Shine Of the Times
Transcription
Shine Of the Times
LANVIN’S L.A. LADIES JIL’S NEW MAN JIL SANDER NAMES RODOLFO PAGLIALUNGA ITS NEW CREATIVE DIRECTOR. PAGE 2 WWD MODEL: ANASTASIA/MUSE; HAIR AND MAKEUP BY KATSUMI MATSUO USING BUMBLE AND BUMBLE AND CHANEL/ARTMIX BEAUTY; FASHION ASSISTANT: LYNDA CHOI TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 2014 ■ $3.00 ■ WOMEN’S WEAR DAILY Shine Of the Times A metallic streak ran through the fall runways as designers turned to alluring shiny surfaces. Here, House of Holland’s leather and tulle dress worn with a Bochic green sapphire earring, Ileana Makri white gold earring, Sequin ring and Peter Pilotto shoes. For more, see pages 4 and 5. PHOTO BY HUGO ARTURI; STYLED BY MAYTE ALLENDE PERMANENT SPACE CÉLINE AT LAST REPLACES ITS TEMPORARY STORE IN PARIS WITH A PERMANENT ONE ON AVENUE MONTAIGNE. PAGE 9 EMMA ROBERTS WAS AMONG THE CELEBRITIES WHO TURNED OUT FOR THE FOUNDATION OF LIVING BEAUTY GALA IN L.A., SPONSORED BY LANVIN. PAGE 10 SEEKING ‘RIGHT’ PRICE PVH Open to Offers For Heritage Brands By ARNOLD J. KARR PVH CORP. is open to suggestion. Emanuel Chirico, chairman and chief executive officer of the New York-based apparel giant, told the Nomura Retail Conference Monday that the company would consider selling some of its Heritage Brands group if the right offers came long, although it is not actively shopping Van Heusen, Arrow, Izod or the Speedo and Olga brands picked up in the 2013 acquisition of The Warnaco Group Inc. Chirico was speaking at the Nomura Retail Conference in New York, where other speakers included Eric Wiseman, chairman, president and ceo of VF Corp., and Karen Hoguet, chief financial officer of Macy’s Inc. PVH sold its G.H. Bass & Co. footwear business to G-III Apparel Group Ltd. for $50 million last year and acknowledged at the time that the retail business attached to its Heritage Brands had struggled. On Tuesday, Chirico noted, “The only business [in Heritage Brands] that’s really problematic for us is our retail business — Izod and Van Heusen. It’s about a $300 million business earning low-single-digit operating margins.” The wholesale businesses in Heritage Brands “added together are all well over 10 percent operating margin businesses,” meaning operating income exceeds 10 percent of revenues, “with very low capital investment required. So 95 percent of the [earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization] really turns into cash flow for us to invest back into the highgrowth Calvin [Klein] and Tommy [Hilfiger] businesses. And so, we like that business model,” said Chirico. Still, he added, “we continue to look at that portfolio and think about what might be pruned as we go forward or significantly shrunk to maximize the returns on that business.” Last year, Heritage Brands was responsible for $1.99 billion of PVH’s $8.19 billion in revenue, but, SEE PAGE 9 Pushing the Boundaries Of Fashion and Tech By VALERIE DEMICHEVA WHEN REPORTS STARTED flying earlier this month that Nike fired the majority of its FuelBand team, many questioned whether it was a big white flag of surrender in the race for truly wearable tech. Some even suggested that FuelBand layoffs and the tepid reception of Samsung’s Galaxy Gear may usher out the wearable tech revolution altogether — unless Apple does indeed save the day with an iWatch launch. But the true believers on the front lines at the Smart Fabrics and Wearable Technology Conference in San Francisco last week viewed the FuelBand layoffs as an inconsequential glitch on the road to wearable-tech progress. “It just might not be the product for the future,” said one attendee from the tech industry who requested anonymity. “It’s such a generic scoring system. If I’m scoring higher in fuel points it could be just because I’m gesturing with my hand, not running. When you’re building smart products you need to make sure that the info you’re grabbing can lead to insights for the consumer.” Nike spokesman Brian Strong did not immediately respond to a request for comment Monday, but previously told CNET: “As a fast-paced, global business we continually align resources with business priorities. As our digital sport priorities evolve, we expect to make changes within the team, and there will be a small number of layoffs. We do not comment on individual employment matters.” Business leaders continue to be keenly interested in the intersection of fashion and technology, and SEE PAGE 8 WWD TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 2014 WWD.COM Neiman’s Scaling Back in China By DAVID MOIN THE NEIMAN MARCUS GROUP LTD. LLC is taking another step back from its stake in China. The Dallas-based luxury retailer is close to disclosing that it’s pulling out of its investment in Glamour Sales Holdings, the Asian-based e-commerce site specializing in flash sales. An announcement could come as soon as today. “They are actively looking for some new capital,” said Ginger Reeder, NMG’s vice president of media relations and corporate giving. “We are a minority shareholder. We don’t have any interest in becoming a majority partner. We realize that may result in our exiting [Glamour Sales]. This is being driven by Glamour Sales.” NMG continues to operate a Web site in China. While Neiman’s ships to many countries, China is the only country where the company has a dedicated site — with Mandarin translation, size conversion charts and customized creative. NMG recently decided not to hold inventory in Chinese warehouses and instead to ship to Chinese customers from the U.S. Glamour Sales had been handling the fulfillment from China. Neiman’s maintains a smaller China team now, of about two dozen workers, for customer care, marketing and the Web merchandising in Shanghai. Reeder said that Neiman’s offers its full assortment in China. “Clearly with the business model operating now, we still believe there is potential [in China] or we wouldn’t have a site in Mandarin,” she said. “This is a better way for us to serve the Chinese customer. We have a much larger assortment now and they like to see the breadth of the assortment, particularly those who have traveled to the U.S. and seen our stores. This is a much more efficient business model.” In March 2012, Neiman’s disclosed a $28 million investment in Glamour Sales Holdings, and subsequently invested another $10 million in Glamour, leading to a 44 percent stake. Glamour helped Neiman’s launch neimanmarcus.com.cn more than a year ago and also has helped migrate shoppers to the Neiman’s site. In addition to products, the site features editorial content, fashion expertise and behind-the-scenes videos about luxury brands. The partnership also involves Neiman’s helping Glamour Sales expand flash sales. Neiman’s challenge is to get Chinese consumers more familiar with its brand through marketing, fashion bloggers and editorial content. Last spring, the retailer staged its first fashion show in Mainland China in Shanghai’s historic Bund waterfront to generate awareness. Neiman’s also wants more Chinese to shop Neiman’s stores in the U.S., including Bergdorf Goodman. It’s rare for Neiman Marcus Group to invest in other brands but the company has taken significant stakes in a couple of high-profile firms in the last two decades. The luxury retailer acquired a 56 percent stake in Kate Spade in 1999 for $33.6 million, and expressed big plans for the brand, including store openings. However, in 2006, NMG sold Kate Spade for $124 million to Liz Claiborne, which proceeded to more aggressively reinvigorate the brand. NMG also once owned Gurwitch Products, the licensee of Laura Mercier. Gurwitch was founded in 1995 by Janet Gurwitch, who was a former executive vice president at Neiman Marcus. In 1998, Neiman’s bought a 51 percent stake in Gurwitch but sold the company in 2006 to Alticor Inc. for an undisclosed amount. Paglialunga Named Jil Sander Designer PHOTO BY PIERPAOLO FERRARI was upbeat about the company’s yet-untapped poBy LUISA ZARGANI tential. “The label has not been tied to its founder for a long time. A number of different designers MILAN — After several good-byes, the Jil Sander have been in charge, and we are at ease about the group is ready to say hello to a new creative direc- strength and potential of the brand. It has an evolvtor — Italian designer Rodolfo Paglialunga. His ing, independent history,” he remarked. “This is first collection will bow in September for the spring a multiyear agreement [with Paglialunga], and we reason in the medium-long term.” 2015 season. Cremonesi also said owner Onward Holdings Co. “He is the most fitting designer to write the new pages of the Jil Sander story,” chief executive of- Ltd. stands by the brand and firmly denied any idea ficer Alessandro Cremonesi told WWD. “He has the of a sale of the business. The label will “continue to be positioned in right characteristics and the experience to evolve the Jil Sander brand in a new direction while re- the high-end range,” and Cremonesi said a priority is to develop the