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      ‘When you fall, you pick yourself up’: Naomi Campbell on her V&A exhibition

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Friday, 14 June - 12:33


    London show illustrates 40-year career spanning fashion, culture and politics of first Black British model to front British Vogue

    Naomi Campbell has been reacquainting herself with London recently.

    This week she’s been running about town on the underground, reliving the journey she used to take to school in Brixton, filming TikToks with content creators and putting in the hours promoting an exhibition at the V&A which chronicles her 40 years in fashion.

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      Five of the best fashion memoirs

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 13 June - 11:00


    From sizzling muckraking and celebrity gossip to why asparagus should be sexy – these books sneak a peak behind the glitz and glamour of the rag trade

    From glamorous parties to celebrity meltdowns, the world of fashion continues to capture the zeitgeist. For those who want a deeper look into the lives of some of its biggest players, here are a selection of the most memorable memoirs.

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      Miniskirts and masculine looks: how Françoise Hardy epitomised French chic – in pictures

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Wednesday, 12 June - 14:42


    Celebrated for her insouciant cool and varied style, the late singer was a muse across decades of fashion. Here are some of her greatest ensembles

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      Max Mara departs from quiet luxury with Marco Polo-inspired Venice show

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Wednesday, 12 June - 08:05

    Resort collection featured brand’s signature camel, but came with sequins, brocades and Jacquard silk

    While quiet luxury has been the stand on which fashion brands have raced to hang their hats over the past two years, Max Mara’s creative director, Ian Griffiths, took a defiantly celebratory stance with the collection he unveiled in Venice on Tuesday evening.

    “Quiet luxury has reached [such] epidemic proportions it’s a total silence, no one’s saying anything,” said Griffiths before the show. “I’ve always slightly objected to the idea of quiet luxury anyway because I don’t know how quiet it is. How quiet is it to walk into a room wearing head to toe total camel?”

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      ‘Bowie said he’d sell his soul to be famous’: Suzi Ronson on sex, ruthless ambition – and dyeing David’s hair red

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Tuesday, 2 April - 14:56

    She’s the ex-hairdresser who turned Bowie into Ziggy Stardust, then set off around the world in his entourage. Ronson relives those wild days – and recalls seeing a darker side of David

    One Saturday morning early in the summer of 1971, Suzi Ronson was busy at work at the Evelyn Paget hair salon on Beckenham High Street when a couple walked past pushing a pram. The woman was wearing black jeans and a furry jacket, the man was in a flowing gold midi dress. “Everybody rushed out to have a look,” recalls Ronson, who then went by her maiden name Fussey. “Everyone was like nudging, poking each other, asking, ‘Who’s that?’ Then someone whispered, ‘It’s David Bowie.’”

    Ronson had vaguely heard of Bowie: the success of his Space Oddity single had made him a local celebrity and the singer’s mother was a client. But she recalls: “He was in an arty clique, not my world.” However Ronson would end up becoming part of Bowie’s world, the only working woman in his touring party – as her new memoir Me and Mr Jones relates.

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      Adidas bans fans from adding ‘44’ to German team football shirt

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Monday, 1 April - 19:06


    Kit’s resemblance to infamous SS rune of Nazi paramilitary wing unintentional, company says

    Adidas has banned football fans from customising the German national shirt with the number 44 due to its alleged resemblance to the symbol used by Nazi SS units during the second world war.

    The Schutzstaffel (SS), a paramilitary organisation of Adolf Hitler’s Third Reich, was tasked with carrying out the industrialised genocide of Jewish people across Europe.

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      Fast fashion retailer Shein more than doubles profits as it awaits IPO approval

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Monday, 1 April - 14:49

    Figures suggest China-founded firm is among world’s most profitable fashion companies as it prepares for stock market listing

    Shein, the online fast fashion retailer founded in China, has more than doubled its profits to more than $2bn (£1.6bn) as it awaits approval for a stock market listing in New York or London.

    The company, which is growing rapidly around the world by using social media to promote its goods, recorded sales of about $45bn last year, according to a report in the Financial Times based on information from sources close to the company.

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      The big idea: why going shopping is due a comeback

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Monday, 1 April - 11:30 · 1 minute

    Bring back raucous changing rooms and friendly smiles – things you can’t buy online

    Here’s a funny thing. The less we go to the shops, the more we shop. We buy more stuff than ever, now that we can do so without leaving the sofa. We have bypassed the bus ride into town, stepped back from the revolving doors and escalators, silenced the tinkle of muzak, skipped the exchange of smiles and niceties with sales assistants, forgotten what it feels like to journey home from the chase with shopping bags tucked next to tired legs. Instead, we can spend our hard-earned cash with the frictionless brush of an index finger, and collect our spoils from the doormat a few days later.

    This, surely, is the worst of both worlds. Let us imagine for a moment a sliding-doors scenario, in which writing shopping trips out of the story had reduced our appetite for stuff. If, thanks to technological advances, we bought what we needed, and only what we needed. Imagine if the technology had been wired so that we could click on and buy a black mascara and a pair of navy socks, or whatever, and leave it at that, without the siren call of a pile of fluffy jumpers or a charming display of splatterware mugs leading us into temptation. Imagine if online shopping had been an Ozempic for shopaholics, blunting our greed, reconnecting us with our willpower. It would still have been bad for bricks-and-mortar shopkeepers, it would still have left ugly grey-shuttered gaps to blight our high streets like rotten teeth – but it would have been in the service of a healthier planet.

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