2015年7月8日星期三

Kudos to Michael Kors, who presented a strong


Kudos to Michael Kors, who presented a strong, easy-to-wear collection that reconfirmed his status as a modern master of practical American sportswear.

Fashion icons Lauren Hutton, Ali MacGraw and Martha Graham were important references for Kors, their relaxed style reinterpreted in earthy jersey ballet dresses, inviting cashmere hand-knit sweaters and a sensational muslin beaded embroidered skirt. True to his love for ultra-luxurious materials, Kors also showed a divine barley suede off-the-shoulder shift, several light shearling jackets, and a mink-backed suede serape to ward off chilly April breezes. The obligatory beige trench came in double-faced cotton, washed and oversized—creating a loose, comfortable silhouette that was anchored down with low-slung leather belts.

In contrast to last season"s somewhat uptight evening looks, Kors closed his Spring show with a couple of absolutely brilliant—and perfectly simple—black stretch jersey gowns that brought to mind the best of the Halston era.Read more from: https://www.kalakendra.org/upcoming-events/

"Palm Bitch" was the inspiration for Michael Kors"s extravagant


"Palm Bitch" was the inspiration for Michael Kors"s extravagant and luxurious cavalcade of tangerine, lemon and bright-pink looks. There were familiar Kors favorites like jersey shifts (this time in Lilly Pulitzer-like acid-colored floral patterns) and sumptuous cashmere cable pullovers in bright yellow and white. Buttery leather skirts were embroidered and paired with simple tanks, while zebra prints made unexpected appearances in everything from cotton shifts to bikinis and cabana shirts. For an evening of uncomplicated glamour, Kors offered slinky jersey columns, nude beaded gowns and seafoam-colored halters.Read more from: https://www.kalakendra.org/upcoming-events/

After Michael Kors" bold take on country luxe


After Michael Kors" bold take on country luxe, there"s little doubt that equestrian chic will be a recurring theme next Fall. Kors may have been inspired by life on the farm, but there was nothing rough-edged or dowdy about his thoroughbred looks. Riding britches were turned into lean, mean trousers that could be tucked into tall leather boots or worn with double-buckle boyish shoes; cashmere Aran sweaters and bright marigold, kelly green and scarlet turtlenecks looked divine under sinful, double-faced blanket coats to the floor.

Kors kept his collection sharply in focus by consistently emphasizing contrasts: Dramatic capes flowed over skinny jodhpurs and mini-shifts while crisp, colorful piping gave an architectural edge to everything from quilted field skirts to practical leather jackets. The recurring play of opposites was especially successful with the evening looks: A long, beaded bronze lace skirt looked perfect with a casual turtleneck and sporty suede jacket; an ivory sweater coat unceremoniously framed a shimmering evening gown.

It takes considerable talent and experience to pull off such a collection without stumbling onto a minefield of overworked references. It"s no coincidence that this Fall marks Michael Kors" 20th anniversary of designing casual yet utterly luxurious clothes.Read more from: https://www.kalakendra.org/upcoming-events/

2015年7月7日星期二

As much as he loves Gotham glamour


As much as he loves Gotham glamour, even Michael Kors Outlet needs to get out of the city once in a while. For spring, he headed to California, taking inspiration from its laid-back way of life and those casual style icons (Slim Keith, Lauren Bacall) whose sex appeal was about ease, not sleaze.

Kors paid homage to the great outdoors, Left Coast–style, via cotton piqué polo shirts, snappy little dresses (accessorized with practical, flat shoes and golf gloves) and a few bathing suits, all done in classic neutrals: khaki, navy, white, ivory. For those times when even beach bunnies have to come indoors, Kors added relaxed, knee-length jersey dresses and skirts in bands of blue-sky tones; crisp cotton tuxedo shirts worn with tailored pants; and fuzzy twinsets in bold turquoise. Lovely guipure dresses and organza skirts paired with the simplest knit tops were just right for poolside parties, with a glossy leather jacket or a supple deerskin balmacaan to ward off brisk nighttime breezes. And to pack it all up for an impromptu weekend in Lake Tahoe, Kors provided generous leather totes that fit perfectly in the trunk of the Mustang.Read more from: https://www.kalakendra.org/upcoming-events/