accessories category, specifispecting its essential traits.” Paglialunga started honing his skills with Romeo cally handbags and shoes. He cited the Jil Bag as “a Gigli in the early Nineties. In 1996, he joined very successful” piece. The bag is being celebrated Prada, where he worked for 10 years, eventually with a traveling exhibition hitting cities including becoming women’s wear design director. In March Milan, Shanghai, Tokyo, Chicago, Paris, Berlin and 2009, attracted by his knack for arty cuts and con- Hamburg, Germany. In 2014, Jil Sander will further develop its retail structions, former Vionnet owners Matteo Marzotto and Gianni Castiglioni tapped the designer as cre- network, focusing on “America, which will become ative director of the brand. Paglialunga helped dust increasingly more important, given its growth pooff Vionnet with his distinctive, glamorous shapes tential; Asia, and Japan,” said Cremonesi. Last year, the company entered China with stores and rich textures, until he left the comin Beijing and Shanghai. There are curpany in fall 2011. rently 59 Jil Sander stores globally. “I’m deeply honored to have the opSales last year were “flat,” said the portunity to take on this role. I have executive, standing at 100 million euros, boundless admiration for the brand as or $132 million at average exchange. I strongly believe in its pure vision and “The year 2013 was not easy for anyvalues,” said Paglialunga. “My aim is to body in the industry, and our company carry forward the fusion between sowas hit by currency headwinds, also in phistication, luxury and innovation and light of the fact that the brand has a relbring the house [to] the next level.” evant presence in Japan,” he explained. The designer, who hails from In October, for personal reasons, Jil Tolentino, in Italy’s central Marche reSander stepped down from the comgion, will be based in Milan, where the Rodolfo pany she founded in 1968. She had recompany is headquartered. Cremonesi Paglialunga turned for the third time to her nameunderscored that he had faith sake brand in February 2012, after Raf Paglialunga will ensure “an evolution, Simons’ seven-year tenure. Sander rose to fame not a revolution” of the label. While recognizing that he was “very happy” with in the Eighties and Nineties with her tailored bathe collections produced by the design team follow- sics crafted from luxurious fabrics. The designer ing the exit of the brand’s namesake designer in sold 75 percent of her company to Prada Group October 2013, Cremonesi said he felt a label must in 1999, and made a highly publicized exit a year be “personified by a creative mind that will clear- later. She was succeeded by Milan Vukmirovic, who ly indicate a direction.” A creative director will did sporty disco flash until Sander returned in May “channel the brand with retailers and the press. In 2003, only to split again 18 months later. After her second departure, the brand’s creative reins were fashion, this embodiment is important,” he added. Asked if Sander herself had contributed to the handed over to its long-standing design team. Prada tapped Simons as Sander’s new creative selection of a successor, Cremonesi responded that director in July 2005. The brand changed hands two this was “the company’s autonomous decision.” While industry observers had expressed concern more times during Simons’ tenure. Change Capital over the future of the brand following the sudden Partners acquired Sander from Prada in February departure of Sander last year and the implica- 2006 and sold it to Japan’s Onward Holdings two tions of a disconnect from its founder, Cremonesi years later. THE BRIEFING BOX IN TODAY’S WWD Gabrielle Ouellet is the subject of “Model Call” on WWD.com. PHOTO COURTESY OF TRUMP MODEL MANAGEMENT 2 PVH Corp. isn’t looking to divest elements of its Heritage Brands group but would entertain offers for the brands in its portfolio. PAGE 1 The true believers in wearable tech were out in force at a conference in San Francisco. PAGE 1 Executives attending the American Apparel & Footwear Association’s sourcing conference recounted what a tumultuous and evolutionary year it has been for the industry. PAGE 6 Uniqlo has opened its fifth Paris store in a 19th-century former factory in the Marais district. PAGE 8 Céline has opened a two-floor, 6,500-square-foot store on Avenue Montaigne in Paris. PAGE 9 The Tribeca Film Festival wrapped up on a similar note to its opening night: with a musical ode to New York. PAGE 10 Ralph Lauren will travel to London for a two-day visit that will culminate with a gala in aid of The Royal Marsden Cancer Charity at Windsor Castle on May 13. PAGE 11 Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. has invested $1.22 billion in Internet television company Youku Tudou Inc. PAGE 12 A memorial service was held in London Monday for Beatrix Miller, the former editor of British Vogue. PAGE 12 The New York Times made its NewFront’s debut Monday morning at the Dia Art space in New York. PAGE 12 ON WWD.COM MODEL CALL: Gabrielle Ouellet, the 18-year-old Trumprepped model, talked to WWD about working at an ice cream shop, smiling (or not) for photos and her crush on Justin Bieber. For more, see WWD.com. CORRECTION Designer Kris Van Assche was in Shanghai recently to present a repeat show of Dior Homme’s winter collection. The season was incorrect in a story in a Fashion Scoop on page 19, Monday. 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IN PA R T N E R S H I P WITH MAY 7, 2014 | 6:30 PM | THE PIERRE HOTEL | NYC TICKETS AVAILABLE AT CLIOIMAGE.COM | 212 493 4036 Sponsor: Partners: 4 WWD TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 2014 FALL’S SIMPLE SILHOUETTES TAKE A STRIKING TURN IN COLORFUL METALLICS. PHOTOS BY HUGO ARTURI STYLED BY MAYTE ALLENDE Ostwald Helgason’s cellulose acetate, cotton and polyester top and skirt. Ileana Makri earrings; Sequin rings. Timo Weiland’s lambskin leather top and skirt. WWD TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 2014 5 WWD.COM Azede JeanPierre’s cotton acetate and polyester blazer and pants. MODEL: ANASTASIA/MUSE; HAIR AND MAKEUP BY KATSUMI MATSUO USING BUMBLE AND BUMBLE AND CHANEL/ARTMIX BEAUTY; FASHION ASSISTANT: LYNDA CHOI Abigail Stewart’s acetate shirt and skirt. Bochic earring. 6 WWD TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 2014 WWD.COM textiles Execs Declare Made in USA Real Deal WASHINGTON — “If anyone in this room still questions Made in the USA as a financially viable option, that’s behind you,” Bill McRaith, chief supply chain officer of PVH Corp., said at the annual American Apparel & Footwear Association’s International Sourcing, Customs & Logistics Integration Conference. “It’s done. We are doing it. It has happened. I think there are 400 investments going on right now in South Carolina and its way beyond electronics and automotive. It is absolutely in the apparel sector.” He said he visited South Carolina in U.S. with a 41.5 percent U.S. apparel import share, will continue to lose some of that share this year, Darling said. “What we are saying is low value-added product will continue to migrate out of China as minimum wage continues to increase,” Darling said. “The Chinese government has mandated a 13 percent annual increase in minimum wage over five years, starting a year ago, so by 2017, the minimum wage will have doubled and that will begin to minimize production in our areas.” Executives attending the conference recounted what a tumultuous and evolutionary year it’s been for the industry. Mounting pressures in the supply chain, ranging from rising labor costs in China Bangladesh, currently the third-largest supplier to the U.S. apparel market behind Vietnam and China, is expected to see significant growth in apparel exports to the world because major companies are committed to improving building and fire safety there, according to Darling. “Based on all of the information we have right now, Bangladesh exports [to the world] will actually be up this year over 2013,” Darling said. “In our own experience we are up in double digits in production in Bangladesh in 2014 over 2013.” He said he expects apparel production in Vietnam to be “very strong” this year. “Things are tightening up a little bit,” said Rick Helfenbein, president of Luen Bill McRaith ’’ Kim Glas March and saw some of the biggest mills in China — a contingency of about 20 mills from the Shanghai area — looking to set up spinning capability “off of the back of $300 million in investment in spinning that is going on there today through key industries. “We are very passionate about Made in America,” he said. “In fact, for the first time in 50 years, PVH is now manufacturing shirts back in the U.S., in North Carolina today. We are scaling up quickly because it’s financially viable, not because it’s a good thing to do, not because we can make a statement but because it financially makes sense to go make those products in that location. We can respond to the consumer so fast. It