Diamond for everyday

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/fashion/30333599

Diamond for everyday

fashion December 10, 2017 13:30

By The Nation

Hermes creates objects – objects that shaped by the hands of artisans to make them true companions for those who wear them. Practical, functional and stemming from uncompromising expertise, they radiate the lightness of the unexpected.

Diamonds break out of the mould as the miniature “Nantucket” appears in a whirl of sparkling radiance. At its birth in 1991, this Hermes watch model was fitted with a rectangular case featuring the “Anchor Chain” motif created by Henri d’Origny who had been asked to design a square shape.

Continuing the saga of an aesthetic rebellion, this “Tres Petit Modele” further accentuates the outline of the original design and celebrates diamonds for daily wear, dotted around as if the wind had scattered them across the watch. Nantucket thus becomes a relaxed piece of daytime jewellery. Crafted in steel, it is fitted with a choice of single tour alligator straps in smooth ember or matte toupe in Mykonos blue, cactus green, abysse blue, black variations.

For Hermes, time is also an object. They make everyday life their playground, and each instant a uniquely special moment.  Its inherent tension is translated by the house into a singular characteristic. Rather than measuring, ordering, and seeking to control it, Hermes dares to explore another time, designed to arouse emotions, open up interludes and create spaces for spontaneity and recreation.

Lisa King pops up in Bangkok

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/fashion/30333566

Lisa King pops up in Bangkok

fashion December 09, 2017 12:00

By The Nation

Renowned print designer Lisa King creates an exclusive limited edition capsule collection as part of her pop up residency in collaboration with international multi-brand store, Siwilai at Central Embassy.

The pop-up experience runs until December 17 and reflecting of Siwilai’s ethos in supporting self?expression, King invites fashonistas to celebrate her signature motif Screwprint.

Screwprint is a simple shape first inspired by a contemporary sculpture by Fiona Banner and designed in the belief that print should be able to adorn any surface. It is a print designed for interpretation and a way for the wearer to reflect their own personality and style.

King, who was born and raised in Bangkok, uses her cross-cultural upbringing as a form of inspiration and has invited several brands to be part of her show.

“It’s a privilege to collaborate with some of the brands I most admire from Thailand. From heritage brand Jim Thompson, who largely decorated my childhood home, and I’m sure was the early influence on my love of print design to exquisite spa brand Erb, whose Thai scented products always accompany me back to London and Timo, friend and fellow print connoisseur, who is making the dream of creating men’s swim shorts a reality. I am also collaborating with Oomchoo, a beautiful handmade leather footwear brand whom I recently discovered and London Sock Company, a quintessentially British menswear brand,” King says.

The space will be dedicated to limited-edition Women and Men’s Ready?to-Wear, accessories and footwear collections, as well as an interactive customization space.

In addition to the pop-up space, King will host a series of lectures at Siwilai City Club.

No lows for Loewe’s creative designer

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/fashion/30333330

  • JW Anderson
  • Adwoa Aboah

No lows for Loewe’s creative designer

fashion December 07, 2017 01:00

By AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE
LONDON

UK design star JW Anderson wins big at London Fashion Awards

RISING fashion star Jonathan Anderson struck a double blow at London’s Fashion Awards on Monday, claiming the prizes for best Accessories Designer and best British Designer for Womenswear.

Considered one of the most influential designers of his generation, 33-year-old Anderson was recognised for his work with luxury leather goods manufacturer Loewe, where he is the creative director, and for the women’s collection at his own label, JW Anderson.

The prestigious awards, presented at the iconic Royal Albert Hall, were marked by a moving tribute to the great French-Tunisian designer Azzedine Alaia, who died last month at the age of 77.

Supermodels including Naomi Campbell, Stephanie Seymour and Eva Herzigova took to the stage to honour the master known for his timeless designs.

Campbell, who was on the verge of tears, said Alaia was a “fashion giant”, calling him her “daddy, protector… and teacher”.

British model Adwoa Aboah, known for her activism, won “Model of the Year” ahead of sisters Bella Hadid and Gigi Hadid, and Kaia Gerber, the 16-year-old daughter of former top model Cindy Crawford.

Belgian Raf Simons triumphed in the Designer of the Year category for his work with Calvin Klein, while Gucci’s chief executive Marco Bizzarri was named best Business Leader, picking up his award from singer Annie Lennox.

