Wednesday, 24 August 2011

Anthropologie Gears Up for UK Growth

16 June, 2011
US fashion and homewares retailer Anthropologie has said it could have more than 10 stores in the UK as it opened its third shop in Edinburgh this week.

Louis Vuitton's Memorable Retail Spaces

Louis Vuitton, in collaboration with parent company LVMH, launches Louis Vuitton – Architecture and Interiors in an effort to promote the arts. The 304-page publication includes insights from the brand’s distinguished architects such as Peter Marino, Christian de Portzamparc, and Jun Aoki; and never-seen-before sketches, blueprints, and mock-ups of retail spaces. At $85, devoted fans can own the beautifully-bound book, or if they want to shell out $130, the limited edition features three separate photographs on the cover to coincide with the three monogrammed fabric slipcases – gold, silver, and copper. The book is available in Louis Vuitton retail locations and speciality book stores starting October 1.

Tuesday, 2 August 2011

Customers Can Create Preferences on App Tailored for In Store Experiences - PSFK

The IdentityMine store concept connects associates and consumers both inside and outside of brick and mortar stores. Designed in partnership with Microsoft, an app on shoppers’ phones allows them to create a shopping list visible to store associates. Before a store visit, customers can browse inventory while being supported by staff with targeted deals, product suggestions, and the ability to send questions to store associates. Customers check-in when they arrive at a physical store, alerting staff members and syncing their user profiles, shopping lists, and purchase history. Staff can then reach out to shoppers via intra-app messages in order to offer help and lend expertise. Connected signage and digital kiosks let shoppers ‘throw’ content and wish lists from their app to larger screens in order to enjoy enhanced browsing and customer service.

The Future of Retail - PSFK










The Retail Space - What is the Future of the Store? - PSFK

In the new Future Of Retail report, we hope to tell a story about how the use of technology has turned the corner, and forward-thinking retailers and brands are using it to put a human face back onto the shopping experience. Around the world, we’ve encountered news about the death of brick and mortar stores, struck down by the ascendency of e-commerce, but I would argue that the physical store will continue to be a vital part of our culture because of technology, not despite it.
Our research shows a promising future for shopper experiences across the entire retail landscape from big-box retailers and department stores to corner shops and independent boutiques.
We will look at the holistic shopping experience and how technology can introduce a social and vibrant market atmosphere to every retail occasion throughout the purchase path from browsing to buying.
 

Tap into Sephora's Virtual World of Beauty - PFSK

Beauty company Sephora‘s new iPad app has some innovative features to keep you up-to-date with all the latest trends. The free app has a magazine-like Beauty Report, with expert tips, animation and articles on hair, make-up, skincare and fragrances. There is also a social media hub where users can get real-time updates from social channels on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and BeautyTalk.
A video library lets you watch expert how-to’s and discover new product innovations, and you can browse and buy products in the shop without having to leave the app. The clever Virtual Mirror feature transforms your iPad into a split-screen mirror and video player so you can watch how to achieve a certain look and follow along. This beauty app for the iPad presents the different aspects of social media, editorial and retail in one neat package.

News - 26/07/11 - 2/08/11

Jaeger Boosts Store Portfolio
Premium retailer Jaeger is to launch seven standalone concessions for its younger, lower-priced sub brand Boutique by Jaeger as the retailer expands its UK store portfolio with two further stores.

American Apparel to Launch Online Ebay Shop
US fashion chain American Apparel is to launch an e-commerce shop on eBay in September in an effort to expand its distribution base beyond its own stores.

Vogue.com to Launch Online Fashion Week
Vogue.com is to launch Online Fashion Week, a five day event that will see retailers offer exclusive deals to customers ahead of Christmas, later this year.

Tom Ford's Shop-in-Shop Harrods
Fashion designer Tom Ford has opened a new womenswear shop-in-shop in Harrods. The shop, Ford’s first in the UK, opened Tuesday and offers the designer’s complete ready to wear line alongside sunglasses, accessories and jewellery. The shop partners Ford’s existing men’s wear shop-in-shop, which is housed in the Knightsbridge department store’s basement.

Nicole Farhi Relocates Flagship Store
Luxury womenswear retailer Nicole Farhi is to open its new flagship store on Conduit Street this week, relocating from New Bond Street after 17 years.

Beyond Foursquare - PFSK

If location-based services began collecting the size and frequency of purchases across all locations and mining the data of check-ins (including likes and dislikes), they could begin to build the next generation of loyalty rewards programs comprised of customer, spending, location, and sentiment. Such a program would benefit location-based service providers, brands, and customers alike.

