WWD Jan 13 - Wwrsd.org
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WWD Jan 13 - Wwrsd.org
DAILY EDITION 13 JANUARY 2016 1 Prize Package Karlie Kloss and Glenda Bailey join the judging panel for the LVMH Prize. Page 8 Fashion. Beauty. Business. Macy’s Mops Up Joy Mangano lands at Herald Square with her Miracle Mop. Page 10 London Wrap Buyers find bankable looks at the latest round of men’s shows. Page 6 FASHION Krazy Kat PARIS — Karl Lagerfeld’s ridiculously pampered pet cat assumes a more fearsome, cartoon guise — Monster Choupette — in a new capsule collection destined for Brazilian fastfashion giant Riachuelo. Here, a leather tote that’s part of the 75-piece range slated for April delivery to 144 doors. For more on the project, see page 9. FASHION Hedi Exiting YSL? ● Anthony Vaccarello is in the wings and may succeed Hedi Slimane at Saint Laurent. Vaccarello photograph by Getty Images BY MILES SOCHA LONDON —Speculation is mounting that Hedi Slimane may be poised to make his second exit from Yves Saint Laurent. According to sources, the designer has so far failed to reach an agreement on the renewal of his initial contract with the Kering-owned fashion house and is preparing to part ways with a brand he revved up with his rock ‘n’ roll-inspired fashions and a top-to-bottom reform of the storied house. What’s more, Saint Laurent is said to have identified a frontrunner to succeed Slimane and has held extensive talks with Anthony Vaccarello, a Belgian designer partial to the racy, fast-paced side of fashion, having been recruited by Donatella Versace for her reboot of the Versus brand. He was named its creative director last Hedi Slimane September. Reached for comment, a Saint Laurent spokeswoman said the house “does not comment on rumors.” Vaccarello could not immediately be reached for comment. Anthony Vaccarello The possibility of a Slimane exit and designer change adds an extra dash of intrigue to the Saint Laurent men’s show scheduled for Jan. 24 at the tail end of men’s fashion week in Paris, typically a megaproduction akin to a rock concert, complete with a front row packed with musicians and Slimane groupies. According to one source, Saint Laurent recently canceled its usual venue, the Carreau du Temple, which Slimane secured for a multiseason exclusive after the Marais location underwent an extensive renovation. It is understood the show will go on at a different place, and Slimane is also said to be working on the fall women’s collection, to be paraded here in early March. On Tuesday, Saint Laurent launched teaser videos featuring musicians and touting an event in Los Angeles on Feb. 10. Should it come to pass, a Slimane exit would deliver another shock to the French fashion scene, wracked late last year by the exit of Raf Simons from Dior and the ousting of Alber Elbaz from Lanvin. Successors for those two houses have yet to be named. Those dramatic changes seem to signal a seismic shift in the fashion industry, as star designers buckle under the pressures and/ or restrictions of an accelerating and highstakes industry. Slimane, who ushered in more than a decade of skinny tailoring with his overhaul of Dior Homme, exited that brand in 2007 and pursued a photography and art career before returning to the fashion fold in 2012 at the creative helm of YSL, which CONTINUED ON PG.4 3 13 JANUARY 2016 BUSINESS Charney Objects Motion By American Apparel ● The objection argues against the Los Angeles firm’s request to extend the time it has to file its reorganization plan. A protest, one of several that took place throughout 2015, at American Apparel headquarters in Los Angeles. BY KARI HAMANAKA Dov Charney may have already gotten his way in successfully slowing American Apparel Inc.’s aims to expedite its bankruptcy. Whether he succeeds in getting back into the company now comes down to a judge. The former American Apparel chief executive officer managed to slip in an objection Monday evening in a Delaware bankruptcy court on the company’s bid to secure its reorganization plan. American Apparel in late December asked the court to extend its period of exclusivity to give it the sole right to file a reorganization plan, a move that would block any competing strategies from coming into play. Charney, Tuesday, sought approval for an expedited teleconference hearing on the matter, according to court documents. At stake is the future of American Apparel and who will ultimately control it. “The bankruptcy court might consider it because at the end of the day the bankruptcy court is a court of equity, meaning there are obviously rules and deadlines, but there are times when the bankruptcy court will be flexible if it appears there is a credible objection out there,” said Caroline Djang, a partner in the Costa Mesa, Calif., office of Rutan & Tucker. Djang, who is not involved in the American Apparel case, added the judge’s responsibility is to do what’s equitable for the most creditors. A $300 million deal for American Apparel, announced Monday, could derail the company’s plans for exiting bankruptcy. The bid involves Hagan Capital Group and Silver Creek Partners in collaboration with Charney. BUSINESS Retailers Optimistic at ICR Conference American Apparel photograph by Kari Hamanaka; Holiday shoppers by George Chinsee; Street style by Kuba Dabrowski ● All spoke of the “challenging” environment, but also stressed positives for 2016. BY DEBRA BORCHARDT “Challenging” was the word for the day among retailers at the ICR Retail and Consumer Conference in Orlando, Fla. Mall traffic, warm weather and an unmotivated shopper seemed to plague all the retailers no matter the brand. And if mall traffic was weak during the holidays, it’s even worse in the post-Christmas season. “A” malls weren’t great and “B” and “C” malls were even worse. Retailers said mall traffic is not improving, and they are adjusting to this new reality as they realize they have to take matters into their own hands. Ascena Retail Group said slow mall traffic was its biggest challenge and seemed relieved that only 31 percent of its locations are in malls. Many retailers are also using those quiet brick stores to fulfill online shopping orders. American Eagle Outfitters has created a clothing reserve option. They offered shoppers the option and then reserve a product online to buy in person at the store. Forty percent of those reserved orders resulted in The group said their bid is better for creditors by offering “a recovery of 10 times that under the debtor’s plan.” The bid, revised from a Dec. 29 $200 million offering, assigns a 15-times purchase multiple based on the last publicly disclosed adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization figure from American Apparel. “Will it be successful? It’s in the hands of the gods but it might be a compromise,” Charney told WWD. “Will we be able to delay confirmation? We’ll see…this is a little bit of a sword fight.” Charney in his objection alleged the company and its adviser have gone out of their way to block alternative restructuring plans from entering the mix in what he alleged to be a distaste for him. Charney was dismissed from American Apparel in late 2014 following an internal investigation that found him to be in violation of his employment agreement, according to the company. Charney has heavily criticized the investigation and called it out as part of an elaborate scheme to rid the company of him — accusations he’s alleged now in numerous lawsuits flung at the company, New York hedge fund Standard General and current and former executives. Holiday shoppers in Midtown. the customer following through and coming into the store to pick up the item. Additionally, shoppers ended up buying three more units for every one they reserved. American Eagle Outfitters plans to leverage this up-selling trend moving forward. And stores that get stuck with a random pair of returned shoes will now ship it out if the item is sold online, which results in recaptured sales. American Eagle Outfitters also plan to launch a newly designed mobile site for shopping this year. The company found that creating a desktop online store, didn’t necessarily translate into a good mobile shopping experience. Ascena Retail Group also noted it has worked on an improved mobile shopping site design. Regarding winter’s slow arrival, GIII’s Wilson Leather chain suffered from negative 4 percent comps as a result of the unseasonably warm weather in November and December. However, the company said a new cold snap has quickly driven shoppers back to the stores. GIII said it reduced its dependency on outerwear so it doesn’t have to hang onto the weatherman’s report. The company also said shoppers are responding well to its Calvin Klein and Eliza J dresses as these brands are top sellers in department stores. GIII was equally optimistic about the “At virtually every turn in the process, it has been evident that the company’s hostility toward…Mr. Charney renders it incapable as a practical matter of genuinely exploring a Charney-involved transaction,” Monday’s objection said. “It is probably also the case that current management is conflicted [by] the old-fashioned way: the alternative offer poses risks of some management shake-up.” It is expected Charney would come back to lead American Apparel if the Hagan-Silver Creek deal is accepted. Whether that is as ceo is yet to be determined. Charney’s also been in talks with multiple industry executives who would join the senior management team should the offer be accepted. While the names of those individuals have not been disclosed, they are described in the offer letter as “senior industry veterans who are highly regarded and credible in the industry with exceptional track records.” Details about the rest of the strategy to improve the business were not outlined in the latest offer letter, other than to say manufacturing is expected to remain in the Los Angeles area. Meanwhile, American Apparel continues moving towards an exit from bankruptcy proceedings, disclosing Monday that a proposed amended reorganization plan received the OK from all voting classes in a deal that sets aside $2.5 million to unsecured creditors. The company said it “remains focused on pursuing the completion of its financial restructuring following its planned bankruptcy court hearing at the end of this month.” A hearing has been set for Jan. 20, although Charney’s motion Tuesday asks the court to postpone that date and push up the scheduling of a teleconference to review his requests. Separately, a judge Tuesday approved the sale of Oak NYC, the more