Where the Kors woman jet-sets


Where the Kors woman jet-sets, so follows the Kors man, and for spring that internationally chic couple settled down for an extended stay in Santorini. It may be one of Europe"s more glamorous resorts, but the wardrobe requirements are surprisingly simple: a neat blazer, a supple sweater, crisp shirts and soft tees, jeans, and, of course, loafers with no socks. This is the good life, though, so all those come in the finest materials: python, for example, or featherweight cashmere. And though he"s American through and through, the Kors male has enough panache to pull off ascots, neckerchiefs, even a pashmina—all the better to cover up those extra-skimpy python-print swimming trunks.Read more from: https://www.kalakendra.org/upcoming-events/

I really appreciate the fact that we have all come together


"I really appreciate the fact that we have all come together," said a newly mustachioed Michael Kors Outlet before his showroom presentation. "Let"s be cheerleaders for all that New York has to offer, because this is the most amazing city in the world."

Kors" positive outlook was evident in a concise collection that brought to mind the best of Halston, with an injection of movie-star glamour (his update on the giant tie-strap tote bag is destined to become a collectible). Alongside beachy getaway clothes, more sophisticated urban looks included chinoiserie-inspired red lacquer cardigans and sweatshirts, georgette halter dresses, and brush-stroke skirts (upon close inspection, some of the abstract prints proved to be expressionist MK logos). Evening took a turn for the dramatic with slinky bandeau columns and stunning black-and-gold embroidered tulle shells and shifts.

Kors" practical yet lighthearted collection struck a chord that is likely to resonate throughout this season.Read more from: https://www.kalakendra.org/upcoming-events/

2015年7月6日星期一

For such an archetypal American designe


For such an archetypal American designer, Michael Kors Outlet draws plenty of inspiration from the great European resorts: Capri, St. Tropez, Portofino. This spring, it was Mykonos and Santorini, where one can imagine the idle jet set of both genders strolling through the local market wearing not much more than a bikini and a breezy tunic.

As the soundtrack bounced from one cheery, cheesy Top 40 hit to another (like a rental-car radio being twiddled by a restless, but well dressed, passenger), Kors sent out a clean, commercially viable collection. There were equatorially bright shades of blue, lime green, and orange, exotic animal prints like tiger and python, and high-end bits like rich glittery brocade and the occasional fur or leather topper. The island feeling came through in crisp white pieces and embroidered tunics. And there were skimpy bathing suits aplenty, for women and men alike. One male model sported a nylon number so brief, editors compared him to Times Square"s naked singing cowboy, while another model wore his with a cigar—a nod to Kors" owner, Laurence Stroll.

Balancing the simple and the luxurious is Kors" driving principle, and there were plenty of multitasking pieces: little cashmere cardigans to wear over a bikini or evening dress, for example, or silky jersey dresses that won"t wrinkle when they"re smushed into a suitcase. And the draped-chiffon goddess gowns that closed the show would look equally great on seaside terrace or red carpet. But Kors" collections, while always polished, have become as smooth as a moonlight sail—and that"s too bad. It would be nice to see Kors break out in a bold new direction. Next season, how about a trip to Atlantic City?Read more from: https://www.kalakendra.org/upcoming-events/

The collection he showed for fall


Michael Kors Outlet is at his best when he allows a little edge to cut through his luxurious sensibility. The collection he showed for fall, rife with references to biker leathers and tough-but-sexy chicks, had just the right blend of rock ’n’ roll energy and urban sophistication.

In his notes, Kors mentioned the go-go world of Warhol in the ’60s, but the collection was refreshingly free of retro references—unless you count the legions of tight little minis he sent out, in cashmere, crocodile and stretchy wools. (The best of all, a marvelous piece of walnut-brown fringed suede, was worn—like no one else can—by Naomi Campbell.) Kors paired these, or smart, skinny pants, with great oversized toppers of all genres: giant satin jean jackets, studded black leather styles, slouchy anoraks with fur trim and generous reefers and bathrobe coats made from plush cashmere or mink. For night, he stitched bands of silvery fringe onto skirts and dresses, and ended with a dazzling, glittery disco-ball of a dress on Carmen—perfect for frugging the night away at Ondine"sRead more from: https://www.kalakendra.org/upcoming-events/

Inspired in part by "the rustic glamour of Aspen,"


Michael Kors Outlet went right for the heart of his customer with a Fall show that blended elegant luxury with down-home comfort.

