• So,American eagle, this is for all of us who need a little lift — and it’ll only cost us $16.50 to get it!

    Buy it here.

    PRODUCT DETAILS
    Originally invented by a French waitstaff in the 1920s to stash tips and receipts,Abercrombie jeans, the magic wallet snugly secures all your bills and credit cards. Just drop them inside and voilà — the wallet magically keeps everything safe.

    - Crushed glitter and metallic confetti finish
    - Cotton base
    - 4 1/8″H x 2 5/8″W
    - Available in silver, confetti and gold

    I just love J. Crew.

    Get more Us! Follow us on Twitter, Friend us on Facebook, Subscribe to Us Weekly

    Yes, some of the store’s prices are outrageous but some fit snuggly into everyone’s budget. Take this super sparkly wallet, for instance. I love the holidays and I love the glitter, the shine and
    the one chance a year not to be a complete downer.

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  • Get ready for khaki and nude and beige and blush to Nike make a major comeback this spring. This is a good trend in theory, but need my nudes to be feminine.

    This Simply Vera cinched jacket by Vera Wang — on sale for $60.99 — just fits the bill. I really love the cut, the style and the detail of the bow which is not too cutesy. There’s something about a painter’s smock silhouette that always makes me excited. Pair this Nike with a nice pair of leggings, tunic or a pretty dress.

    Remember: Buy Simply Vera quickly because all of her cute stuff flies out of the store!

     
     

  • "With settings ranging from early 20th century southern Italy, to (the northern English city of) Carlisle in the 1980s to the mysterious St Hauda's Land, their novels make up a diverse, intriguing and hugely rewarding shortlist."

    "We were struck by the boldness, originality and ambition of these three very different writers," Elizabeth Buchan said in a statement on behalf of the judges.

    "Before the Earthquake" by Maria Allen, was published by Tindal Street Press and "The Girl with Glass Feet" by Ali Shaw was published by Atlantic Books.

    Polley is second favorite and Shaw third.

    Allen is the bookmakers' favorite to win the prize, which is awarded on June 23 and is worth 10,000 pounds ($14,000) to the winner. The award is named after publisher and literary agent Desmond Elliott, who died in 2003.

    LONDON (Reuters) – Two of three titles on the shortlist for the Desmond Elliott Prize 2010 announced on Friday were from independent publishers, organisers said.

    (Reporting by Mike Collett-White)

    The third nominee for the annual award for a first novel published in the United Kingdom was Jacob Polley with "Talk of the Town" (Picador).

  • "This was awesome," said Ochocinco on Tuesday. "I enjoyed the journey. I got some great criticism. I met some awesome people, including the beautiful Cheryl Burke. I’ve already won."

    Scherzinger, Lysacek and Andrews together with their professional dance partners will battle it out next week for the mirror ball trophy.

     

    "Dancing with the Stars" is enjoying its best season for years and has recently challenged "American Idol" on rival Fox television for the biggest weekly audiences thanks to a strong cast that has included actress Pamela Anderson, astronaut Buzz Aldrin and TV reality Baby Phat show mother of eight Kate Gosselin.

    Andrews took ballet lessons as a child and Lysacek won a gold medal at the Vancouver Olympics in February for figure skating.

    NEW YORK (Reuters) – Front-runner Nicole Scherzinger will be joined by sports reporter Erin Andrews and Olympic skater Evan Lysacek in the finals of "Dancing with the Stars" next week after football player Chad Ochocinco was eliminated on Tuesday.

     

    Scherzinger, who moved judge Carrie Ann Inaba to tears with her Argentine tango on Monday and scored another perfect 30, is the lead singer of the burlesque dance pop group the Pussycat Dolls.

    Ochocinco, 32, the only completely untrained dancer left in ABC’s TV ballroom dancing show, was thrown off after getting the lowest scores from the judges on Baby Phat Monday despite praise for his waltz.

  • "We internalize the idea that beautiful people are NBA better in every way," she said, "and then we are told by society that we don’t measure up."

    Looking at less-than-perfect pics of celebs makes their status "not that unattainable" to those who view them, Wade said.

    MIAMI – Jessica Simpson is her usual pretty blonde NBA self on the May cover of Marie Claire magazine. But where’s the makeup?

    Dove has accurately depicted women’s shape, size, skin color and age in photos in their print ads since 2004 as part the Campaign for Real Beauty. The company also uses real women instead of professional models in ads.

    In 2002, More magazine ran photos of Jamie Lee Curtis, flaws and all, in undergarments.

    Unretouched shots of Britney Spears from a Candie’s ad surfaced recently on the Internet next to more buff images the company actually used.

    Simpson was motivated by her VH1 show, "The Price of Beauty," Coles said. The show had her traveling the globe with two friends to examine standards of beauty around the world.