Finally, sandwiched between jokes at the expense of US President Donald Trump, the awards recognised young British talent with Michael Halpern winning British Emerging Talent for Womenswear and Charles Jeffrey picking up the Menswear award.

Stepping into the heart of history

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/fashion/30333329

Stepping into the heart of history

fashion December 07, 2017 01:00

By THE NATION

A new exhibition by Max Mara examines the history of the brand since its founding

THE LATEST edition of “Coats!” the exhibition by Italian style and luxury brand Max Mara, arrived in South Korea late last month and is showing at the futuristic and multi-functional DDP at Dongdaemun Design Plaza until Tuesday.

Dedicated to more than 60 years of history of Max Mara, “Coats!” has once again been designed by Studio Migliore Servetto Architetti Associati.

Known for stylish coats, form-skimming separates, sharp suits and elegant accessories, Max Mara, was found by Achille Maramotti in 1951. The exhibition is set up inside the monumental dome and presents a completely new overview of the Max Mara heritage, plunging visitors right into the heart of the history of the coat and of the brand. Winding its way through seven themed rooms, a series of modern-day wunderkammer, packed with garments, sounds, memorabilia and interactive features, represent the vision that moved Maramotti “to make the ordinary extraordinary”. The intuition that inspired him to turn the masculine coat into an icon of a woman’s wardrobe is one of the most visionary adventures of the Italian clothing industry. The exhibition starts from the dream of the perfect coat.

“Coats!” opens with the site-specific digital installation by the Korean artist Yiyun Kang, curated by Daehyung Lee. It explores the space of the dome, turning features of the production process and images from Max Mara’s historical archive into a bright, living material that gives a distinctive visual slant to the exhibition’s piazza and follows the route through seven rooms of the Max Mara world. The rooms can be visited either in chronological order or according to theme, following the emotions, music, shifts in atmospheres, scenarios and colours that mark the move from one decade to the next.

Each room opens with a set, a sort of theatrical representation, suspended between imagination and reality, which metaphorically places the focus on a specific theme of Max Mara’s history. These are: “The founder” – Achille Maramotti and the dream of the coat (‘50s), “Creative study” – the democratic coat, designers and pop (‘60s), “Colorama” – the coat in Technicolor and the art of experimentation (‘70s), “The icon” – the magic of the coat and Italian know how (‘80s), “The set” – The representation of the coat and the perfect image (‘90s), “The Max Mara women” – the journey of the coat and the female universe (2000), “The fashion show” – runway glamour and new projects (last decade of 2000).

More than 90 coats are on show including the iconic 101801 style. Beginning from the early days of dressmaking and its evolution into fashion, the coats show the changes in taste, society and lifestyles that have marked each decade. Also on display are with sketches by the designers who have worked with Max Mara, among them Anne Marie Beretta, Emmanuelle Khanh, Karl Lagerfeld, Jean-Charles de CastelBajac, Narciso Rodriguez, Giambattista Valli and Proenza Schouler.

The exhibition also features historical magazines, raw materials, advertising campaigns shot by such famous fashion photographers as Richard Avedon, Arthur Elgort, Steven Meisel, Sarah Moon, Max Vadukul, Mario Sorrenti, David Sims and Craig McDean, celebrity portraits and everyday objects (sewing machines, measuring tapes, scissors) plus artworks representing the fruit of the dialogue between contemporary artists and the founder, an avid art collector. This continues today with the Collezione Maramotti.

Featuring fascinating items belonging to the historical archive of the Group the exhibition offers a reconstruction of the varieties of stories and inventions behind the know-how of Max Mara illustrating the evolution of the product and the design culture underlying each garment. “Coats!” reveals how the family business, by engaging with the local area, Reggio Emilia, and with the world, has been able to interpret the desires of women since 1951 right up to today.

A full star cast attended the opening, among them Thai actress Khemupsorn “Cherry” Sirisukha and South Korean superstars Im Yoon A, Irene Kim, and Yoyo Cao all clad in the very latest outfits from the Max Mara collection.

No lows for Loewe’s creative designer

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/fashion/30333330

  • JW Anderson
  • Adwoa Aboah

No lows for Loewe’s creative designer

fashion December 07, 2017 01:00

By AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE
LONDON

UK design star JW Anderson wins big at London Fashion Awards

RISING fashion star Jonathan Anderson struck a double blow at London’s Fashion Awards on Monday, claiming the prizes for best Accessories Designer and best British Designer for Womenswear.

