a blizzard, you’re in trouble,” says Diana Venditto, owner of Eventi Planning in Baltimore.
Raquel Shutt, owner of Wedding Savvy in Annapolis, remembers one wedding a few years ago at the Naval Academy in Annapolis. It had snowed heavily the night before. Shutt spent most of the day before and the morning of the wedding making sure the photographers, florist and caterer were going to show up. She also had to make sure the transportation company would drive guests to and from the hotel.
“It was the day of a huge, huge snowstorm,” Shutt says. “I had assistants with me that day because we knew it was going to be a tough job.”
Snow can make for stunning photographs, but it can also make some areas difficult to shoot. At the Naval Academy wedding, the field was covered with snow, but the bridal party took pictures anyway. “All the girls that day had snow boots as a backup. Everybody had winter jackets and cute furs,” Shutt says. “People do want and expect from the bridal party a few outside shots.”
Colder weather was a draw for Peter and Renee Coolbaugh of Baltimore when they were planning their December wedding. There was no snow on their Dec. 7 wedding day. The next day; however, it snowed a couple inches.
“The day of our wedding it was about 40 and windy,” says Renee. “We got snow the next day and that made it fun for our guests getting home.”
Renee and Peter knew messy weather was a possibility.
“There’s no way I wanted a summer wedding. I don’t like to be hot. We wanted cooler temperatures,” Renee says. “I’m more of a cold weather kind of person.”
Renee’s one regret about the timing of her wedding was photo locations.
“The places I really wanted photos weren’t possible in 40-degree weather,” Renee said. “One thing, if you’re thinking about this season, think about where you want your photos.” Renee and her bridal party took photos at a harborside hotel in the outside garden on the eighth floor, and she and Peter took photos around Little Italy.
Despite the drawbacks, winter has some wedding perks. With amazing photographs and festive decor, they can be beautiful and memorable, says Shutt.
“There’s something about a winter wedding that is intrinsically more romantic,” says Shutt. There are candles and fireplaces and plenty of greens and warm hues. It all meshes in a winter wedding, she says.
Emily and Matt’s reception was at the Bulle Rock Residents’ Club in Havre de Grace. It was decorated with Christmas trees and poinsettias, which the couple loved.
“It is always decorated to the nines for Christmas,” Emily says. Two evergreens in the hallway were decorated with snowflake ornaments for the guests to take home. “I had an ice-blue color for lighting in the reception to give it more of an icy wonderland look.”
And all that romantic ambience will cost less in winter. Because weddings are scarce in winter, reception sites and vendors often offer major discounts. Some sites are already decorated for the holiday or winter season.
“You can save money that way if you like the decor,” says Venditto. “Winter can be gorgeous, and you can make it your own.”
Natural Lip Balms For Winters
2013 December 26. | Szerző: shannon
During winters, the skin becomes dry and itchy as well. Your whole body looks patchy and dry, even after applying lots of body lotion and moisturiser, things do not work the best. The most common area which gets affected during winters is your lips. Often a lot of people suffer from chapped, dry and rough lips during winters. This is all because of the weather which makes the skin dry. Dry lips can look really embarrassing. So, if you do not want flaunt dry and chapped lips, you need to care for them and make them look soft and pink.
Some of the lip balms have too much chemicals which can either burn the soft lips or darken them gradually. So, why waste money on expensive lip balms which are not even worthy. Try some homemade lip balms which can soften the skin and moisturise it as well. They are prepared with simple ingredients and can save your money too. Moreover, if you are running late, just apply the ingredient directly on the lips. For example, olive oil is one of the natural lip balms which can either be used as one of the ingredients to prepare homemade lip balm or applied directly on the lips.
Here are some homemade lip balms for you to apply on winter. It is natural and doesn’t have any side-effect. To save your lips from cracking and peeling off, take a look… Natural Lip Balms For Winter:
Coconut Oil or Milk
This is one of the natural lip balms which is best for dry winters. Apply coconut oil or milk on dry and chapped lips to keep it soft and moisturised.

