Showing posts with label important fashion designers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label important fashion designers. Show all posts

Thursday, October 13, 2016

A look back at watches

   "All of it came from my family’s real estate management company, of which i own 30%.
My brother owns another 30% and my father, 40%. I’m worth more than most people i know, especially my age, but I know quite a few wealthy people where I live. Two close friends of mine come from billionaire families (one’s father sold his real estate company for R$ 800 mm about 10 years ago, the other’s family owns a relatively important investment bank in Brasil).
Most of my net worth is in high-end real estate in Rio de Janeiro, a chunck of it in bonds that generate me more than 15% per year in returns, thanks to the huge interest rates down here.
My father’s net worth is much bigger though, as he earns money for a long time now (he estimates it at a little over R$ 100 mm, or about 31 mm USD, as of today.
We don’t live a lavish lifestyle for american standards - no fancy cars, no boat, but we do live in a house one could call a mansion. We also travell quite a lot and mostly first/business class, sometimes for extended periods of time. I spent 2 months in Southeast Asia at the beginning of the year, went first class in Etihad Airways, was quite a nice experience.
I’m starting a watch collection though:
The apple watch is the only one I regret buying :)
The best thing about having a high networth at such an age is the freedom it gives me. Some of my friends have to work for bosses and worry about their future and it’s great not to be in that “race”. I work quite a lot, but with my father, and we treat each other like business partners, and i often call some important shots."

Saturday, October 8, 2016

Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Runway designer shows

The original and core purpose of most fashion shows is exposure to the industry and—for couture—clientele. While there were certainly spectacular or notable moments in collections before they became explosively popular, a designer sending their clothes down the runway was essentially making a sales pitch. Retail buyers make notes on what they might be interested in purchasing based on whether to not they think it will sell. Fashion editors similarly note which items are likely to get positive feedback from the market, and both buyers and editors may also try their best to key in on common themes across different collections in a season to get ideas for a cohesive story/sales presentation. For couture houses, which were displaying often one of a kind handmade pieces, wealthy clients might also be in the audience, ready to indicate after the show which piece(s) they were willing to spend thousands of dollars on.
The Internet and social media has made it much easier for fashion houses to publish their content online, so while the physical audience for a Chanel show remains fairly exclusive, it can be watched and distributed as media ad infinitum. Turning fashion shows into a mass market advertisement for a brand and making them available to anyone with an Internet connection has turned up the volume on the entire idea of a fashion show, as brands now have another arena to compete for a share of attention and—they hope—sales.
So now the modern fashion show can really serve a huge number of different purposes, and considering that NYFW alone is estimated to have an economic impact of $900 million, it’s fertile ground for some creative marketing and retail. Designers will add impact to their shows through:"
Performance
Rick Owens Spring ‘14
Celebrity Cameos
Lady Gaga walking in the Thierry Mugler Fall ’11 show
Headline-making designs
Moschino’s Spring 2015 Barbie-themed collection
Retail Technology
The Burberry Spring 2016 Collection, which broke from fashion week tradition of showing an upcoming season and displayed clothing that was immediately purchasable
And pure spectacle
Rick Owens Spring 2016
The point with a lot of these ideas is to get people talking and build brand awareness, whatever a particular brand’s ideal image may be. Think of it as a performance. You might personally like ballet more than someone breakdancing on a sidewalk, but a performance is a performance, and both dancers want you to watch, despite what you (the viewer) may perceive as a difference in quality.
The core purpose of industry exposure remains, but now that brands have more access to the consumer and more incentive to do so, they really want you to pay attention…and click, and share, and buy.

#exposure
#pay
#talking
#socialsites
#fashionweek
#showing
#creations
#runwaymodels
#vanityfair