Considered one of the most influential designers of his generation, 33-year-old Anderson was recognised for his work with luxury leather goods manufacturer Loewe, where he is the creative director, and for the women’s collection at his own label, JW Anderson.

The prestigious awards, presented at the iconic Royal Albert Hall, were marked by a moving tribute to the great French-Tunisian designer Azzedine Alaia, who died last month at the age of 77.

Supermodels including Naomi Campbell, Stephanie Seymour and Eva Herzigova took to the stage to honour the master known for his timeless designs.

Campbell, who was on the verge of tears, said Alaia was a “fashion giant”, calling him her “daddy, protector… and teacher”.

British model Adwoa Aboah, known for her activism, won “Model of the Year” ahead of sisters Bella Hadid and Gigi Hadid, and Kaia Gerber, the 16-year-old daughter of former top model Cindy Crawford.

Belgian Raf Simons triumphed in the Designer of the Year category for his work with Calvin Klein, while Gucci’s chief executive Marco Bizzarri was named best Business Leader, picking up his award from singer Annie Lennox.

Finally, sandwiched between jokes at the expense of US President Donald Trump, the awards recognised young British talent with Michael Halpern winning British Emerging Talent for Womenswear and Charles Jeffrey picking up the Menswear award.

Looking cool with Buakaw

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/fashion/30332880

Looking cool with Buakaw

fashion November 30, 2017 13:50

By The Nation

2,281 Viewed

Leading fashion brand Singha Life show off its sporty side with the launch of a new collection designed in collaboration with well-known Thai kick boxer Buakaw Banchamek.

Available now at its store on the first floor of Siam Center, the Singha Life x Buakaw collection is designed to please young generation athletes.

Brand director Preerati BhiromBhakdi was on hand to welcome the celebrity guests to the launch event, among them Ploy Pinsang, Nisamanee Bhirombhakdi, Prakhun Phornprapha, Dan Hetrakul, Pasu Liptapanlop, Ditawat Issara, Supachai Kanchanasakchai and Wiset Rangsisingpipat.

“We want to make apparel that reflects the Thai identity but in a universal and contemporary style. Every piece must fit the brand’s DNA as well as the art of Thai boxing. And when we talk about muay thai, we all think of Buakaw,” Preerati said.

The Singha Life x Buakaw collection is presented through the story of Thai martial arts in a cool unisex style. Highlight pieces include a hoodie in fine French terry fabric with Buakaw’s signature on the neckline tag, basic T-shirts with a graphic design print based on the weapon posture of the Thai boxer, edgy Thai boxing shorts, caps and a cylinder-shaped backpack inspired by a sandbag.

Shoppers can also find a limited-edition weekender bag made from canvas from the fighting ring at Banchamek Gym and featuring the name of the gym along with Buakaw’s autograph. These will be auctioned with the total proceeds going to the Siriraj Foundation to support injured athletes.

Celebrities who attended the event revealed a love for Thai martial arts, with Dittawat Issara noting: “Thai boxing is fun and makes me sweat a lot. It helps strengthen all the muscles too. And for casual wear, I prefer sports gear. It’s easy to mix and match and looks good.”

Dan Hetrakul added: “I learned basic Thai boxing when I was young and was always asked to demonstrates the weapon pose when I was studying abroad. Normally I like wearing Hawaii print shirts and jeans. If I want a sportier look, I add a leather baseball jacket.

May the force be with you

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/fashion/30332879

May the force be with you

fashion November 30, 2017 13:40

By The Nation

2,350 Viewed

Just in time for the release of mega movie “Star Wars: The Last Jedi”, New York-based street fashion brand, Rag & Bone is unveiling a new collaboration with Disney – a capsule collection of iconic styles twisted with timeless Star Wars references.

Contrasting colourways and hidden details represent the balance between good and evil in the saga depicting the two sides of the Force – the light side and the dark side, the opposing factions of the Galactic Empire and Rebel Alliance, or the conflict between the Resistance and the First Order.

“I have always been a huge fan of Star Wars and it has been awesome to create a collection which coincides not only with the launch of ‘Star Wars: The Last Jedi’, but also with the 40th anniversary of the franchise. Our approach was really to re-imagine some of our favourite Rag & Bone pieces while taking influence from some of our most memorable moments of past and present Star Wars films,” says the brand’s Marcus Wainwright.