is completely irrelevant how much extra I have to pay for the product. I always make more when I sell. I may have to pay $5 extra [to produce it in the U.S.] but I will make $20 at retail.” Rick Darling, executive director of government and public affairs at Li & Fung Trading Ltd., said in an interview that he has seen “tremendous interest and some movement” in Made in America but has not found “the need” in particular product categories to shift production back to the U.S. “I think maybe you are seeing two kinds of things taking place [in the U.S.] — some is real niche manufacturing of higher-end products that can be turned very quickly close to home in New York and L.A. for example,” he said. “You are also seeing some investment in the Carolinas, in the South, of building commodity-oriented basics and I think that is really healthy. I think that will continue.” China, the top apparel supplier to the most sensitive textile and apparel imports on Day One of the agreement entering into force. To provide even more opportunities and flexibility to U.S. importers, the U.S. has proposed a temporary and permanent short supply list that would currently encompass about 190 product categories. “In terms of the phaseout of duties, 15 years is a long time…for wovens,” as is 10 years for knits, said Tom Travis, managing partner of Sandler, Travis & Rosenberg, who was on a panel with Glas. “It’s not a criticism of what you are negotiating. It’s a reality for these people,” he said, adding that the long phaseout makes the TPP less attractive to importers. “It might be a negotiat- Sen. Ron Wyden Rick Darling to the fallout of the factory tragedies in Bangladesh, have dramatically changed the global sourcing paradigm, they said. Sourcing experts examined how far they have come and how far they have to go in Bangladesh, where the Rana Plaza building housing several garment factories collapsed on April 24, 2013, co- We are very passionate about Made in America. We are scaling up quickly because it’s financially viable. Thai USA and AAFA chairman, in an interview. “This idea that all of the horses are running out of China isn’t really true. There has been a little bit of a drop off, but you have to look at China not just year-to-year but over the last four years. China has been going down slightly and Vietnam has been going up. If you look at the two of them together, they have almost a 50 percent market share.” Helfenbein said Luen Thai will remain “very involved” in China this year and also seek new opportunities in Cambodia and Vietnam, where the company recently opened its first sewing facility, adding, “We see Vietnam and Cambodia as growth areas.” The Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations between the U.S., Vietnam, Singapore, Australia, Peru, Brunei, New Zealand, Malaysia, Mexico, Canada and Japan could also profoundly impact apparel sourcing and was a key topic at the conference. Kim Glas, deputy assistant secretary for textiles, consumer goods and materials at the Commerce Department, made the case for a yarn-forward rule of origin, which most apparel sourcing executives oppose, and also shed light on the U.S. tariff phaseout proposal in the TPP talks. The U.S. has proposed a 15-year phaseout on tariffs of “sensitive” woven-product imports and a 10-year tariff phaseout on “sensitive” knit-product imports, although no consensus has been reached by all of the TPP partners, Glas said. She also said the U.S. is seeking to find a balance between the domestic textile industry and apparel importer needs. To that end, the U.S. has proposed “substantial” duty cuts on some of the ’’ — BILL MCRAITH, PVH CORP. inciding with the first day of their conference in Baltimore last year. The collapse claimed the lives of 1,132 people and spawned a global backlash and the launch of two retailer-brand safety initiatives. “Day One of this conference last year was the day the news broke about the Rana Plaza collapse in Bangladesh,” said Bryan Wolfe, vice president of international trade at Ann Inc. “So it was a bit of a dark cloud that hit our industry that day and it became a profound topic… what happened there has now permeated other places in the world.” ing issue for you, but it’s a commercial issue for us.” In an interview, Glass said, “We’ve always had long tariff phaseouts on sensitive products. What we are providing here in TPP is substantial duty cuts on sensitive products on Day One. This is a different type of agreement and we have to be very mindful of our current free trade agreements with Central America, a major export destination for U.S. yarns and fabrics,” noting that apparel and textile imports from Vietnam have increased substantially without duty-free benefits. “Again, we have come up with a different paradigm on short supply that will allow a level of flexibility [for importers] up front in the agreement.” Sen. Ron Wyden (D., Ore.), chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, which oversees trade and tax legislation, told the AAFA members that he plans to craft his own trade-promotion authority bill, a tool that is seen as vital to the Executive Branch to complete trade deals, including the TPP, because it only allows Congress to vote for or against trade deals. Wyden’s insistence on crafting a new TPA bill indicates that he does not support a bipartisan, bicameral bill introduced in January, which could slow down the trade agenda and prolong the conclusion of the TPP negotiations. “Some would like to lay blame for lack of support for the TPA proposal recently introduced in Congress at the doorstep of the White House,” said Wyden, adding that the President and U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman are “having a difficult time selling a product that members are not thrilled about.” PHOTOS BY JONAH KOCH By KRISTI ELLIS On behalf of all denim lovers—the women and men who thrive on jeans with stay true fi t, unsurpassed comfort, and undeniable style—we’d like to congratulate DL1961 on being named Denim Brand of the Year by AAFA at the American Image Awards. The LYCRA® brand takes pride in supporting your mission for the perfect fitting jean and are honored to have our LYCRA® fibers and XFIT LYCRA® fabric technology featured in your denim collections. 8 WWD TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 2014 Wearable Tech Still Seeks Its Place Uniqlo’s 5th Paris Unit Marchesa Enters Fine Jewelry By LAUREN MCCARTHY MARCHESA IS entering the world of fine jewelry. Designers Georgina Chapman and Keren Craig have inked a licensing deal with Prestige Jewelry to produce their foray into jewelry. The debut collection, due out for holiday, will focus entirely on bridal and complement the brand’s bridal collection. “Our bridal business is growing rapidly over the past few years, so it seems like a natural fit to offer jewelry in the market,” explained chief executive officer Edward Chapman. The bridal line will consist of 20 different styles, primarily consisting of engagement rings and wedding bands. Stud earrings, pendants and solitaire stones will also be included, with prices ranging from $2,000 to more than $20,000. “The bridal business is really a very steady business,” said Rajiv Kothari, ceo of Prestige Jewelry. “It’s the right place to launch and really get our feet into the market and establish ourselves in that space.” The line will expand beyond bridal for spring 2015 with a full range of styles in colored gemstones and diamonds. Both collections will be available exclusively at select Macy’s stores and on macys.com beginning in November.“Macy’s has been a really great business partner for years,” said Kothari. “We really like the direction that Macy’s has been taking overall as a company. In terms of retail, they are being very innovative and taking all the right steps to connect with the customer on all the right levels.” Kothari sees the Marchesa customer as well versed in the realm of fine jewelry. “It’s someone who really appreciates details,” he said. “It’s someone who wants to step outside of the regular engagement rings that are out there. Bridal is a challenging space, and a conservative marketplace. It’s all in the detail and the quality.” Launches New Model By JOELLE DIDERICH PARIS — Uniqlo is getting conceptual. The Japanese fast-fashion giant has inaugurated a new retail model with the opening of its fifth store here in a 19thcentury former factory in the Marais district, where it is selling clothes and accessories alongside a selection of other products, including books. Yuki Katsuta, head of research and design at Uniqlo, said the store, at number 39 Rue des Francs-Bourgeois, was designed as a flagship retail destination highlighting “the coolest Japanese lifestyle concept.” “We are thinking of making that store…one of the best fashion-message concept stores in the world. Mainly we’re going to be merchandising Uniqlo products. We may also mix in some different items, maybe books, maybe furniture,” he explained. “It’s