This winter
Transcription
This winter
CITYMALL’s magazine - Free Cinema DECORATION STYLE IDEAS This winter s e v a h t s u m Fashion, make-up, lifestyle Make-up What are the winter’s trends? Products you can’t resist Nadine Labaki Where do we go now? Seasonal looks CASUAL CHIC EVENING WEAR Don’t miss it! Best-selling books & movie guide #1 DECORATION STYLE IDEAS This winter s e v a h t s u m Fashion, make-up, lifestyle Make-up What are the winter’s trends? Cinema Nadine Labaki Where do we go now? Seasonal looks CASUAL CHIC EVENING WEAR Don’t miss it! Best-selling books & movie guide Products you can’t resist CITYMALL’s magazine - Free #1 Fashion The trends for the 2011-2012 winter season play on the charm of colors, the subtlety of textures and the originality of prints. So as to not turn the page too abruptly on this year’s summer fashion, color block doesn’t completely disappear, but it is seriously rivaled by the retro, rock chic and neo-bourgeois trends. As you turn the pages, you’ll discover hats which give you character, winter miniskirts, bursts of bright red color, cream-colored coats and always classy fur. Fashion is inspiration, and CITYLIFE takes you on a journey to the land of trends where you’ll discover this winter’s winning looks from head to toe. Live fashion! Fashion Trends sway to the rhythm of fashion shows. Fleeting and creative, the world of fashion is in a constant state of movement and excitement. JEAN PAUL GAULTIER FALL-WINTER 2011-2012 FASHION SHOW Designers of haute couture create eccentric, original, ultrasophisticated outfits. CITYLIFE has selected what you can take from high fashion and adapt to everyday life. It’s up to you now! Fashion Pepe Jeans Marilyn’s photo print scarf Start wearing scarves Hoss Intropia felt hat The TV series Mad Men has turned retro chic into one of this winter’s biggest trends. To add a note of retro to your outfit, tie a printed scarf around your neck, then pull on a little dress and a belted coat and voilà, here we are back in the 1960s. Cop-Copine three level feather and pearl necklace Dare to wear hats Are you more of a 1930s retro woman? The cloche hat is your best ally. First sighted at the last Marc Jacobs fashion show, the cloche hat is so off-beat and so British: Queen Elizabeth is, by the way, one of its most well-known spokespeople. Miu Miu sunglasses Mademoiselle Tara skirt Cop-Copine asymmetrical skin wool dress with a big collar Vanina ballet flats Versace bag Fashion MCS Marlboro Classics corduroy jacket Eleven Paris pants Pepe Jeans wool scarf Corduroy jackets Mexx look Jeans, sneakers… Leave your suit in the closet. But to avoid looking too slack, gentlemen, throw on a corduroy jacket. Simple and effective. Fred Perry shoe Ray-Ban sunglasses Pepe Jeans look Celio duffle bag Celio plaid shirt Preppy shirts Shirts are in denim or plaid, worn either fitted or extra large but not in-between. Button up all the way to the last button for a very trendy, preppy chic look. Fashion Givenchy glasses Fred Perry ties Stripes and polka dots Nodus scarves Suits and ties cannot go out of fashion but they also follow trends. This winter, men’s wardrobes mix stripes and polka dots. Combine both in every way possible but always in the same color palette. Nodus look Cufflinks This great classic is making a come-back. It’s the classy touch to suit fashion. Guys who want to add some fun to their outfits may be tempted to wear leather handbags. Versace leather bag Rectangle jaune shirt and tie Nodus cufflinks Trussardi Jeans look Rectangle Jaune shoes Fashion MCS Marlboro Classics leather jacket Eleven Paris tee-shirt Leather jackets A leather jacket is the pièce de résistance in any decent rock wardrobe. Wear it with slim black or red jeans. To keep it light, throw on some high heels or some derbies. Eleven Paris look Versace glasses with rhinestones Calvin Klein clutch Versace belt See by Chloé look Hoss Intropia pants Athé by Vanessa Bruno leather ankle