fashion-forward brand acquired by American Apparel in 2013, back to founders Jeff Madalena and Louis Terline. coming year. They have had a strong start to its Karl Lagerfeld products, and will be launching the Lagerfeld shoes his year. The company said it will be looking for acquisitions to make this year in the range of $100 million to $1 billion. Although the high yield market has been choppy, they said the company can still borrow at good rates. The preference is for a domestic woman’s brand. Some retailers are capitalizing on the bad winter like Gordman’s department stores, which plans on buying lots of unsold winter merchandise and “hoteling” it until next year. They are also transitioning seasonal goods earlier this year. Gordman’s operates 102 stores in mostly upper Midwest states and while many similar chains like Kohl’s are closing stores, this value brand plans to add six more stores in 2016. Others have put the warm winter in their rearview mirror, setting their sights on spring instead. American Eagle Outfitters said it was seeing a nice sell-through for its transitional spring clothes. The company said it bounced back from Christmas, and are very optimistic moving forward. Retailers said the comparison between this year’s warm winter to last year’s sales (where an extraordinarily bad winter pushed people to buy lots of winterwear) is apples to oranges. And this challenging retail environment has prompted many companies to leave their “open-to-buy” unused. They are preferring to wait and see how shoppers respond before committing funds to inventory. One positive for the industry has been the raw cost of cotton. American Eagle said it would use this cost benefit to improve product quality. The retailer thinks other companies will probably use the savings as a promotional effort to pass on to the shoppers. TOP 5 TRENDING ON WWD.COM Street Style: London Fall 2016 Men’s Wear Collections ● WWD went off the runways and onto the streets and sidewalks for the best looks from London Collections: Men. ●2016 Golden Globes Red Carpet ● David Bowie, Icon, Dies at 69 ●Reactions to David Bowie’s Death on Social Media ● The Blogosphere Pays Off More Than Ever Global Stock Tracker As of close January 12, 2016 ADVANCERS Debenhams Plc +15.55% Brunello Cucinelli SpA +8.47% Iconix Brand Group Inc. +8.33% Oxford Industries Inc. +7.32% Puma +6.43% DECLINERS Ascena Retail Group Inc. -9.40% Kose Corp. -6.67% The Bon-Ton Stores Inc. -6.25% Avon Products Inc. -4.92% The Men’s Wearhouse Inc. -3.68% 4 13 JANUARY 2016 Hedi Exiting YSL? CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 he rechristened Saint Laurent to return to the initial impulses in the Sixties that drove the late, legendary couturier to introduce ready-to-wear. From his home base in Los Angeles, Slimane overhauled the house with a new collection architecture and graphic identity; a widely copied store concept involving acres of veiny marble and gleaming shelves; and influential, mostly black-and-white campaigns lensed by the designer himself featuring a cast of music personalities and edgy models. While he received some barbs from critics for repetitive collections inspired by grunge and other music subcultures, Saint Laurent under Slimane charted rapid growth, outpacing most other designer brands as the luxury sector entered a period of more moderate expansion. In the third quarter, revenues at Saint Laurent vaulted by 26.6 percent on a comparable basis to 243.4 million euros, or $270.8 million. Retail sales were up 32 percent in the quarter, with even mainland China recording a sharp increase, a testament to ongoing customer demand for the brand’s $5,000 biker jackets and $2,000 leather satchels. By contrast, organic sales at Gucci, which accounts for more than a third of total revenues at Kering, fell 0.4 percent during the three-month period while revenues at Bottega Veneta were up 4.3 percent on a comparable basis. Reflecting the increasing role of Saint Laurent and Bottega Veneta in the group’s growth, Kering appointed Saint Laurent chief executive officer A look from Saint Laurent fall 2013. Francesca Bellettini and Bottega Veneta ceo Carlo Alberto Beretta as new members of its executive committee. Kering is scheduled to report fourth-quarter and full-year results on Feb. 19. Saint Laurent revealed in March 2012 that Slimane would rejoin the house as its creative director, a dozen years after he exited YSL Rive Gauche Pour Homme to heat up Dior Homme. At that time, Elbaz helmed YSL Rive Gauche for women in the wake of the founder’s retirement from rtw. Slimane was granted total creative responsibility for the brand image and all its collections, succeeding Stefano Pilati after a fruitful, if turbulent, eightyear tenure for the Italian designer, who would go on to join Ermenegildo Zegna. “As one of the most important French fashion houses, Yves Saint Laurent today possesses formidable potential, which I am confident will be successfully harnessed and revealed through the vision of Hedi Slimane,” FrançoisHenri Pinault, chairman and ceo of YSL parent Kering, stated at the time of the appointment. Slimane’s return to the fashion spotlight — and foray into women’s wear — generated much excitement in the French capital, especially as Raf Simons, another men’s wear power player and proponent of minimalism, was shortly after named the couturier at Dior, succeeding John Galliano. An art history graduate from the Ecole du Louvre, Slimane emerged from fashion’s shadows during his first stint at YSL. Hired as an assistant in fashion marketing at YSL in 1997 and A look from Saint Laurent spring 2016. then quickly promoted to designer, Slimane successfully revved up the label’s Rive Gauche Homme collection with sleek, androgynous tailoring: leather trenchcoats, pinch-waist suits and plunging shirts. He was a pioneer in inviting contemporary artists like Ugo Rondinone to put works in YSL stores, positing his clothes in a broader cultural context. Slimane resigned from YSL in 2000 to pursue exclusive negotiations with its parent, then known as Gucci Group, for the launch of his own label. He ended up signing on with luxury rival Dior, embarking on an ambitious project that electrified men’s wear with his Slimane is said to covet control over YSL’s beauty business, but he does not hold any sway with the operation, controlled by L’Oréal, which acquired the business in 2008. As a result, he has distanced himself from its products and marketing messages. Born in Brussels, Vaccarello studied sculpture at La Cambre, and came onto the international fashion radar in 2006 when he won first place at the Hyères International Festival of Fashion and Photography for his collection inspired by Italian porn star La Cicciolina. He subsequently went on to work at Fendi and in 2009 launched his namesake collection in Paris, where he The possibility of a Slimane exit and designer change adds an extra dash of intrigue to the Saint Laurent men’s show scheduled for Jan. 24 at the tail end of men’s fashion week in Paris, typically a megaproduction akin to a rock concert, complete with a front row packed with musicians and Slimane groupies. glitzy fashion shows and minimalist boutiques. Slimane has been floated as a possible successor to Simons at Dior, although sources close to the house describe such an appointment as unlikely, given his penchant for demanding a wide creative birth. At present, Dior has Kris Van Assche designing men’s wear, Victoire de Castellane in charge of high jewelry, Peter Marino masterminding the store architecture — and a host of famous ambassadors, including Jennifer Lawrence and Marion Cotillard. A look from Anthony Vaccarrello fall 2012. continues to show. Two years later, he scooped the ANDAM fashion award. Impressed by his provocatively sexy and audacious styles, Donatella Versace in 2013 tapped him as a guest designer for her revamped Versus brand. Last September, she named him the creative director of Versus, putting him in charge of the men’s and women’s collections under her supervision. His first full collection was for fall 2015 retailing. Like Slimane, he has a penchant for severe, razor-sharp designs that look best on a thin figure. A look from Anthony Vaccarrello spring 2016. 5 13 JANUARY 2016 RETAIL Barneys Returns to Chelsea With an Exclusive Package ● Opening is set for mid- February. BY DAVID MOIN With the return of Barneys New York to its original site in the Chelsea section of Manhattan, there’s nostalgia and sentiment, and most expect the usual Barneys irreverent wit and style embedded in the windows and the merchandising. But at the core of the project is a major effort to give the city a different take on luxury. Exclusive designer offerings and introductions in men’s and women’s wear will be sprinkled across the 55,000-square-foot space, WWD has learned. And that means a range of products across categories that Barneys has exclusively on either a global, U.S. or local basis. The new Barneys will open in the second or third week of February, but there’s no specific date yet given the uncertainties of construction and last-minute tweaking. Merchandise is another story. The mix has been in the works for months and is set. Products to be sold only in Barneys downtown as “global exclusives” include women’s capsule collections by Irene Neuwirth, Feathered Soul, Elder Statesman and Sidney Garber; the Douglas Little fragrance collection called Heretic and the Bergamot fragrance from Malin and Goetz. Barneys is also relaunching its own Route du Thé fragrance for men and women and introducing a Route du Thé candle. On the men’s side, Barneys will sell an allblack collection from Greg Lauren, a capsule collection from Fear of God, and items from R13. Regarding U.S. exclusives, Barneys downtown will carry capsule collections by Alexander Wang in ready-to-wear and Proenza Schouler in handbags. In jewelry, Irene, Feathered Soul and Tate are providing capsule collections. Barneys also has the U.S. exclusive on bags and clutches in python and crocodile from Baraboux; embroidered white tunic shirts from a new French brand called Kilometer, and capsule shoe collections from Aquazzura, Valentino, Gianvito Rossi and Sarah Flint. In men’s wear for the U.S., Barneys in Chelsea will carry some exclusive runway looks from Lanvin, Givenchy, Balmain, Rick Owens and Alexander Wang, and a collection by Sulvam, a former assistant to Yohji Yamamoto. The store is also introducing to New York a range of constructed jackets by Shiro Sakai, who worked with Rei Kawakubo for more than a dozen years. Exclusives are