“We wanted the pieces to feel like something that referenced Star Wars but that also fitted the Rag & Bone aesthetic – like a modern Jedi.”

In addition to the capsule outfits, Rag & Bone is supporting Lucas film and Disney’s Force 4 Fashion initiative, a charitable programme under the banner Force for Change that was created to empower and improve the lives of children around the world. Rag & Bone will donate to the Starlight Children’s Foundation, continuing Lucas film’s philanthropic message of encouraging fans to be forces of change in their community.

Rag & Bone has also announced the launch of the Star Wars secret site, which gives viewers access to content created to celebrate the collaboration, including a making-of video and other footage and images from the world of Star Wars.

To celebrate the launch of the collaboration, the partners are hosting three events on Saturday (December 2) in New York, Los Angeles, and London featuring surprise elements from the Star Wars franchise. Thai fans will also have the chance to purchase limited items from this special collaboration, which will be in stores on December 13.

Check it out at Siam Discovery and The EmQuartier.

Fighting fit with Singha

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/fashion/30332824

Fighting fit with Singha

fashion November 30, 2017 01:00

2,261 Viewed

Singha Life joins with top Thai boxer Buakaw Banchamek in launching a trendy sports collection celebrating Thai martial arts.

Dubbed “Singha Life x Buakaw”, the collection includes a hoodie made from fine French terry fabric, edgy Thai boxing shorts, caps and a cylinder-shaped backpack inspired by a sandbag. Also available is a limited-edition Weekender bag tmade of canvas from the fighting ring at Banchamek Gym and emblazoned with the gym’s name and Buakaw’s autograph. Only 12 bags are available and will be auctioned to raise funds for injured athletes under the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and Physiotherapy, Siriraj Hospital.

Dress like a Jedi

New York fashion brand Rag & Bone teams up with Disney to coincide with the release of “Star Wars: The Last Jedi”. The capsule collection features a selection of iconic styles twisted with timeless Star Wars references. Contrasting colourways and hidden details represent the balance between good and evil in the saga depicting the two sides of the Force. The brand is also supporting Lucasfilm and Disney’s “Force 4 Fashion” initiative, a charitable programme created to empower and improve the lives of children around the world. The limited edition hits stores on December 13.

Mulberry turns festive

Iconic luxury British brand Mulberry tops the all-important gift lists this Christmas with a delightful limited-edition capsule collection of bags embroidered with an interpretation of the delicate flower that fills every branch and bough of a mulberry tree in blossom. The new equestrian-influenced Amberley Satchel and the iconic Zipped Bayswater become the perfect canvases for the embroidered motif, alongside the Darley in three sizes, a large pouch, zipped wallet and coin purse. The collection also includes soft printed lambswool scarves, slip-on sneakers, delicately crafted jewellery pieces, as well as a key ring that doubles as a bag accessory.

Fresh like a berry

British brand, The Body Shop goes wild for the festive season with a new Special Edition Frosted Berries fragrance that combines traditional winter red berries with a modern frosted sweetness, with notes of cranberries, blackcurrant and raspberry. The beautifully wrapped, fruity tin contains four mini Frosted Berries – shower gel, body scrub, body butter, and hand cream. Special edition Vanilla Chai fragrance and Frosted Plum are also available. Check them out from today at all branches.

Nanda in the pink

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/fashion/30332823

Nanda in the pink

fashion November 30, 2017 01:00

By KUPLUTHAI PUNGKANON
THE NATION

2,086 Viewed

The K-pop look arrives in Siam Square

FANS OF South Korean culture now have a new place to hangout with the opening of the Stylenanda Pink Hotel in Siam Square Soi 5.