Take this example: if every day a consumer purchases a latte from Starbucks and then walks across the street to Dunkin' Donuts to pick up a turkey sausage flatbread, both companies could benefit from that information. If many customers display similar habits, Starbucks could add a similar breakfast sandwich to their menu or even discontinue their current breakfast fare at that location.

With a ripe opportunity for brands to use location-based data to power the next generation of loyalty programs, mining the rich data of check-ins will give companies a more holistic view of consumer behavior, which will help cultivate customer loyalty and drive sales. In short, when finally taken seriously, location-based services have the potential to become more than just a game — and much more than having bragging rights as mayor of a local haunt.

25 NYC Start-Ups with Future Potential - PFSK

Business Insider has a great collection of the 25 New York City start-ups to watch out for, selecting the companies on the right track to becoming the next big thing in tech. Here’s the list with links and a brief description:
  1. Neverware – makes old computers run like new by updating them with the latest software via the cloud.
  2. Artsicle – transform your home into a gallery by renting original artwork by the month.
  3. Tutorspree – an online marketplace for high quality tutoring for finding private tutors near your location.
  4. Turntable.fm – “Pandora for groups”, multiple people can listen to the same playlist from different locations and add songs to it.
  5. BillGuard – antivirus for your bills, scans your credit cards and alerts you to hidden fees, fraudulent charges, billing errors and scams.
  6. Kohort – “Facebook Groups meets Evite”, a social network for groups of people.
  7. Turf – location-based video game.
  8. SpotOn – personalized recommendations for places to go.
  9. JIBE – find jobs with help from your personal connections.
  10. OnSwipe – create app-like experiences on tablet and phone browsers.
  11. Sonar – mobile app that uncovers connections between strangers.
  12. Fridge – share photos, messages, events with specific groups of people.
  13. Quartzy – free online management software for life scientists.
  14. Shelby.TV -  discover and enjoy videos your friends are sharing.
  15. Goodsie – easy-to-use e-commerce site for setting up an online store.
  16. Lot18 – exclusive discounts on wines and spirits.
  17. SignPost – searchable group deals platform.
  18. SinglePlatform – helps local businesses manage their digital presence and gain customers.
  19. CrowdTwist – marketing via social media that rewards loyal fans.
  20. ThinkNear – location-based ad targeting platform.
  21. Immersive Labs – software for digital signs that deliver tailored messages to customers in real-time.
  22. SkillShare – crowdsourced teaching, a marketplace of classes to learn anything from teachers in your community.
  23. Nodejitsu – cloud hosting for individuals and enterprises.
  24. Movable Ink – real-time content for email marketing.
  25. Of a Kind – discover new designers, learn their stories and purchase limited-edition pieces.

Thursday, 21 July 2011

News - 21/07/11

Mintel:

Sephora launches same-day delivery in Manhattan

Sephora launched its new “store to door” service. Customers in Manhattan who order products online or over the phone can have them delivered that same day. The cost is $15 per delivery, and a $50 minimum order is required.
Amazon.com’s BeautyBar to open retail store

Amazon.com’s BeautyBar.com will soon open a physical location in Manhasset, New York. The unit will be BeautyBar’s first permanent store. It will offer about 75 high-end brands and two treatment rooms with makeup artists on staff. The company said it plans to open the store by the end of the summer. The luxury beauty product website is run by Quidsi Inc, which was acquired by Amazon in 2010 for $500 million.

Fortnum & Mason plans expansion into China and Middle East
Source: Sunday Telegraph 06-02-2011
London luxury department store Fortnum & Mason is looking at locations in the Middle East and China as it considers launching stand-alone shops outside the UK. Such a move would mark the first time the 300-year-old brand invested outside of the UK in over 80 years, the last being its Madison Avenue store in New York, which closed shortly after the Wall Street crash of 1929.
Fortnum & Mason already has 14 'stores within stoes' in Japan, and operates a wholesale business in 17 countries, supplying the likes of Le Bon Marche in Paris and Williams-Sonoma in the US. It claims, too, to sell more scones in Paris than in London - testifying to the cachet of the quintessentially British.
According to CEO Beverley Aspinall, 'We're definitely looking at China. It's a bit like Japan was 20 years ago. Most luxury brands trade well in the Far East and China is such an obvious thing to do [...] You just have to wait until the time is right for your brand and I think the time is right for us now. There's a huge interest amongst Chinese customers in English brands'
However, she also added that Abu Dhabi, Dubai, and Kuwait were also 'distinct possibilities', and cited India as 'almost certainly on the agenda but probably a little bit further down the road.' All the proposed stores will be franchised, with Fortnum designing and providing the products and local partners funding the development
Fortnum & Mason was founded in 1707.

