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Archive for September, 2009

Ed hardy store offers latest Trends for hip teenagers

September 22nd, 2009

So, your teenager has a birthday coming up and is set on receiving a Ed hardy T-shirt. A trip to one of the local malls is not necessary.

Trends, its business card advertising “clothing and accessories for men & women,” opened about three months ago in downtown Auburndale. And, yes, it does carry clothing and accessories, but most of the store’s merchandise is what the manager calls, “the in thing for teenagers.”

It is a small store with only a window sign identifying its place among the more traditional tenants – a barber shop, gift shop, and graphic designer – that occupies the well-preserved property along Main Street.

Although it does not have a cluttered feel, the walls, a few clothing racks and one glass case are filled with merchandise. And, to the delight of most adult shoppers, it does not have the blaring music often found in this type of establishment.

Along with the Sean John T-shirts, jeans and other items from the Diddy line, Trends sells Ed Hardy swim wear and tattoo T-shirts. Also available at the store are shoes, watches, gold and silver jewelry, sun glasses, and a wide selection of “designer name purses without designer prices.”

Trends opened about three months ago and, according to the manager, Olga Lennard, it has had steady business. She said she was particularly encouraged by the amount of business because, “usually summer is not a good time for opening a new shop.”

The owner, who had previously owned and operated a fine jewelry shop, was influenced to open Trends because of her teenage son, an aspiring actor. Because her jewelry business had been located at the corner of U.S. Highway 92 and Main Street in Auburndale, she was already familiar with the local Main Street market.

Jon Gosselin Trades Ed Hardy in for Cohesive

September 21st, 2009

Jon Gosselin is stepping up in the fashion world. The father of eight is usually spotted around town dripping from head-to-toe in Ed Hardy, but not any more!

Apparently Jon has dropped his collaboration with Christian Audigier and has started sporting men’s clothing line Cohesive. The line features an edgy preppy American look that’s a far cry from the sparkly rhinestone tees we’re used to seeing him sport.

Owner and designer of Cohesive David Appel tells Hollyscoop, “Fashion is to make people feel better and look better, and Jon Gosselin’s PRcompany didn’t want him wearing Ed Hardy anymore, so I sent him some T Shirts, cause he seems like a laid back type of guy and I thought it would be nice to step up his image. But you wont see me hanging out with Jon Gosselin in St. Tropez anytime soon!”

You can buy Cohesive at Nordstrom. Price values are affordable—from $55 to 150. The line features t-shirts, jackets, and denim.

Take a look at the ED hardy collection here!

Jon Gosselin to Launch Gosselin Gear Clothing Line

September 16th, 2009

Christian Audiger who?

Jon Gosselin, who loves his Ed Hardy t-shirts almost as hard as he does his bluetooth headset and Hailey Glassman, says he’s launching a clothing line.

“I’m doing a line called Gosselin Gear, Jon said while hanging out at the Hotel on Rivington during the House of Hype post-VMA party (of course).

As for that rumored line with Ed Hardy owner-designer Christian Audigier, about which he met with the Frenchman in St. Tropez this summer?

“I think Christian just used me to get publicity,” he said. Sure.

How’s the rest of Jon Gosselin’s life treating him these days?

“I’ll be officially divorced in a couple days,” Jon said, gladly.

The King of Pimps does not require Christian Audiger's collaboration.

The King of Pimps does not require Christian Audiger's collaboration.

While he and nagging, grating former partner Kate Gosselin are hammering out custody issues, Jon was in good spirits over the weekend and also confirmed that ed hardy with him and new girlfriend Hailey Glassman are going “great.”

We saw that first-hand thanks to their photographed make-out session, but we’re glad Jon has gone on record confirming that he hearts his rebound play thing.

Celebrity designer out to conquer his native France

September 14th, 2009

PARIS — Celebrity Hollywood designer Christian Audigier is all over Paris this week, talk-of-the-town in the media, splashed on buses and looking out from giant billboards placed at strategic fashion hot-spots.

Christian Audigier

Christian Audigier

The self-made multi-millionaire with the Midas touch is out to tackle his last frontier — conquering his native France.

“France is the world’s toughest market to crack, they’re experts, connoisseurs,” he told AFP. “I had to make it in America before I could return home.”

Audigier could well be dubbed the “Cinderella” of fashion.

A poor boy from southern France who dropped out of school and became a shop assistant, the 51-year-old friend to Michael Jackson and a host of other VIPs, currently estimates his worth at a cool 250 million dollars.

“I am proud of my history,” admits a smiling Audigier as a driver dusts down his luxury Maybach limousine.

In Paris this week, he opened a four-storey showroom, bought a flat on one of the city’s posher streets, rolled out his lines at a key fashion event — and confirmed his purchase of Michael Jackson’s last LA home for more than 30 million dollars.

A film he loaned a prime TV network shows Jackson at Audigier’s 50th birthday saying “You’re a wonderful human being and the King of Fashion.”

When he first arrived in Los Angeles in 2000, Audigier was a 40-something nobody who had lived in France and Bali and had a taste for fashion.

“I had talent but didn’t exploit it properly, I used it to survive and live a peaceful life,” he said.

“But when I arrived in the United States, I had to get down to work. Insisting is existing, and that’s what I did.”

Audigier first made his mark by reviving the “Von Dutch” streetwear label and turning it into a global phenomenon, partly through luck.