Inspired in part by "the rustic glamour of Aspen," Kors designed a collection perfect for one of his smart urban customers who might jump on her Harley on Friday and zoom off to spend the weekend skiing at Stowe. For the trip up, she"ll put on one of his tough-girl chic leather motorcycle jackets and his skintight cotton ripstop pants; once there, she"ll undo the knee-to-ankle zipper to make a sharp boot-cut trouser, and throw on a quilted leather anorak and hand-painted jeans or a fluffy knee-length coyote vest to hang out in the lodge. Après-ski, she"ll slip into a feather-light cashmere baby doll or a camel pointelle jersey dress for hearthside lounging.

Kors covered the work week beautifully as well, with double-face wool pieces like a generous clutch coat over a short wrap-front skirt, lightweight cashmere dresses and sweaters, or a chic suede coat and pants hand-painted in a herringbone pattern. The bonus prize? With all the smart-looking new menswear Kors showed, her boyfriend can look just as good as she does.Read more from: https://www.kalakendra.org/upcoming-events/

2015年7月5日星期日

By Astrid Wendlandt and Brenda Goh

By Astrid Wendlandt and Brenda Goh
PARIS/LONDON (Reuters) - While Gucci and Louis Vuitton blame slumping sales on their upmarket drive they argue will help them regain some of their lost glory, there is growing evidence they are losing out to newer, more affordable luxury brands.
After years of rampant expansion, Kering and LVMH , Gucci and Louis Vuitton"s respective parents, are finding the likes of Michael Kors Outlet are proving smarter at tapping the fast-growing middle classes, particularly in big markets such as China.
Emerging market customers - the industry"s main growth engine - were previously ready to save up to buy traditional status symbols such as a Louis Vuitton 625 euro ($860) canvas bag, but now they are showing stronger appetite for new brands such as Michael Kors Outlet that cost less.
"Brands like Louis Vuitton are expensive, and I see it everywhere I go," said Saltanat Shamova, a 25-year-old Kazakh studying in London. "Michael Kors was best for me because the design was simpler and the price was affordable."
The New York-based brand embodies affordable luxury: giving consumers a taste of class without the high price tag.
Part of Kors" success is that its products subtly replicate the style of big luxury brands such as Louis Vuitton"s cylinder Speedy bag and Chanel"s quilted leather tote.
Kors" $300 Weston shoulder bag has the same fringed pompom and shape as Gucci"s $2,650 Jackie shoulder bag.
Other fast-growing accessible fashion luxury brands include the more U.S. centric and feminine Kate Spade and logo-heavy Tory Burch, as well as the more sober and minimalist Furla in Italy and France"s classic Longchamp handbag maker.
There are also France"s Carven and Isabel Marant and the UK"s Karen Millen.
Industry observers say China"s rapidly evolving consumer culture, with government policies discouraging luxury gift-giving, helps explain the rise of these more affordable brands.
"The Chinese are discovering new, middle-segment brands, and the austerity measures in the country and crackdown on ostentatious spending mean they will want to spend less on bling," said Arjen Kruger, chief marketing officer of VAT-refund company Global Blue, which monitors global spending.
MOVE UPMARKET
This is a major issue for parents Kering and LVMH, which built their empire on the two luxury brands which still today make up the bulk of their profits and market value.
"They milked the cow so much that now there is no more milk," the CEO of a major privately owned French luxury brand told Reuters at Fashion week.
LVMH, which also owns luxury fashion brands Dior and Celine, has invested in more accessible luxury labels like Marc by Marc Jacobs, the cheaper line of Marc Jacobs, which makes up 70 percent of its total revenue.
But the brand"s sales, estimated at up to $1 billion, pale in comparison with Louis Vuitton at more than 7.5 billion euros.
And LVMH is set to lose some of that growth when it floats Marc Jacobs, a move it outlined last year.