boot Rhinestones and glitter Rockers have starry eyes and… clothes too! Glittery pockets, rhinestone-studded belts and eyewear… the shinier the better! Fashion Lili Gaufrette look Naf Naf wool hat and scarf Put on your jacquard! IKKS Girls faux fur coat © JAMES MOLLISSON Naf Naf gloves Wrapped up in their coats and faux fur, our little princesses are wearing jacquard prints. Child-like and awfully stylish, jacquard is the “in” print of the season for sweaters, scarves and hats which gives a hint of retro to ideal winter outfits. Naf Naf wool sweater dress Petit Bateau stuffed animal Derhy Kids look IKKS Girls wicker basket and faux fur Petit Bateau wool stockings Culture © HÉLÈNE BAMBERGER Here’s a quick once-over for those of you who haven’t yet devoured this year’s literary must-reads. Carrère, Auster, Roth, Murakami, Coelho... The masters of hardboiled crime fiction, introspection and poetry have struck again. “It’s a dangerous, ambiguous life: a true adventure novel. It’s also, I feel, a life that tells a story. Not only about him, Limonov, and not only about Russia, but about all of our history since the end of the World War II.”* Emmanuel Carrère Limonov: hero or scoundrel? After spending time as a bum in the US, a valet in France and a supporter of the Serbs, Limonov then becomes leader of the National Bolshevik party upon returning to Russia. Limonov vacillates his entire life between violence and literature. The author doesn’t judge, he tells the story with his own life in the spotlight at all times. Editions P.O.L, 496 pages © LOTTE HANSEN “She is moving forward now, and falling more and more deeply into the profound abyss of her own void, the place in herself which is everything that she is not.”* Paul Auster A work of hardboiled crime fiction filled with sensitive and emotional characters. Sunset Park is a complex family novel which looks into deeply repressed traumas. Seven years after the Twin Towers fell, Paul Auster questions and criticizes the American dream. The author pushes individuals to painfully and radically reexamine their own story and their values. Actes Sud, 320 pages *The excerpts of the books presented in this issue have been translated by our magazine staff, which may result in certain textual discrepancies with the published editions in English. Culture © NANCY CRAMPTON/OPALE/EDITIONS GALLIMARD “He had lost his magic.”* Philip Roth Simon Axler is a classic theater actor playing Macbeth on stage at the Kennedy Center when he falls down from an attack of terrible pain. Confabulation or real agony? Philip Roth has gone back to his favorite themes: aging and sexual and creative impotence. He adds a new theme as well, that of an imaginary woman devoted to desire. Gallimard, 124 pages “Don’t be fooled by appearances. There is only one reality.”* Haruki Murakami © CÉDRIC MARTIGNY/OPALE PHOTO ARNAUD FÉVRIER © FLAMMARION The story takes place in Tokyo in 1984, but is it really 1984? Aomame, 29 years old, takes a taxi to go to an important meeting. But in a hotel in a Tokyo suburb, she kills in cold blood a man guilty of domestic violence. Tengo is the same age; he is a discreet math teacher who likes to write. His editor suggests he rewrite the “novel” of a teenage girl named Fukaeri. The manuscript, Air Chrysalis, is exceptionally imaginative but very badly written. Tengo tries, against his will, to turn it into a successful novel. Belfond, 534 pages “The Aleph has revealed to me a bit of the woman who is standing before me.”* Paulo Coelho After The Winner Stands Alone, the famous writer Paulo Coelho comes back with a new novel inspired by his travels in Asia. Paulo is going through an existentialist and spiritual crisis which makes him quit everything and leave his village in the West Pyrenees to travel across Asia on board the Trans-Siberian. In Russia, he meets Hilal, a young, 21-year-old Turk. Then a window opens into their souls and through the doors of Aleph… Flammarion, 312 pages