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Tag: Dolce & Gabbana

  • This Abercrombie Trench Is $160, TikTok Famous, and Giving Serious The Row Vibes

    This Abercrombie Trench Is $160, TikTok Famous, and Giving Serious The Row Vibes

    When the style, called the Avio Trench Coat, finally dropped six months later, I immediately added it to all of my usual wish lists and trackers so that I’d be the first to know if it ever made it to sale season. The coat costs $3450 full price, so even with a discount, I might not be able to swing it. That’s why I perked up when I spotted another gray trench in a slew of TikTok videos centered around new Abercrombie & Fitch items. I’ve never been very good at waiting, and my mind is so stuck on gray trench coats that I won’t be able to do anything at 100% until I’ve quelled these urges. Yes, I ordered the Abercrombie alt, and yes, you should do the exact same thing. 

    Though I haven’t received mine yet, TikTok is littered with enough positive reviews to put to rest any worries that it won’t hit the spot. “It’s giving Inspector Gadget chic,” said @alychapss. “Loving this trench coat,” another user, @otherangelawalters, wrote. Follow their lead by scrolling down and shopping the viral Abercrombie trench that’s $160 and giving serious The Row vibes. 

    Eliza Huber

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  • Katy Perry Told Me All About the “Yummiest” Fragrance In Existence

    Katy Perry Told Me All About the “Yummiest” Fragrance In Existence

    Who What Wear: How would you describe the fragrance in your own words?

    Katy Perry: It’s all my favorite things: vanilla, candied citrus—it’s just the yummiest fragrance! So good you can almost taste it.

    WWW: Is Devotion a daytime or nighttime scent?

    Perry: It’s definitely an all-day fragrance. The citrus notes are light and bright for day, but the vanilla notes make it sexy for night, too.

    WWW: What made you want to collaborate with Dolce & Gabbana? And why is this partnership a good fit?

    Perry: I remember wearing this leopard print Dolce & Gabbana dress on Warped Tour all the way back in 2008, and I’ve worn them everywhere from the Met Gala to Coachella, to America Idol to my music video for “When I’m Gone.” They feel like a part of my style DNA, and I’ve always loved working with Stefano and Domenico.

    WWW: What was your experience working with the brand, and on this campaign?

    Perry: I’ve had such a fun experience on this campaign. When you start the relationship with three days on Capri, you can’t go wrong! I got to be on a boat for some of the scenes, and then walked all around the island, getting in some pizza and pasta along the way. It’s also been wonderful being in NYC and seeing my fans who also love Dolce & Gabbana at Macy’s!

    Drew Elovitz

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  • 15 Italian Perfumes That Make You Smell Expensive Instantly for Less Than $195

    15 Italian Perfumes That Make You Smell Expensive Instantly for Less Than $195

    Despite my lifelong connection to the lush, green, and incredibly picturesque mountains and forests of the Pacific Northwest, I’ve always been drawn to the sun- and sand-covered visuals of Italy. Now don’t get me wrong—I loved my childhood exploring the rocky shorelines of the Pacific in the company of the towering evergreen trees, but a part of me has always dreamt of having my very own Eat, Pray, Love adventure. While I’ve yet to experience the bright Italian coastline firsthand, my love for Italian heritage brands with extensive fragrance lines has been more than enough to sustain me until I can travel there myself.

    With that in mind, I’ve taken it upon myself to round up 15 of my favorite Italian perfume from these brands, ranging from Bulgari’s powdery-fresh Eau Parfumée au Thé fragrances to Gucci’s iconic florals (in equally aesthetic, vintage-inspired bottles) and Prada’s modern amber and gourmand scents for the high-fashion minimalist in all of us. Each fragrance will make you feel rich in more ways than one, all falling under $200. Ready to embark on an olfactory journey through Italy’s biggest fashion houses? Keep reading.

    Maya Thomas

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  • How TikTok Remade the Runway

    How TikTok Remade the Runway

    Thom Browne swears he doesn’t plan on going viral when putting together his fashion shows; he doesn’t even think about how they might play on the internet.

    Instead, he crafts his shows—which, really, are much more like pieces of theater—to tell a story to those attending in real life. “For me, it’s more interesting that you get this more intimate experience in regard to what the collection is saying, or what I want to say through the collection,” Browne says.

    Still, when you cast Golden Globe-winning actress Michaela Jaé Rodriguez as a modern-day Cinderella and send her down the runway in a pink tulle Cadillac to close the show, as Browne did for his spring 2023 collection, you’re bound to attract more than a few eyeballs online. And on TikTok, there are a lot of eyeballs to be had: The hashtag #fashionmonth alone had a staggering 228 million views in September 2022.

    A pixelated look from Loewe spring 2023 nodded to the digital world.