In the past few years, both Gucci and Louis Vuitton have been trying to become more exclusive, reducing entry-level products, strengthening their offer of expensive leather bags and putting the brakes on shop openings.
"It is a strategic choice to ensure the long-term desirability of the brand," Kering CEO Francois-Henri Pinault said last month.
PROBLEM IS DEMAND
Both Gucci and Louis Vuitton say their move upmarket explains why their annual sales growth has collapsed to low-single digits from mid-teens levels three to four years ago.
But it appears the problem lies more with demand for the brands in general and with the rising popularity of more accessible luxury brands than with the products they offer.
Analysts say Gucci and Louis Vuitton may have trimmed the number of entry-level products but that business still represents more than half of revenue, raising uneasy questions about whether their high-end business can sustain sufficient sales and profit growth longer term.
"The entry level of Gucci and Louis Vuitton is facing a lot of competition from new, more aspirational brands such as Michael Kors Outlet and Tory Burch, and the trend is likely to continue," said Makiko Zuercher-Hosaka who manages the 12 million euro Dynapartners Luxury Brands fund.
"At the moment, it is hard to imagine seeing Gucci and Louis Vuitton"s growth rates going back to the previous mid-teens levels in the next couple of years."
And the market understands that.
LVMH and Kering are trading on forward multiples of 18 times and 15 times, roughly in line with the industry average of 17 times, while Kors, whose share price quadrupled since its 2011 flotation, is on 33 times.
Also, Michael Kors Outlet is forecast to continue growing at a rate of more than 20 percent in the next few years after having recorded annual sales growth of around 40 percent.
Analysts estimate Kors, with annual sales of around $3 billion, makes revenue in Europe of about $400 million, up from $50 million in 2011 - driven by high demand and significant investments in marketing and new shops.
Gucci and Louis Vuitton are not the only victims of affordable luxury brands. Mulberry , which issued a profit warning in January, saw its sales growth drop after raising prices.
Furla CEO Eraldo Poletto sees "big numbers in terms of business" in the accessible segment and points to the rising number of middle-class buyers in markets such as China.
Goldman Sachs estimates the number of middle-class consumers in China - defined as people with minimum annual income of $30,000 - will rise by 24.4 percent a year on average between 2010 and 2015 and then by 14.5 percent in 2015-2020.
Karen Millen, whose concept is cutting-edge fashion at affordable prices with dresses costing around 250 euros, said many of its customers were global travelers.
"Our customer is a confident, professional, urban woman who travels... We have a lot of Russians and Chinese shopping in Paris and Brazilians in New York," said Andrew Ware, Karen Millen"s finance director.
Karen Millen has, like Kors, stepped up investments, multiplying by five its advertising budget in the past 12 months, opened around 35-40 shops a year and is currently running a network today of around 376 stores.
($1 = 0.7277 euros)
(Writing by Astrid Wendlandt; additional reporting by Li-mei Hoang in London and Isla Binnie in Milan, editing by David Evans)
Read the original article on Reuters. Copyright 2014. Follow Reuters on Twitter.

"It"s Babe [Paley] and Tony [Duquette]


  • Laird Borrelli
"It"s Babe [Paley] and Tony [Duquette]," Michael Kors Outlet announced at his Resort presentation today. The former was represented by the soigné, fitted dresses—some beaded, others in washed moiré—that are a Kors signature. The latter was evident as much in the prints, which referenced malachite, turquoise, and marble, as in the outsize, ethnic-inspired jewelry. Adding to the classic resort feel of the collection were flowing caftans, shirred maillots, and tie-dye pieces. You don"t need a crystal ball to know that they"ll all be hits at the designer"s Palm Beach store, scheduled to open later this year.
Read more from: https://www.kalakendra.org/upcoming-events/