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Glycerin
A lot of lip balms are made using glycerin. It moisturises the skin and also softens it. Moreover, glycerin also helps get pink lips naturally.
Olive Oil
You can apply olive oil not just on your lips but also on your face to keep it soft and moisturised. Olive oil helps get baby soft skin.
Honey
Mix honey with lemon and scrub on the face. It is one of the homemade scrubs which removes dead skin cells and also exfoliates it. If you have chapped and dyr lips, massage with honey as it is a natural moisturiser.
Butter
Applying butter is one of the best ways to prevent chapped and dry cracked lips during winter. Apply butter and massage before going to bed.
Ghee
Massage your lips with ghee to make them pink and soft. It is one of the natural ways to prevent dry and chapped lips during winters.
Milk Cream
This is a grandma’s trick to ensure that you have soft, pink and glowing lips during winter.
For a healthy and lustrous mane
2013 December 23. | Szerző: shannon
For brides-to-be, even the most dazzling and stunning outfits will not have the desired effect if their tresses are dull and lifeless. Read on to know what you can do to keep your hair shining and radiant on your D-Day.
Dry hair. Dull hair. Overly curly and unmanageable hair. Oily hair. Dandruff. Hair fall. These are the problems you want to get rid of before your wedding date draws closer, if you wish to have smooth and shiny hair. And like Rome wasn’t built in a day, you cannot expect to relieve yourself of these problems if you wait till the eleventh hour.
While women with normal hair can begin tending to their hair a month before, those battling hair fall and dandruff need to start preparing well in advance to get best results, say doctors and hair specialists.
“Dandruff and hair fall necessitate specific treatments, targeting the causal factor so that problem is curbed, and this takes time. Hence, it is advisable for such women to start hair care regimes 3-4 months before the wedding,” says cosmetic dermatologist Dr Jaishree Sharad. “Hair vitamins like biotin, amino acid supplements are prescribed. For application, hair serums that contain plant extracts like cysteine and methionine, nourish and give a shine to the hair,” she adds. She also says that dandruff is treated according to its type. For an oily scalp, dandruff ketaconazole shampoo and anti-fungal tablets work well whereas for a dry scalp dandruff, the treatment is application based.
Many brides-to-be opt for salon treatments to make their manes wedding-ready. However, even this calls for an early appointment with the salon expert. Monaz Cooper of Kamal’s salon has lengthy consultation with clients who will be tying the knot in order to understand their lifestyle that comprises their eating, working and sleeping habits. All these differ from person to person and have an impact on the hair.

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“It is thus important to know your client so that you can recommend the right kind of treatment. For instance, L’Oréal has come up with the Mythic Oil ritual that is best suited to treat dry and frizzy hair as it cleanses the root and nourishes the ends. Even highly curly hair can be tamed with the right shampoo and mask used over a period of minimum four sittings,” Cooper explains.
If you want to sport a new hairstyle, it is safe to go for it two months in advance to make sure you get comfortable with it. This will also make it easier to choose the hairdo that suits your new style.
Home remedies will always be a part of beauty regimes and you can easily whip up natural ingredients for hair wash and conditioning. “Make a paste out of hibiscus leaves and aritha or reetha (soap nut) to wash your hair. Following this you can apply a conditioner made of olive or almond oil and a spoon of fresh aloevera extract,” suggests Dr Sharad.
The most important, however is the diet intake, she says. As much as external care, consumption of protein-rich foods like eggs, chicken and walnuts that have high omega 3 fatty acids, will ensure that the hair gets the required nourishment.
So, make sure you pamper your hair well before the wedding and make heads turn your way!
ScarJo on beating the bloat
2013 December 19. | Szerző: shannon
Scarlett Johansson needs to exercise after eating big meals.
Scarlett Johansson feels “bloated” if she stays still after eating.
The 29-year-old actress is known for her enviable figure, which has earned her the Sexiest Woman Alive title from publications such as Esquire and Playboy in the past.