what every retailer tries to score, regardless of whether they target affluent or low income customers. And in luxury, it’s more important than ever, given the sector’s widening distribution [some say overdistribution] through off-price and outlet stores, Web sites and designers’ own boutiques. In addition, Saks Fifth Avenue, Neiman Marcus and other luxury stores have been seeing a decline in tourist spending by international travelers, particularly those from China, Russia and Brazil. Generally, last year luxury traffic and sales were down in the U.S. Given the scorched landscape, purveyors of designer merchandise must come up with innovative, differentiated product and new services and experiences to entice shoppers back. Barneys in Chelsea will have its fair share of amenities and services. For example, the lower level, called the foundation level, will house cosmetics, skin care and fragrances, as well as a men’s barbershop by Blind Barber. The third floor will showcase men’s designer rtw and footwear, as well as a Freds restaurant but with a menu of its own [unlike Freds at Barneys on Madison Avenue] that emphasizes drinks and small plates. Personal shopping suites will be on the fourth level for a more private experience, and there will be treatment rooms on the foundation floor. The second level will house women’s designer rtw and footwear, and the ground level will sell men’s and women’s leather goods and accessories, as well as women’s fine jewelry. Right upon entering the store, located at 101 Seventh Avenue on the corner of 16th Street, visitors will be drawn to a large spiral staircase connecting the selling floors. Grand staircases as a central focal point have become a Barneys signature. The store is being designed by the New York-based architectural firm Steven Harris Architects. As previously reported in WWD, Barneys in Chelsea will have 200 feet of frontage along most of the stretch of Seventh Avenue between 16th and 17th Streets and wrapping the corner of 16th Street. At 55,000 square feet, the downtown unit will be about half the size of the original Barneys flagship on the site, which at its peak measured 120,000 square feet and encompassed the entire Seventh Avenue frontage from 16th to 17th Streets. Barneys is leasing the site. In recent years, Barneys has closed more stores than it has opened, and converted some of its Co-Op stores into regular Barneys sites. But the business was stabilized in 2012 with the arrival of Richard Perry, who took a majority stake in the business by extinguishing virtually all of the $600 million in long-term debt that Barneys had. Barneys operates flagships on Madison Avenue; in Beverly Hills; Chicago; Seattle; Boston; San Francisco; Las Vegas; Los Angeles, and Scottsdale, Ariz., as well as barneys.com and 25 other smaller stores and outlets across the U.S. Barneys was first opened in 1923 by Barney Pressman. The site was vacated in 1997 after Barneys opened its Madison Avenue flagship, and it was converted into a Loehmann’s that shut down in February 2014. Besides Chelsea, Barneys has another big expansion move in the works — becoming a third anchor inside Bal Harbour Shops in Bal Halbour, Fla., near Miami. Saks and Neiman’s are already there. A Barneys lease depends on an expansion of Bal Harbour Shops being green-lighted. That Barneys would also include a Freds restaurant. Two years ago, Mark Lee, the chief executive officer of Barneys, told WWD that when Barneys left Chelsea, it created a void in the market. It’s never been filled, though there is greater competition nearby in the Meatpacking District where many monobrands have opened shop. There is also Scoop, which carries several designer brands, as well as Jeffrey New York, both in the vicinity, and several offprice big-box stores on Sixth Avenue. The addition of the High Line, the Whitney Museum and the influx of residential properties and retail stores have brought greater traffic to the area. Business among fashion retailers in the Meatpacking District and Chelsea is said to be mixed. The old Barneys was as much a style hub and a place to see and be seen. But the new Barneys isn’t simply about restoring the past. “We didn’t do this just for nostalgic reasons,” Lee once told WWD. “The store is really being built and strategized as a modern investment for a modern downtown.” Barneys downtown will carry capsule collections by Alexander Wang in ready-towear and Proenza Schouler in handbags. In jewelry, Irene, Feathered Soul and Tate are providing capsule collections. Barneys also has the U.S. exclusive on bags and clutches in python and crocodile from Baraboux; embroidered white tunic shirts from a new French brand called Kilometer, and capsule shoe collections from Aquazzura, Valentino, Gianvito Rossi and Sarah Flint. A rendering of the Barneys Chelsea store. 6 13 JANUARY 2016 London Men’s Touted For Planning, Fashions ● Retailers point to Burberry, Alexander McQueen, Coach and Wales Bonner as season’s standouts. BY SAMANTHA CONTI WITH CONTRIBUTIONS FROM JULIA NEEL AND LORELEI MARFIL LONDON — The city’s men’s wear outing for fall 2016 won kudos from buyers on both sides of the Atlantic for its polish, professionalism and skill in blending the old with the new. The four-day London Collections: Men wrapped earlier this week, with buyers pointing to bankable looks from established and young brands, and collections loaded with workwear and military influences, sharp tailoring, street influence and cross-gender styles. Among the standout collections that buyers pointed to were Burberry, Alexander McQueen, Coach, Craig Green, J.W. Anderson and the MAN showcase that featured labels Wales Bonner, Charles Jeffrey and Rory Parnell Mooney. “London is full of clever dichotomies: A strong utility/workwear influence on the one hand and a whimsical gender-fluid influence on the other; an energetic, colorful street vibe, and a traditional classic tailored vibe on the other,” said Eric Jennings, vice president and men’s fashion director at Saks Fifth Avenue. He said Christopher Bailey, Burberry’s chief creative and chief executive officer, did a “stellar job of combining all of this by seamlessly, intertwining classic vintage trenchcoats with colorful sequined track suits and sportive trainers.” He added that it was “poignant” to be in London with so many David Bowie Alexander McQueen references from the Seventies and Eighties, “well before we learned of his passing. His indelible influence on fashion will most certainly be felt this season,” added Jennings. Bruce Pask, men’s fashion director at Bergdorf Goodman, called London “a fascinating market” given the country’s tradition and importance in the continuing history of men’s wear. “It’s exciting to see proven heritage brands evolve while also watching the emergence of new, vibrant labels with points of view that derive from the street and youth culture. Made in England still means a lot to a Goodman’s customer, and we are glad to be in business with some very gifted local talent.” He pointed to Gieves & Hawkes and its “very relaxed weekend wardrobe of luxurious pieces, like great shearlings and chunky cashmere sweaters,” and to Alexander McQueen’s “opulent, regal collection that touched on the very vibrant evening wear category in an original way while also delivering some fantastic regimental jackets and coats.” As for the young talent, Pask credited Craig Green for creating a “very singular vision in a very short time” and pointed to Thom Sweeney’s “very relaxed, modern take on British tailoring with a younger, sexy feel that was very fresh.” He added that the showcase, overall, was a success: “The organization of LC:M, in the care of the BFC, sets a very high bar with venues that are convenient and well designed, on a schedule that is well thought out. It’s a great platform for the country’s varied men’s wear resources and there was a bounty of inspiration,” Pask said. Jo Harris, general merchandising manager of men’s wear at Harrods, said the big brands in particular delivered this season. Burberry Coach She pointed to Alexander McQueen’s “drama and the reinvention of styles that are iconic to the brand,” and to Coach “for the incredibly wearable designs that have a fun, novel spin — dinosaur knit, rocket motifs.” She said it was interesting to see Burberry “pull back and create a show that was more stripped back and intimate.” She said, overall, there was often less of a distinction between formal wear and casual wear, with brands blurring the lines between both, most notably at Burberry. Harris said among the big trends to emerge were Nineties nostalgia at Burberry, Moschino and Paul Smith; checks and plaid at Coach and Gieves & Hawkes; novelty at Christopher Kane and Christopher Raeburn, and florals at McQueen and Moschino. At Selfridges, men’s designer and contemporary buyer Jack Cassidy said his top picks included the young talent Wales Bonner, part of the MAN showcase, and J.W. Anderson. “I think that Grace Wales Bonner set a beautiful mood via the music, and really pushed her designs in a way that meant they had a lot of catwalk presence and you could really appreciate all of the detail,” he said, adding that J.W. Anderson also delivered a stellar show. “It was unexpected, fresh and further showcased the uniqueness of Jonathan’s vision. Over the past few seasons the commercial collection has also grown from strength to strength so I’m really looking forward to seeing how the core ideas translate into non-runway pieces when in the showroom,” Cassidy said. He also noticed the London designers distancing themselves from shorter lengths and embracing longer ones. “It seems that designers moved away in general from Gieves & Hawkes bomber jackets, and that overcoats and parkas were more popular.” Darren Skey, head of men’s wear buying at Harvey Nichols, said the biggest trends that emerged were wide-leg pants/flares; tactile materials such as velvet and corduroy, and a move away from structured into soft tailoring, as seen at Richard James. He also pointed to patchwork, placement pockets and less streetwear, “which has been so strong in previous seasons.” He said the 1205 collection by Paula Gerbase was the most cohesive at LC:M. “The fabrication and silhouettes were bang on trend,” he said. Dean Cook, the new buying manager for men’s wear at Browns, which is now owned by Farfetch.com, said he liked Craig Green, Wales Bonner, and Agi & Sam. “Agi & Sam’s collection was super wearable, and Grace’s casting, music, setting and clothes were very strong. I really liked the power of Charles Jeffrey.” Cook had