Still, you wanted a few more of the Kors-luxe knits


With Justin Timberlake promising to "bring sexy back" on the soundtrack, Michael Kors Outlet turned out a collection that was one long riff on a dancer"s body-loving wardrobe. His palette was nude, black, and tutu pink, with flashes of metallics, and his materials—which he layered on his models as if they were ballerinas on their way to the studio—ran from fine stretch wools to jazzy matte jerseys to chunkier knits. With all the leggings and crimped updos and even an off-the-shoulder Flashdance sweater or two, Kors was having a real eighties moment. It was fun while it lasted, but somehow out of step with his usual polished sense of chic. After several days of tent and trapeze looks, the waist came into sharp focus here. Kors cinched wide patent and python belts atop everything from maillots to evening dresses. Sequins, meanwhile, provided a Bob Fosse touch. Was it a coincidence that Chicago star Usher was in the audience? Or that across from him was one of the musical"s alums, Bebe Neuwirth—in fishnets, no less? The collection"s retro-sexy, look-at-me glitz should play big with the designer"s new and huge Project Runway fan base. Still, you wanted a few more of the Kors-luxe knits, great tailored jackets, and sleek evening numbers he"s best known for.Read more from: https://www.kalakendra.org/upcoming-events/

2015年7月4日星期六

In keeping with the flag-waving theme


Leave it to Michael Kors Outlet to channel our election-year anxieties about the future of the country into a feel-good paean to our homegrown style. From the first trill of the Beach Boys" "Good Vibrations" to the last stretch jersey gown, Kors" collection was an extended riff on American classics, from teeny-weeny polka-dot bikinis (worn with fifties-style full skirts) and picnic-blanket-check pinafore dresses to sporty neoprene scuba shifts. Yes, even that much-maligned uniform of Middle America, the tracksuit, got a tweaking. Forget polyester: Kors" version comes in crushed silk.

In keeping with the flag-waving theme, there were more stripes than you"d find on all the lapel pins in Congress: pinstripes on an origami wrap dress, navy and red horizontal bands on a formfitting stretch knit sheath, and countless nautical tees and sweaters worn with crumpled cotton trousers, bathing-suit bottoms, and ball skirts. No, there was nothing subtle about it. And it wasn"t the home run that last season"s Mad Men romp was; for one thing, it didn"t look as rich, and Kors" ladies like rich if nothing else. But you can"t fault Kors" enthusiasm, or his joie de vivre (pardon our French). Only the most hardened cynics in the crowd left feeling less than optimistic.Read more from: https://www.kalakendra.org/upcoming-events/

loves a theme, and with his latest collection


Michael Kors Outlet loves a theme, and with his latest collection, he finally found a theme that loves him right back. Like the American TV audience, Kors has gone gaga for dance, taking his cues from the likes of Baryshnikov and Bob Fosse. Their effortless athleticism made a perfect complement to Kors"s own inclinations toward the simple and sporty. It also provided his menswear a much-needed spark; these clothes were all about the kind of movement critical to the dancer"s craft. Even the suits were light enough to be Gene Kelly–ready.

But the core of the collection was a kind of choreographer"s combo: utility pants, white sneakers, roll-neck sweater, sleeves of another sweater knotted casually around waist. It was a physical, functional look that managed to be supremely stylish in its bare essentials. The same casual effect was duplicated in the cashmere hoodie under a white linen blazer or the layering of short over long sleeves. Kors"s own particular pleasure was in the pleating in the pants: six months of research, he claimed, to yield a result that looked good on every age of man. The pleats were deep and doubled on both suit trousers and sporty slacks in black linen.Read more from: https://www.kalakendra.org/upcoming-events/

Channeling Gloria Guinness by way of Veruschka


Channeling Gloria Guinness by way of Veruschka, Michael Kors Outlet designed a resort collection for the type of woman who wants to look perfectly polished whether she"s lunching in Palm Beach or lounging seaside in St. Barths. She wears bikinis and maillots dripping with hardware. ("We call them "posing suits," " said the designer, "because our girl never gets them wet.") Caftans and sundresses, some in delft porcelain patterns, also came embellished with eye-catching metallic and crystal accents. Unsurprisingly, there were a lot of animal prints, the most interesting of which was a gold-and-khaki leopard cut into a sleeveless dress with a lace-up neckline that fashion watchers will recognize as a modern-day descendant of YSL"s legendary safari jacket.Read more from: https://www.kalakendra.org/upcoming-events/

2015年7月3日星期五

We were there for a party and I thought


  • Nicole Phelps
Philip Johnson"s 1949 Glass House was the starting point for Michael Kors" pre-fall collection. "We were there for a party and I thought, what year was this done that it looks so modern?" the designer explained as he pointed out pieces like a wood-grain-print sheath dress, a three-quarters-sleeve cheetah-print balmacaan, and color-blocked cashmere sweaters loosely inspired by the architect"s midcentury masterpiece. Timeless and seasonless are buzzwords for Kors, so a suit with a sleeveless double-breasted jacket and a collarless black trench were also in the mix. "In this economy, women are investment-oriented," he added. If you can"t afford to buy art, the designer has the answer: a Jackson Pollock splatter-print dress.Read more from: https://www.kalakendra.org/upcoming-events/

This was the pro, après-tennis.