Although she doesn’t follow a strict diet to keep in shape, Scarlett strives to be active after tucking into a big meal.
“I am one of those people who feels bloated if I sit around too long eating and drinking and not exercising,” she explained to British magazine You. “So I may hit the gym a bit more [in the New Year], but not as punishment or out of guilt but because I feel physically and mentally better when I exercise. And it’s nice time out for myself.”

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Scarlett feels comfortable venturing out in public by herself, crediting her petite stance for keeping her hidden.
However, she sometimes feels pressure to dress appropriately at the risk of being snapped by paparazzi.
“Most of the time I walk round by myself because I am pretty short, so people don’t tend to see me! I used to worry more when I was younger, even trying to disguise myself, but now I feel more comfortable to just be me,” she explained.
“There are certain things I see that I think, ‘God, I would love to wear that if I wasn’t recognisable.’ I think if I was just an anonymous person I would probably have a much more exciting day-to-day wardrobe. So I just have to appreciate the clothes I love but can’t wear by encouraging other people, like my girlfriends, to buy and wear them.”
Maje captures Asia’s diversity by going to extremes
2013 December 16. | Szerző: shannon
As the invasion of contemporary French brands continues around the world, their appeal to fashion-savvy working women is increasingly clear.
Labels such as Maje, Sandro, Claudie Pierlot, The Kooples and Zadig & Voltaire have flooded Asian markets and attracted sophisticated consumers from the middle and upper middle class.
Cool, urban and effortless, the French contemporary aesthetic is a globalised take on the classic styles Paris is known for. Its muses are more likely to be Alexa Chung and Lou Doillon, rather than delicate Audrey Hepburn-types.
Maje has enjoyed a measure of success in Hong Kong with the reopening of its IFC store earlier this month.
When I met Judith Milgrom, Maje’s glamorous founder at her Paris headquarters in October, she said the company’s focus for this year and next would be on opening more stores in the US and China.
The company’s success did not come overnight. Maje was founded 15 years ago. Back then there was no brand that offered what it did, Milgrom says. Her sister, Evelyn Chetrite, had founded competing brand Sandro with her husband just a few years earlier.

“There is always stimulating and healthy competition,” says Milgrom. “Evelyn is a very talented person … but we have our own tastes.”
Both brands, as well as Claudie Pierlot (whom both sisters design for) soon formed an interesting fashion movement. Investment from the LVMH Group luxury goods conglomerate, followed by American private equity firm KKR buying a 65 per cent stake this year, has spurred a global expansion for the brand.
“Basically, when we started we were right in the middle of the top brands and the cheaper brands that didn’t have the style to go with it.
“I created the collections to offer an alternative to working active women … as well as the younger fashionistas who could not afford those luxury brands. I wanted to give them the opportunity to wear beautiful pieces at affordable prices.”
It is a niche that has proven to be rewarding for both sisters. With the diverse lifestyles of today’s woman, Maje – a little bohemian, a little glam, but always offering plenty of chic, sharp office wear – has found a combination that really hits home.

“Fashion today has to definitely adapt to this lifestyle. I like to create collections that you can wear all day at work and then you can just add one accessory or beautifully cut jacket and carry on into the evening,” says Milgrom.
The brand has been popular in Asia for some time, she says, despite only setting up stores here a few years ago.
And while Maje’s French customers may still favour a more effortless style, Milgrom says her Hong Kong clients are often more fashion conscious and particular about specific pieces. The collection for spring-summer 2014 channels a feeling of warmth that is inspired by an imagined, road trip across the US, moving through extremes between the coasts.
Feather-light, ethereal pieces are accompanied by heavy, protective jackets. “Leather fringe suede might remind people of Texas and coastal music festivals, but on the other side, there is the New York working girl with fitted, black structured pieces,” says Milgrom.
Well-edited extremes seem to be a theme at Maje. And with women’s styles diversifying fast in Asia, they appear to be hitting a rather powerful note.
