Daily Obsesh: Pleated Shorts

imagePleated shorts are not just for your stylish grandma! We are loving this pair here with the adorable chevron-stripe tulip print. Marc Jacobs chose an amazing color combination for this piece. The print on the purple background is absolutely lovely! Not to mention the pleating is complimented with the flattering high-waist fit. With an amazing pair of shorts like these, you will need to tone down your top half, so make sure you pair these with a simple silk tank. Throw on your best pair of strappy sandals and you’ll be the most stylish gal at the party!

LungA Festival 2013: Creativity takes center stage at Iceland’s fascinating festival

LungA Festival 2013


by Maj Hartov A celebration of art and creative practices, the LungA festival on the east coast of Iceland invites attendees to partake in a full week of activities during July each year. Set in a…

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Daily Obsesh: Leather Tank

imageLeather can be worn all year-round! That is why we are obsessing over this gorgeous leather tank. This is a great way to rock a cool leather blouse during the warmer seasons. In this example, our model is wearing her leather tank tucked into a cute high-waisted skirt. You can also wear this leather tank with a pair of skinny jeans! If you want to take on a serious rocker style, try to pair this tank with a gold studded clutch for a fresh and modern look.

Interview: Scott Meleskie of Clark Street Mercantile: The humble start to a versatile lifestyle shop focused on Montreal’s discerning creative community

Interview: Scott Meleskie of Clark Street Mercantile


Opening just over a month ago, Clark Street Mercantile is a modest boutique in Montreal aimed at the discerning gentleman. Clothing, footwear, apothecary, pens and paper, magazines, accessories, artwork, bags, blankets, tonic and grenadine, razors—the inventory…

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SuperDuper Handmade Hats: The brand embarks on the time-honored Italian trade with totally new approach

SuperDuper Handmade Hats


When we think of Made in Italy, we usually assume that family traditions, ancient techniques and heritage are naturally involved. SuperDuper Handmade Hats are the exception. The Florence-based company produces entirely handmade hats using unique wooden…

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Trunk Sale: The Paris Review Turns Cover Art into Swim Shorts

It’s been sixty years since Harold L. Humes, Peter Matthiessen, and George Plimpton founded The Paris Review, and the storied literary magazine is celebrating the big soixante with a fresh take on beach reading: smashing swim trunks that feature cover art from issues past. Created in collaboration with Barneys New York and Orlebar Brown, the quick-drying trunks are awash in the work of (pictured clockwise from top left) William Pène du Bois, Donald Sultan, Kim MacConnel, and Leanne Shapton. Each pair—limited edition, bien sûr—comes tucked in a Paris Review-branded, waterproof drawstring bag and includes a one-year subscription.

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Daily Obsesh: Relaxed Tees

imageThis tee is the definition of cool. With the delicate beading and the antiqued metal studs, this tee has a relaxed casual feel with an embellished twist. This cute top can be worn with a pair of relaxed fit denim. Make sure you stick to a lighter wash to compliment the pastel color palette throughout this blouse. The geometric print is eye-catching cool! This tee is a perfect fit with a flattering scoop neckline, and the hem is divided at the sides for a smooth drape.

Levi’s Vintage Clothing and Made & Crafted Fall 2013 : A closer look at the many textures included in collections for the colder seasons

Levi's Vintage Clothing and Made & Crafted Fall 2013


While we’re enjoying the warm weather here in NYC, we’ve been thinking about fall fashion since seeing the heavily textured FW13 collections for Levi’s sub-brands Levi’s Made & Crafted and Levi’s Vintage Clothing earlier this…

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Wilderness Embodied by Iris van Herpen

Spiny translucent 3D-printed collars were paired with magnetic dresses and shoes that looks like tree roots in Dutch fashion designer Iris van Herpen’s latest haute couture collection.

Wilderness Embodied by Iris van Herpen

Iris van Herpen‘s Wilderness Embodied collection included dresses and jewellery that combine 3D-printing technology and natural forms.

Wilderness Embodied by Iris van Herpen

“My Wilderness collection explores the wilderness that we as human have inside us as well as the wilderness in nature,” she told Dezeen.