  • Tim Blanks
Michael Kors Outlet came up with a typically cute sobriquet for his spring collection: Virginia Slim Aarons. It embodies everything he loves in a woman—sexy, sporty, casually deluxe—and he"s a past master at capitalizing on that spirit. But his challenge with his men"s range is to find the guy who"d be a match for such a gal. Actually, match wasn"t far off the mark with Kors" latest looks: The first man out wore tennis shorts, carried a racket, and sported a white cashmere hoodie under his navy blazer. He looked like a glossy tennis pro. Next was a pink cashmere turtleneck, also under a navy blazer.

This was the pro, après-tennis. And après ça? A stream of clothes that suggested the kind of men who would dance attendance on Kors" fabulous females in a strictly professional capacity. Not gigolos, mind you, but dressy male wing pieces just the same. That might explain all the shorts on parade, the better to reveal legs tanned and toned by the leisurely pursuit of the good life. One particularly striking look matched a gold Lurex polo shirt with linen shorts, also glazed and belted in gold. This young Apollo would surely gladden the heart of a Lilly Pulitzer-clad matron. The metallic theme was equally striking in a pairing of polo (in silver cashmere) and pants (in silver sharkskin). Kors has a finely honed appetite for camp—attested to by the soundtrack"s exuberant bursts of Mika, Scissor Sisters, and Xanadu—and it finds its purest expression in his menswear.Read more from: https://www.kalakendra.org/upcoming-events/

A New York Fashion Week of firsts and lasts

AFP/File Justin TallisDesigner Victoria Beckham with her "Brand" award during the British Fashion Awards 2014 in London on December 1, 2014
New York (AFP) - Celebrities are jetting in, gluten-free cocktails are concocted and designers are unveiling their 2015 fall/winter collections: a frozen New York kicks off its multi-million-dollar Fashion Week Thursday.
Hot on the heels of haute couture shows in Paris, the fashion glitterati is flocking to admire the best and brightest in US design, where young talent rubs shoulders with fashion barons Ralph Lauren and Tommy Hilfiger.
But it"s not just the jet-set tripping through snow on stilettos. Fashion is big business in New York, where twice yearly fashion weeks generate nearly $900 million for America"s biggest city.
Here"s what you need to know as more than 270,000 people watch the 350 shows that kick off the 2015 fall/winter season before the juggernaut shifts to London, Milan and back to Paris.
CELEBRITY SHOE-IN
Fresh from his on-stage protest against Beyonce not winning album of the year at the Grammys, rap star Kanye West makes his New York fashion debut on Thursday with a collection for Adidas.
MOVING ON
Fashion house Oscar de la Renta shows its first collection by British-born Peter Copping, appointed creative director shortly before the Dominican-born master designer died in October.
MOVING OUT
It"s the last time the Lincoln Center will host Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week after a New York state judge ruled that it disrupts an adjacent park.
Most designers have already left, holding catwalk shows in hotels or prominent buildings across the city, but for now organizers are keeping quiet on where the new home will be come September.
HOT TALENT
The big names are Alexander Wang, Jason Wu, Marc Jacobs, Tommy Hilfiger, Ralph Lauren, Calvin Klein, Diane Von Furstenberg, Donna Karan, Prabal Gurung, Vera Wang, Michael Kors, Victoria Beckham and Zac Posen.?
Dozens of young designers are snapping at their heels, among them Thomas Wylde Maison, Ready to Fish and Thaddeus O"Neil.
VARIETY SHOW
Inspiration will be as eclectic as ever. Tommy Hilfiger has chosen the 60s and 70s, Tory Burch has eyes for Marrakesh, Michael Kors Outlet mined night and day, Jason Wu is hot for desire and Marchesa an opium dream.
MEN"S ROOM
Men will be overshadowed by women for the last time. In July, New York gets its own men"s fashion week, joining the likes of London, Paris and Milan that already showcase fashion for the sexes separately.
BOTTOM LINE
Fashion is one of the largest industries in New York and generates $887 million in economic activity, employing 180,000 people and coughing up nearly $2 billion in tax revenue a year.
Fashion Week brings about $547 million in direct visitor spending, which is more than the 2014 Super Bowl, the New York Marathon and the US Open tennis championship.
BOTTOMS UP
Vodka company Ciroc, for which music mogul Sean Combs is brand ambassador, has concocted three official cocktails, and to honor the carb-conscious fashion brat pack, they"re gluten free.
DISEASE, GUNS AND BOMBS
British supermodel with a temper Naomi Campbell is hosting a charity fashion show and clothing auction to raise money for Ebola victims.
The hemorrhagic fever gets a second look when charities including the International Rescue Committee host a pop-up lounge to showcase a protective suit for medics who treat Ebola patients.
Donna Karan and former New York mayor Michael Bloomberg host an event to spotlight efforts to end gun crime and save lives.
The Peace Bomb project, which fashions unexploded ordnance from the Vietnam War into jewelry, is to showcase its designs on the sidelines.

