Proenza Schouler for Target

kimair said:
i can't find the leather jacket...
do you have the link lucy?

also, does anyone have the chain print bikini?
is the sizing similar to the palm print?

i tried on the chain print bikini the other day and didn't find the fit to be all that flattering--despite the triangle top which usually looks really good--it just looked a bit weird and felt a little stiff if i remember correctly...

i went to another target yesterday--they didn't have any of the blue kimono dresses :(
and only had one skirt in that print...

they had 1 each of the bustier tops--both were size 13... as were the brown bustier top dresses I saw there, i think there may have been one in an 11

I got a couple more tissue tanks (in yellow and navy blue).. which i've been getting in xs because the fit is so loose...

i didn't see anything on clearance yet....
but will probably check in again soon to see if they bring in any new stuff...
 
ChrissyM said:
i tried on the chain print bikini the other day and didn't find the fit to be all that flattering--despite the triangle top which usually looks really good--it just looked a bit weird and felt a little stiff if i remember correctly...

thanks chrissy...:flower:
i was iffy on it, so i think i'll pass...
 
i think the fit is off on ALL the bathing suits actually.

i think target tends to sneak heavily marked down items over to the super targets and target greatlands eventually. just remember usually when at item ends in "4" it usually wont be marked down any further. :flower:

i'm eagerly awaiting more markdowns!
 
i saw this in person today for the first time. My target had a decent selection of the stuff i guess but i found the fit to be off on everything. I was swimming in the 13 dress but found the 13 skirt to be a teensy bit small. I don't know if the selection was heavily picked over or not but nothing seemed that great. The seaming on the dress (it was black/navy with some darts and things) looked really flattering but on the seams stuck out way too much. The only thing i really wanted was the purple skirt that didn't fit. And i tried on one of the blazers and it made a big ripping sound :shock: haha i looked but couldn't find anything and then put it back on the rack and hurried away :lol:
 
Meg said:
And i tried on one of the blazers and it made a big ripping sound :shock: haha i looked but couldn't find anything and then put it back on the rack and hurried away :lol:

:lol:
 
^haha, i thought that was funny too...

Meg, i also really liked the black and navy dress but once on, it fit me strangely too - the seams and darts seemed to want to pop out. :huh: haha...
 
i went to my local target today and the racks were pretty barren!

i also noticed that more things are on sale online. the bubble print silk dress, the aloha print babydoll dress are both on sale for 20% off.

i purchased another tissue tank in navy today. i really like it a lot.
 
I went to a Target yesterday and picked up one of the Proenza shirts (sweatshirt-like material, but it's more like a shirt than anything) for $18. There were mostly pants/jeans left, although there were a surprising amount of the bustiers left as well. (They're gorgeous in person, but I didn't buy one.)
 
I bought yet another Proenza item today :shock: The item was the hooded sweatshirt in "Heather Grey." I got a medium (I generally wear small/medium), so hopefully it'll fit. (I was in a hurry, so I didn't get the chance to try it on.)

The store had a few dresses left, although in only a few sizes. I noticed that the items that I saw most frequently were the polo shirts and plain, one colored shirts. Additionally, I noticed a couple of bags, which I did not see on the website--they ran for about $40 each.

B000LRJNA0.16._SCLZZZZZZZ_SS260_.jpg

target.com

P.S.--The item I bought the other day, which I mentioned in the post above, was the "Short Sleeve Sweatshirt" in Ebony.

B000LRAYGC.16._SCLZZZZZZZ_SS260_.jpg

target.com
 
this story from the wall street journal had me relating (wsj.com)


The Gold in Your Closet:
Investment-Grade Bustiers


[FONT=Times New Roman,Times,Serif]Online bidding wars erupt for second-hand
designer duds; $500 for a $80 dress -- from H&M
[/FONT]

