big blue

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Côte d’Azur July 2011, photo Camilla Alfthan

Well, the sun was actually shining most of the time but it was not until the stormy weather that the coast truly lived up to its name.

what’s the matter

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horn ? 4.478 m tall and the peak of a recent trip to St. Moritz and Zermatt..and a reminder that I have not been very good at updating my notebook. Not that it really matters,  as the Matterhorn Ski Paradise is where you can ski all year round; and the subject of a new museum. www.zermatt.ch

riding high

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The liason between sport and fashion is nothing new. But with the latest Gucci Masters show jumping event in Paris fashion has entered the sporting arenas.  While venue itself was designed in Gucci’s red and green colours including a red and green Gucci store with gilded stir ups hanging from the ceiling, the world’s best riders competed for the honours and more than 600,000 euros worth of prize money. Apart from changing the face of show jumping the event, which was founded by Nelson Pessoa and Christophe Ameeuw, introduced two new concepts: Gucci by Gucci Challenge where ten women challenged ten men (and Rolf-Göran Bengtsson narrowly beat Pénélope Leprevost) and Caroline Casiraghi’s Style & Competition where ten couples – a professional and an amateur – competed to impress a jury. “Each week we do the thing and the venues look the same. So it is positive when someone like Gucci comes in and does something different which can open new doors for the sport,” said Marco Kutscher, winner of the Gucci Grand Prix on the final day of the event.


think different

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Paul Smith and his favorite briefcase which he brings along for some escapism in case a meeting gets boring.

Familiar faces gathered at The International Herald Tribune’s tenth luxury conference where personalities such as Karl Lagerfeld, Christopher Bailey, the Missonis and Diego Della Valle were part of the impressive line-up. While their views were inspiring and even reassuring – that craftsmanship and heritage are important keys to success – Paul Smith gently observed – as he did at the same conference eight years ago – that travelling is not what it used to be. Todays shop tend to look the same all over the world, when travelling used to be an adventure.

The designer own approach to globalization has been to act global and think local. While his Parisian boutique is located in a old café with both its name and scruffy interiours intact his Los Angeles store is situated in a large, pink bunker which on the inside resembles a film set. As the luxury industry is colonizing the emerging markets at a staggering pace his views were a welcome reminder of the industry’s role in local cultures.

“If fashion wants to be relevant people have to learn to think different, that is my best advice…Stop doing things that are logic. Logic is predictable,” said Paul Smith.

Ralph Lauren’s take on thinking differently : A digital lightshow on their New Bond Street façade which marked Ralphlauren.com’s 10th anniversary. “Merchentainment” is what David Lauren dubbed the house’s ventures into the digital age where a magazine and even a tennis clinic have helped create brand awareness across the globe.

the beauty of art

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Some people create art which moves you by its depressive nature. One such is the film director, David Lynch who is also an avid painter and who just opened an exhibition in Gl. Strand in Copenhagen. The world is ugly, argues Lynch, and his works only reflect tiny fractions of all the ugliness in the world. In his cartoonish cult film, Blue Velvet, which was aired on the same day as the opening, Lynch even let his then-wife, Isabella Rosselini surrender to an asthmatic beast. Others have taken a different approach. In the world of fashion the images are generally an homage to beauty and estheticism. One example is the young, Australian artist, Michael Zavros who was recently commissioned to make portraits of iconic personalities such as Grace Kelly and Debbie Harry for the designer, Tommy Hilfiger. In an era of airbrushing the images are perhaps too perfect –  though, Zavros’ work is probably what most people would prefer on their walls.

http://www.booooooom.com/2009/09/18/michael-zavros-painter/

on the go!

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“I was always inspirered by the cosmos, circles and eternity. Circles have no corners, they go on forever,”  said Cardin, who at almost 88 is also always on the go. When I met him the other day in his Marigny office, which he refers to as his laboratoire for the past 60 years, he’d just been in Moscow to receive a prize for his Palais de lumière – a 280 m glass sculpture situated in Boulogne-Billancourt  – the original sketch was still laying on his cluttered desk. In July he opens the 10th edition of his cultural festival in Lacoste  where he restored Marquis de Sade’s chateau and bought forty houses. That the futuristic Cardin style is forever a classic is evident in Jean-Pascal Hesse’s new book, Pierre Cardin – 60 ans de création, published by Flammarion.  www.pierrecardin.com

Risky riding

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Nature is at center stage for the London based jewelry designer, Philippa Holland – whether she’s in the saddle or creating her intrinsic gems.

By Camilla Alfthan, photos courtesy of Philippa Holland/ Nico Morgan and Alison Murphy

 

A COUPLE OF  years ago Philippa Holland was riding out from former footballer, Michael Owen’s yard in Chesire – The Manor House Stables which are run by the succesful trainer, Tom Dascombe. For most amateurs the company would seem daunting. But not to Philippa Holland who has enjoyed some success of her own including winning the Magnolia Cup at Goodwood twice – a celebrity race for women only, where she raced against sporty adversaries such as Francesca Cumani and Lucy Henman.

She also did several point to point races on the Charlie Mann trained champion, Mr. Big who twice raced in the Pardubice in the Czech Republic – a 6,9 km steeple chase which was first run in 1874.

Style was always an important part of Philippa Holland’s risqué rides. At her latest Magnolia victory she wore silks by Love magazine editor Katie Grand and a necklace of her own design.
“Looking smart makes you a more confident rider,” she said sporting a long gold chain with a disc that was engraved with ‘Artemis, Goddess of Hunting’.