2015年7月1日星期三

3 Troubling Trends For Wal-Mart's Business

walmart wal-martREUTERS/Kevork DjansezianCustomers walk outside a Walmart store in the Porter Ranch section of Los Angeles.For most of the past five decades,?Wal-Mart?has been the retailer competitors feared most and as a result it made for a phenomenal investment for its shareholders. But Wal-Mart has begun to lose its cache with consumers and major holes are starting to form in its business.
Interestingly, Wal-Mart has hidden its financial problems from the headlines because challenges are different around the world, masking themselves in the overall picture. But when you dig between the headlines you can see a company in serious trouble and could be the latest in a long line of leading retailers to go from boom to bust in the blink of an eye.
U.S. shoppers are abandoning Wal-Mart
The most alarming statistic at home in the U.S. comes from falling same-store sales. This measures how sales are growing location by location and any healthy retailer is looking to grow same-store sales at or faster than consumer spending grows because that shows increased market share locally. Overall sales can be increased by increasing store count, but if same-store sales are falling then the return on each store will drop, something well see in a minute.
Below, I"ve built a table that shows year-over-year changes in same-store sales at U.S. Wal-Mart and Sam"s Club stores compared to the growth in consumer spending on goods. You can see that Wal-Mart is growing far slower than what consumers spend on goods and has been consistently negative over the past year.
?2013?Q1 2014Q2 2014Q3 2014Q4 2014
Wal-Mart1.8%-1.4%?-0.3%-0.3%-0.4%
Sam"s Club2.2%-1.2%0.1%-0.2%-0.4%
Consumer Spending-Goods3.1%?3.7%3.1%4.5%2.9%
The problem for Wal-Mart goes far further than just cyclical swings in retail or a weak economy. Wal-Mart has long been able to lure customers with one-stop shopping and low prices, but consumer trends are now working against that core strategy. For cost conscious shoppers, lower prices can often be found online and more affluent consumers are choosing style and quality products over one-stop shopping. This can be seen clearly by the growth in online retailers like?Amazon.com?as well as specialty retailers like?Williams-Sonoma?,Lululemon, and?Michael??Kors, among others.
Foreign failures don"t help the problem
Here"s where Wal-Mart"s story gets really interesting. Sales in the U.S. are beginning to struggle, but overseas the company"s profitability is in downright freefall. I highlighted this in an?article a couple of weeks ago?and the table below shows just how fast margins are falling internationally.
High margins in the U.S. have masked profit struggles overseas and store growth in some international locations is masking U.S. struggles from the revenue side. So, when you look at Wal-Mart"s overall profitability it"s hard to see any problems emerging.?
But there"s only so far you can push margins in the U.S. before you either start losing sales to lower cost competitors or you have to lower prices. So, eventually profits could decline in the U.S. and that"s when the warts will truly show.?
Wal-Mart"s high returns are falling like a rock
The most startling evidence of Wal-Mart"s decline comes from Wal-Mart itself. Each year, the company provides a return on investment calculation for investors, which measures the profit Wal-Mart makes from the money it invests in stores, inventory, and other infrastructure.
You can see below that Wal-Mart"s ROI is dropping rapidly since 2010, despite the broader economy recovering over that time.
If ROI continues to decline, Wal-Mart could become unprofitable very rapidly. Falling same-store sales and plummeting returns are how?Sears,?Kmart, or?Montgomery Ward, becameformer retail icons that were eventually overtaken by competitors. These two trends can only last so long before something has to be done.
Is Wal-Mart in serious trouble?
Wal-Mart"s traditional supercenter business model is clearly showing major signs of weakness both in the U.S. and overseas. If the retail giant can"t adapt to new competition like online, specialty, and local retailers there"s a real chance the company is in danger of heading down a downward spiral we"ve seen so many retailers go down before.
Wal-Mart Neighborhood Market is an effort to move away from the big box to local retail. Source: Wal-Mart.
There are efforts to introduce smaller footprint stores closer to consumers but that"s a stretch for a business that"s operated one way for decades. Many major retailers have problems adapting to shifts in the way consumers buy products, which is one reason you don"t shop at the same stores your grandparents did 50 years ago.
From an investment perspective, I think Wal-Mart is going to be a loser long-term, because of the challenges I"ve outlined above. Returns are falling, Wal-Mart is struggling overseas, U.S. consumers are shopping elsewhere, and the success of new formats is uncertain.
Time will tell if Wal-Mart can turn around but I"d stay out of the stock and would even consider shorting shares if operations continue to struggle.
Travis Hoium?has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services?free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that?considering a diverse range of insights?makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a?disclosure policy
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Please enjoy the photos