supposed to be a completely different store to any other store,” said Katsuta, adding that the concept could be rolled out eventually to other cities. Designed by Tokyo-based interior design firm Wonderwall, the store spans just over 8,800 square feet across three floors. Located in a former jewelry-waste foundry, it juxtaposes modern elements like digital screens and LED displays with original features such as an imposing 115-foot red-brick chimney, which literally soars through the shop’s glass rooftop. “Please visit downstairs,” encouraged Berndt Hauptkorn, Uniqlo’s chief operating officer of Europe, during the inaugural party on Thursday. “We created a museumlike atmosphere,” he noted, calling the place “a ruin” when the company spotted it. On display are several of the old, highly specialized tools for cleaning and recycling gold and other precious materials, as well as a mock-up of the former factory. Uniqlo has ventured beyond clothing before: In September 2012, it opened Bigqlo, a collaboration with Japanese electronics retailer Big Camera, in Tokyo. The Marais opening is part of an aggressive overseas growth drive that could see parent company Fast Retailing Co. Ltd. open between 100 and 300 Uniqlo stores outside Japan in 2014. Earlier this month saw the opening of the first Uniqlo store in Germany, the largest in Europe, and another in Melbourne, Australia. The maker of lightLooks from Uniqlo’s UT collection. weight down jackets and the popular HeatTech line of thermal underwear also plans to open its first French store outside Paris, in the Mediterranean port city of Marseille, later this spring. The Marais store is the smallest to date for Uniqlo in the French capital. Its flagships at Opéra and La Défense clock in at 21,500 square feet and 17,200 square feet, respectively, while the Uniqlo stores at the So Ouest and Beaugrenelle shopping malls both span around 10,650 square feet. That required a more selective approach to merchandising, said Jörgen Andersson, who joined Uniqlo from Esprit Holdings Ltd. in January as co-global chief marketing officer. To wit: The store’s offer hones in on the spring collection designed in collaboration with Parisian style icon Inès de la Fressange, who attended a presentation held at the new space a couple of weeks before the opening. Andersson hailed the store as exemplifying a new retail model. “The Marais as a district has really made itself known for being very creative. I mean, every company that comes there has been trying to preserve what has been there from the past and really respect the historical heritage of the area, and add something new to it, mixing the old and the new,” he noted. “It’s much more back to where we used to be. Instead of going downtown to big flagships locations, we like to shop in the neighborhood where we live, where you have your local butcher, your local grocery store, your local Uniqlo store,” he added. “I think that’s quite interesting. I could personally see that coming in London or any other big city around the world.” The opening was accompanied by an outdoor advertising campaign featuring four local personalities: director and actress Géraldine Nakache and DJs Brodinski, Mouloud Achour and Inès Mélia. The four were photographed by Thomas Lohr and styled by Jonathan Kaye. PHOTO BY FRANCK MURA PHOTO BY RONALD GUTIERREZ PHOTO BY DAAN ROOSEGAARDE {Continued from page one} For Anouk Wipprecht, an artist in residence at research and development people from Apple and Autodesk, a 3-D software design corporation, the Disney were checking out the scene at the confer- arts of 3-D printing and sensing technology come together in a collection of dresses called Intimacy 2.0, ence, although declining to comment. From the presentations and booths at the con- which become transparent and sexier according to ference, it is apparent that the machines are still biometrics. She calls these plays with transparency firing up for the future. Companies such as Seattle- a “dialect” between the wearer and the dress. Another 3-D designer, Julia Koerner, presented based startup Heapsylon presented socks made out of undisclosed “propriety 100 percent textile sen- a dress called Hybrid Holism, which was almost sors” called Sensoria. The conductive material can translucent to start and meant to serve as a second skin. Koerner, an track steps, calories, architect by trade, speed, distance and discussed a 3-D techstride. Textile sensors nique called Mammoth and a detachable anklet S t e r e o l i t h o g r a p h y, power the socks. When which uses laser beams the wearer is stagnant to harden polymers and for too long, the sock transform them into can be programmed to fashion statements. alert them to move. It Her engineering can even tell loved ones background leads the that the wearer has had way for her designs. an accidental fall. But “I wouldn’t say there’s its main hook is that it a lot of difference begives runners gait and tween designing strucspeed analysis for longtures and couture,” term tracking or immesaid Koerner. “My ardiate cyber coaching. chitectural background For other compaand knowledge in nies, technology is procomputational design viding a natural assist methods allow me to to safety. Reebok prebe able to create these sented Checklight, a Intimacy 2.0 dresses are made of leather and complex 3-D models. skullcap that senses the smart e-foils, which can become transparent These dresses are very intensity of hits during according to the wearer’s mood. expensive to produce high-impact sports such and, besides various as football. The light small test prints, you on the caps glow green, do not have a second yellow or red dependchance to print the ing on the likelihood of whole dress twice. concussion, a condition Whatever I do in the that often goes unat3-D file has to be pertended in sports. fect and work out.” The question that Koerner has colReebok’s vice president laborated with Iris of advanced concepts van Herpen and her Paul Litchfield posed couture pieces have was: How can one creappeared on runway ate a product that’s Made by Art Center College of Design shows in Paris. But her going to be used for a students, Axiom suits correct posture view on wearability is long time and not simduring weight training by vibrating. realistic: “Currently the ply seen as a novelty? designs are still rather It seems that for the Reeboks and Heapsylons of the wearable tech uncomfortable due to the fact that the materials are revolution, the answer is to become indispensable still very hard, but I think the more flexible the mato athletes who set the trends for the increasingly terial gets the more comfortable it will be to wear such garments. There is a difference between haute fitness-crazed masses. For products and designers on the other end of couture pieces, which are meant to be exhibited in the fashion spectrum, the path is perhaps not as a museum as an art piece and ready-to-wear fashion simple and the value proposition is less utilitarian. clothes. I don’t think we are quite there yet to talk Representing this camp at the conference were about the clothes and their comfort parameter.” The tech trend is set apart by its transitive nature. companies focusing on style with the help of 3-D By way of 3-D printer, anyone can download and printers and LEDs, or light emitting diodes. While LEDs within apparel feel very futuristic, print a gown for free off of Thingiverse.com, an they’ve actually been around for longer than some open-source file-sharing site for makers. The high fledgling designers have been alive. Today, it seems fashion Francis Bitonti Studio Dress has seen 2,353 like only early adopters of style — performers such downloads since it was published on March 11. The hope, at least among some in the tech set, is as Katy Perry — can get away with a bra top that outshines the Rockefeller Center Christmas tree. that this new spirit of sharing could unlock couture But many forget that regular civilians have been for all. But the rest of fashion is left to wonder when playing with LEDs since the Nineties when the popular LA Gear sneakers lit up footsteps across wearable technology will be ready for prime time the nation (they’re still available at Sears for those and, if that moment does come, what it will mean for the industry at large. feeling nostalgic). — WITH CONTRIBUTIONS FROM PAULINA SZMYDKE WWD TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 2014 9 WWD.COM PVH Could Reduce Heritage Portfolio {Continued from page one} on an adjusted basis, $154.1 million of its $966.9 billion in earnings before interest and taxes. The retail component of Heritage Brands lost $24.4 million on a GAAP basis and $4.2 million on an adjusted basis on $547 million in revenues. “When you have a business like that,” Chirico said of Heritage Brands, “you’re always looking at the components of that business and judging if they’re adding value or not, are they strategic or not. So there are some assets in there that, if the right offer