
Marte Mei Van Haaster covers the Numero may 2013 edition. Photographed by Jacob Sutton in a look from Prada’s spring collection.
Source: Fashiongonerogue.

Marte Mei Van Haaster covers the Numero may 2013 edition. Photographed by Jacob Sutton in a look from Prada’s spring collection.
Source: Fashiongonerogue.

Prada Group had another strong year with a 29% gain in revenues in 2012.
The successful performances of the Prada and Miu Miu brands and the growth of global markets resulted in registered sales of 3.29 billion euros.
“In a year characterized by a particularly difficult international economic environment, our group has made further important progress along its path of growth, consolidating its position at the head of the luxury goods sector,” stated Prada chief executive officer Patrizio Bertelli. “The strength of our brands, our ability to interpret and anticipate market trends and our global retail network continue to form the basis for our long-term growth strategy.”
Source: WWD


colette window
L+A was out today to pick you some beautiful windows in rue Faubourg St Honoré et rue St Honoré.
We wish you a Merry Christmas and happy holidays !

The Italian luxury firm, driven by growth in its leather goods category and a robust performance of its retail network across all geographic markets, reported a strong rise in nine-month, posting a 50 percent gain in net profits, which reached $523 million in the period ended Oct. 31.
Via WWD.
Sasha Pivovarova in a sporty glam shoot for Prada resort 2013 campaign. Steven Meissel photographs the Russian model in a neo-retro look.
Anyone starting to doubt the potential of short fashion films distributed online need only look at the results of this season’s Dior video, “Secret Garden – Versailles,” shot at the Château de Versailles by image-making maestros Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin. When YouTube viewership figures for the film’s 60-second and 3-minute versions are added together, the video has clocked over 23 million views, a staggering number that could make it the most popular fashion film ever, surpassing last season’s CGI epic “L’Odyssée de Cartier,” which currently has almost 16 million views.
[dropcap]W[/dropcap]atch this beautiful new brand film from PRADA – STRUCK. Directed Axel Lindahl on location at the Blue Lagoon, by the small Swedish village of Munsö, starring model, Clement Chabernaud, as our confused subject. Extremely well done and colored.
Via Selectism
[dropcap]A[/dropcap]fter the successful collaboration between Baz Luhrmann and Miuccia Prada for the film adaptation of ‘Romeo & Juliet’ in 1996, it is again the designer standing behind Prada and Miu Miu who will design the costumes for Luhrmann’s next big film project ‘The Great Gatsby’.
For Prada’s Fall ‘12 campaign, Steven Meisel photographed Miuccia Prada’s “virtual princesses,” models Iselin Steiro, Madison Headrick, Elza Luijendijk, andVanessa Axente, in a futurist enclosure and shifted camera angles to create playful illusions.
With their strong gazes, dip-dyed hair, and embellished, geometric-print clothes, these fashion avatars look fit for a video game.
Via Style.com
After almost three years of absence, Prada opened last week its new flagship store in Dubai within the Mall of the Emirate. The new Prada store, designed by architect Roberto Baciocchi, spreads over 1.140 sqm and features separate womenswear and menswear sections with ready-to-wear, footwear, bags, accessories and a “made-to-measure” area dedicated to bespoke clothing.
Prada’s operates in the UAE through a strategic partnership with luxury retailer Al Tayer. Speaking about expansion in the Middle East, Stefano Cantino, Prada Group’s communications and external relations director said ”We are looking at Kuwait as a next step, then Qatar and shortly Abu Dhabi, where we have a team searching for locations. They are investigating potential places but it will take at least two or three years and really depends on availability of location and complete opportunities.”
Inside, the store is a succession of symmetrical rooms along a majestic marble and mirror gallery. Precious, tall display cases in burnished metal with a very thin frame and marble drawers stand out on a chequered black and white marble floor-a legacy from Prada’s historic image-which is distorted to become almost optical, with flight lines highlighting the display’s key points.
The oval counters, in burnished metal and crystal on a marble stand, are a modern reinterpretation of the counters found in Prada’s historic store of Gallerria Vittorio Emanuele II in Milan.