confirmed even before the shows that budgets would be up for fall — and he did not change his mind. “Browns has always supported British designers. I increased the budget for the London men’s designers last season, and I’ll be doing so again this season. I do think that we need to be offering British designers and need to add more into the mix,” he said. Damien Paul, head of men’s wear at Matchesfashion.com, also pointed to Wales Bonner and Charles Jeffrey as standouts. “I thought the MAN show this season was exceptional — particularly Wales Bonner and Charles Jeffrey, who had two of the most impactful shows of the week. They are exactly what we want from London — bold, dynamic and idiosyncratic,” he said. Some of the biggest trends, he said, were retro zip-tops, which he “loved at Burberry;” and wider trousers, “which continue to feel like the most modern cut.” He believes “there’s still a grungier, more bohemian spirit in the air. We saw the influence of Alessandro Michele’s Gucci at many of the shows.” While he would not comment specifically on budgets, he did say the store “continues to see a really encouraging response to our London designers, and our men’s department on the whole continues to grow at a very strong rate. I’m leaving London feeling optimistic — it’s always reassuring to see so much creativity and energy and it was a great start to the show marathon,” he said. Moschino Photographs by Giovanni Giannoni and James Mason RETAIL 7 13 JANUARY 2016 Alberta Ferretti ALBERTA FERRETTI Daywear trumped Alberta Ferretti’s signature ethereal evening frills for pre-fall. Lest anyone assume daytime gear and its inherent practicality come off as boring in comparison to the drama of gowns — not so in Ferretti’s world. She infused tailored separates with dramatic animalia, embroidering a camel-and-black coat with snake and panther motifs, working furs in feral stripes and anchoring looks in wildcat motif boots. A bold statement for sure, the exotica was controlled by sharp silhouettes, and segued into dreamier fare including delicate silk dresses with lace details and a jewel-toned group of dresses, coat and shifts. — JESSICA IREDALE PHILOSOPHY DI LORENZO SERAFINI A Nineties-tinged take on Edwardian romance fueled Lorenzo Serafini’s pre-fall Philosophy collection, which is building momentum. Serafini has shown a keen eye for cool femininity that’s romantic while avoiding the precious. Prints are one of his strong suits, rendered here in a delicate tea rose set against black and a softly exotic bird and bamboo motif inspired by something he found on Chinese cushions. Dress silhouettes included long-sleeved, floor-length styles in crochet lace and Seventies midi styles, a period echoed in button-front A-line skirts, tie-neck blouses and robust, tweed tailoring, such as slouchy, mannish trousers and jackets. — J.I. SELF-PORTRAIT Self-Portrait has quickly become a cool girl go-to in the special occasion category. For pre-fall, designer Han Chong explored more relaxed, romantic silhouettes than he had in previous collections. Done in soft blues and creamy whites, dresses with high necklines Alberta Ferretti and Philosophy di Lorenzo Serafini photographs by George Chinsee Self-Portrait and bell sleeves channeled a prim, Victorian mood, while tiered ruffles, pleating and off-the-shoulder detailing kept things sensual and current. Chong also worked with print for the first time: a delicate, vintage-inspired floral on a pair of red and white dresses. The best group in the feminine lineup juxtaposed sporty, patterned guipure lace silhouettes with sheer, floral-embroidered overlays that resulted in a novel 3-D effect. — KRISTI GARCED JOSEPH Inspired by Perry Ogden’s “Pony Kids,” Louise Trotter reinterpreted traditional men’s wear into a luxe and feminine pre-fall lineup for Joseph. She wanted to give heirlooms an “aristocratic edge.” She worked in cashmere, Shetland wool, Prince of Wales donegals, tweeds, traditional felts and flannel. Strong, borrowed-from-the-boys outerwear included a cream wool cashmere trench with oversize pockets and a felt melton underneath the collar, a nubby oversize Tuscana coat and a soft gray leather shearling coat. The tension between masculine and feminine also played well in cashmere cardigan sweaters, roll neck sweaters and cream silk blouses, some with a bow at the neck. Sturdier camel corduroy trousers and high-waisted skirts and pinstripe button-down shirts balanced the assortment. — LORELEI MARFIL THEORY In pursuit of unconstructed ease, Lisa Kulson focused on the fluid and feminine with soft suiting, washed silk blouses with lace insets and bodycon knit dresses with bare shoulders or ruffled hems for Theory pre-fall. Navy and red plaid trousers with a matching car coat in a lightweight wool blend offered a cool, tomboyish take on transitional dressing. All of it was stylishly versatile and safe — no big statements here. — K.G. Joseph Theory Philosophy de Lorenzo Serafini 8 13 JANUARY 2016 FASHION Karlie Kloss, Glenda Bailey Join LVMH Prize ● They are among new members of the expert committee who will help narrow the field to 10 finalists. BY MILES SOCHA PARIS — Here’s another hyphen for model-entrepreneur-coder-Instagram-sensation Karlie Kloss: Fashion judge. She has been asked to join the expert committee for the third edition of the LVMH Prize for Young Fashion Designers, which today opens its site to applications for anyone under age 40 who has produced and sold at least two women’s or men’s ready-towear collections. Up for grabs is a grand prize of 300,000 euros, or $325,000 at current exchange, plus a year of coaching from experts at luxury giant LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton, parent of fashion houses including Fendi, Givenchy, Berluti, Loro Piana and Kenzo. Also joining the committee, charged with narrowing a pre-selected list of 30 contenders to 10 finalists, are Glenda Bailey, editor in chief of Harper’s Bazaar in New York; Miroslava Duma, founder of the Russian fashion site Buro 24/7; makeup artist Peter Philips, creative and image director of Christian Dior makeup in Paris, and Katherine Ross, a fashion and art consultant based in Los Angeles. They are to join 35 other journalists, stylists, buyers, photographers and other fashion professionals, among them photographer Juergen Teller and editors Emmanuelle Alt and Suzy Menkes. Unique in its online-only application process — and a jury stacked with LVMH fashion stars including Karl Lagerfeld, Marc Jacobs and Nicolas Ghesquière — the prize is expected to attract about 1,000 applicants, as it has for its first two editions, according to Delphine Arnault, the force behind the initiative and a key talent scout at family controlled LVMH. Applicants and interested parties will discover a refreshed prize Web site designed to offer formerly shortlisted designers more dedicated online space. “It’s available for everyone to be able to consult the designers that have been selected by our experts and the jury, to give exposure to these young talents. It’s an exciting tool,” Arnault told WWD in an interview. The executive, second-in-command at Louis Vuitton, LVMH’s largest and most profitable brand, noted that the group’s experts are at the disposal of all shortlisted designers to answer questions, while the ultimate victor receives a full year of dedicated attention. “We’re really there to help,” she stressed, noting that staffers continue to guide Thomas Tait, winner of the inaugural 2014 edition, “in the different decisions that he’s taking in his company.” Marta Marques and Paulo Almeida, the Portuguese duo behind the London-based Marques’Almeida label, have seen their company grow “a lot” since bagging the grand prize in 2015, according to Arnault. “We work with them on strategy, making sure they have the right collections plan, the right pricing for the products. They’re very proactive, very entrepreneurial,” she enthused. French designer Simon Porte Jacquemus, who scooped a special jury prize of 100,000 euros, or $108,400, during his second attempt at the prize, is relying on LVMH experts to help him find a new space in Paris and to assemble the right team for his fledgling company. As in past editions, LVMH plans to fly semifinalists to the French capital during Paris Fashion Week where they can display their wares at the firm’s Avenue Montaigne headquarters for the 40 members of the expert committee to inspect. Arnault also invites a broad slice of the fashion pack to a cocktail event, offering the young talents additional exposure and more networking possibilities. “It’s a great opportunity to see so many people in the fashion industry that otherwise might take years to meet,” she said, noting department store executives, famous photographers, top editors, models and makeup artists stream through the designers’ booths. “They get a lot of exposure to different aspects of the industry and they get more awareness for their brands. I think it’s a great opportunity for them,” she explained. “The idea is really to connect them with important people in the industry — people who can make a difference in their career. “We are a leader in our industry and it’s our responsibility to help identify young talents and to help them grow,” she added. To date, LVMH has hosted 55 young designers in Paris and handed out five awards. Applicants have come from 100 countries and included relatively established talents such as Simone Rocha and Demna Gvasalia of Vetements, who stage runway shows in Europe, to more obscure names such as Kiev-based Anton Belinskiy and Shangguan Zhe of Sankuanz, Xiamen, China. In mid-June, the 10 finalists for the 2015 edition are to face the all-star jury. Besides Arnault, Lagerfeld, Jacobs and Ghesquière, the other members of the jury are Loewe artistic director Jonathan Anderson; Céline’s Phoebe Philo; Givenchy’s couturier Riccardo Tisci; Kenzo designers Humberto Leon and Carol Lim of Kenzo; Jean-Paul Claverie, an advisor to LVMH chairman and chief executive Bernard Arnault and the groups director of sponsorships, and Pierre-Yves Roussel, chairman and ceo of LVMH Fashion Group. Also today, LVMH opens up applications for fashion graduates through May 15. Each year, LVMH awards three winners the chance to join the creative team of one of the group’s houses for a year, as well as a grant of 10,000 euros, or $10,830. Prizes for young designers have multiplied in recent years as fashion’s biggest players jockey to do good and forge relations with potential future recruits. LVMH also supports the ANDAM Fashion Awards; the International