Vogue:
"Macy's is the perfect department store in the US, where everybody can find what they're looking for without ruining their budget."
The line will comprise 45 limited edition styles, featuring plenty of tweed, statement jackets and printed T-shirts. Dresses will come in various shapes, from the soft and feminine to the more sculpted and tuxedo-based.

Consumer Trends - Mintel

Mintel has predicted eight key consumer behaviour trends for 2011, examining how consumer behaviour is changing in the wake of the recession.
In this report Mintel uses exclusive online consumer research to quantify these trends, identifying the groups of consumers who will be taking them forward, as well as the likely impact on brands.
The march of technology, and its possible downsides in terms of loss of the human touch, is another of the 2011 Inspire trends (see Affection trend). Among Mintel’s respondents, it was the fun aspect of new technology that prompted the most positive responses. More than six in ten agreed that ‘I find it fun playing around with new gadgets’.
High-street retailers are finding it increasingly difficult to compete with the online experience in terms of price and convenience, but Mintel’s research found that, despite widespread recognition of the advantages of internet shopping, seven in ten still prefer to see and touch the goods before they buy.
Smartphone apps, particularly those using location-based technology, are revolutionising retailing. Mintel’s research suggests that shoppers using Marks & Spencer and Waitrose (which have both been active in the field during 2010) are particularly enthusiastic about their smartphones, and keen on using apps to make their lives easier and more interesting.
Among the social and demographic developments predicted by Mintel is an acceleration of the long-standing trend towards non-traditional gender roles in households, for example men doing more housework, and women taking more control of finances.
Getting closer to nature is one way of coping with recessionary gloom. A dominant feature of Mintel’s research into Inspire trend Modern Urban Nomads is the high level of interest in city-based nature pursuits among respondents aged under 35.

Wednesday, 20 July 2011

Boudoir Beautiful - Vogue.com July 2011

VINTAGE-INSPIRED lingerie label Alöe is set on changing the face of women's underwear. Launched in 2003 by Central Saint Martins graduate Claire Judge, the line's luxurious, understated, subtly sexy pieces have been worn by an impressive following - including Sarah Jessica Parker, Kirsten Dunst, Kate Moss and Yasmin Le Bon.

"I set up my label as I love lingerie and I saw a real gap in the market for a fashion-orientated lingerie/loungewear line," Judge told us. "The market seemed to be saturated with typically costume- styled boudoir lingerie, which for me is completely out of synch with the style of fashion I wear. I see lingerie as part of my wardrobe and an extension to my fashion expression. My silk camisoles and blouses can as easily be worn as lingerie as they can as ready-to-wear pieces."

Highlights from Judge's latest autumn/winter 2011-12 collection (available from August), include beautiful silk camisoles with lace panelling, Twenties-style one pieces with drawstring waists and cut-away backs and soft, sheer nighties with delicate embroidery. Each piece has a vintage feel, but with a contemporary, clean effect. Judge places emphasis on detail and quality, with each piece made using soft washed silk

"Beautiful lingerie makes women feel beautiful and gives women a feeling of sensuality and softness. Lingerie forms the foundation of a woman's wardrobe so it should be luxurious and beautiful," said the designer. "Each French seam, delicate pin-hem and embroidery design ensure a beautiful and high-end finish. Luxurious lingerie is the ultimate fashion indulgence; it is a daily treat."

This year Judge expanded the label, by launching a ready-to-wear line - reflecting Alöe's "pared down elegance and understated glamour.

