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Pump up the volume, Instagram's pull, PPR confirms Brioni talks, Throwaway fashion, Proenza power

Proenze Schouler | Source: Modern Wearing
By
  • BoF Team

The Volume Stays Up (NY Times)
"There seems to be no escape from the orgy of prints and color consuming the runways. It continued on Tuesday at Rodarte and Vera Wang, with runny floral patterns. It struck on Monday with ice-cream pastels at Preen, tribal prints at Donna Karan and blazing red at Ohne Titel... But if you look at many of the prints that have appeared this week, and the way they were handled, you don't find that human dimension of wit and vulnerability. They don't make you smile."

Style as Seen Through Rose-Colored iPhone App (WSJ)
"Fashion enthusiasts—an image-obsessed group—are enamored with how Instagram turns a low-quality image into a moody composition. At the tents in New York this week, editors, bloggers and publicity people are donning Instagram's digital rose-colored glasses and uploading images by the thousands, to the chagrin of some professional photographers."

PPR confirms eyeing Brioni (Reuters)
"French retail and luxury group PPR confirmed it was in talks to acquire family-owned Italian tailor Brioni and added there was a risk the recent drying up of the debt market could affect the disposal of its mail order business Redcats... The deal this summer carried a price tag of about 350 million euros ($480 million)... If it went ahead, the acquisition would allow PPR to make progress on its pledge to strengthen its position in the luxury market and get out of retail."

Rising cost of clothes could signal end to 'cheap chic' (Guardian)
"The days of "cheap chic" and throwaway fashion could be numbered, because the cost of clothes is rising at its fastest rate for nearly 15 years. The "fast fashion" trend, where T-shirts sell for £2 and jeans are priced at less than a fiver in supermarkets, is being battered by big increases in the cost of cotton, labour and transport."

A Duo Clashes for Fashion (WSJ)
"Messrs. Hernandez and McCollough, both 33 years old, are considered leaders of a new school of designers in their 20s and 30s representing the next generation of big American fashion designers. This new breed is known for its willingness to experiment with fabrics and its ability to reinterpret classic designs for a contemporary audience."

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