9/11 Truther Nabs Fancy Perfume Campaign

  • In a move that smacks of Chanel-Audrey-Jean-Pierre, Dior announced it’s making a 6 1/2 minute online perfume ad with Marion Cotillard and Olivier Dahan, who of course directed Cotillard in La Vie En Rose. [WWD]
  • Richard Avedon‘s retrospective at the International Center of Photography, opening tomorrow, is the largest show of his fashion work yet mounted. Cathy Horyn spoke to curators Carole Squiers and Vince Aletti, plus friends like the New Yorker‘s Adam Gopnik, about the legendary lensman and his manifest influence on contemporary fashion photography. [NY Times]
  • Alexa Chung, the British former model who recently moved stateside to present a new show for MTV, endears perhaps most of all by not pretending her job is difficult. “Presenting isn’t hard. You’re basically reading cards. I mean, how fucking difficult is that?” And then by sharing these words about the television industry: “I think the mistake a lot of TV channels make is that they assume kids are dumb when they’re not. Middle-aged fat men [shouldn’t] tell young people [what] to watch when they have no idea.” [WWD]
  • Aldo, the normally good relatively cheap shoe line, wants us to wear horrendous teal ‘n’ bronze ‘n’ snakeskin ‘n’ studs gladiator sandals this summer. [LA Times]
  • Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen‘s fashion line, Elizabeth and James, gave People the exclusive on the release of their fall ’09 lookbook. This marks a new uppermost notch on the continual rise of lookbooks into campaign territory. [People]
  • Carla Bruni-Sarkozy and her husband are reportedly considering moving into the Paris apartment formerly owned by Yves Saint Laurent and Pierre Bergé. [Daily Mail]
  • The Agyness Deyn on Twitter is, says BFF Henry Holland, an imposter. “THIS IS FAKE PEOPLE!!!” typed the designer. “AGGY DOES KNOW HOW TO OPERATE A COMPUTER AND MOST CERTAINLY DOES NOT EAT BREAKFAST!” [Grazia]
  • C. Scott Hemphill and Jeannie Suk, law professors at Columbia and Harvard, respectively, give a good summary of the current status of U.S. copyright law in relation to clothing — which is that it offers designers not a whit of protection from knock-off artistes — and why it would be a good idea to change it. [XX]
  • In related news: Trovata‘s case against Forever 21, which it accuses of copying six of its designs, has begun at a federal court in California. [WWD]
  • Urban Outfitters is rolling out two new designer diffusion lines for summer: both Burberry and fellow British brand Pistol Panties are going to be selling bikinis at the American chain this summer. [Telegraph]
  • Urban Outfitters‘ Philadelphia-based parent company just announced very disappointing earnings for the first quarter of this year. Same-store sales across the whole company dropped by 9.6%, and profits fell 28%, to $30.8 million. Free People was the biggest-losing brand, with sales at its stores slipping by 23%. Anthropologie‘s sales were down by 13%, and Urban Outfitters by 6%. The CEO, Glenn Senk, says his company is “well-positioned to show improvement over the next several quarters,” in what is surely the understatement of the year. [The Street]
  • Yesterday’s flurry of rumors about the future of i-D magazineDerek Blasberg Twittered from the Chanel resort show in Venice that the fashion monthly might have closed — the publishers have clarified that i-D will be bi-monthly as of this September. The current April issue will be on newsstands until then; the magazine will run more frequent online content instead. [Fashionologie]
  • Another not-new piece of menswear news: Designers using foam batting, instead of perhaps down, as lofty insulation within garments. You know, because foam has structure. [WSJ]
  • According to sources, Louis Vuitton Moët Hennessy is to buy an almost 50% stake in the eco-conscious fashion line Edun, owned by Bono and wife Ali Hewson. Edun was founded in 2005 and manufactures its organic cotton goods in the third world, while paying workers fair wages. A cash infusion from LVMH would allow it to ramp up its advertising and exponentially expand its reach. [WSJ]
  • Philip Lim, whose clothes — though still expensive — hit a price point well below that of many of his designer competitors, is anticipating a 15% growth in sales this year. Accordingly, he’s planning to add three new lines to his label: swimwear, footwear, and lingerie. The first, his swim collection, will launch this summer, with three styles, two one-pieces and one bikini, priced at $175 each. Lingerie, for $65-$125, will be available at his Manhattan boutique from May 20. Footwear, at $290-$675, will hit stores this fall. And don’t expect 6″ heels with fiddly feathered doo-dads that might last twenty steps in their original condition. “Everyone’s making crazy shoes,” said Lim, “so we were like, ‘Let’s do working shoes, but sophisticated and beautiful.'” [WWD]
  • Maidenform‘s first quarter earnings declined by 0.8%. Although the brand experienced higher sales, its margins were hurt by aggressive discounting to move old stock. [WSJ]
  • Kohl’s profit for the quarter just ended fell slightly on last year, to $137 million, but still beat analysts’ expectations. Sales rose during the same period by 0.4%. [Reuters]
  • Hartmarx wants another six months to file for reorganization in bankruptcy court. [WWD]
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