Swindon starts work on historic regeneration
2013 December 12. | Szerző: shannon
Swindon Designer Outlet in the UK began works on the regeneration of the historic Long Shop building, part of the Grade II-listed Great Western Railway Works.
The regeneration is part of a £35-million investment to incorporate the Long Shop as part of the extension of Swindon Designer Outlet, which will add 50,000 sq ft/4,700 sq m of new retail space, to bring the total to 250,000 sq ft/23,000 sq m.
The extension will also create around 350 new jobs once the works are finished in early 2015, increasing the total number of people employed at Swindon Designer Outlet to 1,100, making the centre a key employer in the town, which is just off the M4, west of London.
This will be the third extension of Swindon Designer Outlet since it opened in 1997, nearly 20 years ago. The centre was originally developed and is still managed by McArthurGlen. It is owned by Henderson Global Investors within the Outlet Mall Partnership – a fund for institutional investors, and one in which McArthurGlen itself invests.
Sven Gaede, McArthurGlen’s UK Managing Director, says: “The start of the refurbishment and expansion works today is great news for Swindon and for the South West. It marks the relaunch of the centre as the region’s must-visit fashion and shopping destination.

“As part of the extension, we will be bringing in new, exciting brands and improving the overall shopping experience. Shoppers will now also be able to experience and enjoy first-hand the refurbished Long Shop, with its conservation ensured for future generations.”
Andrew Rich, Fund Manager for the Henderson UK Outlet Mall Fund, adds: “Swindon is a very successful centre within our outlet mall portfolio, and the expansion is part of our investment strategy to continue to deliver strong performance for our investors in a fund that has returned almost 10% IRR in a difficult period for the UK economy and property market, demonstrating the resilience of the outlet mall sector.”
Ian Piper, CEO of Forward Swindon, the economic growth and regeneration company for Swindon, says: “We’re delighted to see this level of investment into Swindon, and the enhanced facility will offer more high-quality shopping and eating options for our residents and workers, as well as visitors from further afield.
“The challenge of creating a stronger connection between the Swindon Designer Outlet and the rest of the town centre, as identified in the Masterplan, is an important element of our work at Forward Swindon.”
Dolce & Gabbana Spring/Summer 2014 Campaign
2014 January 11. | Szerző: shannon
For the Dolce & Gabbana spring/summer 2014 campaign, the two masterminds behind the label, Domenico and Stefano, decided to stick to a tested formula that works. The new set of ads unveiling the upcoming season’s coolest ensembles might bring a sense of deja-vu as they’re still based on the family type of gathering with a glam spin we’ve seen over the past seasons. However, that doesn’t make it any less interesting to watch. The new campaign brings bombshell Bianca Balti in the spotlight once again. She poses alongside Eva Herzigova, Catherine McNeil and Marine Deleeuw and male models Adam Senn, Evandro Soldati, Noah Mills and Tony Ward.
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The new Dolce & Gabbana spring 2014 campaign was lensed by designer Domenico Dolce in Taormina. With Sicily being a big part of the inspiration behind the Dolce & Gabbana spring 2014 collection, the location couldn’t have been a better choice. The new campaign is, in essence, a curated selection of the new line with a more practical spin. With massive coin motifs and many ostentatious textural contrasts, it was quite easy to remember the Dolce & Gabbana spring/summer 2014 line as being opulent and over the top first and foremost.
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However, the styling of the new campaign for most of the options displayed makes the new creations seem much easier to sport in real life, without overly diminishing their statement making potential. Ladylike elegance and sultriness are tightly interwoven in the new Dolce & Gabbana spring/summer 2014 ads. The label does a great job at revealing how women with different style needs can update their look, making the new campaign a good source of inspiration for those who have made dressing more elegantly a resolution for the new year. The new Dolce & Gabbana spring 2014 campaign also brings an interesting assortment of accessories into the spotlight, particularly when it comes to handbags. As with the rest of the looks, the label brings both season-inspired options and versatile items which would prove a great investment.
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