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Showing posts with label Fashion Industry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fashion Industry. Show all posts

Saturday, August 11, 2007

Fashion And Luxury Turn To Online Video


Enhancement in online video and the growing prevalence of broadband access are encouraging luxury brands to create glossy new Web sites that better reflect their elite appeal on a medium that can make things look equal. Find shoes from Marc Jacobs online and they sell for $499 and then find some shoes from Target, they are $14.99. They look almost the same online. Now with the help of interactive features the luxury product imagery can be very beautiful. Every component, every detail can be carefully crafted on the Web, exactly as their products are.
A 2007 survey by market research firm Luxury Institute found that 99% of those 21 years and older with a minimum household income of $150,000 had Internet access at home and 94% said they used broadband connections, which are amenable for video viewing. Similarly high numbers were reported for the use of the Internet in researching shopping and products. As you would expect, as high-end consumers have gone on the Web, more luxury brands and high-end retailers have opened up online flagships.

Sophisticated imagery can help high-end brands validate the price discrepancy with lower-end products. The luxe site has to do a better job of romancing it, using additional audio as well as visual inspiration to really get you excited. They have to make consumers feel that they can connect and relate to this site, otherwise why would they spending so much money? Not relying on retailers or on traditional advertising, and adding streaming video is a type of "three-dimensional branding" that adds life to the product and its message in a way not possible with "flat" advertising in magazines.
Many luxe sites also aim to give visitors a sense that they are getting insider information. Those not invited to Fashion Week's members-only tents can watch the runway shows online.
Christian Dior's Fall/Winter Haute Couture extravaganza, in honor of the fashion house's 60th anniversary, was available online the morning after the show. High fashion sites are also adding behind-the-scenes viewing to differentiate themselves. Chanel.com features interviews with Karl Lagerfeld, while MiuMiu.com has footage of its May 2007 photo shoot with model Laetitia Casta for its Fall/Winter 2007 campaign. Documentary filmmaker Seraphin Ducellier directed Balenciaga.com's suggestive time-lapsed movies of four handbags; the brand also plays up its fashion heritage by featuring archival footage from the 1960 Spring/Summer runway show. The reaction people have is this real emotional connection with video, much more than still images. A woman looking at the video feels, “I need that bag.'"

Prada.com's site, showcases nearly 20 short films on the production process, including clips of the making of a Prada ballerina slipper, artists sketching bags, and the hand-finishing of a perfume bottle. Showing the hands behind the luxury object only burnishes a brand's image, says CEO of the Luxury Institute, Milton Pedraza. "Luxury consumers want to know that they are paying for craftsmanship," Mr. Pedraza says. "And it's a little more subtle but it's also important, they want to know that people who are making the product are treated well.”

MarcJacobs.com features elaborate Fashion Week mini-documentaries used cameras which swooped 30 feet over the audience and 24-hour time-lapse footage of set-building. The site also posts insider news and gossip uploaded by employees. The new features also keep viewers on the site longer. However even Mr. Jacobs, the online trendsetter in the industry, must continue to add new features to his site to maintain an edge. According to industry sources, one prominent designer is planning on streaming live video -- a first -- during New York Fashion Week this September. “Bring it on” says Publisher Barbara Segal of www.Blondeheiress.com this is what all us fashionista have been waiting for,” says the Blondeheiress!

Friday, February 02, 2007

Fashion Is Seeing Red At New Yorks Fashion Week




Fashion week is supposed to be about tailoring and texture, hemlines and heels. But this week, all eyes will be on pronounced rib cages, protruding hip bones and hollow-eyed faces. After years of controversy about unhealthy models, New York City - America's fashion capital - is being put on notice. "People point fingers at the people who are walking the runways,” said Glamour Magazine’s Deputy Editor of Health, Wendy Naugle. “They say, ‘oh she's too skinny, they need to be heavier.’ The Council of Fashion Designers of America released new guidelines just weeks before February's fashion week in Bryant Park. The new guidelines include keeping models under 16 off the runway, educating the fashion industry about the dangers of eating disorders, providing healthy meals and snacks backstage at fashion shows, and requiring models with eating disorders to seek professional help.
The first show on the catwalks at Bryant Park was the Heart Truth show, an annual event in which celebrities wear red dresses. Heart Truth is part of the Red Dress project, a federal initiative lead by first lady Laura Bush, to raise awareness about heart disease. The Heart Truth show was attended by Laura Bush, who wore a red Bill Blass skirt suit. She was accompanied by Blass designer Carolina Herrera and Michael Vollbracht. Actress Angela Bassett strutted the runway wearing a dress by designer Carmen Marc Valvo.

After the Heart Truth show came the first real preview of the fall styles that attracts editors, retail buyers and stylists to Fashion Week. Shows continue through Feb. 9, with designers such as Oscar de la Renta, Ralph Lauren, Marc Jacobs and Vera Wang on the schedule.


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