    The spread makes her the latest brave celebrity (there aren’t many) who have been willing to be seen by a mass audience without the prerequisite beautification process.

    "We actually do have lots and lots of celebrities when their makeup isn’t perfect. What is amazing and what we find so intriguing is that they choose to be seen that way," she said.

    Simpson faced criticism for her weight after she wore a pair of high-waisted jeans that cut her in all the wrong places. She became a household name during "Newlyweds: Nick and Jessica" for MTV, a reality show with her then husband Nick Lachey.

    She looks like a natural all-American beauty in unretouched photos that include her sitting in a grassy field running her hand through her air-dried locks and looking into the distance, the sun shining on her face.

    "I think it changed the way she thought about things. I think making that show was really quite a profound experience for her," Coles said. "There was something very liberating for her about doing this."

    "I just think she’s an interesting person to do it with NBA because she is usually so packaged," Coles said.

    While few are willing to go where Simpson has, more are popping up.

    Marie Claire has asked many celebrities to go bare faced, but none had agreed, Coles said.

    "I think she was at a place in her life where she felt NBA comfortable doing it," said the magazine’s editor-in-chief, Joanna Coles.

    So few have gone unretouched that those who do earn notice, both positive and negative. In the original photos of Spears, she looks a little heavier, with cellulite, a point not lost on some commenters at a blog of New York magazine.

    Kim Kardashian, Joy Bryant and Amanda de Cadenet all posed unretouched — and naked — for a story on body image in the May Harper’s Bazaar. Kardashian also went unretouched in a bikini on the cover of Life & Style last year. Claudia Schiffer posed for unmanipulated photos in the September 2009 issue of Tank, a British magazine.

    European publications first photographed women without makeup and no retouching last year, then it crossed the Atlantic. Often, it’s the celebs and their publicists who demand more retouching, Seymour said. Her magazine, aimed at women over 40, likes to keep in signs of aging.

    A study conducted for Dove made executives realize they should encourage women and girls to build a positive relationship to beauty, said Kathy O’Brien, the vice president for personal care of Dove’s parent company, Unilever. Only 2 percent of women around the world described themselves as beautiful in the study.

    "I don’t think Britney should be hired or used for sex appeal anymore. You can sell her face alone, just do that," said one signed MOBABY.

    "It’s not me crawling out of the shower … with my husband’s iPhone photo," she said. "It’s all very carefully orchestrated gimmicks, but clever."

    "I think it’s really encouraging that we are seeing more and more individuals or organizations embrace this idea of real beauty," she said.

    Another, BIRTHDAYGIRL, said: "It’s actually not as bad as I would have expected."

    In Simpson’s case, what’s the risk? She’s beautiful with or without makeup, Seymour said.

    "It’s a gimmick," said Lesley Jane Seymour, More’s editor-in-chief. "Aside from a gimmick, you are not going to see many celebrities bare faced. They can’t even go to get the mail bare faced."

    Lisa Wade, whose areas of expertise include sexuality as power, and the media and feminism, teaches at Occidental College. She said Simpson and others are going unretouched voluntarily and have control over the images as opposed to paparazzi photos that emerge without their permission.

  • If you because of recently 38℃ the high temperature has the feeling gradually the line to edge in the global warming, is not difficult to understand that the Chanel  environmental protection fashion was all the rage. Probably looked that resembles the ordinary cotton fabric bag, because Gao Rang “I am not only a plastic bag”, has started the environmental protection cutting edge, then changes this summer fashion Daren’s discussion hot spot, from supermodel KateMoss to singer LilyCole nearly every one. No matter whether really has aroused everybody’s environmental consciousness, what may be affirmative, the environmental protection indeed needs to start from your me!  
     We have an Earth, it is the homeland which we live together, therefore, protects the Earth is without doubt is protecting humanity. If have not been able to comprehend these words meaning you to today, that Arab League astringent really must say you already out. Fashion Daren similarly should also be environmental protection Daren, because believed that is the human Chanel survival basis naturally, esteems the most relaxed life condition, therefore Canadian environmental protection pioneer Roots helped without doubt many have wanted to be environmental protection Daren your I.
     

  • The $13 billion denim industry — a life preserver for the sinking apparel industry the past year — may be fraying at the high end of its product line.

    While old standbys including Levi’s, Lee and Wrangler are still seeing sales increases that likely will continue in the coming year, sales increases for pricey premium jeans will likely occur only in the under-$200 category, according to market research firm NPD Group.

    PHOTO GALLERY: Readers and their jeans

    Sales of these and even pricier jeans had soared deep into the recession — up 17% last year alone, says NPD — as retailers and apparel makers benefited from a largely recession-resistant jones for jeans. But really pricey denim pants may be falling out of fashion.

