Oct 9, 2010

Brit-Brit Album Update!!!

britney spears new album is different says manager larry rudolf new sound releasing early next year

We're just dying to hear what is coming next!

Britney Spears' manager, Larry Rudolph, has high praise for his client's upcoming album, which he announces to Entertainment Weekly could be in on our iPods as soon as 'early next year.' He admits that most of this years has been spent 'getting back to basics' for Brit-Brit (aka being a mommy and a proper-functioning person of society.) But now, she's completely in a 'new album cycle' and he says we can expect a very 'progessive' sound from our diva in her new music. He promises,“It’ll be a departure from what you’ve heard.'

Hope not too much! We're all for maturing with your music, but we want some killer dance tracks on this album! Don't leave us hanging, BB!

[Image via WENN.]

Dec 19, 2009

Jessica Simpson Women's Single Breasted Walker Coat

women coat
Single breasted walker with a notch collar and puff sleeve detail
View product details at Amazon

Larry Levine Women's Hooded Pea Coat

women coat
Invest in a classic with this Larry Levine double breasted hooded pea. Inset Waist seaming details adds shape to your figure while the cute backbelt detail sits at just the perfect spot.
View product details at Amazon

Fleet Street Women's Wool Walker

women coat
Single breasted wool walker with notch collar and side pockets
View product details at Amazon

Big Chill Women's P.A. Originals - Ultra Silk Stadium With Iridescent Trim

women coats

Ladies poly-filled coat with contrast iridescent trim inside collar, placket and cuffs. Zip front with placket and novelty snap closure. Hidden zip pockets, engineered channel-quilting on body. Detachable faux fur trimmed hood. Lined.

View product details at Amazon

Dec 8, 2009

You In? Yahoo Wants To Help Spread Ripples Of Kindness This Holiday Season

via TechCrunch by Jason Kincaid on 11/26/09

The holiday season is in full swing, and that means it's time to share some of the comfort we enjoy year round with those who are a little less fortunate — and just to be nicer to people in general. This year, Yahoo is kicking off a drive called You In?, where it invites users worldwide to share their "purple acts of kindness" (purple has long been Yahoo's official color).
Here's how Yahoo describes the campaign:
"Help us create a ripple of good around the world with purple acts of kindness. Update your status to share what you're doing to spread holiday joy, then inspire others to join you by asking, "You in?"
Yahoo! will also be doing our own purple acts of kindness inspired by your updates. So whether you pay for someone's groceries or drop off a coat for the homeless, you'll be encouraging people around the world to join in acts of kindness."
The site revolves around briefly describing your good deed in a Yahoo status message, which is then plotted on a global map. Right now messages include things like "Connie is buying coffee for everyone at work today. You in?" and "Dropped off supplies to the local Humane Society and to the local women's shelter". And then there are gems like this one: "I just returned a case of wine that was mistakenly delivered to our house. Husband had to be dragged along w/this decision."
The site also has a pool of Flickr images that people are using to share their acts of kindness.
It looks like we've caught the campaign pretty early on: the site only has 161 updates at this point, and the pool of Flickr images only has a few submissions. It's hard to knock a do-good campaign like this one, but Yahoo might want to consider integrating Facebook and other social networks so that users can share their updates from other platforms.
Aside from 'You In?', Yahoo also runs regular monthly campaigns though its Yahoo For Good program.
Via Khris Loux's Twitter stream.

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Mar 20, 2009

A Word with your Wardrobe: Galleria Fashion Show and Tell

A Word with your Wardrobe: Galleria Fashion Show and Tell

While the Big Five - New York, London, Paris, Milan and Tokyo - are showing collections for Fall 2009, the fourth-largest city in the U.S. is celebrating the here and now with some Spring '09 fun.

Last week at the Galleria, Simon Fashion Now presented Houston with its very own three-day fashion presentation, complete with runways as well as bonus style stops to discuss beauty. The first evening, however, was a high fashion event that was invitation-only. Luckily, the Thresher happened to get me and Joel Kahn, a staff photographer, on the guest list.

We arrived to see that there was already a socializing buzz about and that almost every fashionable woman in sight was in a pair of pumps, while the men were sharply clad in suit and tie.