    Peter White/Getty Images

    Fashion has always found its way onto social media, whether through archive-obsessed Tumblr accounts or the in-depth analyses found on high-fashion Twitter—and, of course, Instagram, with its reputation for glossy images, has been the reigning platform of choice for many years. But, armed with a video-forward ethos, TikTok is poised to take over.

    “Instagram almost feels like it’s very controlled, like a traditional media outlet,” says Alyssa Mosley, a stylist and content creator who has found an audience as a TikTok creator (@alyssamosley_). “[TikTok] is like the people’s platform.”

    Intentional or otherwise, the spring 2023 season was packed with eye-catching moments perfect for the kind of bite-size videos that find success on TikTok. Courrèges created a giant sandpit for its runway, while Balenciaga’s catwalk took the form of a dystopian mudslide. Gucci’s twin parade, with a cast of 68 pairs of identical twins revealed in a surprise finale twist, was a huge hit on the app, too. “I definitely think the larger brands with the budgets have been trying a little bit harder to achieve those viral moments,” Mosley says. “A lot of brands are really having fun with their production and set design to draw attention.”

    pairs of twin models walking at gucci's spring 2023 show

    Gucci’s spring 2023 show featured 68 pairs of identical twins.

    Gucci via Pixelformula/SIPA/Shutterstock

    But perhaps no show illustrates the power of going viral quite like Coperni’s. In August 2022, the #coperni hashtag was doing admirably, clocking some 1.9 million views. Then, at the end of September, the brand closed its spring 2023 fashion show with a bang. Bella Hadid stepped onto a platform and was promptly sprayed down with a white material. With a few minor tweaks—a tug at the shoulders, a cut up the front to reveal some leg—Hadid took her finale walk in a dress literally created on her body less than a minute before.

    The moment went viral just about everywhere, but on social media, the proof is in the numbers: On TikTok, #coperni jumped to 7.3 million views in September, and then an astonishing 123 million views in October. (Hadid saw her name gain power, too, with #bellahadid going from 272 million views in August to 524 million views in October.)

    Another quick route to viral success? Tapping into celebrity, of course. Famous people have been a mainstay in fashion for decades, but brands looking to make extra headlines know an A-list name goes a long way. Dolce & Gabbana partnered with Kim Kardashian for its spring 2023 collection, while Balmain and Versace featured famous faces on their runways (Cher and Paris Hilton, respectively). For his production, Browne tapped actress Gwendoline Christie to play “Charming” alongside Rodriguez’s “Cindy.”

    And, because TikTok has minted so many celebrities, designers are now inviting popular creators to sit front row at their shows, whether it’s Addison Rae at Givenchy or Wisdom Kaye at Ralph Lauren. “A lot of brands are really utilizing that celebrity, especially youth—so TikTok stars who wouldn’t traditionally be in the fashion space are being invited to a lot of different shows because they do draw attention,” Mosley says.

    True fashion fanatics need not fret, though: The focus is still on the clothes. Loewe’s punchy, trompe l’oeil pixelated pieces cut through the noise, as did Maximilian Davis’s red-tinged debut at Ferragamo. Going viral on TikTok is just another way that designers can spread their message to an entirely new—and, apparently, eager—audience.

    “I love putting provocative ideas in front of people. I think it is important to open people’s minds, open them up to really thinking differently about clothing or, culturally, what’s going on,” Browne says of his own viral moment. “I like that there’s a reaction. I do. I’m not doing my job if there’s just a mediocre reaction.”

    This article appears in the February 2023 issue of ELLE.

    Headshot of Tyler McCall

    Freelance Writer

    Tyler McCall is a writer whose work has appeared in The Cut, GQ, Porter and more. She is the former editor-in-chief of Fashionista.com.

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  • The Trending Color That Won the 2023 Golden Globes Red Carpet

    The Trending Color That Won the 2023 Golden Globes Red Carpet

    Hollywood’s most-watched celebs gathered on Jan. 10 at the 2023 Golden Globes Awards, and some swapped viral Barbiecore pink for something much more regal.

    Purple, in a variety of shades, was the trending color on the Golden Globes red carpet. Sheryl Lee Ralph opted for a floor-hitting embellished gown by Aliétte (and rocked matching colored eye shadow for the finishing touch) in a vibrant jewel tone. Niecy Nash appeared in a rhinestone-studded Dolce & Gabbana ensemble, complete with a billowing cape, in a rich eggplant. Similarly, Selena Gomez‘s velvet Valentino number was washed in a deep, almost black ultraviolet, with lighter balloon sleeves. 

    India Roby

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  • The Unbearable Lightness of Daphne Sullivan

    The Unbearable Lightness of Daphne Sullivan

    Style Points is a weekly column about how fashion intersects with the wider world.

