Kate Moss For TopShop

photo from the dailymail
 

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photos from the guardian. i guess the pansy print dress is an exact copy!

i love looking at the outfits on real people.
 

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^ I think that dress is the most flattering thing in the collection.
It seems to look the best on normal folk.
 
dreams said:
Hmm, I'm in the states and I haven't received confirmation yet, and their customer service number for us customers has been down all day. The funny thing is that I wonder if I was the first person to make an online order:blush: . I logged into topshop at 11 and literally a second later the Kate Moss link came up. I threw the one item I had in mind into the cart & did quick check out by like 11:02:lol: I knew if I bothered taking the time to look through all the items they would probably sell out or the site would crash.

Well done! I guess you'll just have to wait. Which one item was it that you ordered?
 
No offense to any of those women who modelled the clothes, but I think the collection only suits women from late teens to mid-30s at most (maybe except a few pieces). The cut and the style, it just doesn't seem to suit ppl older.
 
[FONT=&quot]the styling from the guardian is so much better than those from other magazines/newspapers. The Daily Mail obviously went out of their way to find the most unattractive people to model the clothes just to prove a point that yes, these clothes wont flatter everyone.

Im happy with my blouse and may add the black waist coat to my wardrobe as well. Although I dont want to be head to toe in Kate Moss a few pieces mixed with other items from elsewhere is fine, I think.


Jo, I havent seen the striped jeans, just the waist coat and shorts. Im thinking there is a limited amount of the jacket and trousers. you might have to head to a large store if you can.
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Kate Moss Sells Out in Paris

Godfrey Deeny
May 02nd, 2007 @ 00:42 AM - Paris Reviews of her debut collection might have been as tepid in New York as commercial sales were strong in London, but when it came to the acid test by discerning cognoscenti, i.e. hip Paris fashionistas, the jury reached a clear decision – Kate Moss for Topshop is an unqualified hit.

The uber model’s collection went on sale exclusively in France Wednesday morning at 11 AM in Paris style emporium Colette, and one hour before the doors opened a line of several hundred had formed around the block on central rue St Honore. By one PM, the only Moss items left in the store were a few pairs of tiny red jeans, a dress on one mannequin and two looks in the store’s prestigious windows.

“We sold everything we could get from Topshop. There will be more deliveries, and anything that arrives will go right away,” beamed Colette’s creative director and owner Sarah Lerfel.

Colette limited shoppers to just three items per person, causing groans of anguish from some consumers.

Moss had officially launched her collection in London on Tuesday in Topshop’s flagship store at Oxford Circus. At one stage designing Kate appeared in the window of that store, but she made no appearance in Paris.

“The collection lived up to its billing. It was meant to be stroll inside Kate’s wardrobe and it was. For this reason it was credible,” underlined Lerfel.

She stressed that it was hard to describe any individual items as best-sellers, seeing everything sold out on the opening day. However a black mini-dress with a cut-out neck, ribbed cotton singlets and striped dresses with attached matching vests were particularly sought.

Kate Moss for Topshop will also start retailing next week at Corso Como in Milan and at Barneys New York, and is available on Topshop's Web site.

UK media reports suggests Topshop’s owner Phillip Green paid Moss £3 million, or $6 million for the project, which, seeing the demand so far, appears to have been a savvy move.

http://www.fashionwiredaily.com/first_word/news/article.weml?id=1121
 
That Daily Mail article is hideous...but they do hate Kate so it's not surprising.
 
I think the Daily Mail article just proved that older women cant pull them off. I think you have to have the right look for them NOT to look awful!!
 
Harrods Girl said:
Well done! I guess you'll just have to wait. Which one item was it that you ordered?
The long gold skirt. I had my eye on it when I first saw Irina wearing it.
 
thanks ladies for the articles and videos. :flower: very informative!!

... there are over 2000 items on eBay (USA) of this collection. :shock: i don't think the 5-item, one-of-each-style limits worked as far as preventing people from buying to sell on ebay.
 
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there are too many pages to read up on, so i dunno if it's been posted yet. but does anyone know how much the white dress will cost? i'm in love
 
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^ if you are asking about the one-shoulder white dress, it's going to be $120 USD. it's made of cotton i think.
 
shopping247 said:
^ if you are asking about the one-shoulder white dress, it's going to be $120 USD. it's made of cotton i think.

that's the one!(i had a pic of Selma Blair posted but i deleted it cause i didn't know the source-a friend of mine emailed it to me :blink: ) thanks!
 