was made, then we could see ourselves getting out of some of those businesses.” While the divestiture of existing businesses was characterized as a possibility, the PVH executive was more definitive in his discussion about picking up the rights to Tommy Hilfiger businesses outside North America and Europe, which are already operated directly by PVH. Chirico pointed out that there are opportunities to bring in-house Tommy Hilfiger businesses in South Korea and China and other locales in central and Southeast Asia as well as in Brazil that today are a “$500 million sales opportunity that’s being done by licensing partners” or through joint-venture partners. “We have relatively short-term licenses or areas where we have an option to buy a licensing partner or a joint venture partner out of those arrangements over the next three to five years,” he said. All told, conversion of Hilfiger and Calvin Klein licenses and joint-venture arrangements could translate into between $1.5 billion and $2.5 billion in sales beyond 2015 or 2016. With the Warnaco acquisition, he said that PVH now has “control over all of the markets with just about all of the product categories that we would want for Calvin Klein.” PVH continues to work towards rebuilding its Calvin Klein jeans business, acquired with the purchase of Warnaco, and Chirico said that PVH is seeing signs of progress, with many department stores committing to shops for the second half of the year as PVH puts more effort into the product, systems marketing and point-ofsale support. He noted that last year the Calvin Klein brand grew between 8 and 10 percent in U.S. department stores, “and that’s with the jeans business down double digits in both men’s and women’s.” In Europe, the Calvin Klein Jeans business is about $500 million but not profitable and weak on representation outside its strongest markets, Spain and Italy, two of the nations hardest hit by the euro zone crisis. Of the $7.8 billion in retail sales generated by the Calvin Klein brand ’’ You’re always looking at the components… and judging if they’re adding value or not, are they strategic or not. diversification” that PVH has with its Tommy Hilfiger business. As he has in numerous exchanges with analysts and the press, Chirico noted that the Calvin Klein underwear business remains “healthy” and “profitable.” Wiseman focused his presentation on macroeconomic factors and how they are impacting VF. Among his key points were: n “In general, we think the middle- and lower-income U.S. consumer is under a lot of pressure. They don’t have a lot of disposable income. When you come through a winter like this, when they’ve had to spend more to heat their homes… just something that takes discretionary income away from something else, and that’s not the kind of consumer spending that shows up in the store.…For us to grow, we have to be able to gain share with them.…And we’ve been able to grow because we have been able to speak to them in a way that is relevant to them.” n “And we have seen the Chinese economy slow down, the consumer economy, a little bit, still leading as the fastest-growing consumer economy in the world. But it’s not growing superhigh single digits, it’s come off that a couple of points. Still a great place to do business if you have platforms and know how to make money. It’s hard to get started there, really hard.” n “We said…when we announced our five-year plan last June that we were going to take [the e-commerce] business from $250 million to $750 million by growing it 25 percent a year.…We’re running slightly ahead of that growth rate, which doesn’t surprise us. But if there’s a channel of distribution that’s growing faster than all others, that’s the one, and we’re beginning to get good at it.” Hoguet touched on a variety of points, including Amazon, Bloomingdale’s and Macy’s omnichannel efforts: n “Amazon is coming. They’re trying, they’re working on it. Not having stores will be a disadvantage to them in the apparel world. The real fashion customers love ’’ — EMANUEL CHIRICO, PVH worldwide, about 57 percent is in North America, or about $4.4 billion, and “a little over $1 billion,” mostly from jeans, underwear and fragrance, in Europe. He referred to Europe as “total white space” for the Calvin Klein brand, especially once the integration of the Warnaco business is successfully completed. “No sportswear, no footwear, no meaningful accessories business,” he said. “There’s huge growth potential in Europe for the brand, similar to how the Tommy Hilfiger brand has been developed.” Ideally, Calvin Klein could “mirror the product diversification and country to shop. They love the ability to return in store. We offer the ability to ship returns to distribution centers for free, but nobody is using it. When they do come into the store, that’s a reason to sell them something else.” n “We started a Bloomingdale’s outlet strategy, opened 13 stores and then we paused. We wanted to make sure we learned where they did well and where they didn’t do well. Terry [Lundgren, chairman and ceo of Macy’s Inc.] is now ready to start looking at real estate and rolling out [outlets] for 2015. We’re actually quite bullish on the outlets for Bloomingdale’s. People ask, ‘Are you going to start an outlet strategy for Macy’s?’ I think it would be a bad idea because the prices aren’t that different than an outlet. We’re not talking about hundreds of stores, but a lot more than 13. It brings new customers to the base store.” n “Single View of Inventory is when you have two buyers, but one set of eyes watching where you put the inventory. Dresses was one of first business where we began piloting this omnichannel collaboration. We’ve really improved the assortment. There were some dresses we didn’t have in some stores. Now, if an Internet sale comes back to the store, we have a full-size range of the dress so it wouldn’t be an automatic markdown. We’re going to roll this out and test it in other families of business, and Bloomingdale’s will be doing a similar test.” n “We didn’t think buy online pickup in store was going to be important to our customers. We tested in the Washington area in 10 stores and we were wrong. Customers loved it. By July, we’ll have it in every single store. The technology we built has the ability to see real-time inventory by location. We don’t fully know how this is going to work, but we like what we saw. We built the technology to be able to get us to same-day delivery when we do that.” — WITH CONTRIBUTIONS FROM SHARON EDELSON Larger Céline Unit Opens in Paris Warming Up to Herrera Handbags at the new store. hefty pillar. Next to it is a spacious rtw salon, its living-room vibe heightened by the sofas and pale parquet: broad planks of Danish oak arranged in a point de Hongrie pattern. Chunky marble and onyx cubes are dotted throughout the boutique, and large slabs of colorful stone are embedded in the floor under clothing rails, or wrapped around pillars. Céline declined to provide first-year sales projections, though it has said in the past that the François 1er location was its highest-grossing unit worldwide. The high-profile Paris location — in a Haussmann-era building next to new-look boutiques by Saint Laurent, Fendi and Chanel — is one of 15 new Céline stores slated to open this year. The French firm is part of LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton, which reported sales in its fashion and leather goods division vaulted 11 percent in the first quarter to 2.6 billion euros, or $3.6 billion. Among scheduled openings are a 7,000-square-foot unit with 90 feet of frontage on Omotesando in Tokyo, slated to open May 31. A 5,900-squarefoot location at IFS in Chengdu, one of the richest and fastestgrowing cities in China, opened earlier this month. A 4,300-square-foot store in Crystals at CityCenter in Las Vegas is slated to open May 14 and another on Wooster Street in New York’s SoHo district is budgeted for late August. LVMH, which owns the handsome, prow-shaped building on François 1er that had housed Céline’s temporary store, has yet to indicate which of its luxury brands might take over the retail space. NEW YORK — September might seem eons away on the fashion calendar, but the Couture Council of The Museum at FIT got a jump on its annual fall luncheon by hosting a warm-up one Monday for this year’s honoree, Carolina Herrera. While guests like Yaz Hernandez, Alexandra Kotur, FIT’s Joyce Brown and Valerie Steele, and this year’s cochairs Julie Macklowe and Elizabeth Musmanno wound their way through the designer’s Madison Avenue boutique for an air-kiss or two, models passed by in looks from Herrera’s archives collection. Once seated, they viewed a sampling of designs from Herrera’s archive, spring, prefall and fall collections. During lunch, the modeling stopped any thank-goodness-winter-is-over conversations cold and prompted such exclamations as, “Is that one going to the Met ball?” Another guest said of an all-gray, fur-lined ensemble, “I’ll take one