| |
Designer Clothing News Archive03-Oct-2007
Designer, Retailer Team Up To Woo Customers (The New York Sun) Under a tree of paper apples, designer Wenlan Chia uses giant pink needles to teach a group of 30-something city women how to knit. Across the room, an assistant in ankle boots and a fitted vest helps the knitters with the pattern for a "Shopping Tunic," one of the designs in Ms. Chia's book, "Big City Knits." The chunky-chic tunic is also sold for $228 at Anthropologie, the women's clothing ...
Consignment shop offers deeply discounted designer labels (Norwalk Advocate) Randi Henry doesn't believe that everyone in Greenwich wants or can afford to buy a $500 designer dress that might be worn once, then placed in mothballs.
Tesco's Eco Love Affair With Designer Sours (Forbes) Katharine Hamnett regrets using a major supermarket chain as the launch-pad for her organic clothing range.
NYPD arrest 13 in fake designer clothing raid (Asbury Park Press) New York City police say they arrested 13 people after raiding a factory that manufactured millions of dollars worth of counterfeit brand clothing. Police say the 13 arrested in Monday's early morning raid in Queens were facing various trademark counterfeiting charges. Their names were not released. Police say the factory was being used to churn out fake clothes with brand names like Polo Ralph ...
Dragonfly alights in Ship (The Sentinel) Dragonfly, a new shop in downtown Shippensburg, offers a range of clothing for women.
PETA wants ban on snake and crocodile skin use in designer fashion (ANI via Yahoo! India News) London, Oct 2 (ANI): Exotic skins are making waves on the British ramp this season, but animal rights activists are protesting the use of snake and crocodile skins in designer fashion. People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), claims that some snakes are being skinned alive in order to fulfill the huge demand generated by the fashion industry. To discourage the use of animal skins, ...
Bonds' home run ball donated (The News Record) I do not wear the Ecko clothing brand. I never have, and I probably never will, but I do have a newfound respect for Ecko's designer, Marc Ecko. He frivolously purchased a baseball for $752,467. It is insane. It is absurd.
Back to Designer Clothing
Back to Designer Clothing News Archive
|
|