Shortly afterwards, an omnipresent voice ushered everyone to their seats, and the show began right at 8 p.m., with Saks Fifth Avenue, featuring Christian Louboutin shoes, as the opening act.

Yes Men
With each brand's walk out, I started to notice the competition of varieties. There were menswear paired with women's wear, but then each switched roles from accessories to tailoring. There were casual play clothes quickly followed by sleek evening looks.

The juxtapositions were clear and a rather enjoyable way to see what these designers and stores pictured their customers would be wearing from them, day and night.

The Dresses vs. the Suiting
It was a battle of the sartorial gender styles, sometimes within the same brand. Ferragamo's crimson 1940's-style, hourglass-figure wrap dress was followed by its doppelganger in jacket and cropped pants form. Billy Reid's striped shrunken blazer and tailored white skinnies gave his ultra-feminine, playful polka dotted dress a quick once- over before exiting.

Luckily for the dresses team, Fendi and Carolina Herrera stopped the show with their girlishly-shaped tea and pencil dresses, which were belted and flared accordingly. The ethereal fabric details, whether cut out, draped, appliquéd or coaxed out at the right places, seemed to nip and tuck perfectly to the body's form, saving the day by making every woman appreciate curves.

And while some designers dabbled in the day leather jackets and shorts area for men, everyone seemed to concede to Billy Reid and Nordstrom, which showed only menswear, that even in pieces, nothing looks better than a man in a well-fitted suit. (Amen to that.)

The Formal vs. the Casual
This one is for the girls. Missoni's girls were all fun and games and ready to hit the beach in their summery short dresses of sand and ocean-pebble colors. This is, of course, not before meeting up with their friends clad either in Neiman Marcus's colored shifts, Barney's city-street-cool jackets and jeans or Billy Reid's striped tights for lunch on the promenade.

Their Ferragamo and Saks Fifth older sisters keep changing their minds: artsy dolman sleeved day dress or princess-style ball gown?

Their mothers, all decked out in floor length Carolina Herrera, have other plans in mind. Day and evening wear for women were at times a matter of transitioning between fiercely feminine to unstoppably elegant, but as the presentations sang the chorus together, there's no need to compromise.

The Bags vs. The Shoes
The victor is obvious: shoes. Their numbers and reception of ooh's, ahhs and double-takes overruled the handbags, though they do deserve honorable mention. The shoes ranged from heels to flats, Choos urban gladiators to Louboutin's S&M Mary Janes to Fendi's suede wedges with a false printed heel.

Ferragamo's and Carolina Herrera's bags' reds did pop out in their carry-on structure, but the ease and folds of neutral tones of Saks' and Missoni's slouchy hobos were just as college-girl appealing. Simple evening clutches with metallic fastenings stepped up to their patent pump counterparts.

In the end though, some designers omitted the bag entirely, while shoes are essential to the look. Plus, giving a girl a little lift adds bonus points for multitasking adornment. I'll admit that I am more of a shoe person, but I began to question, with all the soft and beautifully-displayed craftsmanship, why I wasn't already a bag lover myself. You know a fashion show is good when it makes you want things you really don't need.

From start to finish, there's just something surreal about seeing the clothes from famous brands. You see them all the time in magazines, looking distant and untouchable, but when they are parading themselves out in front of you as if you have the funds for them, it is something else. It is like window shopping on a whole new level; it's a dream in decadence.

But back in reality, where we exist as college students, the best we can do is extrapolate onto our own wardrobes. Whether that means DIYing a Fendi dress, or styling a la Billy Reid, or even saving up one day for the real thing, ultimately, what I got from the collections was that it's not so much a matter of affording, but experimenting.

I saw this in action post-show. The guests, of all ages, had their own unique sense of stylistic flair: a group of young models donning hipster accents, a cute girl with a covet-worthy necklace, a woman with a cupcake purse straight from Sex and the City.

On the runway and off, there was a real sense of adult play on classics there that night and a message that declared there would be no minimum on how old you have to be to have fun with your clothes.

The show, as all shows should, ensured that everyone who has Peter Pan syndrome - us included - won't be neglected and need not fear giving up their childhood delights of dress-up.

See you next week!

Deanne Nguyen is a Will Rice College sophomore.

Taken From Ricethresher.org