These days, the 35-year old’s equestrian outings mostly takes place in a side saddle where she’s dressed in her friend and fellow rider, Lady Martha Sitwell’s sharp designs – fitted jackets and wide dresses which are sewn in Saville Row.

“It’s like a uniform so the tailoring is very important, “ tells the designer, who about ten years ago learned the sport from her boyfriend’s mother – “an old school, glamorous and eccentric woman who had some horses stabled in Normandy”.

A top hat or a cap is normally the most elegant way to complete the look. “But in hunts, where you jump large hedges and you’re with the fast and furious, I always wear a saftey hat as it can be quite dangerous.”

That these female dare devils dressed as the feisty women of yesteryear fascinate an increasing number of bystanders is obvious at the yearly Diana of the Chase – a chic side saddle hunt race, hosted by Brian Henton at Ingarsby Old Hall in Leicestershire. For the past three years the race was organized by Philippa Holland who equipped each of the riders with an Artemis pin from her own jewelry collection.

“The riders are a lot like Artemis or Diana the Huntress – strong, brave and spirited women, who are independent and in touch with nature.”

 

“The sport is catching on. I’ve met side saddle riders from Normandy, Ireland, Holland and some from the United States. Once you get your balance right its quite easy,” she tells. “I’ve been doing yoga since I was 18 which helps a lot,” she adds. “The most important thing is to sit straight in the saddle and to go with the horse’s movements. If you’re imbalanced it’s bad for the horse and it’s bad for you, too.
A lot is relying on a good horse – you have to teach it to canter slowly and to never trot, just like in the old days, when people would only walk or canter. If you get it right it looks good and it’s very comfortable – like you’re on a rocking horse,” tells Phippa Holland who studied with side saddle expert, Roger Philpot to get the technique right. It took her six months to learn properly – since then, she’s been passionate about the sport both riding and organizing events.

“For the Wincanton charity flat race – which was the only time a side saddle race has been held on a race course – we had 22 entries but only selected 11 as the criteria was having both raced and side saddle hunted. In Diana of the Chase there were 14 runners for the past three years. Lately, the race has become quite fashionable – it’s appeared in magazines and a BBC documentary. The riders are a tightly knit club of women a lot like Artemis or Diana the Huntress – strong, brave and spirited women, who are independent and in touch with nature.”

 

 

A favourite of the designer – a moth and spider cast from life in gold and silver. As the pin is hidden when the piece is worn the predatory spider appears to be approaching the moth.

Philippa Holland is based in Nottinghill, London, though she was never a city dweller.

“I grew up in the countryside, so when I first came here I craved nature and I would always go to the park. My designs are always linked to nature. Now you see more of that sort of thing and that’s why I don’t want to go mainstream – I only want to make jewelry that you don’t find elsewhere,” she tells.

“It’s like you’re wearing nature like an amulet to protect yourself.”

A favourite of the many celebrities who have endorsed her brand is an engraved silver disc with a long chain that she often wears herself. But it is insects which are her most frequent motifs and the way they’re cast is unique as it allows even the tiniest details of a beetle or a moth become visible works of art.

The collection Nature’s Tricks is inspired by the Darwinian world and the theories about the survival of the fittest. Various insects and animal skeletons were gathered and then electro-formed and cast in gold and silver to create an exact replica, a process reinvented from Renaissance ceramicists.

“It’s quite unusual to make jewelry that looks like insects. But in history, the Egyptians wore scarabees and flies, and it was very symbolic. In my new collection I have skeletons, beetles and cicadas. It’s like you’re wearing nature like an amulet to protect yourself.”

The stones are sourced in Jaïpur in India but all craftsmens are English.

The most luxurious items are made in collaboration with the famous London jeweller, David Morris and they are literally treasures in 18ct white or rose gold and quotes such as ‘All you need is love’ and ‘I can resist anything but temptation’ delicately written in diamonds and rubies.

Despite Philippa Holland’s love of horses, they are nowhere to be found in her designs and she’s never ridden in London.

“But some twenty soldiers from the Household Cavalry have come for breakfast at my house in Nottinghill in London at seven o’ clock in the morning. I knew some of them from hunting, and as they were passing my house so we gave them sausages and drinks.”

©

 

 

erwitt’s loafers

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Magnum photographer, Elliott Erwitt tends to leaves a humouristic trace where ever he points his objective, and this is also the case with his latest works for the Italian leather goods company, Tod’s, where families, cool hunters and even a dog are a part of the pebbled soled Tod’s tribe. The pictures which where taken in Europe and in the States will be exhibited later in the year, and in the meantime, Erwitt’s Personal Best can be seen at La Maison Européenne de la Photographie. www.mep-fr.org

women doing it by themselves..

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Selfportrait by Rie Rasmussen

Supermodel Rie Rasmussen SLAMS Fashion Photographer Terry Richardson, Calls Him A Coward

“HE RAN instead of defending his art, I guess he knows what he is being blamed for is true, but oh what a fake superficial hardcore look he has! Im surprised I’m the first woman to say anything to this individual?! How is this possible?” says Rie, a photographer and in many ways, artist herself.

sailing in the city

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The 33rd edition of the America’s Cup was an unusual experience – not just because it took place in a chilly Valencia at the wrong time of the year after months of legal wrangling with just one America’s Cup boat in the harbour. I also seemed like rooting for the wrong team could get you into trouble. So let’s not mention any of the humoristic cartoons that one of the teams posted on their website – or that friendly racing was an overlooked phrase from the Deed of Gifts. The design of the boats was amazing – just as the city itself, which is where some of us spent our time when racing was delayed.     Photos Camilla Alfthan