Fashion and Photography Festival in Hyères, France, and Central Saint Martins College of Arts and Design in London. “It’s a great opportunity to see so many people in the fashion industry that otherwise might take years to meet….The idea is to connect [designers] with… people who can make a difference in their career. We are a leader in our industry and it’s our responsibility to help identify young talents and to help them grow.” — Delphine Arnault, LVMH 9 13 JANUARY 2016 FASHION Karl Lagerfeld Readies Collection With Riachuelo ● The capsule range is to be sold in 144 of the Brazilian retailers’ stores starting in April. BY MILES SOCHA wallets, small leather goods, iPhone cases and collectible items are totes bearing a cartoon likeness of Choupette, the designer’s pet cat, who has become a celebrity in her own right — and an engine of the Lagerfeld business, her likeness plastered over all manner of Lagerfeld products. Apparel looks in the Riachuelo collection include a black jersey jumpsuit and graphic T-shirts, some depicting Chopuette. Prices are to range from 50 to 400 Brazilian real, or about $12 to $100 at current exchange rates. Riachuelo boasts 23 million PARIS — Karl Lagerfeld, with his Olympian work ethic, is sweeping into Brazil this spring with a special 75-piece collection for fast-fashion chain Riachuelo. Disclosing the project exclusively to WWD, Lagerfeld has designed a range of ready-to-wear and accessories for women slated to debut in April at roughly half of its 285 doors. The collaboration comes more than a decade after the German designer helped pioneer “masstige” with Sweden’s Hennes & Mauritz, igniting a craze for high-low collaborations. The Lagerfeld company is plotting a launch event during São Paulo Fashion Week, scheduled for April 13-17, along with a national advertising campaign, window animations and special displays. Brazil, despite its economic challenges, will be in the international spotlight this year as it gears up for the Rio 2016 Summer Olympic Games, prompting some fashion firms to capitalize on the attention. Louis Vuitton will parade its next cruise collection on May 28 in Rio de Janeiro, as reported. According to Pier Paolo Righi, chief executive officer of Karl Lagerfeld, Brazil boasts a “customer base with a strong passion for fashion and who resonates incredibly well with Karl Lagerfeld.” Among the handbags, clutches, credit-card holders and welcomes up to one million customers per day. It markets clothes and accessories for women, men and children, along with homewares. The Brazil venture is the latest volley in an international push for Lagerfeld’s signature brand, which last fall dove into e-commerce in 97 countries in partnership with Italy’s Yoox Net-a-porter Group. Lagerfeld initiated its retail rollout in 2013 and initially focused mainly on Western Europe, particularly France and Germany. It counts about 20 directly operated stores and about 20 franchise locations, including eight locations in China and six in the Middle East. In 2013, Lagerfeld embarked on a multiseason collaboration with Melissa, the Brazilian maker of colorful jelly shoes. A Karl Lagerfeld jacket for Riachuelo. Totes bearing a likeness of Choupette, the designer’s cat, will be among the 75-piece collection. BUSINESS Chinese E-commerce Players Merge ● Mogujie will take over rival Meilishuo and form a new company. BY CASEY HALL Chinese social e-commerce player Mogujie said Tuesday it will take over rival Meilishuo and form a new company with annual sales of about $3 billion. Both Mogujie — Mushroom Street in English — and Meilishuo — Beauty Talk — are female-focused platforms that visually bear a striking resemblance to Pinterest, but with a much more direct e-commerce component, with easy click-through from posted images to points of purchase. The deal will see Mogujie acquire Meilishuo — which is backed by Chinese internet giant Tencent — through a 2:1 share swap and Tencent will increase its shareholdings of the new company, according to a statement from Mogujie. Mogujie’s cofounder and chief executive Qi Chen — a former “Ali Ren,” as Alibaba employees are colloquially known — will helm the new enterprise, Mogujie said. The two companies registered combined annual sales of 20 billion yuan, or a little more than $3 billion at current exchange, last year. Hangzhou-based Mogujie completed its latest round of fund-raising last November, raising $200 million from investors led by Ping An Ventures, according to statements from the company at the time. The takeover comes at a time when consolidation is becoming the norm for China’s tech start-ups. A proliferation of competition and a scarcity of funding as China’s unsettled economic situation weighs on investor sentiment is making mergers and acquisitions a common occurrence. 10 13 JANUARY 2016 RETAIL Joy Mangano Pushes Mops at Macy’s in N.Y. ● The Miracle Mop founder will partner with the retailer to develop products. BY SHARON EDELSON Macy’s doesn’t sell mops, but there was Joy Mangano on the eighth floor of the Herald Square flagship watching demonstrators in purple “Joy” shirts pushing the vehicle she’s ridden to fame and fortune across the floor. Mangano may be the only woman in America who can make a mop sound sexy. The story of her invention, the Miracle Mop, was seductive enough to entice Hollywood director David O. Russell to make a movie about her life, in which the mop plays a leading role. On Sunday night, Jennifer Lawrence, who plays Mangano in the film, “Joy,” won a Golden Globe for best actress. Mangano typically sells her products on HSN, which bought her company, Ingenious Designs LLC, in 1999, and where her hourly sales regularly exceed $1 million. During the course of her career, she’s sold $3 billion worth of products. This time, Mangano’s new and improved Miracle Mop launched on HSN on June 3, but she’s also adding brick-and-mortar to her distribution. “I believe in the circle of commerce,” she said. “This is very strategic. I know how to choose partners that are creative.” In addition to Macy’s, the Joy collection will be sold at Bed, Bath & Beyond and Target. Mangano arrives at Macy’s at a time Joy Mangano and Terry J. Lundgren at Macy’s Herald Square. when the core department store business — anchored by women’s fashion, which represents about a quarter of the total volume — seems to be a limited or no-growth proposition. Tourism and Macy’s stock price are down, and the forecast for 2016 is for reduced earnings. It’s no wonder chairman and chief executive officer Terry J. Lundgren is looking for the unconventional and a little of Mangano’s fairy dust. “Macy’s is an absolute institution,” Mangano said. Of the retailer’s troubles, she added, “The entire economy is a pendulum. I’m here because it’s the discovery of Macy’s and all those customers I’ve never reached before. I’ve been shopping at Macy’s for decades.” Mangano said she’ll partner with Macy’s on exclusive products, adding, “With a partnership with Macy’s, we could do so much together. I cross all categories. This is so exciting. “When I design something it’s not from a category point of view but where I see a need,” said Mangano, who holds more than 100 patents. “The Macy’s customer is going to be in for some fun when you see the beautiful Joy brand get bigger.” Mangano met Lundgren at an industry function several years ago, but it wasn’t until March that she and the ceo sat down to discuss her products and the possibilities at Macy’s. “I was talking and he said, ‘This is very exciting. This is really very exciting,” Mangano said of the meeting. When Lundgren sat down with Mangano in March, he said,“It took about three minutes for me to think, ‘This woman has something. Ten minutes later, I said, ‘I want to buy something for you.’” “Later, I nonchalantly said, ‘They’re making this movie about me,’” Mangano said. “Terry said, ‘Is that really true? But I believe you, I really believe you.’” “We’re excited to see what the possibilities of this partnership between Macy’s and Joy will bring to both of our national brands,” Lundgren said. “With her innovative designs, she has been at the forefront in the home category and she brings with her a new audience and expanded product options to Macy’s Home Store. “As we cater to an omnichannel customer, we are very excited to have her product line enhance our Macy’s Home Store offerings for our online and bricks-and-mortar shopper,” Lundgren added. “Joy’s appeal is extensive and her story inspirational. Having Joy here with us at Macy’s Herald Square to launch her collection that’s available for the first time in stores is a great moment for not only Macy’s and the Joy brand, but for our customers and her TV audience who shop with us, too.” Macy’s created a shop-in-shop for the Joy collection, which includes beauty cases, Huggable hangers, steamers, Single Touch hair dryers, home fragrance, Memory Cloud pillows in purple, turquoise, red, white and black. Mangano told the Macy’s customers gathered how over dinner, several years ago, a producer vowed to write her life story. She thought nothing of it until Russell called. While the director told Mangano that “Joy” would be “half-fiction” and not a biopic, she completely recognized it as her own story. “I severely inspired that movie,” she said. “David captured so many emotional touch points. David O. Russell actually created a tribute to an industry — television home shopping — which made my path possible. “There were several ‘A-ha’ moments [in developing the Miracle Mop],” Mangano said. “But, it was quite a task to get that mop to market. “Go find that mop,” she told the customers congregated on Macy’s eighth floor. “It’s a movie star.” BUSINESS Ermenegildo Zegna Wins Trademark Case powerhouse will be paid damages of $309,000. BY LUISA ZARGANI The Ermenegildo Zegna Group has secured a trademark victory in China. The Guangzhou Intermediate People’s Court has determined that the Guangzhou Fuyin Co. should cease infringing the trademarks of the Italian men’s wear powerhouse and should pay damages of two million yuan, or about $309,000 at current exchange. This was delivered through the issuance of 21 verdicts. The court has thus “supported the protection of Zegna’s legitimate rights and interests, reenforced appropriate market order, and confirmed once again Zegna’s longstanding confidence in China’s legal environment,” said the Italian firm. Guangzhou Fuyin Co. was using labels that were similar to Zegna’s trademarks, such as the Zsnoi collection, ZZsnoi and Zsnoisport. The Zsnoi men’s wear brand was established by Guangzhou