Style.com did not review the Fall 2010 menswear collections. Please enjoy the photos, and stay tuned for our complete coverage of the Spring 2011 collections, including reviews of each show by Tim Blanks.Read more from: https://www.kalakendra.org/upcoming-events/

But we"re here to talk about the clothes


  • Nicole Phelps
If the celebrity crush was a little crushier and the furs on the runway a little fluffier at Michael Kors Outlet this morning, there was a good reason. The designer is marking his 30th year in business. Yes, he started young—at 19, in fact. Tonight, he"ll celebrate in the tony confines of Bemelmans Bar at the Carlyle, where it"s a good bet that some of the boldfacers in the front row—Michael Douglas, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Bette Midler, Anjelica Huston, and Debra Messing, for starters—will turn up. Next month, no less a figure than the American ambassador to France will welcome him to Paris, with a festive dinner. Kors is opening a store there on Rue Saint-Honoré, and they"re putting the finishing touches on a renovated Madison Avenue flagship as we speak. In other words, the designer is having a pretty good birthday year.

But we"re here to talk about the clothes. You wouldn"t be wrong if you called this a greatest-hits collection. Over his career, Kors has ridden double-face cashmere, slinky silk jersey, the aforementioned fox fur, and evening crystals straight to number one, and they were all in abundance today. His MO this time around: playing luxe tailoring against languid draping. For every clean charcoal flannel jacket and straight-leg trouser, there was a clingy cocktail dress or gown. He"s loving a tunic for Fall, but they shared the runway with bodysuits. The operative word here was sleek; even the furs were knitted to eliminate some of their inherent bulk. The prettiest came in soft shades of plum and mauve, layered over matching draped jersey tops and pajama pants. Nearly every look in the show was monochrome, the better to create that long, uninterrupted line Kors favors.

For the guys, there were luxe takes on wardrobe essentials, too, like leather reefers, tissue-weight knits, and trousers in stretch gab. But the boys couldn"t help fading into the background a bit with all the crystal-studded evening numbers Kors offered, the last one modeled to sultry effect by his favorite model, Carmen Kass, in his favorite color, suntan.

If you want relaxed but unalloyed glamour, this collection proved that 30 years on, Kors is still the man to give it to you.Read more from: https://www.kalakendra.org/upcoming-events/