Kim Kardashian dazzles in white at Monaco fashion show... and accessorises with her new fiancé and $2 million ring





Last updated at 10:38 PM on 27th May 2011

And while her tall basketballer beau was certainly a handsome accessory for the reality star at a fashion show in Monte Carlo today, all eyes were certainly on her brand new ring.

Kim let the stunning $2 million diamond really stand out by choosing a simple white gown for the event.

Engaged: Kim Kardashian and Kris Humphries make their first public appearance since announcing their engagement at the Amber fashion show in Monaco

Kris, 26, towered over his diminutive fiancée in a sharp grey suit, blue shirt and sunglasses.

Kim tweeted from the event: 'Backstage at the Matthew Williamson fashion show! He is amaze! Prince Albert & Charlene here too! About 2 go on stage! I always get nervous.'

Mario Testino: Princess Diana will always be my favourite





Kate Winslet and Anna Wintour were among the stylish guests in New York last night to honour fashion photographer Mario Testino's 30-year career.

BY MELISSA WHITWORTH | 27 MAY 2011


Princess Diana's favourite photographer was honoured in New York last night at a gala celebrating his 30-year career as one of fashion's most revered figures.

Mario Testino, 56, was trusted by the late Princess of Wales, so much so that Prince William and Kate Middleton chose him to shoot their official engagement photographs last year.


The New York gala to Benefit El Museo del Barrio , the city's most prominent Latin American cultural institution, saw 600 people celebrate Testino's career including Kate Winslet. The Oscar winning actress, who was most recently shot by Testino for the cover of British Vogue, and for her Lancôme campaign presented him with an award: an Asprey silver tray signed by 35 of his closest friends and colleagues. These included Tom Ford, Grace Coddington, Sienna Miller, Anna Wintour, Julia Roberts, Demi Moore and Claudia Schiffer. "To be honest it's all a little bit overwhelming." Testino said.

Testino told the Telegraph how over and over again - and for many years - he has been asked who his favourite subject has been during his illustrious career.

"So many people ask me this," he said, "It would have to be Princess Diana, it took my career to another level."

But being asked this question is like asking a parent of five children to pick a favourite, he added.

"Top five? Kate Moss has been one of my favourites for a long time. I have worked a lot with her. I think I have managed to document her through the 20 years that we have worked together. But there are many people like that: Gwyneth Paltrow, Kate Winslet, it is hard to pick just one."


He was 24 when he picked up his first camera. "I was pretty useless. I had to direct people around me to help me do it. But I was good with a subject."

And that is the key to Testino's enduring career. He has shot the greatest supermodels and most talented actresses for the world's top fashion magazines because he has the ability to capture the beauty in each subject. He is affable both on set and when it comes to dealing with the editors.

Carine Roitfeld, the former editor of French Vogue, who has worked with Testino for the last 25 years, told the Telegraph:

"What I love about him I can tell him anything and that is very rare with a photographer. If I don't like these shoes, or I don't like this picture I can tell him. It is his complicity… to be able to say what you want to someone. I just finished a book about my work so far and 80 per cent of it is with Mario."

Testino talked of his special affinity with England, telling the Telegraph:

"England is the country where I learned my profession. They are the ones that trained me they are the ones that believed in me. I owe a lot to your country.

"For me photographing the Royals is my way of giving back to the country: documenting this tradition and the history. For a Peruvian - apart from Paddington Bear - there are very few of us that can be a part of it. I feel very attached to the English."
In a speech given by Winslet, she talked of Mario's ability to take a woman's insecurities and quickly dispose of them.

Testino explained it this way, saying, "I have been very lucky I have been given this ability to love people, I like people. Whoever I meet, I always feel that the photograph belongs to them and not to me. I have always tried to make sure they look their best.

"I have started with a certain sense of aesthetics where I know it looks more beautiful like this or like that, and I have let that be my talent. Maybe it seems a little bit superficial, but I have learned to accept it and enjoy it."
Winslet began her speech by joking, "the two other Kates, Kate Moss and Kate Middleton, were unavailable so you have to make do with me."

She then went on to pay tribute to the photographer in affectionate terms.

"No matter the subject, we all have one thing in common, we know that we are in the best hands and he will talk us into doing absolutely anything for him and why? Because we trust him. We know that he will create a unique and disarming, beautiful and timeless image that goes beyond fashion, beyond art and more often than not beyond our own expectations and interpretations of ourselves.

"Not only is he capable of assembling teams of the most beautiful camera assistants to keep us all focused, but he surrounds himself with people with whom he can collaborate thus creating a working atmosphere that is full of professionalism and dedication. This in itself is a joy to be part of.

"His vision is clear and direct and honest. He never fails to challenge himself and his subjects. And you know that his biggest strength without fail is making women look beautiful.