Fuyin Trading Co. Ltd. A pioneer in China, Ermenegildo Zegna opened its first boutique in Beijing in 1991 and has been developing its brands, Ermenegildo Zegna, Z Zegna and Agnona, throughout the region with its network of banners. The first “Zegna” trademark was granted registration in China in 1973. Since then, the company has worked to build “a comprehensive intellectual property rights protection system, thereby ensuring Zegna’s legal rights and interests are well protected under Chinese law.” This is the latest signal that Western brands can successfully argue their cases in China. In November, Moncler won a landmark battle against Beijing Nuoyakate Gourmet Co. Ltd. After discovering in 2013 that the Chinese company was manufacturing and selling jackets with counterfeit Moncler logos and that it also tried to register several fake trademarks in China and other markets, the Italian luxury firm sued the Chinese company in December 2014 in the newly established Intellectual Property Court of Beijing. Moncler was granted the payment of around $452,000 in damages in the case. In 2014, Dsquared2 secured the rights to distribute its collections in China — a cornerstone for the Italian firm that helped overturn its prospects in the area and fully develop its business there. A court in Hangzhou ruled it was “legitimately allowed” to do so — despite the fact that another company has trademarked the Dsquared label (without the 2 figure) and was selling counterfeit products under that moniker. Guangzhou Fuyin Co. was using labels that were similar to Zegna’s trademarks. Z Zegna’s trans-seasonal spring collection. Macy’s photograph by Patrick MacLeod ● The Italian men’s wear 11 13 JANUARY 2016 ACCESSORIES Miansai Names CEO, Outlines Growth Plans ● The brand, which has a strong e-commerce business and is carried in more than 300 doors worldwide, is expecting to double its business this year. BY RACHEL STRUGATZ Barbara Cook is taking the reins as chief executive officer of Miansai, eight years after the company first broke onto the accessories scene with a series of leather hook and anchor bracelets. Michael Saiger, founder and creative director, said business has doubled nearly every year since inception and that Cook was brought on board to help manage that growth. In addition to its e-commerce site at miansai.com and a flagship on Crosby Street in SoHo here, Miansai is carried in more than 300 doors in 37 countries, including Selfridges, Harvey Nichols and Le Bon Marché. Industry sources estimate that sales this year could hit $25 million. Cook is the company’s first ceo and was formerly president of Hudson Jeans and head of operations for Gap Stores North America. Her primary focus is to double the business in 2016, largely by way of an aggressive e-commerce push, international expansion — 25 percent of all sales come from outside the U.S. — and growing the women’s sector of the business. Miansai’s digital flagship is responsible for 27 percent of overall sales, but this portion is expected to jump to 36 Michael Saiger and Barbara Cook RETAIL Money 20/20 Creators Launching Shoptalk ● The conference will gather retailers, disruptors and investors for a three-day event in Las Vegas. BY ARTHUR ZACZKIEWICZ After taking Money 20/20 from a conference of few hundred tech industry stakeholders to 10,000-plus attendees, cofounders Anil Aggarwal and Jonathan Weiner have pulled together Shoptalk — which will gather retailers, disruptors and investors for a three-day event in Las Vegas from May 16 to 18. Aggarwal told WWD that the event, to be held at the Aria, is not a trade show, or even a traditional convention. Instead, Shoptalk — as the name implies — is a gathering of retail industry stakeholders who gather, share, network, collaborate and discuss how they can work to evolve the retail industry through technology and with investments. The initial lineup of confirmed speakers includes about 125 retailers and brand executives from retailers such as Neiman Marcus, Target and Under Armour. They will be joined by what Aggarwal described as “disruptive commerce companies and prolific investors.” Aggarwal, who is former global head of payments and wallet business development at Google, said he expects to have close to 300 speakers by the time of the event. The confirmed speakers include: Affirm founder and chief executive officer Max Levchin; Ashley Stewart ceo James Rhee; Curbside cofounder and ceo Jaron Waldman; Dollar Shave Club founder and ceo Michael Dubin; House of Fraser ceo Nigel Oddy; Jet.com ceo Marc Lore; Kohl’s executive vice president of digital technology and innovation Ratnakar Lavu; Macy’s senior vice president of strategy and innovation Michael Tobin, and John Koryl, Neiman Marcus group president of stores and online. Pinterest general manager of monetization Tim Kendall, Target Corp.’s chief strategy officer Casey Carl and Bain Capital Ventures managing director Scott Friend will also speak, among many others. Aggarwal said in a statement that the speakers “comprise an unparalleled grouping of key figures in commerce ranging from early stage innovators to recognized and established pioneers of retail and e-commerce. These are the minds reshaping how products, services percent by year’s end. An entirely new site is in the works and slated to go live this summer. While the Web site is the brand’s biggest store and will soon drive over a third of all sales, retail still remains a priority. Following the opening of the brand’s first free-standing door in late 2013, a second store is slated to open in Los Angeles in March. A 1,000-squarefoot store on Abbott Kinney will have an outdoor area and a Kombucha bar. “When I first started, there were no other men’s accessories brands out there that had great quality, design and price points,” Saiger said of Miansai, which has received no outside funding to date. He noted that the men’s accessories category was rife with opportunity when he started out in 2008. Cook added: “It’s the number-one brand in many of the key retailers around the world for men’s accessories. Men’s is well-established and has the lion’s share of our business today.” But as the brand rolls out additional women’s styles and starts to sell at key wholesale accounts, she predicts that women’s will soon comprise 30 percent of the overall business, men’s 60 percent and leather goods and timepieces the remaining 10 percent. Both a women’s line and timepieces launched in 2013, five years after the initial men’s line bowed. Saiger said that although many of the early pieces were considered unisex — 80 percent of the core collection could be worn by either gender — the women’s line contains slimmer and more feminine metals, sizes and colorways. The emphasis is on rose gold metal. and experiences are created, curated and consumed.” Some of the topics include how startups are driving product innovation; reinventing the consumer selling experience; venture capital perspectives on commerce technology; reinventing product returns; the state of drone delivery; collaborative consumption and the sharing economy; new retail rental models, and virtual reality experiences in retail. But the underpinning goal of the event is to gather a community of industry stakeholders to engage in a meaningful discussion about the evolution of retail. Aggarwal said retailers “will have the opportunity to network with some of the most innovative leaders shaping commerce, learn about the most important technologies, and collaborate on what’s coming next.” The organizers are also holding a “Start-Up Pitch Contest” for early-stage companies to “have the chance to present their business plans to a panel of judges from leading venture capital firms for a $25,000 prize,” the organizers said. Aggarwal told WWD that ultimately, Shoptalk “creates a narrative and a framework for a conversation” around how disruptive innovation can improve retail commerce. “And it is being done with a holistic view of the retail commerce ecosystem,” he added. 12 13 JANUARY 2016 FASHION Ala Isham Launching Resortwear nonprofits she cofounded in honor of her mother Sunny von Bulow, Ala Isham has started a signature fashion line to help stop violence against women on college campuses. BY ROSEMARY FEITELBERG For Ala Isham, Wednesday night’s debut of her signature resortwear completes a circle that was decades in the making. A classically trained artist who has studied under the New York Studio School’s Ophrah Shemesh for the past eight years, Isham first asked the designer Antonio Gual to design a dress for her nearly 40 years ago. The pair became fast friends and continued to collaborate here and there, while Isham was busy raising four children. During that time she cofounded two nonprofits in honor of her mother Sunny von Bulow, the American heiress who died in 2008 after being in a coma for nearly 28 years. Those unfamiliar with the details of her adult life may be inclined to associate her with the much publicized-trials of her stepfather Claus von Bulow, who was convicted and twice acquitted of attempted murder. During a Monday morning interview, such shadows seemed worlds away from Isham, who spoke excitedly about her new business venture and the lasting beauty that her mother has cast on her life. The Munich-born Isham spent her childhood in Kitzbühel, Austria and her adolescence in Newport, R.I. where the family lived at Clarendon Court, which years before had been used as a set for Grace Kelly’s last film “High Society.” Isham graciously confirmed such details, but was not about to offer them. After graduating from Barnard, she herself created films about the photographer Alfred Eisenstaedt, Wagnerian tenor Peter Hofman and “Surviving Coma: The Journey Back” in the Eighties. Art has been of interest for years, with Caravaggio, da Vinci and Van Gogh being her personal favorites. And her frequent gallery and museum outings are all “part of learning,” she said. Gual suggested they use some of Isham’s figurative artwork as prints for the customized pieces he designed for her. After friends and even strangers started asking her where she bought those creations, Isham decided to pursue fashion as a business. Describing herself as someone who is always looking at clothes, silhouettes, store windows and magazines, Isham singled out Oscar de la Renta, Carolina Herrera and custom-made Vera Wang — from the time when she lived a more formal life — as favorite resources. “I love beautifully executed clothes — the way that most people don’t mix clothes any more. I’ve always appreciated a beautiful lining, piece