Women’s footwear areas are defined by their beige carpeting, green velvet walls and the ‘’Clover Leaf’’ sofas, also in green velvet, designed by Verner Panton and exclusively reproduced for Prada.
Photos fromDubaiChronicle
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Prada taps some of Hollywood’s most famous leading men for their Autumn/Winter 2012 campaign. Starring Gary Oldman, Garrett Hedlund, Jamie Bell and Willem Dafoe – the same gents who highlighted the collection on the Milan runway earlier this year.
The Autumn/Winter campaign transposes “cinematic codes to the world of menswear in the series of three-quarter length portraits.” Take a look at the preview of the campaign.
(Via Selectism)
[dropcap]T[/dropcap]he Metropolitan’s newest exhibit at the Costume Institute is not one to be compared to recent shows past. Curators Harold Koda and Andrew Bolton had the desire to create a show that centered its focus on women. The current show at the Costume Institute is the first to focus solely on a female designer in seven years, its last being the Coco Chanel show in 2005. It is a noted change of pace after coming off the high that was “Savage Beauty” Alexander McQueen’s retrospective; “Impossible Conversations” is a more understated study of the relationship between designers Elsa Schiaparelli and Miuccia Prada.
Although it may center on the female, “Impossible Conversations” is far from a dry feminist study. The name and the idea for the show is taken from a segment featured in Vanity Fair during the 1930s with the same title. It was an almost surreal series that fabricated conversations between important figures from all areas, one of which included Schiaparelli and Stalin (of which Schiaparelli won). Koda and Bolton wanted a visual of the two designers conversing and solicited the expertise of filmmaker Baz Luhrmann, to digitally compose it. Using separately filmed interview clips of Prada and Australian actress Judy Davis whom played Schiaparelli, Luhrmann makes the impossible conversation possible. First projected in the beginning of the exhibit, the dialogue continues on and off throughout the show.
The show is broken down room by room, allowing the designers’ work to speak on its own in some areas while focusing more on the comparison and similarities in other areas. A sort of marriage of designs is displayed in two categories “dark chic” and “naïf chic”. “Dark chic” has the dominating influence of Prada; clearly made for the adult, “dark chic” displays baroque, and polished pieces that seem to cast an uneasy feeling in the space. In contrast Schiaparelli reigns in “naïf chic”, with dresses in youthful shapes and fantastically absurd fabrics.
The final gallery, a surrealistic and disorienting hall of mirrors and cases, created by artist Nathan Crowley, is the area that strangely lets the viewer see the designs of Schiaparelli and Prada most clearly. It is in the final act where the single pieces are given their time to speak. Several well known pieces are displayed in the final gallery, where they exist together in a single space while also commanding the sole attention of the viewer.
Photos courtesy of:
New York magazine http://nymag.com/daily/fashion/2012/05/first-looks-the-mets-schiaparelli-and-prada-costume-instute.html
and The New York Times http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/11/arts/design/schiaparelli-and-prada-impossible-conversations-at-met.html?pagewanted=all

The Oscar-winning director attended the screening of the short film titled “A Therapy”, which has British actors Ben Kingsley and Helena Bonham Carter play a shrink and his pouting Prada-clad patient.
“It’s a sort of anti-ad,” he said afterwards, joking that he wanted to show the world that he was as good at making short films as he was at long ones.
The Kingsley character quickly loses interest in Bonham Carter’s chatter as she lies on his couch, and he turns his attention to the fur coat she hung on a rack upon her arrival in his office.
He ends up stroking his face with its fur collar as a final caption reads “Prada Suits Everyone”.
( Via DAWN.COM)
[dropcap]F[/dropcap]ashion and fantasy collide in the latest showing from Prada. For the Prada Spring/Summer 2012 lookbook Real Fantasies, AMO/OMA explores the nostalgia of hot rodding, golfing, picnicking, the space race, and other wholesome past times.
Told through a sequence of 100% handmade collages – continuing a new tradition of handcraftsmanship started last season – Real Fantasies is a palimpsest of photography, graphics and text that pulls the user into a realm of hyper reality.