January 28, 2013

Tomboys always stand out in a sea of girlie girls at fashion week. Thanks for pointing them out Tommy Ton.

January 13, 2013

Tommy Ton holding it down at Pitti for the start of men’s market week, check the rest of his flicks at style.com.

October 17, 2012

Style.com in house photographer Mr. Ton captures the street style babes at SS13. 

September 19, 2012

As always Tommy Ton captures street style perfectly at NYFW. From the looks of it, mutts and animals of all sorts are #trending pretty hard right now. Check out our favourite selects, and head over to style.com to see the rest of his photo. 

July 19, 2012

More street style steeze from the European trade shows and menswear fashion shows. 

Source | Tommy Ton for style.com

June 26, 2012

more #streetstyle inspiration from Pitti Uomo in Florence.

Source: style.com | Tommy Ton

February 25, 2012

more Miroslave Duma love. 

Last month when Paige was in Paris for the men’s shows, she ran into Miroslava at Colette, and she kindly posed for what I am sure was her millionth photo op that day!

The first photo is from earlier in the day she when she was spotted by Mr. Tommy Ton for style.com at the shows.

February 23, 2012

More Tommy Ton for style.com snaps from the women’s fashion weeks.

(Source: style.com)

February 4, 2012

mmmm menswear and men’s week. women wearing menswear. all so good.

Mr.Tommy Ton for style.com covering Pitti Uomo and men’s fashion week in Europe.

(Source: style.com)

November 27, 2011
small business sunday’s

This weekend over a bottle of wine, and a discussion on everything from the ‘occupy movement’ to ‘organic vs. local’ we mutts each made an honest assessment the power of the individual. With those thoughts swirling in my head, I decided to make an early new years resolution to become much more supportive of the entrepreneurial community of both small and local businesses. 
A small change can be shopping at the local organic grocery store and buying only $10 worth of organic veggies per month. Instead of spending all yer bucks at a grocery chain store and buying produce that has travelled across the globe, is out of season and filled with GMO’s.
To help influence change we will be posting interview’s and information on an assortment of small businesses. Here is segment of an interview from style.com on Maria Cornejo, discussing her views on keeping business (relatively) small. The photo above is of our neighbourhood organic store Multiple Organics where I purchased my $10 of veggies today!
How important is it to you to be a small business?
It’s important for me, for my own creativity, to have our own point of view in the whole market. Being a small business, you’re offering a different a point of view that hasn’t been offered everywhere else. Having a so-called small business allows us to move quickly and respond to clients and what they need, rather than by trends. When things get too homogenized, everything [becomes] very corporate. You can find the same store in every major capital in the world.
But I imagine it’s more difficult to be a small businesswoman.
It’s tough. You’re putting yourself out there every season and there’s no security blanket. But that’s half the thing that keeps it interesting and keeps it challenging. When collections become formulaic, they die very quickly. They have their moment in the sun and they’re gone. When you have your own business, you’re constantly evolving.
You mentioned your business is growing. What are you working on now?
We’re launching the shoe collection, it’s a small collection made in Italy. And bags too. When it comes to bags you can’t really fake it anywhere else [than Italy]. I like keeping things local, wherever possible. I like to keep things where they’re meant to be.
Like the clothing, which is largely made in New York.
We made 70 percent of the collection in New York, like The Row. We have the same factories. For a certain level of customer, that’s really important. It’s a luxury. To have something genuinely made and know who made it, that’s a real luxury. And to know there’s not 2,000 of it flying around the world. It means a lot to me to go to a factory and see how things are made. I think people appreciate that.

November 7, 2011
RIP: Loulou de la Falaise 
She was a model, a muse, and a designer of both clothing and jewelry. In many ways, Loulou de la Falaise was a fashion-industry renaissance woman.
It’s believed she inspired Saint Laurent’s famous ‘Le Smoking’, a tuxedo for women that led to everything from menswear details being used in women’s clothing to today’s pantsuits.Read more: YSL muse Loulou de la Falaise dies at age 63 - the Fashion Spot http://forums.thefashionspot.com/f63/ysl-muse-loulou-de-la-falaise-dies-age-63-a-153099.html#ixzz1d1x2C4iU

RIP: Loulou de la Falaise 

She was a model, a muse, and a designer of both clothing and jewelry. In many ways, Loulou de la Falaise was a fashion-industry renaissance woman.

It’s believed she inspired Saint Laurent’s famous ‘Le Smoking’, a tuxedo for women that led to everything from menswear details being used in women’s clothing to today’s pantsuits.

Read more: YSL muse Loulou de la Falaise dies at age 63 - the Fashion Spot http://forums.thefashionspot.com/f63/ysl-muse-loulou-de-la-falaise-dies-age-63-a-153099.html#ixzz1d1x2C4iU


October 8, 2011

Our fav #Tommy Ton for #style.com shots from #Paris Fashion Week.

September 18, 2011

More of TOMMY TON’s for Style.com pics from NYFW.

Loving the leather kits and Peter Pan collar!

September 17, 2011

Our favourite Torontonian TOMMY TON’s for Style.com flicks from NYFW.

I can’t get enough of Argentine stylist Marina Muñoz and camoo.

June 28, 2011

#spring/summer 2012: Woolrich Woolen Mills

“American heritage” has become such an overworked concept that it would seem impossible to keep coming up with fresh angles. Fortunately, that doesn’t seem to be the case for Mark McNairy. His initial inspiration for his Spring 2012 collection for Woolrich Woolen Mills was The Rat Patrol, the classic TV show set in the North African desert during World War II. But then, seeking a closer link to Woolrich’s roots, McNairy was also thinking of Hemingway on safari in 1954. At the same time, he was interested in the birth of technical fabrics in the 1970’s.

Reblogged from style.com

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