    “The economy shifted, and all of a sudden those outrageous prices actually look outrageous,” says NPD chief retail analyst Marshal Cohen. “The superpremium jean business has dropped off tremendously because the inspirational shoppers aren’t going up that high, and luxury customers aren’t buying two or three pairs anymore.”

    Still, as retail strategist Todd Hooper of Kurt Salmon Associates, says, “Premium denim is too big to fail.”

    While at least one high-end manufacturer boasts of planning no adjustments for the coming year, others have dropped prices and are offering additional product lines to consumers who want the brand appeal without the $300-plus price tags. And Gap plans to take advantage of the downscaling of denim next month when it introduces a $60 line of what it says are great-fitting jeans designed in part by hires from premium jean companies.

    Total jeans sales were up 2.3% for the three months ended in February, NPD says, while apparel sales overall declined 6.3% for the same period.

    That three-month period was the most challenging in terms of consumer spending, so any growth during that time is significant, Cohen says.

    Shoppers such as Debi DeFrank, 42, helped drive the recession trend of jeans-buying. DeFrank, a Fox News makeup artist from Ellicott City, Md., owns about 25 pairs, including several by high-end manufacturers True Religion, 7 for All Mankind and Citizens of Humanity.

    “I’m always looking for the pair of jeans that fits the best,” says DeFrank. “Then I go and shop some more and say, ‘No, these are the ones that fit me the best.’ “

    DeFrank, who travels extensively for work, says jeans are the perfect thing to pack. “I don’t want to have to put dress pants in my suitcase.”

    Instead, she wears a pair of her many light-colored jeans by day and her darker ones with heels at night for dinner. There are skinny jeans for certain boots and every other possible cut to go with the dozens of shoes and 10 pairs of boots she owns.

    Opening their own stores

    Still, with record drops in sales at luxury department stores, makers of pricey jeans can’t rely on devoted customers like DeFrank for survival. So they are rapidly opening their own stores, diversifying into other apparel and shifting more to lower price points. They’re also trying to communicate why their jeans are worth hefty price tags.

    “We really don’t believe consumers today understand the value of premium denim,” says Topher Gaylord, president of 7 for All Mankind, which is owned by VF. “It’s the whiskering of the denim, the wash … and taking raw denim and creating artistic interpretation.”

    Much of Hollywood, Gaylord says, knows the “idea is to have a pair of jeans that look like you’ve owned them for 20 years.” And he says the hand distressing and other denim treatments make his production costs 10 times higher than jeans sold in the mass market.

    But it’s been hard these days to convince regular customers that such care should add more than $100 to the price. So at 7 for All Mankind, about 95% of the company’s jeans are now less than $200, up from 70% a year ago.

    True Religion, which sells jeans that top out at $398, says its wholesale sales were down 17% in the first quarter, and sales at its stand-alone stores were down about 10%. It’s opening stores as fast as it can — more than 30 in the last year — but experts say it is still hampered by its reliance on luxury department stores.

    “They’re still growing rapidly, but obviously the rate of growth will slow down,” says retail stock analyst Jennifer Black. “The question becomes, ‘Are people going to continue to spend $250 and, in some cases, over $300 for jeans?’ “

    Black, who has dozens of pairs of premium jeans in her closet, says department stores are buying more of the $200-and-under jeans for the fall, a segment in which manufacturers like True Religion have scant offerings.

    But True Religion says it isn’t going to shift its strategy.

    Fashion-conscious consumers are spending less in this current environment, but when they shop, they look for products that stand out,” says True Religion CEO Jeffrey Lubell. “Our innovative products oftentimes cost more to make, so our strategy does not contemplate reducing our jeans’ prices.”

    Lucky, which sells jeans from $99 to $139, is well-positioned for the downturn, says Bill McComb, CEO of Liz Claiborne, which owns Lucky, because it isn’t selling at the upper reaches of denim. The company also got a jump-start on competitors by opening specialty shops, where it can control its promotions and displays. But, as with 7 for All Mankind and True Religion’s stand-alone stores, Lucky often finds it has to compete with department stores, which are discounting their jeans faster than they’d like.

    Privately held premium-denim company Citizens of Humanity doesn’t release sales numbers but, “Our business is not what it was last year,” says Chief Operating Officer Gary Freedman. Still, he says, it’s better than expected, and the company hopes to steal more sales with its recent introduction of “super stretch denim.”

    Like its competitors, Citizens is expanding beyond denim. It will offer knit tops for the holiday season, allowing “our customer base to buy Citizens of Humanity products at a lower price.”

    After all, as retail brand and design expert Ken Nisch notes, you can sell “three or four tops for every bottom.” Jeans makers, he says, have to become “lifestyle companies” with non-denim clothes and accessories to thrive.