    She has a seemingly endless, trousseau-like wardrobe; an affinity for matching sets that is unrivaled even by 1989-era Taylor Swift, an aperitivo permanently welded to her hand, and a travel adapter on her Dyson AirWrap. Daphne Sullivan, the object of everyone’s collective obsession on The White Lotus, seems to have the fashion community in a death grip. After the last episode, Tyler McCall tweeted: “I’m sorry…I have to live my truth…even though I know we’re meant to find her a bit basic I LOVE Daphne’s wardrobe on WHITE LOTUS…”

    Even the contents of her medicine cabinet (and we’re not talking about the Vintner’s Daughter) are dissected online: When writer Kelsey McKinney asked her followers what antidepressant cocktail they thought Daphne was on, one responded: “I think it’s called money.”

    daphne sullivan on the white lotus season 2

    Daphne’s Pucci bikini garnered particular praise.

    //HBO

    Money is definitely a part of the appeal, but it goes beyond that. Daphne, played by Meghann Fahy, represents a fantasy not just of wealth, but of blithe ignorance (she doesn’t remember if she voted.) That is perfectly encapsulated in the Barbie getups costume designer Alex Bovaird puts her in: a matching Prada set with a prominent triangle logo; a mod-tastic Pucci bikini; another set, this one gilded, from Dolce & Gabbana. (You can just imagine her swanning into a department store asking for “all your Italian stuff!”)

    daphne sullivan on the white lotus season 2

    A matching Prada set worn on a day trip with Harper (Aubrey Plaza).

    Fabio Lovino/HBO

    While her clothes bear designer labels, they’re awkward translations of what’s in currently in fashion. And yet, we can’t look away. Especially post-pandemic, Daphne and her wardrobe appeal to the part of our lizard brain that just wants to throw on a Farm Rio dress and bask in the sun. No thoughts, just crop tops!

    daphne sullivan on the white lotus season 2

    Colorful, maximalist dresses are a Daphne staple.

    //HBO

    The character’s insouciance is part of her appeal; the only thing not stuffed into her designer luggage appears to be existential angst. Nothing seems to perturb her, whether it’s the specter of her husband cheating on her or her dining companions getting embarrassingly drunk. She and her husband, Cameron (Theo James), in their uncomplicated happiness, remind me of a 2022 version of Gerald and Sara Murphy, the Lost Generation expats and F. Scott Fitzgerald pals whose lives were chronicled in Living Well Is the Best Revenge (an apt motto for the couple). Or perhaps, depending on what befalls them in Sunday’s finale, Daisy and Tom Buchanan. Everyone on the show exudes privilege, but they do it with the least self-consciousness. Whatever else you want to say about their wardrobes, they aren’t hiding their sartorial light under a bushel. They don’t expend all their energy on trying to throttle back and appear tasteful. They want to look rich.

    audrey hepburn roman holiday style

    The show’s costume designer has cited Audrey Hepburn (seen here in Roman Holiday with Gregory Peck) as an influence.

    Bettmann

    The mythical idea of “resort” in fashion has become less about a physical trip to an actual resort (White Lotus or otherwise) and more about escapism. Resort collections often contain more watered-down versions of the harder-edged runway trends, sanding away the more avant-garde aspects of a designer’s work—which makes them perfect choices for Daphne. But they also have an element of costume to them that’s made for look-at-my vacation-Boomerang-level peacocking (you just know Daphne still posts Boomerangs.)

    daphne sullivan on the white lotus season 2

    Brigitte Bardot, vacationing in Capri in the ’60s.

    Keystone-France

    When Americans visit Italy, “they bring their A-game,” Bovaird told Variety. The show plays with the trope of tourists soaking up the Old World, a tradition that dates back to the winsome heroines of A Room With a View and Daisy Miller. He pulls from midcentury references that fit the show’s cinematic allusions (Fellini, Antonioni, The Godfather.) And while it may occasionally be cringeworthy to watch people try this hard, it’s always entertaining.

    With fashion’s maximalist tides ebbing and a pre-recession austerity casting a pall over style in general, the show’s splashy looks are as refreshing as a beachside spritz. Daphne is the kind of person I’d probably hate in real life. But I have to admit, she kind of makes me want that Prada set.

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  • I Love Light Blue, But These 7 Other Dolce & Gabbana Perfumes Are Just as Good

    I Love Light Blue, But These 7 Other Dolce & Gabbana Perfumes Are Just as Good

    As beauty editors, one might say we always have our finger on the pulse when it comes to what the absolute best perfumes on the market are. More specifically, we also tend to know which designer perfumes are worthy of a spot on your vanity. You name it, we’ve probably tried it. Although every designer label has its own unique set of fragrances, there are always those that manage to remain a cult-loved item even years after its release.

    Dolce & Gabbana’s Light Blue ($62) is one of them. The classic, timeless scent has remained a best seller for the brand (and beauty-editor favorite) since its release in 2001. Although I love the fresh, fruity, and woody scent myself, I think there are a few other Dolce & Gabbana perfumes out there that absolutely shouldn’t be slept on. Keep reading below—I’m breaking down all my favorites in no particular order because who can manage the impossible task of ranking them all?

    Shawna Hudson

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