A Winning Combination: Black White Denim - Vogue.com July 2011

BLACK WHITE DENIM, the Cheshire-based store that stocks pieces in black, white and denim, has launched online - offering wearable, versatile pieces from established and emerging names, from Preen to Vauxhall Fashion Scout winner Eudon Choi.
"I was at a friend's baby shower and, as part of the fun, was asked to describe the mum-to-be's wardrobe. I replied 'black, white and denim'," says Jo Davies, founder of Black White Denim. "When all the other women there agreed that their wardrobe could also be summed up in those three words, a light-bulb came on in my head. This was my chance to fulfil a lifelong dream not just to open a boutique but one based on a concept that the vast majority of women would buy into."
The store stocks exclusive looks from Richard Nicoll, Mark Fast and Preen, as well as jewellery from Lara Bohinc and Husam el Odeh - with an emphasis on carrying, as its founder says, "elegant and timeless pieces that will never go out of fashion". Aiming to compete with MY-THERERSA and MY-WARDROBE, the company more recently selling stocking vintage Christian Dior, as well as new labels such as Jan Ahldren. Items range from £50 - £2,000.
"The icing on the cake is that, over time, whatever you buy from Black White Denim pretty much goes with whatever you've bought from us previously and it's that sort of versatility the savvy shopper is searching for today," says Davies. "It doesn't matter how old you are, what size you are, whether you work or not. It doesn't matter what style you have - Black, white and denim crosses all of those things seamlessly."
http://www.vogue.co.uk/news/2011/07/14/black-white-denim-online-store

Micro-Nutrient Couture : Emily Crane - Vimeo July 2011

Material culture in clothing and fashion has always been linked to technology - from looms to sewing machines to the processes of harvesting raw materials and transforming them into 'cloth'. However, the concept and materiality of textile is being contested with new technical practices which subvert conventional expectations of what cloth should be.

Increasingly, material research in clothing and fashion is leading us down the path of synthetic and organic explorations to enhance garments by means of novel manufacturing technologies such as 3D printing, rapid prototyping and bio-couture, by reconsidering harvesting philosophies such as local production, and by implementing scientific novelties such as carbon nanotubes and shape memory alloys.

What is more, many of these innovations at the textile substrate have transformed the relationship between our bodies and clothing - presenting us with a varied field of material expression and somatic experience. This event seeks to ask questions about new materialities for clothing, investigates the crossover between fashion and applied uses, and probes towards a future of clothing without “cloth”.

In this edition of Test_Lab you will witness Emily Crane prepare molecular cuisine 'garments' in front of your very eyes; probe the speculative designs of Central Saint Martins’ Textile Futures ateliers with MA course director Carole Collet; join Christien Meindertsma to question what happens when you harvest wool from your own flock of sheep to then computationally knit your sweater; test out high-tech laboratory-developed garments from Grado Zero Espace and experience what it feels like to walk in Pauline van Dongen’s 'printed' shoes made in collaboration with Freedom of Creation.

The Transformation Age for Spring Trend Briefing 2011 : Director's Cut - The Future Laboratory

The Transformation Age is a video produced by Andy Baker that was shown at our Spring 2011 Trend Briefing at the Roundhouse in Camden.

This short film gives an idea of the social, environmental, political and economical changes we explore and analyse to identify emerging trends.


Westwood's Savile Row - Vogue.com July 2011

Ben Westwood, Dame Vivienne's elder son, is teaming up with Savile Row tailor Cad & the Dandy to produce a ready-to-wear collection. The tailor - which specialises in bespoke suits, including those to be worn by the groom and ushers at Zara Phillips and Mike Tindall's forthcoming nuptials - insists the collection will remain true to its luxury aesthetic, whilst possessing Westwood's signature "edge".
"We specialise in bespoke tailored suits, shirts and overcoats - but that does not mean we are too staid to indulge in a touch of trendsetting," Ian Meiers, co-founder of Cad & the Dandy, said. "We just love the exuberance of Ben's work - it's the perfect foil for the more formal pieces we deal with in our bespoke tailoring service."
Westwood debuted his menswear collection at London Fashion Week last year and his eponymous line is now stocked exclusively at A Child of the Jago, the Shoreditch boutique owned by his half-brother Joe Corre.

Beauty Futures : Salon of the Senses - The Future Laboratory July 2011

Chanel's Make Up Robots - Vogue.com June 2011

CHANEL robots will be invading Selfridges Oxford Street, London, from today.

Don't be alarmed - the five quirky robots (created entirely from Chanel make-up products), are the brainchild of Peter Philips, creative director of the brand's make-up division, and even starred in their own unique animation entitled Here Comes the Beauty Pack as part of the Chanel's new
Make-up Confidential campaign.

"A few years ago I made these little robots that were part of a headpiece I created for a tribal make-up shoot, that's where the idea first came from," explained Philips. "I then had the chance to play with these characters and do an animation, that's how my little robots came to life."
Two of Selfridges' windows - famed for their head-turning displays -  will be dedicated to the figures while, in-store, customers can purchase lip and eye products handpicked by Philips to create the robots, as well as watch the fun robot animation.