Tuesday, June 27, 2006


This pic is going to cost some kids parents thousands of dollars in therapy!

Time is flying these days! There are alot of things goin on that you need to look out for. Alot of new brands launching, trendy brands dying, and now this annoying award show is going to slow up my drive everywhere.

For those not familiar, there's a BET awards show going on tonight and since last night, flocks of out of towners are here dressing up to go to clubs (who does that) and trying to make left turns from the middle lane (I'm goin to hit someone). So if you want to avoid the crazy frenzy at Teddys (if you know, you know) then hit up Element! Oh and I'm a firm non believer of attending award shows but you should tune in, the Jackson 5 are performin (LOL)!

Now enough of that,

Bloomingdales just signed their lease at 48 Stockton for the flagship store so get ready!

OH and if you didn't believe that True Religion was dead, check out this link:
TRUE RELIGION IS DONE FOREVER!!!!

Thursday, June 22, 2006

Wow, two posts day to day, I'm actually shaping up loll. Nope, I'm just doing my normal routine of reading up on the news online and I found a few interesting things lol.

Did you hear about Federated selling Lord & Taylor for $1.2B, yes that's billion dollars!

Check it out here!



Also for anybody that would ever find themselves eating at horrible places like these (Cheesecake Factory, TGI FRIDAYS, Cafe Verona) you should always carry cash from now on. I wouldn't trust the waiters further than I can see them. Look at this!!!!! A LAMBORGHINI, $267,000 in cash!!! Those waiters for sure could care less about the tips you were leaving lolll!!! I wonder if that's why the lady last night told me to keep my tip, I wonder hmmm.... no thanks on the debit purchases for a while lol.

Oh and just in case you've been living under a rock for the last few days, Justin and Cameron are over! Yup, they've broken up it seems but will give you the rest of the news later. Off shopping now, see ya later!

Wednesday, June 21, 2006

HAHAHA, time flys when you're busy! I didn't realize it had been this long since I've gave you guys some insight on what's going on. Well I find it really funny but there's alot of big moves going on right now that I'm hearing about.

TRUE RELIGION (TRLG) IS FOR SALE! Yup you heard it here first, they are actually closing up a deal to an unknown buyer so pay attention to any changes that are being made from their end. They've been on there way out for some time now so I don't know if that's the smartest move on the buying part lol. But along with the sale, they're changing in other ways as well. I posted a motnh ago or so about them debuting full collections and now I see why. They're opening 20 company stores sooner than we think and will make denim only 40% of their business. WOW! Sounds like big moves for a brand with jeans that are fading out... FAST!

NOW THIS ONE IS GOOD!

BLUE HOLDINGS
(BLUE.O: Quote, Profile, Research), who owns Antik Denim, licensee of Yanuk, Taverniti, and U, has bought UP AGAINST THE WALL. Big news considering UATW has 24 stores and are growing at a rapid pace and are currently carrying a very wide range of the hottest wears every season. This is big news lol, really big news.

Ok enough of that, I'm dying from this LA weather and really need to get away from the computer, grab your reefs or rainbows and meet me at the beach.

Thursday, June 15, 2006

I have heard it all these last few days, honestly this article is kinda disturbing but yet who can blame the guy. I'm not sure of celeb's reaction and am curious about how this will affect his in store sales after this leaks out. It's been speculated for years that he's tipped off paparazzi and that's what's made his store so popular (one of the reasons lol, KITSON ROCKS!) but let me know what you think about this one.

The owner of an upscale boutique who has lamented the effect celebrity-stalking paparazzi were having on his shop has become an investor in a paparazzi agency.

Last October, Fraser Ross said the paparazzi who regularly wait outside his boutique, Kitson, were hurting his business, which caters to the likes of Lindsay Lohan, Paris Hilton and Britney Spears.

"There's a wake-up call here," Ross said after Lohan crashed her car nearby while trying to evade the photographers. "It's not good for my store; it's not good for business on the street."

The same month, however, Ross became an investor and an officer in a new paparazzi agency called Sunset Photo and News LLC, which is run by a veteran tabloid reporter and celebrity photographer.

