
Thanks to Kendall Jenner, the Gen X Boot Tuck Is Trending for Summer
Kendall Jenner woke up this weekend and, according to the tabloids, set out on a 'steamy summer outing' (she parked her Toyota Land Cruiser in a car park) to show Bad Bunny (the ex she's reportedly on good terms with) 'what he was missing' (a high-cut vest, baggy jeans and cowboy boots). I respect the need to truss up a regular stroll as breaking news, so here's an alternative angle:
That Jenner's decision to tuck straight-legged denim into Western boots is a future trend in the making–and a welcome alternative, perhaps, to the malign rule of the phalangeal flip-flop. I don't think I've seen a young, fashionable celebrity do this with real, 2003 levels of conviction, since Kate Moss was photographed trotting around West London with skinnies tucked into Vivienne Westwood knee-highs.
Kendall Jenner in Los Angeles.
AKGS
British Vogue's senior contributing fashion features editor, Julia Hobbs, recently fished out an old pair of Ghesquière-era Louis Vuitton boots to wear with attenuated Levi's for New York Fashion Week. 'I'm living by my own mantra that skinny jeans walked so jeans in boots could run,' she said. 'What started as a tongue-in-cheek take on 2010s 'date-night dressing' has become my everyday uniform.'
And wasn't it Kate Moss who just last week starred in a self-styled campaign for Self-Portrait, shot paparazzi-style by Johnny Dufort, wearing this exact combination of pieces as she parked her own car? Perhaps, then, Kendall Jenner's so-called 'steamy summer outing' wasn't so much about showing Bad Bunny 'what he was missing,' but fashion culture at large.
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Yahoo
9 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Q&A: Pulitzer Prize winner Robin Givhan chronicles Virgil Abloh's rise to fashion fame
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Abloh remixed his interests with his marketing genius and channeled it into fashion with streetwear labels like Been Trill and Pyrex Vision. These endeavors were the launchpad for his luxury streetwear label Off-White, known for its white diagonal lines, quotation marks, red zip ties and clean typeface. Off-White led to Abloh's collaboration with Ikea, where he designed a rug with 'KEEP OFF' in all-white letters and also with Nike where he deconstructed and reenvisioned 10 of Nike's famous shoe silhouettes. Throughout his ventures, Abloh built a following of sneakerheads and so-called hypebeasts who liked his posts, bought into his brands and showed up in droves outside his fashion shows. Social media made Abloh accessible to his fans and he tapped into that. Off-White had built a loyal following and some critics. Givhan, a Washington Post senior critic-at-large, openly admits that she was among the latter early on. 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GIVHAN: He really used social media as a way of connecting with people as opposed to just sort of using it as kind of a one-way broadcast. He was telling his side of things, but he was also listening to other people. He was listening to that feedback. That's also what made him this larger-than-life person for a lot of people, because not only was he this creative person who was in conversation with fans and contemporaries, but he was this creative person inside. He was this creative person at the very top of the fashion industry. For a lot of people, the idea that you could ostensibly have a conversation with someone at that level, and they would seemingly pull back the curtain and be transparent about things — that was really quite powerful. AP: You write about his relationship to Kanye in the book. Were you able to get any input from him on their relationship for the book? 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Forbes
13 minutes ago
- Forbes
20 Critical Mistakes Advertisers Make With Social Media Campaigns
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Associated Press
23 minutes ago
- Associated Press
CODE27 AI Companion Exceeds Crowdfunding Expectations, Ignites Industry Buzz
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