Meeting Britney Spears in the street, he gave her a first Von Dutch baseball cap and a few days later hoisted one on Justin Timberlake in a nightclub. When the pair split up weeks later, they featured on the cover of People magazine, wearing the caps.

In 2004, he branched out on his own with a line inspired by Californian tattoo artist Don Ed Hardy. Learning from the Spears-Timberlake episode, he sent out clothes to stars and used the paparazzi, hotel and restaurant staff to spread the word.

“Americans, who then dressed very conservative and very corporate, liked the colour and my European twist,” he said. “And marketing the brands through celebrities who are known worldwide was how I operated.”

Before long his flamboyant streetwear was a hot favourite with Hollywood stars. He boasted Madonna, Mariah Carey, Sylvester Stallone, Puff Daddy and Kanye West among his clients.

Audigier continues to send designs to stars for free, occasionally hitting the jackpot, such as when Madonna wore an Ed Hardy t-shirt trip to Malawi to adopt a little boy.

Could he have made a similar fortune overnight in France? “No. France is a very small country with celebrities who are lesser known worldwide.”

“It is the immensity of the country in the US that gives you the chance to expand a brand. You have to learn how to produce and deliver on time.

“You can go faster, do better, and do nicer there,” he added.

Audigier, who is investing two million euros in his French launch, already has outlets in Britain, Germany, Italy and Spain.

His brand, which also makes champagne and wines, has a yearly turnover of 600 million dollars after only four years, he said.

“I’m not going to be looking for celebrities to help launch in Europe,” he said. “I’ve become a celebrity in my own right. The product will do the rest.”

Ed Hardy for Women

September 12th, 2009

The Ed Hardy brand is a phenomenon that is, in the context of today’s pop culture, instinctively logical: Here is Hardy, an artist who works in one of the stranger art forms — tattoos, quite elaborate — and on perhaps the strangest of all art media — human skin, still alive, thank you very much — and were you to acquire one of his works of art, you could virtually guarantee a marvelous explosion from your parents. Thus the explosion of the brand. (When I was in Mexico City a few months ago, you couldn’t throw a Dos Equis without hitting a massive Ed Hardy billboard.) On the other hand, were your parents familiar with the depth of Hardy’s artistry, they might applaud your investment acumen.

ed hardy

Ed Hardy’s tattoo apprenticeship was apparently carried out while earning a San Francisco Art Institute B.F.A. in printmaking. He studied traditional Japanese tattoo art in Japan, and his strange work became strangely beautiful and substantive. He has with his wife written, edited and published numerous books on alternative art while curating gallery and nonprofit exhibitions, and is a frequent museum and university lecturer. Hardy mentors younger tattoo artists, though he is reputed to have now turned his focus to printmaking, drawing and painting. So you probably couldn’t get a real Ed Hardy tattoo even if you wanted one. Still, he created real art.

Enter fashion. The flamboyantly French and ardently litigious fashion designer Christian Audigier acquired the rights to commercialize Hardy’s art by plastering it on everything from hoodies to ball caps to leather jackets, and the bottom of the official Web shop of Audigier’s Hardy-exploitation wear has a list of registered trademarks as long as your arm. You can’t get a Hardy tattoo, but you can buy the T-shirt. More axiomatic still are the perfumes. Oh, but you saw that coming a mile away. Audigier has creative-directed two pairs — a feminine and a masculine each — and one wonders if Hardy smelled them before they left the factory. I realize these things are critic-proof (Macy’s can’t keep them on the shelves), but here we go.

Take Audigier’s most recent launches, in December of 2008: Love & Luck for Women and Love & Luck for Men. For the feminine, Adriana Medina has created a very nice copy of Olivier Cresp’s Light Blue (the feminine) for Dolce & Gabbana, simply lowering the volume almost to zero on the green apple (which is what makes Light Blue so good) and substituting a very light, rather diaphanous spice. It’s a nice scent, not a full-fledged perfume as much as a well-executed initial sketch, but this works perfectly for Hardy’s demographic: mass-market teenagers. It precisely gives the perception of wearing scent without actually wearing much. It’s also the best of the four. (It has decent persistence on skin; on the other hand, it diffuses like lead.)

Love & Luck for Men, by Olivier Gillotin, is equally perfect: the masculine cliché of deodorant soap, aluminum and synthetic spice. Mennen Speed Stick on 17-year-old. Commercially savvy and of no interest at all. Good persistence, sadly.

Ed Hardy for Men, the original masculine that debuted 11 months prior, is Gillotin doing another version of the masculine cliché: subtract some of the aluminum et voilà. That leaves its mate, the original Ed Hardy for Women.

Which is fake strawberry. Like, the stuff used in Jolly Ranchers. This isn’t even a realist school of perfumery because it’s not perfumery at all. Perfumers and flavorists share many raw materials (a lot of the things in your Diors and Laurens are food grade), and what Audigier has bottled, you can find in the cake mix aisle at D’Agostino. I say Audigier advisedly. Technically, this sugary elixir is attributed to a perfumer, Caroline Sabas. To say that her prodigious talents are wasted here is to misunderstand entirely the marketing premise. Obviously Audigier wanted fake strawberry, and that’s what Sabas gave him. (It’s nice as far as fake strawberry goes, incidentally — probably Sabas’s contribution.) And if you’re wearing your awesome Ed Hardy T-shirt, size small, you’ll probably buy a bottle because the packaging design matches. But it’s not good. Not strangely beautiful. And not substantive.