Hysteria and the great Kate Moss con
By LIZ JONES, Last updated at 08:59am on 2nd May 2007 Our fashion columnist joined the mob fighting to buy Kate Moss's new clothes range. Her verdict? Tacky outfits. Hugely inflated prices. And a blind worship at the altar of celebrity that defies belief



Monday night on Oxford Circus will go down in fashion history as the moment British women woke up to the fact that we have all been thoroughly duped.

Even the most sensible and sceptical among us - ie me - had been seduced by the tremendous amount of hype surrounding the new collection for Topshop "designed" by Kate Moss.

I turned up at 6pm on Monday to stake my claim outside the flagship store with hundreds of other women, all confident in the knowledge we would soon emerge stylish, cutting edge and envied - and all without having spent too much money. How wrong could we have been?

And, to be honest, what on earth were we thinking, allowing ourselves to be herded and prodded like cattle for the privilege of spending our own money? All the women around me in the queue were smart, educated, fashion-literate but, ultimately, also deluded, brainwashed and downright stupid. The Great British High Street had turned into the Great British con.

I arrived at Oxford Circus not to join the VIP cocktail party being held inside the store for Kate's friends, including Sadie Frost, but to take my place in the queue, which was already snaking around the building.

I think there were about 2,000 women in front of me, ranging in age from 12 (the beautiful Cordelia, there with her mum Helen), to, well, my age.

I was duly given an armband (my colour was "Mint", which meant I would gain entry to the hallowed portals at 9pm) and handed a Draconian list of rules to follow: Thou shalt not purchase more than five items, Thou shalt not try on more than eight - and informed I would have all of 20 minutes to make my purchases.

Actually, the queuing part - fuelled as we were by free bottles of water and packets of sweets - was quite fun. Topshop boss Philip Green kept wandering past, flanked by bodyguards and sporting a deep tan, making sure we could all remember the pin numbers for our credit cards.

0017g8ek
Kate posing in the Topshop window to excited crowds in Oxford Street

We gazed at the giant billboards featuring Kate in all her honey-toned glory and planned

what we were going to buy. It was only once we got inside that the reality hit home.

The Kate Moss boutique in the basement reminded me of those really tacky, dingy shops in Camden, North London, that sell cruddy T-shirts and lots of awful studded belts.

Fears that the items I had coveted before I arrived - the Lurex halterneck dress Kate wore on the cover of Vogue, the shiny, mannish trouser suit and long tuxedo dress she was photographed wearing inside the magazine - would be sold out were unfounded.

There were millions of each item squashed on the rails, which made me think the whole KM range was not going to be as exclusive as we had been led to believe.

Faced with the 20-minute deadline, most women were panic-buying, and failing to try anything on. It was all remarkably clever: the build-up meant we were desperate to shop, even if most of what we saw was badly made, in horrible synthetic fabrics and dingy colours.

What was an ordinary ribbed cotton vest top doing in here? Or a pair of tiny denim hot pants you can buy anywhere?

Earlier in the evening, Kate Moss herself had been spotted briefly in the shop window in an orange maxi dress with butterfly sleeves, and you could tell that even she was desperate to tear it off and slip into something by Gucci.

And don't get me started on the prices. When my time was up I found I was £255 worse off - and that's just for five pieces I didn't even like that much. For that amount of money I could have bought a lovely pair of trousers in Prada. I felt as though I had been mugged.

I bought a black shift dress with cut-outs at the neck, which on the billboard looked very Burberry.

But having tried it on (it is made of nasty, stiff polyamide and very short, but still cost £60!), I realised Philip Green must have spent most of his budget (apart from the £3million he handed over to Kate) on the ad campaign, hiring the cleverest stylists and photographers in the business.

I tried on a shiny trouser suit, which I decided was too boxy and felt cheap, so I settled on a signature Kate waistcoat at £35, and a printed T-shirt that, despite costing £25, was not even finished well.

I also picked out a £60 black halterneck which Kate wore on the cover of Vogue, but it was so creased by the time I got it home I am wondering how I will ever wear it.

The only item I am pleased with is a navy tuxedo dress, which has a nice drape to it. And it jolly well should do for £75.

But I have to report that some girls, having spent their hardearned cash, were in tears. A few had been sensible - I met Hannah and Sophie on the escalators, who said they hadn't bought anything, despite queuing for three hours, because "it was all rubbish, really tacky, and didn't fit well" - but most had been carried away in the excitement.