Wilderness Embodied by Iris van Herpen

Pieces that wrapped around the length of the neck and extended down the chest were decorated with pointy globules tinted purple, blue and pink colours.

Wilderness Embodied by Iris van Herpen

These elements were repeated in symmetrical patterns on the see-through layers worn over neutral dresses.

Wilderness Embodied by Iris van Herpen

The collars and spiky elements on the dresses were designed in collaboration with architect Isaie Bloch and 3D-printed with additive manufacturing company Materialise.

Wilderness Embodied by Iris van Herpen

This season Van Herpen also worked with designer Jólan van der Wiel to create a pair of dresses grown using magnets – find out more about them in our previous story.

Wilderness Embodied by Iris van Herpen

“Natural forces like magnetism that are essential to life inspired me to not only use manmade techniques like 3D printing, but to combine technology with the creativity and power of nature itself,” Van Herpen said.

Wilderness Embodied by Iris van Herpen

Shown in Paris last month, the Autumn Winter 2013 collection also featured 3D-printed shoes that look like a tangle of roots designed with United Nude founder Rem D Koolhaas and printed by Stratasys.

Wilderness Embodied by Iris van Herpen

We’ve featured a few of Van Herpen’s previous collections that include 3D printing and interviewed the fashion designer for our one-off magazine Print Shift, during which she talked about how these technologies could transform the fashion industry.

Wilderness Embodied by Iris van Herpen

Recently we posted a collection of 3D-printed jewellery by Dorry Hsu, inspired by her fear of insects.

See more design by Iris van Herpen »
See more 3D printing »
See more fashion design »

Read on for more information sent to us by van Herpen:


Nature is wild. Generated by powerful forces. It proliferates by creating startling beauty.

For her fifth collection as an invited member of the Chambre Syndicale de la Haute Couture, Iris van Herpen focuses on the forces of nature, with a back and forth between innovation and craftsmanship. Beyond simple visual inspiration, this wonder of the natural world forms the basis of wild experimentation.

Wilderness Embodied by Iris van Herpen

With the help of artists, scientists and architects, Iris van Herpen explores the intricacies of these forces trough the medium of fashion, and the sensitive poetics that have long characterised her aesthetic vocabulary.

Wilderness Embodied by Iris van Herpen

Through her collaboration with artist Jolan van der Wiel, who has spent several years pondering the possibilities of magnetism, they have created dresses whose very forms are generated by the phenomenon of attraction and repulsion.

Wilderness Embodied by Iris van Herpen

Iris van Herpen draws equally upon the life force that pulses through the sculptures of David Altmejd. His wild organic forms derived from the regenerative processes of nature have greatly inspired Wilderness Embodied.

Wilderness Embodied by Iris van Herpen

She proposes to reach this wild nature freedom into the human body and soul. The human spirit is forged of this same vital energy, coursing and erupting through the limits of the body in such resplendent displays of extreme tradition or technology as piercings, scarification or surgery.

Wilderness Embodied by Iris van Herpen

This wild(er)ness of the human body, as unchecked as it is intimate, is one that the designer has sought to reveal the collection.Balancing respect for the traditions of atelier craftsmanship, with each garment subject to individual handwork, Iris van Herpen has nonetheless broadened the horizons of her domain: materials and processes.

Wilderness Embodied by Iris van Herpen

With architect Isaie Bloch and Materialise she continues to develop the innovative 3D-printed dresses, which she was the first to present in both static and flexible forms. On the one hand, her long-term collaboration with Canadian architect Philip Beesley and, on the other had, her partnership with United Nude’s Rem D. Koolhaas and Stratasys which has led to a line of shoes, help to spread the spirit of the collection.

The post Wilderness Embodied
by Iris van Herpen
appeared first on Dezeen.

Architecture Inspired Knitwear

La marque de vêtements londonienne Chinti and Parker s’associe avec le studio de création de motif Patternity pour une collaboration réussie : une série de 28 pulls aux inspirations architecturales, sorties des motifs qui se dégagent des façades d’immeubles. Un partenariat et une collection étonnante.

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