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Thursday, April 17, 2014

Mary Katrantzou For Adidas via @BritishVogue

MARY KATRANTZOU is to collaborate with Adidas. The sportswear brand today announced that the collaboration - slated to launch in November - will be a long-term union and will comprise both clothing and footwear.
"I'm really excited to be working with Adidas on a line of apparel and footwear," Katrantzou told us this morning. "I grew up, like so many other kids around the world, wearing Adidas sneakers and I'm really excited about bringing my vision to such a global brand. They have a fantastic heritage and their ability to innovate in sportswear makes them the perfect partner for us to work with in this market."
Katrantzou follows in the footsteps of TopshopPharrell WilliamsRaf Simons and Stella McCartney by joining forces with Adidas, something that Dirk Schoenberger, global creative director of Adidas's sport style division, is naturally very excited about. 

MTV Movie Awards 2014

April 13 2014













Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Victoria's Secret Comes To London

THE Victoria's Secret Show will take place in London this year, two of the Angels revealed at the brand's Bond Street store this morning.Adriana Lima and Candice Swanepoel joined marketing director Ed Razek to announce the move, as well as the venue and date: Earls Court on December 2.
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LONDON's Old Bond Street is officially the most expensive street in Europe via @BritishVogue



LONDON's Old Bond Street is officially the most expensive street in Europe in terms of retail space. Despite not being much more that 500 feet long, the street - which is favoured by jewellers and the world's biggest fashion labels - has seen rental prices reach £838 per square foot annually, way ahead of the continent's other shopping capitals.
Banhofstrasse in Zurich came second with annual rents of £599 per square foot per year, followed by the Champs Élysées in Paris, Milan's Via Monte Napoleone and Moscow's Stoleshnikov Lane. Streets in Rome, Geneva, Vienna, Munich, Berlin and Stuttgart (the latter of which tied) rounded out the top 10.
"London is still the signature location for any brand that aspires to international luxury status," Paul Souber - head of Central London retail at Colliers International, the property adviser that compiled the results - told the Evening Standard. "At present, demand for prime London locations seems insatiable and even the headline rental levels achieved by new lettings do not tell the whole story about just how strong demand is."
London still lags behind the world's most expensive streets, however, with New York's Fifth Avenue and Hong Kong's Causeway Bay leading the way.