or seam. That comes from being exposed to couture as a young person and appreciating the difference between a piece of workmanship, and something that is really functional and wonderful. It is not the same.” she said. “I feel really strongly about the feel of beautiful fabrics and I really care about how it feels on the skin. And I care about how a piece of clothing makes you feel.” Reminded of “the wonderful caftans her mother, grandmother and aunt used to wear at home or poolside,” Isham used that as a starting point, adding an assortment of “transparent, floating” pieces that can be just as easily packed as they can be layered. “You can wear them with a bathing suit or layer two dresses to wear out at night. I like that they fold up. It’s sort of like a New-World trousseau. The Old World trousseau was that you had to have a big trunk. But now the idea is you have to pack small — we want everything to be very transportable,” she said. In fact, Isham hails from a family of inveterate travelers — Von Bulow even mused about becoming an astronaut. And Isham’s maternal grandmother Annie-Laurie Aitken, whose father Robert Warmack founded the International Shoe Company,”came from an era” where a three-month stay in Paris was customary. More unusual was the fact that select pieces from her exquisite French furniture collection would be temporarily moved into her suite at Le Meurice. Some of her pieces can now be found in the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Annie Laurie Aitken Galleries for English furniture and decorative arts. Terrified of flying, Warmack preferred to take the SS United States ocean liner, and Isham and her brother joined her a few times including once in a hurricane. Isham’s mother also had an affinity for Paris. “From an early age, I can remember my mother going to Saint Laurent or Givenchy. When I was about 16, she took me to a fashion show at Givenchy. I remember her saying before a fitting with [Hubert de] Givenchy, ‘Ala, the best-looking man in the world is about to walk into the room.’” Isham said. With homes of her own in Antigua, Newport, the Hamptons and Manhattan, Isham has always loved doing interiors. “We grew up surrounded by beautiful things. My mother was really elegant and she loved beauty. Her collection of clothes became one of the initial collections of The Metropolitan Museum of Art.” Isham said. Interestingly, she said her appreciation for beauty and intent to design clothes that make women feel good also led her to consider women who aren’t feeling good. Having cofounded the Sunny von Bülow Coma and Head Trauma Research Foundation and the National Center for Victims of Crime, Isham will donate a percentage of the proceeds from her 22-piece resortwear to benefit the latter to help survivors of campus sexual assault. Chief operating officer Larry Black is overseeing the West 38th Street-based label, which retails from $400 to $1,300. Trunk shows will be held in Antigua, Newport, Palm Beach, Southampton and Los Angeles in the next three months. Isham’s collection is also geared for select e-tailers, resort stores and specialty stores in resort communities. Swimwear will be added for fall so that shoppers can swim in them or wear bikini tops as underpinnings as her friends in Antigua like to do. Isham said of her new venture, “In life, you have to be able to do at a certain age something that you really love. I’m really having so much fun with this. And I really love that it has a circle in that I can talk about things that I’m interested in.” As for how she overcame her own pain without bitterness, Isham said, “We were very young. That was many, many years ago so we’ve had a long time to, I don’t mean to denigrate it, but we’ve had a whole lifetime. I’ve raised four children since then. I miss my mother, I missed my family and it was a hard time growing up. It was terrible. But it’s nice to be able to do something like this where I can look back and have been influenced by something and to be able to bring that back into something that I’m doing.” “People go through terrible things. Everybody does. People used to say, ‘Oh my God, how do you do it?’ I would say, ‘You wait.’ You know, you’re going to lose a parent. Some people lose children. There are terrible things that happen in life and people move through them. That’s just the human condition.” Isham said. “I’ve been lucky in my life that I’ve been given the opportunity to do things. There is nothing more humbling than working with victims of crime or people who have had brain injuries…And I have a great family, a great husband and I’m very close to my brother and my sister.” Ala Isham A look from Ala Isham’s resort collection. Isham photograph by Thomas Iannaccone ● After focusing on the two 13 13 JANUARY 2016 A still from “Pride and Prejudice and Zombies.” Millie Brady Millie Brady Breaks Out The 21-year-old actress, who stars in Miu Miu’s latest campaign, discusses her role in “Pride and Prejudice and Zombies.” Millie Brady in the Miu Miu spring 2016 campaign. Brady portrait by Thomas Iannaccone; Stills by Jay Maidment/CTMG A still from “Pride and Prejudice and Zombies.” As it tends to go for a breakout actor, this past year has been full of firsts for 21-year-old Millie Brady. There was her first fashion show (front row at — and decked in — Miu Miu), her first brand campaign (Miu Miu again, naturally) and, coming Feb. 5, the release of her first feature film, “Pride and Prejudice and Zombies.” The latter has the English actress feeling nostalgic. “It’s my first project, so I’m just very sentimental about it,” she says. “That sounds weird to say about a zombie film!” “Pride and Prejudice and Zombies” is, as the title suggests, is based on the beloved Jane Austen tale, with the added twist of a zombie apocalypse. “I don’t know how, but it does work,” Brady says. Brady landed the role after an adolescence spent pining for her big break. “I’ve had a lot of knockbacks,” she says on a recent chilly morning over English breakfast tea at Locanda Verde in TriBeCa. “But I know what I want to do and I know that I can do it.” As a child, her family moved around a lot in England “just because we got bored easily,” but she credits most of her growing up to a boarding school in Ascot, where she was from ages 11 to 18. Nowadays she shares a flat in Hampstead, North London, with her older sister, who works in finance. “When we get back in the evening there’s no talk about work or anything like that,” Brady says. “Just sisters catching up.” She began acting at a young age, and by the time she was a teenager she was holing up in her room, penning letters to agents. “My mum couldn’t work out what I was doing in my room,” she says. This was — shockingly — met with success, and she was signed while she was still in school. “At that age you’re so naive — I never thought for a second, ‘Oh, I’m not going to get signed,’” she says. “So I went in and sent all these DVDs of me acting. It’s so funny now looking back on it — I’m like ‘God, you were a cocky 15-year-old.” “Pride and Prejudice and Zombies” is a cheeky adaptation of the prim literary classic and is chock-full of English heartthrobs: Lily James, Suki Waterhouse, Sam Riley, Bella Heathcote, Douglas Booth and Jack Huston. “The girls are all trained in martial arts, and they are basically the heroines of the book,” Brady explains of the reimagined Bennett sisters. She plays Mary, the middle of the five girls and one who has “always been the kind of nerdy, bookworm sister,” she says. But in the “Zombies” iteration, “she gets to come into her own a bit. She’s not shying away into the corner, she’s getting down and fighting these zombies.” After “Zombies” she’ll head back further in time, to another retelling of a literary classic, for Guy Ritchie’s “Knights of the Roundtable: King Arthur” epic, out in July. She stars as Jude Law’s daughter, a character she describes as “off-the-chain nuts.” It was only her second film and her first big-budget blockbuster. “They built this life-sized castle in nine months,” she says. “I went on set and was just like, ‘Oh my gosh, this is ridiculous.’” She recently took a break from film sets and spent a week in New York shooting Miu Miu’s latest campaign, after the brand had invited her to sit front row at its show in September. “They were like, ‘Does Millie fancy going to Paris?’” It was, one would imagine, an easy “yes.” Brady has some experience with modeling. During summer holidays from school, she worked a bit as a model to save money for acting. “I knew that in the long run what I wanted to do was act, but in order to do that I was going to have to be living in London, if I wanted do it full force,” she says. “I couldn’t be living in the middle of Hampshire with my mum.” Though she is no longer working as a model — save for when Miu Miu calls — she found it beneficial to her career, “because it did make me comfortable in front of the camera from a young age and it means that now I can live in London from the savings I made from being a 16-yearold and having been a bit savvy.” Fashion is still part of her life, and comes in handy when prepping for roles. “For auditions, if it’s a period piece, I’ll always make a nod to the era,” she says, noting that she frequently goes up for such roles due to her “Old English face.” “I’ll put my hair up on the sides and wear a lace blouse or something.” The Miu Miu gig, then, is not a complete departure from the creative process as an actor. “I think fashion does come a lot into what I do,” she says. “So it’s nice to be doing both of them.” Case in point: her Old English face looks quite at home mugging for the brand one minute and zombie-slaying the next. Contemplating the movie, Brady sets her tea down. “Well,” she smiles. “Jane Austen’s probably tossing in her grave.” — LEIGH NORDSTROM 15 13 JANUARY 2016 Kendall Jenner in Mango’s “Tribal Spirit”spring campaign shot by David Sims. KALLING KENDALL Mango is on a mission to match its marketing plans with the pace of its fast-fashion business and it’s tapped Kendall Jenner as part of the plan, WWD has learned. Jenner will star in “Tribal Spirit,” the first of the four separate themes that make up the spring 2016 campaign. She will model the collection, which is inspired by the African savanna, and includes a tribal print dress with a high slit, and a leather fringe minidress. The campaign was photographed by David Sims in a London-based studio last month. The brand is seeking to align its marketing efforts with the pace of fast-fashion, and it plans to unveil a new mini-campaign — with a different