Sunday, June 11, 2006

This sounds pretty big, what do you think?

NEW YORK (Reuters) - After a decade of wide-leg pants and skinny tops, jeans are getting skinnier and are being paired with wider and longer tops.

The new look could boost sales for clothing retailers that roll out styles at the right time, but companies that change their inventory too rapidly or wait too long could be stranded.

"Fashion is usually a three-year cycle, but this is a major one -- it's a silhouette change that happens only every 10 years," said analyst Christine Chen, who follows apparel companies for Pacific Growth Equities in San Francisco.

Overall, the outline of women's clothing is reversing to an upside-down triangle, characterized by larger tops and narrower bottoms. Clothes overall are becoming less flashy, with details like darts, stitching and pleats replacing sequins and embroidery.

Companies ranging from women's career dresser AnnTaylor Stores Corp. (NYSE:ANN - news) to teen retailer Abercrombie & Fitch Co. (NYSE:ANF - news) to casual clothing stalwart Gap (NYSE:GPS - news) are rushing to get the newest shapes into shops.

But risks lurk, even with such a clear fashion shift. Companies that change their inventory too quickly risk alienating customers who have a preferred look, or those who are waiting to update their wardrobe until they have a clear sense of the styles.

And if companies wait too long to bring out the newest shapes, "you can miss the boat and be sunk," said CL King & Associates analyst Mark Montagna.

Montagna, along with other financial advisers and fund managers, expects teen retailers to be the most successful sellers of the new look.

"Newness in fashion is always good and in the near term, it's really good for the teen retailers. It gets the teens to shop," Chen said, noting that the younger generation looks better in leg-hugging pants, and that students will be anxious to get the latest styles for school.

Chen said she hadn't yet seen trendy young-adult retailer Urban Outfitters Inc. (Nasdaq:URBN - news) stocking the latest styles, which could prove troublesome for its summer sales, but she expected Gap, Abercrombie and Bebe Stores Inc. (Nasdaq:BEBE - news) to be on top of the trends.

The outlook is more uncertain for companies that cater to older women, such as Chico's FAS Inc. (NYSE:CHS - news) , which is known for its clothing for women over 35, classic apparel retailer Talbots Inc. (NYSE:TLB - news) and AnnTaylor.

"Talbots already has the right look since we're going to an unembellished style," said Marion Schultheis, who manages a portfolio of retail stocks for J.W. Seligman & Co. "And Chico's never got too wide (with their pant legs)."

But, she added, women are more cautious about spending on the latest fads, tending to wait until they see what becomes widely popular. That could mean women's retailers won't see the dramatic fall burst in sales that teen retailers will likely enjoy.

Schultheis also noted slumping May sales at Limited Brands Inc.'s (NYSE:LTD - news) Express chain, saying the company had likely stocked too many straight-legged jeans before consumers were ready for the look.

"Express got into skinny jeans first and look at their comps," she said, saying she'd counted on Limited shares rising due to their early fashion endeavors, and been burned.

Kurt Barnard, a long-time industry watcher who now heads his own industry forecasting group, warned that any bursts in sales and profits could be short-lived, even for the winners.

"Teen customers belong to a certain breed which is completely unpredictable," said Barnard, the head of Retail Forecasting Group. "Today you may find a company that is wallowing in sales and tomorrow those very same customers won't remember a store exists."

Tuesday, June 06, 2006


“The first time I paid more than $50 for jeans, I was 12 years old and my whole existence hung in the balance. They were tight, acid-washed with splatters of pale blue and white, and zippers slipped up the back of each calf. None of those details mattered, though. What did was the small white triangle with a question mark on the back pocket: They were Guess. I whined, cajoled and saved, and finally they were mine. And for a while, I felt cool."

It's so weird to hear stuff like that now. Time and time again I listen to a bunch of people belly ache about how times were and all of this and I think to myself: Are we really that bad for buyin denim the way we do? OF COURSE NOT! LOL

Hey everybody, sorry for the delay, been dealing with alot of work on my end and I just recovered from one of the hottest (94 degrees) weekends I've had in LA. Crazy stuff!