of those in aisle two. That’s in my color wheel — even if it wasn’t, I’d still take it.” At one point, Herrera, who will receive the 2014 Couture Council Award for Artistry of Fashion on Sept. 3, tried to cool all the attention. While the council’s chairwoman Hernandez spoke of the upcoming “lovefest for Carolina” and raved about the designer being “a megastar” for Latinas, the designer jokingly fanned herself, which only lead to another compliment. “Of course, everybody knows she’s a fabulous designer. But does everybody know that she is so witty and funny, and a really good friend? As my Venezuelan husband would say, ‘She embodies the best of Venezuela,’” Hernandez said. Carolina Herrera PHOTO BY THOMAS IANNACCONE PARIS — Phoebe Philo has finally bid adieu to Céline’s “temporary” store on Rue François 1er in Paris — after more than four years in the raw, no-frills space — and decamped to a light-filled boutique at 53 Avenue Montaigne. Roughly double the size of those temporary digs, the new 6,500-square-foot location sprawls over two floors, connected by a coiling staircase in cement and pale oak, and gives ample showcase to Philo’s ready-to-wear, leather goods, footwear, eyewear and costume jewelry collections. The unit opened to the public Monday, and was unveiled via newspaper ads, outdoor advertising and a mass e-mail. Residential in feel, the store boasts views of a leafy courtyard, and is appointed here and there with cream sofas, armchairs, area rugs and potted tropical plants. The main floor, paved in large squares of gray Vicenza stone, is dedicated mainly to leather goods, including three travertine shelves exalting versions of the label’s most popular handbag styles in colorful precious skins. Leather totes and crossbody bags hang from a sculptural steel rack by the Danish artist known as Fos, who also designed bloblike terra-cotta flower pots, brass light fixtures, some shelving units, brass trays and even a water decanter and matching glasses. Upstairs, shoppers alight on a large area dedicated to footwear, a low bench ringing a PHOTOS BY DOMINIQUE MAÎTRE By MILES SOCHA Steele seemed to agree, noting the expected 600-plus crowd will call for extra tables at the David H. Koch Theater event. With the official tribute still months away, Herrera said she is not quite ready for that occasion. “I am ready for resort, and the Met ball. And I’m leaving for a wedding in London Wednesday, but I’m coming back on Sunday. It’s Taki Theodoracopulos’ daughter [Mandolyna]. Reinaldo is there and the girls are coming. They are like family.” — ROSEMARY FEITELBERG 10 WWD TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 2014 Maria Bell and MOCA director Laura Mulleavy, Liz Goldwyn and Kate Mulleavy. L.A. Stories MILAN-BASED Francesco Vezzoli described Los Angeles as “a city that has adopted me,” but judging from his latest oeuvre, “Cinema Vezzoli,” which opened at the city’s Museum of Contemporary Art on Sunday, it seems the relationship is reciprocal. Part of the artist’s three-museum series, titled “The Trinity,” (“Galleria Vezzoli” bowed at Rome’s MAXXI last year and “The Church of Vezzoli” will open in New York’s MoMA PS1 later this year), “Cinema Vezzoli” occupies four of MOCA’s galleries: one filled with celebrity portraits in starshaped frames, another with embroidered portraits, a third with giant fictional movie posters and a fourth transformed into a screening room complete with vintage chairs. On Friday, MOCA trustees Maria Bell and David Johnson, along with their spouses Bill and Suzanne, respectively, toasted the opening with a dinner at Hollywood’s oldest restaurant, Musso and Frank Grill. “It’s fitting that this place is on the Walk of Fame,” said Maria Bell. China Chow, Bret Easton Ellis, Liz Goldwyn, Eli Broad, Eugenio López, Scott Sternberg and Kate and Laura Mulleavy sipped martinis in the railcar-style bar before retreating to the main dining room, whose slightly musty air only seemed to add to the atmosphere. Vezzoli himself appeared just in time for dinner, seated between more important than art,” Vezzoli said as he greeted some old friends who flew in from Europe for the occasion. Fittingly, photographer Matthew Rolston said he had just shot the artist for Italian Vanity Fair, in the manner of George Hurrell. “It was great fun,” Rolston said. “Getting him dressed up like an Old Hollywood icon.” The following night, the Foundation for Living Beauty and its founder, Amie Satchu, threw its third annual fundraiser, this year sponsored by Lanvin. The affair boasted a runway presentation of the house’s Hiver 2014 precollection, following in the well-heeled footsteps of Tom Ford shows the last two years. The French fashion house’s touches were seen throughout the night, from the bevy of Lanvin-clad starlets including Emmy Rossum and Rashida Jones, to the glittering mannequins on display. A silent auction preceded the garden presentation, during which Olivia Munn and Emmy Rossum, both in Lanvin. Rossum called out from her front-row seat and demanded the opportunity to bid on a private dinner party. “She’s shameless,” quipped Satchu of Rossum, who conveniently lives three doors down. She failed to note the irony (Rossum stars on Showtime’s “Shameless.”) eye Emma Roberts in Lanvin. Rashida Jones in Lanvin. Also occupying the front row were guests Olivia Munn (who was spotted leaving midshow), Ashley Madekwe and Emma Roberts. The show featured 27 looks and ended on a celebratory note with models tossing handfuls of confetti into the audience. “I want all of the gorgeous long black dresses that I’m just dying over. I love all of their collections and each one is just so different,” mused Roberts postshow. “Once Upon a Time” star Jennifer Morrison also came to lend support, but admitted there would be no late-night festivities in store for her, noting that the next day marked her first day on set as a director for the short film “Warning Labels.” “This will be a very incontrol evening for me, but it’s a great cause,” she said. “We start filming tomorrow at 1 p.m. — I can’t wait to say, ‘Action.’” — MARCY MEDINA AND LESLEY MCKENZIE MULLEAVY PHOTO BY BILLY FARRELL/BFANYC.COM; ROBERTS BY CHELSEA LAUREN/GETTY IMAGES FOR LANVIN; ALL OTHERS BY DONATO SARDELLA/GETTY IMAGES FOR LANVIN Philippe Vergne. “Friendship is Mayor Bill de Blasio and Chirlane McCray did not have auspicious beginnings. THE TRIBECA FILM FESTIVAL “We were 18 and graduated high wrapped up Saturday on a similar note school and thought we were going to be to its opening night: with a musical ode rock stars,” he said. “Within six months, to New York. we were dropped from the label. The closing-night film was “Begin Basically we were a miserable failure.” Again,” a dramedy starring Keira The film’s stars, including Hailee Knightley and Adam Levine, the Maroon 5 front man, as a musician couple Steinfeld, were joined at an after who move to the East Village in party at the Tribeca Grill by search of fame and glory. Levine’s festival founder Robert De Niro, his character finds success — and wife Grace Hightower and Mayor hordes of adoring female fans — Bill de Blasio and his wife, Chirlane and the pair break up, leaving McCray. De Blasio, who just Knightley’s character alone to stepped out for his first major record her own album, which social event as mayor last she does with the help of a week, seems to be enjoying failing music executive played rubbing shoulders with the by Mark Ruffalo. It played like movie crowd. “It was compelling, a love a big-budget version of “Inside letter to New York, for sure,” Llewyn Davis.” the mayor said of the movie. The movie delivers two firsts “It’s very interesting to see — Knightley’s debut as a singer your city again in a different and Levine’s debut as an actor. way and sort of fall in love “[Levine] kept going, ‘I with it again…it had this don’t know what I’m doing, I beautiful sense of New York don’t know what I’m doing,’” togetherness, the way anything Knightley recalled. “But he’s can happen in New York.” such a natural entertainer. And how was He has a boundless amount of Levine’s debut? energy; he just sort of throws FOR MORE PHOTOS, SEE “It was kind of a it at you and you sort of pin tough role to play it back at him.” Levine, who WWD.com/eye. because he didn’t walked the carpet of the get to exactly be the Chanel-sponsored premiere Behati good guy,” de Blasio said. with fiancée Behati Prinsloo in Prinsloo “He was believable as the a decidedly un-rock ’n’ roll not-good guy, so I guess that navy suit, could relate to his shows acting chops, right?” character’s career trajectory. Everybody’s a critic. His band’s first incarnation, then called Kara’s Flowers, — KRISTEN TAUER Adam Levine in Prada and Keira Knightley in Chanel haute couture. PHOTOS BY WILL RAGOZZINO Only in New York Hailee Steinfeld in Valentino. WWD TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 2014 11 WWD.COM FASHION SCOOPS — SAMANTHA CONTI CHANGES ON THE VINCE BOARD: Jill Granoff, chief executive