Showing posts with label Vogue. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vogue. Show all posts

Friday, March 18, 2011

Vogue's Top Spring Picks

The weather is finally warming up and after a brutal winter, spring is on everyone's minds! So, it's perfect timing for Vogue to release their top 10 picks that are affordable for spring.

All the items on the list are under $500. Vogue features classic items, like the tan United Colors of Benetton trench coat for $139, a Gerard Deral striped cashmere sweater for $199, and a perfectly cut white tee by Theory for $100.



All Photos Courtesy of Vogue.com

At Qi we believe in affordable luxury. That is why we love offering high-quality clothing at fair prices.

If you're looking for classic staples for spring, try our Lilac Tee. It is 100% cashmere and features a scoop neck and pocket. Perfect for everything from work to running errands on the weekend, this tee can be worn again and again.


Lilac Tee- $150

And if you're looking for stripes, look no further. This season Qi offers a few different striped styles. Our Rip Tide Cardigan is the perfect touch to a simple outfit like the short and tank combination shown.


Rip Tide Cardigan-$102.50

Our Whispering Wave T is another great piece to have in your closet this spring. With its deep V-Neck and asymmetrical hem, the tee is casual, trendy, and comfortable.


Whispering Wave T-$98

For more closet staples, shop QiCashmereShop.com!

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Vogue China



Have you seen Qi in Vogue China? Pick up the issue and see our Catwoman Skirt featured in the magazine!

Visit QiCashmereShop.com to view the rest of the fall collection.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Fashion and Technology

These days, technology has infiltrated our lives so deeply that it is hard to imagine living without it. Constantly being within arms reach of a cell phone, iPod, laptop, and now the iPad, has changed the way we look and react to the world around us. It certainly has turned the fashion industry upside down.

The viral effect of the Internet nurtured the creation of fashion blogs, which have become wildly popular in the last few years. The consistent and fast-paced nature of the Internet meant that bloggers could get news out to the public weeks before the monthly fashion publications hit the newsstand.

In order to compete with the immediacy of the Internet, publications like Vogue were forced to reevaluate their audience and market. In some cases, this may have caused some bitterness between bloggers and editors.
PC: [Patrick McMullan via NYMAG]

In an address to the Pratt Institute, Anna Wintour discussed the evolution of the industry and in a calculated compliment expressed her feelings about blogs:
"We love as much coverage of fashion as possible. We don’t care at all where it comes from, and we embrace bloggers and video and social networking, and anyone that’s talking about fashion is a good thing. And we now have our own website that incorporates all of that. But I think what’s interesting to us with this new phenomenon that ‘everyone’s a fashion editor, everyone’s a fashion writer’ is that all of that actually helps Vogue, because we have access and the understanding of fashion that, forgive me, but maybe some bloggers and some of the newcomers to this world have a little bit less experience of, but as I said, the more the merrier. We embrace it."


Between rivaling for front-row seats at fashion shows and racing to stay relevant, tension between the "serious" publications and the fashion bloggers increased...until now.

Vogue.com has announced that it will soon be disaffiliating itself with Style.com and will unveil their new site in September. It seems Wintour has more fully embraced technology; perhaps she's grown to see it not as a fleeting trend, like last season's neon, but as something that's here to stay,like a classic trench coat. They hope that the site will surpass Vogue’s competition and have worked a lot to develop it. For now there seems to be peace between the Vogue editor and technology--she recently professed to owning an iPad and even admitted that “of course” she reads fashion blogs.

The advancements in technology has not only put pressure on major publications, but on all tiers of the industry. For instance it has opened up the doors for a person to do more than one thing in the industry.

Nina Garcia, fashion editor at Marie Claire and a regular judge on Project Runway, revealed that she thinks being a fashion editor requires one to appear on television.
"The fashion editor as it used to be has changed. Now you have to wear many hats, and whoever tells you differently is wrong. Now you’re on TV, whether you want it or not.”
[NYTimes]

PC: [Getty Images]

Editors aren't the only ones having to adapt--designers are feeling the pressure too.
Shirley Cook, CEO of Proenza Schouler, told the New York Times of the challenges the Internet poses:
"In today’s world, to be successful in fashion you’re required to do it all. The Internet is changing how designers work: “It’s actually forcing the designers to be the leaders in fashion again . . . The Internet has brought a wealth of information and also boredom. All those blogs and new ways to dress and shop. For me, it means we have to be much more on our game.”


The fact that the face-paced fashion world is constantly evolving, and as soon as something is "in" it's already on its way "out," certainly poses some challenges for those who work in it, but being more on the game, as Cook puts it, is certainly something consumers will reap the benefits of. After all, apply pressure to a coal and you'll get a diamond.

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Oil, Oil Everywhere...


The oil leak may have been stopped, but the controversy continues. Vogue Italia has attracted criticism for mixing politics and fashion in their August issue’s “Oil and Water” shoot. Photographed by Stephen Meisel, the shoot stars Kristen McMenamy, betrothed in an oil-soaked feather gown, who appears incapacitated and washed up on shore. Editor-in-chief Franca Sozzani admits that the shoot is “shocking to see” but that the message being conveyed is very important. She reminds readers to “[b]e careful about nature” and “take more care about nature.”

However, some people do not share Sozzani’s perspective on the shoot. Many residents of the Gulf argue that Vogue Italia is cheapening a grave, life-altering catastrophe by glamorizing it. Take a peek at the photos below and decide for yourself whether the magazine did a tasteful job in mixing art and fashion with social commentary or if you feel Vogue Italia should have steered clear of the serious issue: [Styleist]


All Pictures Courtesy of: Vogue Italia

Here at Qi, we tend to agree with Franca Sozzani—the pictures, while provocative, depict the environmental tragedy in a creative and realistic way. We commend Vogue Italia for making the disaster a global issue and preventing it from going unnoticed. Qi especially approves of the message Sozzani intended to send—a reminder to examine our society’s environmental impact and make conscious efforts towards a sustainable future.


This season Qi is celebrating the increasing social concern for environmental conservation. Our Holiday 2010 collection features pieces that are adorned in beautiful feathers. We will be donating 10% of the proceeds of the feathered garments to the National Wildlife Federation to help aid in the clean up of the Gulf. Qi is also saying no to plastic and encouraging others to do the same. We created the Mother Nature tote bag to serve as a fashionable reminder to save our planet. With its inspirational phrases such as, “Mother Nature Loves Us, Love Her Back” and “Make A Change, Start A Trend, Go Green,” we aim to inspire everyone to make changes that will benefit the earth.