I've been hearing talks about a limited edition line with Target and LA boutique Intuition. I can think of alot of things to say but just know that the jeans in this pic are retailing for $140 so I really am curious to see how this does. They actually have bags that are being sold for $250!!
TARGET COUTURE! Tell me what you think!

Thursday, June 01, 2006

I've come to the realization that everything is going to be trendy at one point or another and religious wears aren't even exempt anymore. We've seen the rosary beads worn by Brittany Spears, Usher, and David Beckham to name a few but now it's gone on to something else. Take a look:

DUBAI (AFP) - They come with sparkling crystal beads, pearls, satin flowers, embroidery, or patches in colored fabrics. Abayas, the long black robes worn by women in the Muslim Gulf region, have become trendy.

For a wedding or other special occasion, the abaya must be as stylish as the dress underneath -- and the shinier, the better.

But add to the abaya what you will, one thing remains sacred: it must be made of black fabric, with crepe the top choice in the United Arab Emirates.

"We here must wear abayas. So, much as (other) people like to show off their clothes, the only thing we can take pride in is our abayas," said Hana Mohsen, a 26-year-old Emirati broker picking a new outfit in a Dubai shopping mall.

"Since the abaya is black, they (designers) introduce novelties on it. If you go to a wedding, you will see abayas more expensive than the gowns," she said.

"I choose my abayas as I would choose a bag or a ring. I have a cupboard just for abayas. My relatives in Saudi Arabia do the same," said Mohsen, adding she would spend up to 3,000 dirhams (820 dollars) on a wedding abaya and half that amount on one meant for other outings.

The abaya, though, is only part of the story.

The "shaila", or large scarf wrapped as head cover, must be matching. Alternatively, a fancy shaila will liven up a plain abaya worn at work or on daily errands.

A 19-year-old Emirati university student, who asked not to be named, explained why one of the patches on her head cover was in jeans fabric.

"It's because I'm wearing jeans," she said, slightly pushing back the front of her plain abaya to show her trousers.

"The cuts differ too," said Amer Batah, a Syrian sales manager at an abaya boutique.

"You've got the French cut for instance, which fits the body and becomes wider at the bottom. And there's the butterfly, which is trendy at the moment," he said, showing off a sample of the "butterfly" with a wings-like cut under the sleeves.

"Kuwaiti women love the 'butterfly'," said Hassan Humaidi, another abaya salesman.

While classic black lace is still used, Swarovski crystal beads, single or multi-colored, are the hit for dressy abayas.

"They have a special sparkle. And they don't fall if you wash the abaya," said Humaidi, explaining why these particular crystal beads are so popular.

Saifullah Nouraei, an Iranian designer and branch manager at one of the leading abaya retailers, said things had changed a great deal since women in the oil-rich region wore only plain abayas that came in a single piece covering them from head to toe.

"They now follow the fashion in everything. You can't be wearing a Giorgio Armani dress with a 100-dirham (27-dollar) abaya on top," he argued.

"We can't change the black color of the abaya, so we work on the design," he said.

Nouraei, whose displays include dazzling hand-made abayas fetching between 1,000 and 2,000 dollars apiece, said many customers choose their own designs, and the price depends on the load of precious metals they want sown on their garment.

"Of course, not everyone wears crystal ... Not everyone drives a Rolls-Royce, right?," Nouraei said.

"Some ladies design abayas at home and sell them. It doesn't cost much that way," said Aysha Abdullah, an Emirati housewife who wore an abaya embroidered with thick thread in different shades of gray.

The simple traditional abaya, costing in the range of 55 dollars, is still holding its own even in liberal-minded Dubai, especially among the older generation.

But advocates of fancier versions are convinced they can combine fashion and modesty.

"I cannot have my wife going around in a short dress while I am wearing a dishdasha," said Rashed Mohammad, a Kuwaiti man in the long white garment worn by men in the Gulf as he strolled with his Moroccan wife in a shopping mall.

Never mind that his elegant consort, sporting an abaya decorated with golden metal and matching head cover, could cause more heads to turn than a less attractive woman in a short skirt.

"Abayas are now both decent and fashionable. Everyone follows the fashion nowadays," Mohammad said.