officer of Vince Holding Corp., has been named chairman of the board. She succeeds Christopher T. Metz, who has resigned. In addition, Jason Neimark resigned from the board. Neither resignation involved a disagreement with the company or any matter relating to the company’s operations, policies or practices, according to an 8-K filed Monday. T. Scott King, managing director of Sun Capital Partners, and Jonathan H. Borell, principal of Sun Capital Partners, were named to the board, filling the vacancies created by the resignations of Metz and Neimark. The company also expanded the size of the board to nine members and appointed Marc Leder, co-ceo of Sun Capital Partners, to the board. Mark Brody, managing director and group chief financial officer of Sun Capital, was named lead independent director. As reported, Eugenia Ulasewicz joined the board earlier this month. — LISA LOCKWOOD BANKING ON BRAZIL: Farfetch is training the spotlight on Brazilian design talent with a new shop that stocks 15 of the country’s hottest brands. Destination Brazil will launch as a shop-in-shop on Farfetch.com on Wednesday, with labels such as Osklen, Martha Medeiros, Lenny Niemeyer, Patricia Viera and Giuliana Romanno. The timing is meant to tie in with this summer’s World Cup in Brazil, and Farfetch will be promoting the project with dedicated editorial and fashion shoots on the site. “It’s the first time on the site that we’re giving Brazilian designers a presence outside Brazil,” said José Neves, the company’s founder and chief executive officer. “We’ve been operating a local version of Farfetch in Brazil with 90 designers. And we have 50 people in our office in São Paulo. But we’ve been selling to Brazil only and exploring the domestic market.” Of the 90 designers, Neves said he and his team chose 15 for Destination Brazil, based on their potential appeal to a global audience. “A lot of the labels are atelier-based and ethically sourced. This is not mass fashion but luxury made in Brazil,” he said. Some of the designers will be in London this week to launch the project, meet with local retailers and visit the Farfetch offices. Neves said Brazil has been a vibrant market for Farfetch. While there are no immediate plans to replicate Destination Brazil for designers in other markets, Neves said his message is clear: “I want to show how the Internet — and Farfetch — can be a platform for different geographies,” he said. “We’re not a London or New York-centric group of buyers. There are 25 countries represented on Farfetch.” — S.C. APPLE SEED: Could Apple be angling for an address on Manhattan’s Upper East Side? There are rumors that the tech company wants to roost with fashionable names such as David Webb, Milly and Ralph Lauren. According to sources, Apple is circling 940 Madison Avenue near 74th Street, a former 1921 bank building that’s now home to VBH. The store has 4,000 square feet of space on the ground floor, 4,000 square feet in the basement and a 1,000-square-foot mezzanine. V. Bruce Hoeksema, designer and owner of VBH, the Rome-based luxury brand, hired Peter Marino to transform the space with his signature luxurious style. Apple, no doubt would renovate the space in line with its sleek minimalist aesthetic. “We’ve made no announcement about a store in that location,” said an Apple spokeswoman. MALIBU MIX: Oliver Peoples feted its Lydia Hearst new Oliver Peoples West collection on Saturday with an outdoor exhibit in Malibu, Calif., by two-time FOR MORE world champion surfer and SCOOPS, SEE photographer, Daize Shayne Goodwin. Never-before-seen WWD.com. prints of surf legends from Goodwin’s Ohana series were on display poolside at a private home, as were the beach- and sportsfriendly frames, priced at $265 to $295. “These were taken in 1999 when pioneer surfers really helped shape the culture,” said the Kauai, Hawaii, native, one of the original Roxy girls who has also been sponsored by Vans and Hurley. “We wanted to do something different, that helps show the collection in a more — SHARON EDELSON CH. 11 FOR CAROL’S DAUGHTER FREESTANDING STORES: CD Stores Jill Granoff LLC, formerly known as Carol’s Daughter Stores LLC, is in bankruptcy. CD Stores on Thursday filed a voluntary Chapter 11 petition in a Manhattan bankruptcy court. The filing listed assets and liabilities each in the range of $1 million to $10 million. The parent company and owner of the Carol’s Daughter brand, Carol’s Daughter Holdings LLC, did not file for bankruptcy court protection. The brand sells natural beauty products for hair, body and skin care. In a filing with the court signed by John D. Elmer, the chief financial officer and chief operating officer for Carol’s Daughter Holdings, said the plan is to restructure operations for the two New York stores. The locations are at 125th Street in Harlem and at the Atlantic Terminal in Brooklyn. CD Stores is the guarantor on the 125th Street store lease. Carol’s Daughter products are sold on the company Web site and via other sites. — VICKI M. YOUNG ACED-D IT: The Accessories Council has rolled out it first round of honorees for the 18th annual ACE Awards, which will be held Nov. 3 at Cipriani 42nd Street in Manhattan. InStyle’s Hal Rubenstein will host the ceremony, which also marks the Accessories Council’s 20th anniversary. Proenza Schouler will take home Designer of the Year; Kate Spade New York will be honored with Brand of the Year, and Shinola will be honored with the Brand Launch award. Other honorees include: Oliver Peoples for business visionary, Google Glass for fashion and technology, Lord & Taylor for retailer of the year and Alex & Ani for speciality retailer. Guy Trebay of The New York Times will receive the Marylou Luther Journalism Award, while Rose Marie Bravo will receive the Leadership Award. Additionally, Bulgari will receive the Legacy Award, and Salvatore Ferragamo will be honored with the Hall of Fame Award. The council will reveal additional honorees and sponsors closer to the ceremony date. — LAUREN MCCARTHY TOTES FOR TOTS: For the ninth installment of its Project H collaboration, Holt Renfrew has partnered with Rag & Bone for three limited-edition canvas totes. All proceeds will benefit Right to Play, a global organization that uses the transformative power of play to educate and empower children facing adversity. The totes are a riff on Rag & Oliver Peoples’ Larry Leight, Daize Shayne Goodwin and David Schulte. PHOTO BY BILLY FARRELL/BFANYC.COM London. The designer will travel to the British capital for a two-day visit that will culminate with a gala in aid of The Royal Marsden Cancer Charity at Windsor Castle on May 13. The day before, Lauren will tour the Royal Marsden, a specialist cancer treatment center in London’s Chelsea. The charity’s patron is Queen Elizabeth II and its president is the Duke of Cambridge. PHOTO BY LARRY LETTERA LONDON TIME: Ralph Lauren is headed to authentic way,” said Oliver Peoples chief executive officer David Schulte. Joining Japanese surfer Takuji Masuda, who hosted the event, were Anthony Kiedis and Flea of the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Lydia Hearst, Fuschia Kate Sumner and Sanoe Lake. — MARCY MEDINA Bone’s surf-inspired Numbers T-shirts, introduced in the men’s spring 2013 collection. They’re available in black, cream and dark green and will sell for $55 at Holt Renfrew stores across Canada as of May 9. — JESSICA IREDALE Anthony Kiedis and Flea SMALL SPACE BIG BUSINESS WWD Marketplace is the premier destination for the industry’s classified and career listings. 800.423.3314 WWD.COM/MARKETPLACE 12 WWD TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 2014 WWD.COM MEMO PAD NYT BETS ON VIDEO: The New York Times made its NewFront’s debut Monday morning at the Dia Art space in New York’s Chelsea neighborhood. Bruce Headlam, the Times’ managing editor of video, started the hour-long presentation with an overview of the paper’s shiny, expanded digital and marketing strategy. That strategy includes a souped-up digital hub comprised of videos organized across 14 channels devoted to different sections of the paper, such as culture, style, news and politics, sports and food. Acura is the launch sponsor of the hub, which will be home to more than 30 new series. Some of those series will include videos by wellknown columnists, such as Mark Bittman for food, Molly Wood for technology, David Carr for media and culture and Adam Bryant, who has a business column called “Corner Office.” In a surprise appearance, Vanessa Friedman, who doesn’t start as the Times’ fashion director until next month, will also get her own program. Her videos will explore the behind-the-scenes world of fashion, and will touch on the industry’s historical, cultural and political connections, she said. “I was so eager to be here that I jumped the employment gun,” said Friedman, who is still tying up loose ends with her previous employer, The Financial Times. Although she wrapped up her column last week, she will end her employment at the