Tag Archives: Barneys

Arizona Muse at Barneys

A crazy thing happened on the way to Barneys yesterday – Arizona Muse walked by! Here she is looking gorgeous without a stitch of makeup. The super cool faux python bag with bright red piping is Stella McCartney, and her trench with patent leather sleeves is Burberry.

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Amanda Brooks at Rodarte

Nooo! Fashion director Amanda Brooks has left Barneys NY to move to London. Wherever she lands, let’s hope she’ll keep going to fashion shows, because she’s been a lot of fun to photograph during fashion week. Here she is on Valentine’s day, going to the Rodarte show in a cute striped Comme des Garcons top, knit scarf and red belt tied just so. Her great style and innovative designer collaborations at Barneys will be missed in NYC.

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Amanda Brooks at Rag & Bone

Barneys fashion director Amanda Brooks wore lots of fabulous outfits this fashion week, all of which were chronicled in The Cut’s Fashion Week Style Diaries. Here she arrived at the Rag & Bone show in Céline sunglasses, Maje by Vanessa Traina camisole, Giulietta pants, Azzedine Alaïa sandals and a Céline bag. Particularly love the combination of the Céline leopard print bag with polka dot pants – detail shot, after the jump.  (more…)

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Amanda Brooks at Michael Kors

Amanda Brooks, the new fashion director of Barneys, has been impeccably dressed all week. Here at the Michael Kors Fall 2011 show in a blue suede skirt, navy ribbed top and open-toe, fur-trimmed stilettos.

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Transition Pieces: What to Wear Into Fall

fall-2009-fashion-trendsAugust-September: they’re not exactly sweater weather, but they’re far from the heady days of spring. The key to transition dressing is finding lightweight materials in more somber colors, in styles that give a few hints of the fall trends to come. These pieces for day, night, and office can all be worn right now, then layered with tights, cardigans, and jackets as the weather starts to turn. (more…)

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Beach Chic

beach-boho-bikiniBelieve it or not, the sun may come out this weekend. Get prepared with these new bikinis and one-pieces that flatter and fit, no matter what your body drama may be. If you top it off with these cute cover ups and accessories, you’ll be ready to go from pool to beach to Cyril’s – or wherever a lazy summer afternoon may take you.

Four looks: Beachy Boho, Poolside Sophisticate, Mexicana Mama, and Hawaiian Surfer Chick – plus the coolest new beach accessories.

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Summer Black Tie: What to Wear

phoebe-gownOne takeaway from the recent CFDA Awards red carpet: Black tie in the summertime has always presented a fashion quandary. You want to look formal, but not wintry, done to the nines, but not sweaty. (See Goths in Hot Weather for that one.) Not only does it seem a little over-the-top to wear a full-on J. Lo Oscars gown, it’s also exorbitantly expensive for those of us who can’t just borrow our clothes.

There are several ways around this: shop Bluefly.com and the new Net-a-Porter outlet TheOutnet.com, buy little-known designers, or sell an expensive dress after one wear like many savvy socialites do. Here’s a shopping guide from low to high price points with both gowns and cocktail dresses that will get you black-tie ready without the hand-wringing. (more…)

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Outdoor Concerts: What to Wear

outdoor-concert-wear-480x480At Monday’s David Byrne show in Prospect Park, we saw a ton outdoor concert outfits – some of them more successful than others. Ditch the ancient Grateful Dead tee and get in gear with one of these four looks that combine layers, comfort, and high style. You may not be en route to Bonnaroo right now, but chances you’ll have a reason to bust out some concert wear sometime this summer.

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Beautiful New B&W Window Display at Barneys

Simon Doonan is nothing if not a colorful character, which may be why this new, entirely black-and-white window display at Barneys is so intriguing. They curated black and white items from all over the store and incorporated them into the display, presumably using the surrealist bent of the Fornasetti pottery throughout as the inspiration. One mannequin is tipped on its side, its forehead crowned with a teacup. Another has a pillow silkscreened with the ghostly image of a face as a head. All are in black and white.

Black and White Barneys Window

This detail in particular was fabulous – an upended Fornasetti urn with the face of a woman, and appearing out of the top of the head, an urn-with-sleeping-woman-face. Conscious vs. subconscious mind? It certainly resonates.

Fornasetti Urns at Barneys

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Outside Barneys, Lunchtime

The Red Flash of LouboutinsAnna Wintour may be joining forces with Michael Bloomberg to create a customer initiative for New York, but the well-dressed crowd outside Barneys on Madison Avenue the other day suggested that some people are still shopping – or at least still looking good.

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Madison Avenue and 60th Street

Shoppers and fashionable people travel the route between Barneys and Bergdorf’s on a November afternoon.