Young Cordelia was pleased with her red skinny jeans, although at £50 thought them overpriced. Her mum, Helen, found one item she liked, a vest top with a draped back for £18 in red or sand, but, she said: 'I tried it on and the fabric was so thin you could almost see through it.'

Nadia, an architect, bought a studded dress, the lemon frilly off-the-shoulder dress, the long silver skirt and the tuxedo dress which have all featured heavily in the pre-launch publicity, but was disappointed not to have found other pieces she had set her heart on.

"Not all the items advertised were on sale, such as the black floral dress and the white cocktail dress," she said. "I think it was quite sneaky, because we are the most loyal fans."

Lila, 21, was disappointed a classic white shirt wasn't on sale, and said she doubted the £35 sandals will last. "Once inside, I didn't see much that I actually wanted to buy," she told me in an e-mail the next morning.

You could sense the dismay as most women in the queue for the cashiers realised that just about everyone else had snapped up the short, floral summer dress with the cute smocking at the neckline, meaning you won't be able to move this summer without seeing a similarly hoodwinked doppelganger.

The morning after, in a series of e-mails, all the shoppers I spoke to on Monday night were feeling rather ridiculous that they had bought into such a clever marketing ploy, and queued for up to five hours to get their hands on a few scraps of denim and polyester.

"I felt so silly when I got home, tired and bloody broke," a 30-year-old called Layla told me.

But what on earth does the hysteria say about British women? Have we been so deluged with cheap, instantaneous, disposable fashion that we have lost our minds? Have we lost all sense of reason and rationality, of what is important and what is actually worth aspiring to in life?

Are young women really in thrall to a skinny model with not one O-level to her name, who has admitted to rarely walking down the catwalk without at least two glasses of champagne inside her; who dates a serial junkie and whose only talent is to look good in clothes put on her back by highly skilled stylists before she is airbrushed into oblivion?

Well, yes, on the evidence of Monday night, they are.

The queue of desperate young women proved that we really do buy into all the garbage the glossy magazines tell us - not one publication has dared to publish anything remotely negative about the new collection, so terrified are they of losing advertising revenue or their 40 per cent Topshop discount cards or the chance to put Kate on a future cover.

So we now believe that if we buy this bag or these boots or those hotpants we will not only look like Kate, but will also live a charmed, glamorous life.

The real Kate in the window on Monday bore no relation to her billboard self. The clothes we were all scrabbling over bore no relation to what I saw her wearing in Vogue. It was all a clever marketing trick, persuading us that what we need in our lives is a piece of someone else, not anything of substance or quality or lasting value.

But there is some good news to come out of all this.

The huge swell of disappointment outside the store has, I hope, hastened the end of a fashion era driven purely by hype and the cult of celebrity, an era when we do what we are told, hand over our credit cards and are happy to look the same as everyone else, be it Madonna (her range at H&M was hideous) or, God forbid, Victoria Beckham.

Women need to learn to trust their own tastes, to forge their own style and, perhaps, to think about investing in something they really love rather than spending money on something they have been told they should love.

The Kate Moss experience should serve as a wake-up call not just to those in the fashion industry, but to all women who have ever loved shopping but now feel their fingers have been burnt.

Perhaps the fashion press might learn to be more honest. Perhaps we can discover someone new to emulate, someone who actually deserves to be called a role model

Source
 
thanks for the article avant! i definitely agree that we have to trust our own taste and go with what looks good on our own bodies. of course half the stuff from the topshop kate moss collection will look awkward on us if we are not rail thin and tall. so it's definitely about knowing our own bodies and what pieces will look good on us because of course, EVERYTHING looks GREAT on kate moss! and that's the con right there.

returnofsaturn - i found the pic from the selma blair star style thread. the source for those pics are celebtopia.net.... i personally like the way the dress looks on selma with her short hair.

http://img178.imagevenue.com/img.php?image=46352_blaircelebutopia2_122_443lo.jpg
 
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I was never a huge contender in the Kate Debate. I’m not 17 years old or size 8 (you know who you are!). But I knew she’d not allow shoddy workmanship to create havoc with the range. From what I’ve seen, there’ve been good materials used and nice tailoring. Some of the ends of the materials have been left with a signature-crusty unfinished hem, which has led to the Daily Wail (UK ‘news’ paper) mouthing off about shoddy workmanship. If any one tells me that the white silk jacket is shoddy, I’ll laugh at them.
 

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