British paper by moderating its annual luxury summit in Mexico City in mid-May. Carr lightened up the mood with a selfdeprecating comment about his wardrobe. Calling his tan suit a “garbage bag with a pair of legs” that is “rented and due back at 11 o’clock,” he quickly turned to the driving force behind the digital push. “More and more because we are becoming a consumer company, I think it makes us a more powerful advertising company,” he said, offering that nyt.com gets 40 million unique visitors and 800,000 paying customers around the world. Carr — who at times sounded like he’d transferred to the marketing department, even referring to the paper as a “brand” — credited those numbers to the Times’ strong and trusted reputation. In order to bring in new revenue, the Times has partnered with Vimeo to develop original branded content for marketers. The videos include riffs off of popular Times columns like “Modern Love,” as well as “Verbatim,” a sketch on real legal transcripts that are reenacted by comedians. The site will also stream Kevin Spacey’s play “Clarence Darrow” in September. The paper launched a native advertising platform, in which brands can advertise their own videos alongside the Times’ videos. Marketer videos will be “clearly labeled,” the company said, adding that its first native video partner is Sotheby’s International Realty. The Times also expanded its cross-platform native program called “Paid Posts,” comprised of text, images and video. But back to journalism. The Times, which posts more than 430 videos a month, said it is training its foreign correspondents on how to use and cut video via mobile device for its site. “The Internet is the great leveler. Once video was the sole preserve of the broadcasters,” said the Times’ chief executive officer Mark Thompson, who closed the presentation. “But now, anyone with the talent and an idea can create great video and get it to a big audience. Over the past year, I’ve been lucky enough to watch the Times really get to grips with video. We’re all behind this push into video…and we’re going to back it with resources and tech investments.” — ALEXANDRA STEIGRAD WEBBY WINS: The Webby Award winners were revealed Monday, weeks ahead of the official awards ceremony, which will take place May 19 at Cipriani Wall Street in New York. The 18th annual awards fete the best of digital, and this year some of the usual suspects nabbed top honors, with a few newbies grabbing bragging rights. For the third year in a row, The New Yorker won best editorial writing, while Wired grabbed People’s Choice. The technology-inspired title won best magazine for the second time since 2012. The Atlantic won for best political site, as Refinery29 received both the Webby and the People’s Choice award for Fashion and Beauty. The site beat out competitors Lucky, Style.com, Net-aporter, Mr Porter and IntoTheGloss, among others. The New York Times scooped up the Webby for News site, as J. Crew snapped up best fashion & beauty social media site. In that category, GQ received the People’s Choice. While it could have won the Webby for Humor — Funny or Die took that one — Mullen got top honors for native advertising, thanks to its clever Century 21 ad, which showcases a house that looks very similar to Walter White’s home from “Breaking Bad.” — A.S. Alibaba Invests in Youku Tudou By LARA FARRAR SHANGHAI — Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. has invested $1.22 billion in Youku Tudou Inc., China’s largest Internet television company. Youku Tudou announced the investment late Monday. Alibaba’s investment in Youku Tudou comes ahead of the e-commerce company’s upcoming initial public offering, which analysts project could be one of the largest in history. The IPO is projected to come within the next few days in the U.S. Yunfeng Capital, a Chinese private equity firm, is also joining Alibaba in the billion-dollar purchase of class A ordinary shares from Youku Tudou. Alibaba and Yunfeng will indirectly hold approximately 16.5 percent and 2 percent respectively of the shares, according to a statement issued by Youku Tudou. In recent months, Alibaba has engaged in a widespread investment spree that has extended into the U.S. market. The company has announced the establishment of an ecommerce Web site in America via two of its subsidiaries. SIZE OF ALIBABA’S INVESTMENT In March, Alibaba agreed to IN YOUKU TUDOU. invest $692 million in Chinese department store company Intime Retail to create “online-tooffline” retail opportunities. Also in March, Alibaba announced the purchase of a 60 percent stake in Chinese television and film production firm ChinaVision Media Group Ltd. for $804 million. A rationale for the investment in Youku Tudou was not provided. A recent study from the Boston Consulting Group on China’s e-commerce industry noted that Youku Tudou is one of the top-five Web sites where Chinese Internet users spend a disproportionate amount of time. Many brands have turned to Youku Tudou as an advertising platform as opposed to more traditional media channels. Alibaba executive chairman Jack Ma said in a statement that the investment would support Youku Tudou’s “innovation in this key emerging space as well as accelerate our digital entertainment and video content strategy. This is an important strategic initiative that will further extend the Alibaba ecosystem and bring new products and services to Alibaba’s customers.” $1.22B British Vogue’s Beatrix Miller Remembered in London By SAMANTHA CONTI Bruce Oldfield Bianca Jagger Alexandra Shulman Zandra Rhodes Caroline Charles Anna Wintour PHOTOS BY TIM JENKINS ANNA WINTOUR, Manolo Blahnik, Twiggy, Grace Coddington, Mario Testino, Bianca Jagger, Lady Sarah Chatto, Jasper Conran and John Frieda were among the guests at a memorial service on Monday for Beatrix Miller, the shy and fastidious former editor of British Vogue who steered the title through the Sixties, Seventies and most of the Eighties, a pack of Rothmans cigarettes by her side and a quip forever on her tongue. Miller, who died at the age of 90 in February, and who was known variously as “Miss Miller,” “Beatrix” or “Bea,” depending on one’s status, served as editor of British Vogue from 1964 to 1986. She promoted and supported generations of editorial, fashion, photographic and creative talent, including Coddington, Liz Tilberis, Anna Harvey, David Bailey, Patrick Demarchelier, Bruce Weber, Mario Testino, Norman Parkinson and Lord Snowdon. Art historian Sir Roy Strong was among the speakers at the service, which was organized by Jonathan Newhouse and Nicholas Coleridge at St. George’s, Hanover Square, a few minutes walk from Vogue House in London. Strong recalled Miller telling him in the Sixties: “I’m trying to educate Bailey — I ring him up every day, and make him learn new words,” she said, referring to the coarse East End snapper whose work is currently the subject of a retrospective at London’s National Portrait Gallery. Strong remembered Miller, “in her dark glasses, inhaling and exhaling a Rothmans cigarette,” as a self-effacing figure, a woman of trust and integrity, and “one of those rare people you did not ever want to let down.” Nicky Haslam, who wrote a column for Miller’s Vogue, said after the service that he found her reserve “very charming. She was the very opposite of [Diana] Vreeland. She drew you out in a different way,” he said. Sandra Boler, the former editor of Brides who had worked for Miller, recalled her “crisp, precise and economic” use of language. “She never used two words when one would do. She could be brusque — but it was a way of hiding her shyness. She was kind and sympathetic — but never sentimental,” Boler said, adding that Miller was a “born observer.” Miller presided over the magazine as the Sixties were coming into full swing, and she relished transforming Vogue into the title that would lead the way. “British Vogue was at its peak in the 1960s, they were the golden years,” said David Sassoon, following the service. “Beatrix did a tremendous amount for British designers — and she was wonderful in encouraging the mood of the Sixties [among them].” Zandra Rhodes said Miller’s avant-garde Vogue was a major influence on its American sister title. Joan Burstein, founder of Brown’s, admitted that she was always terrified of Miller. “She was so cool, calm and impressive. And she was very supportive of us — in as much as she could be.” During the service, Wintour read “Dusk in Fierce Pyjamas,” a piece that Miller had written for the 75th anniversary issue of British Vogue in 1991 about her experiences working for Vogue in New York, while the British title’s current editor Alexandra Shulman read “Who Wore What When” by Angela Carter, which appeared in Vogue in 1975. Other guests included Shulman’s mother, writer and journalist Drusilla Beyfus, Caroline Charles, Barbara Daly, Min Hogg, Terry Jones, Julie Kavanagh, Patrick Kinmonth, David Mlinaric, Martin O’Brien, Terry O’Neill, Bruce Oldfield and Christopher Sykes.