Leather accessories in beautiful fall colors.
Three young women exchange a taxi.
Schoolgirls – one with trench coat and cell phone.
Woolen shorts.
Traveling in style with bicycle and briefcase.
Man with scarves and family.
Metallic bag.
Black crocodile Birkin bag.
A well-tailored coat.

Black leather jackets can be hard for guys to pull off, but this one does it with panache by mixing it with preppy picks.
Tina Brown with Goyard bag.
Family of three.
Fluorescent soled sneakers.
Jamee Gregory pops in yellow.
Wide-legged pants and winter white coat.
An interesting mix of color.
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Kate Moss and a Cheap Chic Critique

Is it any coincidence that the most famous fairytale about vanity and self-deception is also about fashion? The Emperor’s New Clothes comes to mind often these days whenever a major designer or model launches a cheap chic clothing line.

Proenza Schouler opened a pop-up store earlier this year for their Target line, but you did not see it on Gastro Chic, because it sucked. I’ve never been a fan of Proenza Schouler, despite their heartwarming meeting-at-Parsons story and socialite connections. Take away the high-quality materials and hand stitching, and Proenza Schouler line isn’t much different from the run-of-the-racks clothing you’d find at Target. By 3pm, the only things left were cropped orange jackets and weird floral things in size 14.

But this didn’t stop Colette in Paris from carrying the line. Can somebody please pass the Kool Aid?

As for the Alice Roi collection for Uniqlo, when it is bad, it is very, very bad, and when it is good, it looks like anything else you’d find at Uniqlo. Here’s a nightmare in floral, right, and for a floral Alice Roi house dress, check out Racked. Mystifyingly, it was sold out by the time I arrived at Uniqlo. Couture designers seem to see doing a mass market line as an opportunity to take risks they would never take at a high-end level, in a “let them eat cake” sense. There’s a fine line between jolie-laide and just plain ugly, and many of them cross it.

This Alice Roi sack dress was interesting but not particularly wearable. The only things worth buying from Alice Roi’s collection for Uniqlo were the more conservative designs, like this safari-style top, below. And for that, why do you need Alice Roi?

Everything I needed to know about Madonna’s ill-conceived collection for H&M I learned by peering in the windows at H&M and seeing rows and rows of basic hoodies and sweatpants. They should have called it “Madonna Gym.”

Last week’s Kate Moss at Topshop at Barneys hullabaloo was best approached with cynicism. If it is possible for a blog to stalk someone, Fashionista did before this opening, posting a video, Kate Moss Speaks! In case you were wondering whether she has anything remotely of interest to say, no, she doesn’t. Nevertheless, Kate fans were in awe of the video, sent multiple comments, and drove traffic to the site. Barneys, Fashionista, and Racked all posted countdowns to Kate. Apparently, she is Santa Claus. Maybe even Jesus.

Is it any surprise that the line is a letdown after that? This may come as a major shock given her involvement with Pete Doherty, but Kate Moss is dumb as bricks. But it doesn’t matter. They’re like the stylish couple Woody Allen approaches in Annie Hall and asks for the secret to their happiness.

“Uh, I’m very shallow and empty and I have no ideas and nothing interesting to say,” she says.

“And I’m exactly the same way,” he says.

Forget about love. The fashion take-away from Annie Hall is, they’re still stylish! For better or for worse, you can have nothing interesting to say and still have style.

But not chic. Only an original like Isabella Blow can be truly chic.

I wasn’t one of the hundreds waiting in line at Barneys, but I did go up to the seventh floor around 1pm Wednesday to find…tank tops! Oh my God, tank tops! With buttons on them! They reminded me of… dare I say it? Another K word. It begins with a K and ends with a Mart.

There was no sign of the cool black windowpane dress that reminded me of…some other designer. Or the floral dress that was directly copied from Kate Moss’ wardrobe. I grabbed a ruched gray thing before anyone else could, but it wasn’t in my size. A salesguy appeared immediately and offered to pull it in my size from the display window.

I nearly fainted. Not only had a Barneys salesperson rushed to my service, but he had volunteered to mess up the pristine, Simon-Doonan-designed Barneys windows for me. Thrilled, I accepted. There was no way I wasn’t going to buy the Kate Moss thingie now. I was beginning to like this fairytale.

It wasn’t really the first time. I became obsessed with the Rodarte for Gap white trapeze top with pintuck pleats when I saw it on a friend who works for Marc Jacobs. It’s on its way to me now, being shipped from Gap in the mall at Lakewood, CA. No big deal. I just put in an hour of phone research on 1-800-GAP-STYLE and called five stores all over the nation when it sold out in New York.

So here are my spoils from Kate Moss for TopShop, below. I’m not sure if it’s a top or a dress, but it’s actually kinda cool. The detailing seems to be hand stitched. And there are none left anywhere in the world.