"So when Mario turns to you and says, 'it's beautiful, but I think it would work better naked, no?" How can one refuse? No matter what insecurities about oneself a subject may have, Mario makes them go away like a magician. One moment you are in the hair and makeup chair fully clothed and wishing you had smoother skin, longer legs and smaller feet and then Mario comes in and in that charming way he takes you by the hand and says, 'Don't worry it's going to be amazing.'"

Testino says that his parents we disappointed when he first announced he wanted to be a photographer. They had expected him to become a lawyer, a doctor or an architect.

So he set off for London and made his career amongst the fashion world there, before becoming an international star himself.

"When I started, people told me I wouldn't make it. Many people didn't believe I would get to be where I am today. Something tells me there is something I did right."

Lily Allen: I am no bridezilla - my wedding is really not that stressful





A smiling Lily Allen has admitted she is not a 'bridezilla' just yet, despite her big day being just a matter of weeks away.

The singer turned fashion guru gave Metro an exclusive update at the launch of her label Lucy In Disguise’s ready-to-wear collection.

‘It’s not really that stressful,’ said the bride-to-be at her Harvey Nichols bash.

‘I am not bridezillary at all about it.’ 

The Smile singer revealed she has had to be brutal with her guest list. ‘Lots of people want to come. It is quite difficult,’ she added. 

Her sister and fashion business partner, Sarah Owen, said Lil hasn’t been ‘someone who is being really demanding’. 

Sarah said: ‘She’s not been saying ‘‘I want it this way, this is how my wedding has got to be.” I think it is just a stressful kind of thing.’ 

It is slightly more than two weeks until Allen and fiancé, Sam Cooper, marry in Gloucestershire. 

While juggling plenty of projects, a return to music is still a while off for the 26-year-old.

‘You know me, I’m Lily,’ she added. ‘I’m about to get married, so I don’t want to go on tour for two and a half years and float a record.’

Focused on her and Sarah’s latest fashion concept, Allen said: ‘I want to enjoy my house in the countryside and you know, work on the business that we have set up together.
 
'I also have a record label, which I am working really hard on. The band Cults are over here this week playing. Their album’s out in a couple of weeks, I have my finger in a lot of different pies. That’s the way I like it.’

'Duchess of Cambridge effect' sparks international buying frenzy over dress




£175 dress from high street label Reiss sells out worldwide after Kate is pictured wearing it to meet the Obamas


The Duchess of Cambridge wears the Reiss dress as she and her husband meet the Obamas at Buckingham Palace. Photograph: Charles Dharapak/AP

Reiss, an understated, privately-owned British label of 40 years' standing, has been catapulted into the limelight by a new phenomenon in fashion: the Duchess of Cambridge effect.

Within hours of the new duchess being photographed chatting to Michelle Obama at Buckingham Palace this week in a beige bandage-style Shola outfit by the British high street label, the dress – which retails for £175 – had sold out worldwide. Unprecedented traffic caused the website to crash twice before the end of the day.

"I have been in the business for 40 years, and I've never seen anything like this reaction," said founder David Reiss, "and not just in the UK, but overseas".

Profit from sales of the Shola dress are capped by the fact that only 1,000 were produced, but "you can't put a monetary value on this kind of brand awareness and excitement. As a brand we've always been understated – maybe even too discreet about who we are. This has given us an incredible platform without straying from who we are as a brand."

The duchess shops at Reiss without prior appointment, paying full price, David Reiss confirmed. "I am sure she would never accept gifts, and we would never offer them." The first inkling the label had of this week's publicity was on Tuesday morning, when buying director Andy Rogers saw on Twitter that Jane Bruton, the editor of Grazia, had posted a link to the dress.

"As soon as the picture came up on the news my assistant recognised the dress. She checked the website and thirty seconds later we had the link up on Twitter," said Bruton.

This is the second time the label has been championed by the duchess. In official engagement portraits taken by Mario Testino she wore a draped cream Nanette dress, bought for £159 from the store's autumn 2010 collection, which fuelled a spike in sales at the label.

This week's effect has been far more dramatic for several reasons. The positive reaction to her Alexander McQueen wedding dress has sent the duchess's fashion stock soaring. The connection with the Obamas, combined with the afterglow of the Royal Wedding, ensured that this week's photograph was widely broadcast on American media, as well as in Britain. And while the Nanette dress had been bought several months earlier and was no longer available when the engagement photos were released, the Shola dress was still available in stores and on the website when the Duchess wore it this week.

"Kate is the most watchable woman in the world right now," Reiss said. "We've had celebrities wearing our clothes before – Beyoncé wore our leather jacket when she came to London – but nobody else has had an effect like this.

"The royal family is held in respect throughout the world, but [until Kate] there had been no one since Diana who had really won the public's affection. And this week there was the added association with the first lady, which is huge for us in terms of an American audience."

