Posts Tagged peking
Which Olympians Could Be Anna Wintour’s New Arm Candy?
i really had to laugh when i read this article

The looming dawn of another September Fashion Week means one important thing: ‘Tis the season for Anna Wintour to widely grin while squiring her tennis crush Roger Federer around town. We fully support her fascination with the dreamy Swiss ace, but can’t help wondering if Anna’s love is real, or whether her affections will drift thanks to Olympics mania and all its attendant delectable man-torsos. In this first week alone, we’ve spotted tons of spry, decorated — or soon-to-medal — athletes who’d make stellar Fashion Week arm candy. So pay heed, A-Dubs: If Roger cancels on you, or you’re just feeling frisky, here are some excellent potential heirs to his throne.
James Blake, tennis: If Lady Bobbington wants to swap one ace for another, what better candidate than super-hot, Harvard-educated Blake — who surprisingly knocked off Federer in the quarterfinals today? And who cares about a gold medal when front-row seats to Oscar De La Renta are on the line?
Jonathan Horton, gymnastics: The U.S. team’s surprise bronze came mostly thanks to his inspiring routines and enthusiasm. Anna could use that kind of fire in her life. Or her purse — if she can’t score wee Jon a seat, A-Dubs could just tuck him away in her handbag. He wouldn’t even need a makeover: The way menswear is going, Horton’s regulation elastic-waist stirrup pants are probably runway-bound.
Park Tae-Hwan, swimming: The Korean suffered an embarrassing disqualification at the Athens games when he just 14, but has already won a silver and a gold in Beijing. Clearly, someone with such capacity to bounce back after adversity can handle Anna’s slings and arrows. Also, he’s deliciously buff and barely legal, which ought to get her some column inches in “Page Six.”
Add comment August 16, 2008
The Olympics of Fashion: Canada vs USA
I know you want to see more olypmpic fashion,here we go :
Since I recapped the style on parade of the Olympics Opening Ceremony on Friday, over the weekend I’ve been tracking fashion writers around the globe as they weigh in on Parade of Nations style (so far, the French stand atop the podium). In his own audio slide show discussing the fashion hits and misses, New York Times style writer Eric Wilson’s singles out Team Canada, because he was “most startled” by our attire. “It’s hard to look at the images of athletes wearing ball caps and messenger bags and, uh, jackets and shorts and to not think that someone is trying to sell something here,” Wilson elaborates. Hit tacit implication being that with that much merch, Canada sold out.
Right. Because virtuous Polo Ralph Lauren, the first-time Team USA licensee, is only trying to sell Olympic spirit, not stuff. (Not here, nor here, nor in its choose-your-own-country and Big Pony collections.) Even amidst the red, white and navy blue, Polo’s signature brand shorthand of player and pony is hard to miss on most articles of its preppy Olympic Games Collection, especially when in some cases it’s supersized–by several inches. It’s been buzzed about elsewhere for being writ vulgarly large, especially on the otherwise dapper navy blazers American athletes wore on Friday (made available as a replica to consumers for the sum of $695 but alas, already sold out – not that they’re selling anything).
Add comment August 11, 2008
Fashion Makes Few Waves At Olympic Opening Ceremony
That´s what i expected when i saw the first pictures:
At the Olympics, countries rise and fall, athletes smash world records and progress, generally, is made. Not so, when it comes to the fashions that are trotted out during the opening ceremony’s Parade of the Nations.
Year after year, the look of many of these national uniforms seems to fall in one of three categories: 1. Festive national costumes. 2. Suits with a flight-attendant flair. 3. Tracksuits.
It’s curious that more memorable fashion statements aren’t made. Friday’s event drew an estimated live global audience of at least two billion people, making it possibly the most-watched event in television history. And although many delegations flash across the screen in just a few seconds, those seconds can have great impact . Viewers have taken style cues from the looks they see during the ceremony. In 2002, shoppers stormed the flagship stores of Roots, which outfitted the U.S. team for the Salt Lake City Winter Olympics, clamoring for the $19.95 fleece berets the athletes wore. (The retailer ended up selling more than a million of them.)
So, why not seize upon this moment to make a memorable, fashion statement?
Add comment August 10, 2008
Who won gold in the fashion Olympics?
I´ll skip the Olympics for many reasons but this is a fashion blog so let´s stay to fashion:
Say what you will about the opening ceremony, but the parade of nations that followed made the Chinese, in their elaborate historical costume, look like an army of supermodels.
First up: the Greeks, proud originators of the Games and self-proclaimed inventors of Western civilisation, wearing dodgy white tailoring with nattily folded black handkerchiefs tucked into jacket breast pockets. To say they looked wide would be an understatement.
But not as wide as many of the other athletes – presumably the weightlifters were out in force – nor as wide as the kipper ties and Seventies lapels that suggested the event was locked in a time warp. Butlins Red Coats, Just William school blazers and the type of characterless, brass-buttoned jackets that air stewardesses have to wear, rubbed shoulders with migraine-inducing Hawaiian shirts, nasty acrylics and bad casuals that wouldn’t be out of place at a bowling party in Hastings. Whatever else, this motley crew amply demonstrated the perils of dressing to look like one’s flag. Never have so many virulent shades made it in to one place, at one time.
Noble members of the Ukraine 2008 Olympic team, for example, stand up and be counted. It is simply not socially acceptable to wear a turquoise blue and canary yellow jacket with a turquoise blue and canary yellow striped tie to match, however fervent any national pride may be.
read more and click on the picture above to see more picture
2 comments August 9, 2008
Beijing Olympics 2008: Chinese fashion police crack down on style horrors
Isn´t that ridiculous?Are there no other,more serious problems?
Fashion police at the Beijing Olympics have ordered men to steer clear of white socks with black shoes and advised women to shun leather skirts.
Residents of the city should also shirk embarrassing public displays of affection and fighting over who settles the bill after dinner and avoid garlic.
Rules produced by Chinese officials on what to wear and how to behave stretch out over 36 pages in official booklets and cover nine web pages. They go from general tips, like combing hair appropriately for age to minutiae details such as women with thick ankles wearing darker stockings to disguise their imperfections.
Women get specific fashion advice to avoid common fashion faux-pas, such as matching the length of their skirt to their age and not wearing more than three colours in their oufit. Men on the other hand seem to get more basic advice, including not sporting pyjamas in public, not going out with a bare chest and not rolling up their trouser legs.
While some style recommendations do not need explanations – fat people should avoid horizontal stripes – other tips have their reasoning spelt out: “Clothes should not be too small, otherwise this makes people feel you are unreliable” .
The how-to in the style stakes has been handed out by the Capital Spiritual Civilisation Construction Commission. Beijing will be under the spotlight during the Olympic Games and the Commission are keen that the city’s 15 million residents dress and act impeccably.
2 comments August 1, 2008