It may be mass delusion, but the quest for A-list style at D-list prices has unified fashion fanatics everywhere. The long lines, the months of anticipation, the inequality of demand versus supply: it’s the same kind of mania you see surrounding a Rolling Stones concert or a really big sample sale. In the end, who really cares whether it’s worth it or not? It’s all about the feeling of group participation in an otherwise merciless, every-woman-for-herself fashion world.

As for the Kate Moss for Topshop dress, I may be wearing the emperor’s new clothes, but that doesn’t take away the thrill of winning the hunt. As someone who beat out Kate fans across the country and in the U.K., all I can say is, How you like me now, sucka?

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Bilious Green

We interrupt our regularly scheduled programming to bring you an East Village Rant.

Like an annoying insect hovering around one’s ear, the fashion world has been buzzing about green. Not the color (which happens to be fashionable too – like this kelly green DVF skirt), but the eco-friendly concept. At first I dismissed it as the usual fashion hoo-hah, but it’s not going away. It threatens to be the new breast cancer awareness of good-cause fashion tie-ins.

Fashion Week Daily dedicated an entire Front Row magazine to the green trend during New York’s fashion week this February; Barneys proclaimed that green was what the Barneys customer wanted, and green was what Barneys was buying. Leave it to Barneys, which generated this animal-centric exotic leather accessories campaign in the fall, to spearhead the green trend as well.

I’m not saying that many of the things featured in the most recent Styles’ Pulse column this Sunday aren’t pretty (though the sneakers are hideous). But the items featured here aren’t really green. What’s really green is not to produce, buy, or even write about a new necklace/ pair of shoes/dress.

According to this April’s InStyle Magazine, these celebrities are all green because they buy recycled shoes (again, hideous sneakers) and bags. I’ll believe a celebrity is green when I see one of them mixing with the hoi polloi on a commercial plane instead of flying by private jet.

I bought these Garnet Hill pajamas made from green cotton recently. I didn’t buy them because they were green, but because I liked the pattern. They’re kind of scratchy. Despite this inconvenience of mine for the good of the environment, I still don’t consider myself at all green. On a good day, I might pass for a pale shade of aqua.

Intermix (which I call “Interbitch” – clothes sold by, for, and to bitches) just sent me this gift card with a promise that they’ll donate $5 to “support initiatives reducing global climate change” if I redeem the $50 gift card. (I can see the tagline now: “Helping bitches everywhere!”) A generous offer, but I also have to buy $300-worth of new things to get Interbitch to donate the $5.

So if that’s not green, what is? No one in fashion is writing about it, because there aren’t any pretty photos to go with. If green were truly in fashion, here is what the dress code would be:

1. Ignore fashion.
2. Don’t buy anything.
3. Wear clothes until they wear out.
4. Solicit hand-me downs: mom’s clothes, or a “boyfriend sweater” that really is your boyfriend’s sweater.
4. If you must buy something, buy only natural materials like wool and cotton.
5. Wear only inherited jewelry.
6. Resole your shoes rather than buying new ones.
7. Old-looking clothes are in; new-looking clothes are out.

I didn’t think of these rules all by myself. No, they hark back to an earlier time, circa 1980.

Because it’s out of print, the Official Preppy Handbook isn’t available new anymore. If you want it, you’ll have to buy it used.

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Barneys, Inside and Out

Madison Avenue on a wet winter afternoon.


Chanel bag, above and below


in the windows


black and white


skirt with a center pleat


full-length Barbour coat


ankle boots




electric blue


fur coat and combat boots


military coat with brass buttons



thinking pink


Prada bags in “Celine Dion green”


Celine Dion photo from Just Jared


spring’s little white dress by Sea New York


slate and navy blues on the co-op floor


metallics at Prada

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Luxury! Humor! Taste?

As my yoga instructor used to say in her resigned, melancholy way, “some of you may still be eating meat and [sigh] wearing leather shoes.” If you have read anything on this site, you probably know by now that I am one of those people. But Barneys came up with something even a ravenous meat-eater like me couldn’t dream up: using baby animals to advertise leather goods made of fellow animals – brilliant!

These bunnies are so cute, they make me want to rush to Barneys and buy a rabbit-fur-lined Juicy Couture jacket.

These boots are made of pony. I always wanted a pony!

Bunnies aren’t the only models. In another issue, little puppies make leather bags look even more adorable.

Some of the puppies even look like foxes – another product Barneys sells!

+ =

Then I thought, wouldn’t this campaign be even more effective if they used the animal associated with the product to advertise it? Sort of an “I’m OK, You’re OK” approach. It could be an all-animal catalog!

That would be the most cutest catalog in the whole wide world!

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