face — each month for the spring season. A new ad will drop in the months of February, March, April and May. “We are organizing our marketing strategy to be as close as possible to the strategy of the product,” said Mango vice president Daniel López in an interview. “We are creating and detecting and launching trends very quickly on the sales floor. And we’re also shooting the campaigns with the trends that we will have in the stores in that relevant month.” He said the celebrity that will star in each campaign will reflect “the relevant trend” for that month. He said Jenner fit in well with the mood of the savanna. “We thought that she was the best model to embody this trend. And obviously the upside with that is that, as a model, she’s very professional, she works fantastically. As a celebrity she has huge repercussions in the market and among her followers.” He called Sims “a master of the photography, with a huge talent, undisputed prestige and experience. Moreover, we knew his work and we thought he would be the best to shoot the campaign. We knew he was going to be able to bring his unique, creative energy and expertise to Mango.” Jenner said it’s the first time she worked with the Spanish brand, and called the experience “unbeatable. I felt very comfortable with the garments and with the entire Mango team,” she added. The campaign will run in the March issues of glossy publications, although the company would not specify which ones. It will be featured on the label’s advertising platforms on Feb. 1. — LORELEI MARFIL PROJECT RUNWAY Leave the Kardashian/Jenner clan and Rihanna to other titles. Fashion editor Carine Roitfeld has always been a fervent proponent of models, and Jenner photograph by David Sims/Courtesy of Mango; Calvin Klein by Cass Bird CHARLOTTE OLYMPIA, AGENT PROVOCATEUR A longtime customer of Agent Provocateur, Charlotte Olympia Dellal has finally got her wish of creating a capsule collection of lingerie for the brand as well as a selection of boudoir-inspired shoes. The founder and designer behind the luxury footwear brand Charlotte Olympia has channeled her love of vintage Hollywood glamour into a collection that includes three lingerie sets and three shoe styles. The styles incorporate the signatures of both brands, including the Charlotte’s Web motif and Kitty face, and the signature sexy shapes of the AP collections. During a joint interview with AP’s creative director Sarah Shotton, Dellal said that lingerie and shoes have a world in common. “They’re both technical. They have to fit, and they have to function. They’re very personal, and have the power to make you feel a certain way,” she said. The collection includes “Get Caught in Charlotte’s Web,” a Fifties-inspired matching set of a bra, high-waisted big underpants with removable suspenders, and the lingerie brand’s Trixie G-string. There is also the “More is More” shoe/stocking hybrid that merges a soft and flexible Lurex stocking with a stiletto-heeled boot. It’s worn like a thigh-high stocking. — SAMANTHA CONTI 99 YEARS IN FLUSHING In the largest real estate transaction in the history of Flushing, N.Y., Colliers International arranged a $1 she will soon drop a 48-page volume spotlighting 20 “girls of the moment” with her eighth issue of CR magazine, slated to hit newsstands on Feb. 25. “For me, no model was more iconic than Christie Brinkley with her white teeth and blonde hair, and her image was so compelling that it set a new beauty standard,” enthused Roitfeld, who is also global fashion director for Harper’s Bazaar and an in-demand stylist. “Now suddenly in 2016, we see the comeback of the American girl, and I find myself so excited by this new generation of stars.” Roitfeld dressed her selection of future runways stars and cover girls in Yeezy Season 2 by Kanye West clothing and Gianvito Rossi shoes. “CR Girls 2016” plumps up her namesake magazine, launched in 2012 as a single magazine comprising 340 pages, to 500 pages across three volumes that weigh in at four pounds. The magazine proper is devoted to Roitfeld’s idea of Americana, and heralds the return of the American supermodel with four alternative covers, whose identities are still under wraps. The second volume, at 128 pages, is her second devoted to men’s fashion. Photographers that contributed to the issue include Karl Lagerfeld, Michael Avedon, Bjorn Iooss, Sebastian Faena, Felix Cooper and Alex Olson. CR has a print run of 65,000 and carries a cover price of $30. — MILES SOCHA Jim Rutenberg RUTENBERG’S MEDIA TURN AT THE TIMES The New York Times has moved Jim Rutenberg back to the media desk, where he will become the paper’s next media columnist. Rutenberg, who has held various reporting roles for The Times during his 15-year tenure, takes over the column, left open for nearly a year, following David Carr’s death in February. Executive editor Dean Baquet and business editor Dean Murphy released a joint memo on Tues- billion, 99-year ground lease on behalf of the Benider Company at 136-62 Roosevelt Avenue, a site fully occupied by Macy’s. Crown Acquisitions signed the long-term lease beneath the 250,000-square-foot property. The ground lease is subject to Macy’s existing lease, which has 10 years remaining, according to a spokesman for the retailer. “We plan to operate for the full term,” he said. “We have no plans to close the store. It’s business as usual in Flushing.” Macy’s has been battling weak sales trends throughout 2015 and the forecast for 2016 is for reduced earnings. The retailer last week revealed it’s eliminating 2,100 jobs. Macy’s has said it will close 40 stores in the spring. “It’s possible for Macy’s to vacate a part of the property,” said Robert L. Freedman, co-chairman, Tri-State of Colliers International, who with Steve Chasanoff, executive managing director at Colliers, arranged the ground lease. “Macy’s could reduce its footprint or effectuate a lesser lease term for a sum of money. Any time you have a below market lease there’s always potential....Macy’s has value in their lease, which they have yet to monetize.” The Flushing Macy’s is said to be a relatively robust performer for the last five or six years. Freedman said the size of the transaction points to Flushing’s growing importance. “There are a number of mixed-use developments with retail and office components and luxury condominiums” on the horizon, he said. “The 7 train is the key to connecting Flushing with Manhattan’s upcoming Hudson Yards. The 7 train is embedded in the bowels of the Macy’s building. — SHARON EDELSON SIGHTLINE Marchon Eyewear Inc. has signed an exclusive global licensing agreement with Columbia Sportswear to manufacture and distribute Columbia sun and optical eyewear. Product is slated to launch in September, at Columbia stores, specialty sporting good retailers and select optical boutiques worldwide. Collections will include eyewear specially day to staff on their decision to move Rutenberg to media, noting: “He was among the first reporters to recognize the ascendance of Fox News, and helped coin the term ‘the Fox effect’ to describe cable’s tilt to the right. He helped lead the coverage of Dan Rather’s role in a report questioning President [George W.] Bush’s National Guard service that ended the CBS anchor’s career. And early last year, well before Megyn Kelly had become a lightning rod in the Republican debates, he wrote a magazine profile of the Fox News anchor that captured her contentious and winning formula.” Calling the search for Carr’s successor “exhaustive,” the editors touted Rutenberg’s chops as The New York Times Magazine’s chief political correspondent, the paper’s White House correspondent, City Hall bureau chief, and as a gossip writer for the Daily News and New YorkPost. Rutenberg joined the Times in 2000 as a business reporter covering the media beat. Prior to that, he covered television at The New York Observer. “Jim cut his teeth in media reporting before Facebook, Netflix, YouTube and the iPhone revolutionized the industry. Back in those days, much of the beat was focused on covering the then-mighty traditional broadcast networks — and Jim crushed it,” the memo said, noting that Rutenberg nabbed scoops that had “network and cable news executives scrambling.” More recently, Rutenberg worked on the paper’s magazine writing political features, including its “Disenfranchised” series, which “chronicled the campaign that led to the Supreme Court’s nullification of the Voting Rights Act’s most powerful Lisa Bonet and her daughter Zoë Kravitz in Calvin Klein Watches + Jewelry ad. provision and the consequences for minority voters,” the memo said. Rutenberg will join the media desk in the coming weeks, and he will continue to contribute to the magazine. — ALEXANDRA STEIGRAD COUPLES’ TIME “Life in the Now” is the theme of Calvin Klein’s new watches and jewelry campaign that breaks today on social media. Photographed by Cass Bird in New York, the ads feature a series of modern and dynamic couples highlighting the immediacy of time and the richness of human relationships. Actress Lisa Bonet is featured with her daughter, musician and actress Zoë Kravitz; actor Will Peltz appears alongside his girlfriend, model Kenya Kinski, while model couple John Hein and Tilda Lindstam are portrayed together. For the second year in a row, the campaign includes Korean model and actor Kim Woo Bin, who this year is accompanied by his friend, Chinese model and street-style star Ju Xiao Wen. The campaign continues the brand’s #ckminute global digital campaign, which launched last year. This year, the social media initiative has evolved through the tagline “Life in the now. Share Your #CK Minute,” encouraging users to capture and share meaningful moments with Calvin Klein Watches and Jewelry pieces. The program launches with key influencers around the world. The company declined to provide the spring budget. — LISA LOCKWOOD A campaign image from Agent Provocateur. engineered for sport fishermen. Marchon chief executive officer Claudio Gottardi said, “Columbia presents exciting opportunities for Marchon while further enhancing our Sport/ Performance division. With a global reputation for innovation, quality and performance, Columbia fits perfectly into Marchon’s brand portfolio.” Columbia sportswear’s director of licensing Matt Merriman added: “Our shared goal is to deliver an innovative eyewear line that enhances our customers’ experiences in the outdoors. Whether you are on the water, on the trail or cruising around town, the new line will do just that.” — MISTY WHITE SIDELL Columbia Eyewear Produced by Marchon.