Home to cosmetics and fashion as well as a coffee shop, the pink hotel lives up to its name and is liberally coated in shades of pink just like its big sister in Myeong-dong, Seoul, which is known as one of the quirkiest but instagrammable makeup and fashion shops in the Korean capital.
Designed to delight the selfie-obsessed, the pink venue has been packing in the ladies since it formally opened its doors a few weeks back.
The first floor features Stylenanda’s famous 3CE cosmetics covering everything from skincare to makeup – in short everything you need for that essential K-pop look. Get there fast to snap up one of the limited-edition 3CE Bangkok Lip Colour Mini Kits comprising five best-selling nude shade mini-lipsticks as well as the “Fox in the House of 3CE” collaborative collection with Maison Kitsune. This is a contemporary make up line featuring Kitsune, a mythical shape in Japanese folklore that shifts with the belief in the potential of an individual.
Take the narrow staircase up to the second floor and you emerge into the White Milk Zone, a lovely area with large cosmetic mock-ups as the props.
The third floor, which is decorated like a laundry room, has the new |collection of women’s fashion and accessories along with bags, shoes, jewellery, and hats.
The fourth floor is home to the ultra-chic Stylenanda ‘pool’ complete with a huge beach umbrella, pink sleeping chair, and cute swimming rings. It’s the perfect place to chill while sipping a drink of refreshing strawberry and lemonade with |cotton candy.
Get updates at Facebook: Stylenanda Thailand official,

The perfect fit

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/fashion/30332454

The workshop of Japanese master shoemaker Yohei Fukuda in Tokyo. / AFP
The workshop of Japanese master shoemaker Yohei Fukuda in Tokyo. / AFP

The perfect fit

fashion November 26, 2017 01:00

By Agence France-Presse
Tokyo

2,346 Viewed

Japan fills its boots with bespoke shoes

WHEN YOHEI FUKUDA left for England more than a decade ago to learn his trade as a master leather shoemaker, he could hardly have imagined that his native Japan would one day become a leader in this traditionally European art.

“ The number of bespoke shoe workshops has been booming in Japan in the past few years,” says the elegant-looking bald and moustachioed 37-year-old, sporting a smart shirt and tie under a dark-blue work apron.

“There are at least 40 in Tokyo today and maybe as many as 100 in the whole country.”

Everything is done by hand, from the precise measurement of a client’s feet to the delicate business of attaching the soles to the shoe./AFP

Bespoke leather shoemaking has historically been dominated by European artisans but Japan developed a taste for the luxury footwear at the beginning of the 2000s and local manufacturing classes quickly took off.

Fukuda’s own workshop is located close to the upmarket area of Ometesando in Tokyo, often described as Japan’s answer to the grand Champs Elysee avenue in Paris.

A narrow staircase leads up to his old-fashioned workspace that smells strongly of leather and glue, the basic tools of the trade.

There is not one machine in the whole place – everything is done by hand, from the precise measurement of a client’s feet to the delicate business of attaching the soles to the shoe.

“Each pair of shoes takes between 120 and 140 hours of work and we produce around 80 a year,” Fukuda explains.

He does not want to go at a faster pace: “I want to make good shoes,” he stresses.

Japanese master shoemaker Yohei Fukuda at work./AFP

Fortunately, his customers are in no hurry and willing to pay a hefty price for the bespoke quality – a 100-per-cent made-to-measure pair costs 480,000 yen Bt140,000) at least.

Why Japan? Mari Yamaguchi, who teaches this meticulous trade in a private school in the trendy Harajuku area of Tokyo says that bespoke shoes “speak to the Japanese spirit, with its sense of detail.”

At Yamaguchi’s school, dozens of young students are bent over workbenches, carefully learning each one of the individual painstaking steps required in the manufacturing process.

“A foot is something very special. Each foot is unique, like each piece of leather. When making bespoke shoes by hand, the challenge is to get close to perfection by bringing together these two imperfect but magic elements,” she says.

Maybe Japanese people think about shoes more than in other cultures because most people put them on and take them off several times a day – whenever entering a house,” muses the 43-year-old teacher.

Not for the first time, the Japanese have travelled abroad to adopt the skills and then improved them, says Jesper Ingevaldsson, Swedish author of a specialist blog on shoemaking.

“They have done with shoes what they have done with other things, like denim for example: they learn from the west, come home, and perfect it and evolve it” he says.

The Japanese have developed such a good reputation in the field that Western apprentices are now heading east to learn the trade.

In Fukuda’s workshop, five young apprentices labour on workbenches made from old 1920s English chests of drawers.

One scrutinises the quality of a new delivery of leather, another sews on a sole, making sweeping gestures with his arm every time he pulls the thread.

And these interns are in turn bringing their own Japanese-inspired creativity to the ancient tradition.

Clemence Rochard, a 27-year-old French apprentice, created a pair of hand-made shoes made partly of leather and partly from material from a sparkling and flowery kimono she found in Kyoto.

“In Japan nobody would have thought about it,” Fukuda acknowledges.