The duchess has shown a preference for the more upmarket end of high street fashion. In the second of her engagement photos she wore a £95 cream blouse by Whistles. This has been welcomed by the fashion industry, in which mid-market retailers are often squeezed out of airspace between the attention-grabbing prices of the value sector and the catwalk theatrics of designer fashion.

"When the headlines are about how Kate impresses the world in a £175 dress, that draws people's attention to the fact that £175 is a good price for a quality product," said Reiss, who believes "a backlash against cheap fashion" is overdue.

"The middle high street brands are having a hard time in the recession," agreed Bruton, "so this is a very positive statement, showcasing a well-priced British brand to a global audience. Michelle Obama did something similar for J Crew in the States. Reiss is very much becoming Kate's fail-safe go-to label. It's obvious that she feels confident in it."

While Reiss basks in the spotlight, ripples of the Duchess effect are being felt by other retailers. When a £165 pair of LK Bennett wedges made an appearance on the Buckingham Palace lawn as part of the duchess's going-away outfit, sales surged.

According to LK Bennett's brand director, Mark Lukas, there is now "an international waiting list" for the updated Maddox style. Kate Bostock, executive director of general merchandise at Marks & Spencer, reports that sales of wedge shoes increased by 70% in the days following those going-away photos. In fashion, the newly minted princess is already a force to be reckoned with.http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/michelleobama


John Lewis in fashion as sales rise





Department store John Lewis has reported an “encouraging” week of trading after it returned to sales growth helped by strong demand for its fashion ranges.

The chain said sales excluding VAT were up 3.2% in the week to last Saturday, with takings at its fashion department up 11.5% as shoppers snapped up premium beauty products, women’s brands and handbags.

The sales growth ends a run of three weeks when the chain’s sales excluding VAT declined on the previous year. Including VAT, revenues were 5.3% higher at £53.5 million.

Competition was tough on the high street, it added, but more unsettled weather had increased footfall at its 32 stores.

Its fashion department also saw strong sales of Menswear Items, with formalwear, accessories and shoes all in growth.

The rise in demand for its fashion ranges had a favourable impact on its online sales, which were up 28% on last year.

Sales of goods through its home department, which have been in decline in recent weeks, also provided some cheer after they rose 3.3%, with gift collections, kitchen utensils and bed linen among the most popular items.

However, electronics revenues were down 0.1% despite buoyant demand for computers and accessories.

Trafford was John Lewis’s best performing store in the week, with sales up 11.6%, while outlets at Cribbs Causeway, Glasgow and Edinburgh also saw strong growth.

The Waitrose supermarket chain, which is also owned by the John Lewis Partnership, said sales rose 6.4% to £101.3 million.

...............Read more

Is fashion wearing out the world?





It's a big week for ethical fashion, with Lucy Siegle's long awaited launch of her book To Die For: Is Fashion Wearing Out the World?, and the fifth birthday celebrations of London Fashion Week's Estethica.

BY TAMSIN BLANCHARD | 23 MAY 2011

The ethical fashion movement comes of age this week. Livia and Colin Firth are hosting the book launch tonight of Lucy Siegle's book, To Die For: Is Fashion Wearing Out the World? The book is a thoroughly researched, hard-hitting (and occasionally depressing) look behind the scenes of the fashion industry, focusing on the environmental and social impact the industry is having on the planet. Siegle, who has been assisting Livia Firth on her Green Carpet Challenge highlights the people who are part of the long chain who all contribute to the making of our clothes, from the farmers who plant the cotton and herd the goats to the machinists who sew our dresses and T-shirts. A farmer in Gujarat gets 13 rupees for 500 grams of cotton, while a pair of designer jeans weighing 500 grams sells in the west for the equivalent of 1500-1700 rupees.

In pictures: Livia Firth's green hits on the red carpet

There are some moments of light. I love the idea of Choolips , whose clothes are pictured here, a company that works with batikers and tailors in Ghana. Siegle paid £70, placed her order and then followed her dress for two months as it was being made from the printing of the fabric, the cutting of the pattern and the sewing to the finishing and final packaging. Each part of the dress's journey forms a kind of blog which is sent to you so you can be part of the whole process. 'I can't think of anything more different from the fast-fashion experience,' Siegle writes.

Siegle was also in attendance on Friday night with Livia Firth for the launch of Fashion's Fairer Footprint, an initiative set up by LSE Students' Union Fashion Society ' to build awareness about sustainable fashion and beauty, and inspire future industry leaders'.

And tomorrow sees the 5th birthday party of Estethica, the British Fashion Council initiative to help promote sustainable, responsible fashion at the industry's cutting edge. Estethica's designers include Goodone, Ada Zanditon, Junky Styling, Noki and From Somewhere whose designer Orsola de Castro is also the show's curator and a passionate campaigner.

The Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, will be attending the party to launch his own green initiative, Greening London's Fashion Industry, outlining 'straightforward ideas to save money and the environment'.

To Die For: Is Fashion Wearing out the World? is £12, published by 4th Estate.