[FONT=times new roman,times,serif][FONT=times new roman,times,serif]By TERI AGINS[/FONT]
[/FONT]
The stock market may be having its ups and downs this month, but here's an investment that appreciated 629% in just a week: a blue silk bustier top from Target. The top, designed by Proenza Schouler, orginally sold for $35, but because it was featured in a TV commercial and had already sold out at Target, its owner was able to sell it on eBay for $255.
This month, women across America will go through their annual spring-cleaning ritual, clearing out their closets in hopes of recouping a few dollars from clothes they no longer like -- or just never wear. But the market for reselling clothing is changing, with some of the least-expensive goods seeing big jumps in value and online auction sites letting shoppers effectively scalp hot-selling items from H&M and Target in particular. It's a big shift from the traditional approach, in which shoppers resold their clothes after they'd worn them for a while and would fetch only a fraction of the purchase price.
Among the items that have found buyers willing to pay substantial premiums: A Roland Mouret dress that sold for $108 at Gap in January appreciated 100%. A sweater dress from the limited-edition Stella McCartney line that H&M sold in 2005 went for more than six times its original price on eBay this past January.
Though it's hard to predict precisely which items will ignite a bidding war, the feeding frenzy for fast fashion is beginning to resemble the demand for high-priced "it" handbags. Speculators have jumped in to snap up the clothes as soon as they hit stores -- and list them for sale on eBay. Even before a collection by Madonna arrived at H&M in the U.S. this past week, there were multiple bids on eBay for Madonna sunglasses that H&M started selling March 10 only in Hong Kong.
The irony is that these clothes, created by designers such as style icon Karl Lagerfeld and the trendy Viktor & Rolf duo, were intended to give the masses a chance to own designer duds. They're made from less-expensive fabrics than the usual designer fare and feature lower-quality tailoring, with price tags to match. But when fast-fashion chains carry these designer collections for a limited time only -- and at only some of their stores -- the scarcity can drive up prices on the secondary market.
That "drives up the cachet and it drives up the price," says Constance White, style director of eBay, which has more than two million listings in clothes, shoes and accessories at any given time. "Logic isn't dictating the high prices. It's emotion."
Women who want to unload their designer clothes every year have far more options than in the past. In addition to consignment shops, an array of dealers have sprung up to help people unload their unwanted clothes online in exchange for a cut of the proceeds. Sales of apparel and accessories on eBay alone exploded to $4.7 billion last year from $2.9 billion in 2003.
Most designer clothes, however, don't fetch much, with the exception of certain vintage couture items and brands with a cult following. On eBay, the most searched terms in apparel, shoes and accessories are Coach, Louis Vuitton, Abercrombie & Fitch and Chanel. There is also demand for certain items by designers Norma Kamali and Ossie Clark. The prices typically reflect a garment's condition as well as availability.
Some dealers, of course, do a better job than others of unloading castoff clothes. New Yorker Marlene Provizer, a personal shopper who has sold online for 10 years, for instance, relies on her "Book" of satisfied clients to match buyers and sellers just before she lists items on eBay. That has enabled her to move goods promptly -- often at impressive prices. She has sold about four of designer Zoran's $900 tafetta evening jackets, including one for $450 to a return client. "If people have already done business with you," she says, "they come back to you again."
For the most part, women who sell their unwanted clothes don't expect to get a lot. Janis Ehlers of Boca Raton, Fla., regularly takes suitcases full of designer clothes to a consignment shop in Washington, D.C., that takes a 50% cut of the proceeds. She says she considers it "found money."
The limited-edition designer clothes made for Target and H&M can fetch prices far above their original values on eBay because they are novelties that often sell out quickly at retail. Only a few styles are offered and they're on sale for only a couple of months.
This is a contrast to a new generation of "designer" labels such as Isaac Mizrahi's line for Target and Nicole Miller's Nicole line for J.C. Penney, which are simply part of the year-round mix at the stores and seem to command only routine interest in the secondary market. For example, in the past three months 87 Mizrahi items sold on eBay with an average price of about $10 -- and none sold higher than their original retail price.
Even Mr. Lagerfeld, who generated a lot of buzz when he did the first designer guest turn at H&M in 2004, wasn't a hit on eBay. Only 34 items from his H&M collection, which featured a lot of black and had a high-fashion look, were resold on eBay, and the highest price was $78.56 for a party dress that originally sold for $116.
Sellers -- especially those looking to make a profit -- usually have to strike early. Two weeks ago, Triss Budoff of Houston spent $2,000 at Target on about 55 Proenza Schouler items but missed the peak of the frenzy. So far, she has sold 30 of them for an average of $8 per item more than she paid, meaning she is essentially breaking even after her costs to list the clothes.
Still, she isn't deterred. She figures she can return anything she can't sell within 90 days and get a full refund. To increase her chances of cashing in next time, she plans to show up at the store the first day the clothes hit.
Target, H&M and the other stores don't seem to mind because the guest-designer programs are aimed more at generating buzz than sales volume. Target doesn't limit the amount of designer merchandise a shopper can buy, because its goal is to make high fashion accessible to a broad audience, spokeswoman Amy von Walter says.
H&M also says it's making high fashion more accessible and allows people to buy as much as they want. H&M said in a statement: "While we prefer buying and selling to take place in our H&M stores, there are no laws preventing private individuals from trading on the Internet."
 

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^Interesting read...I bet whoever sold the Stella McCartney dress for a $420 profit feels pretty good about themselves :rofl:
 
^thanks for posting this article! it was definitely an interesting read.
 
I picked up the Stripe Crop Sleeve Jacket yesterday and I am really impressed.
 
Am I the only one who still hasn't been able to find the blue bustier top? That was the only thing I really wanted...I spent over $500 on Proenza Schouler for Target, but ended up returning everything except the purple bustier top and a scarf. I have had the worst luck trying to get my hands on that blue bustier top, beginning with when I went to Opening Ceremony only to find that they closed a day early. I have checked on target.com daily for the last 2 months but was at school when they were up on the website for the 6 hours or so before they sold out, and I have been to the Brooklyn Target a dozen times (even though I usually avoid it like the plague), where the salespeople have told me that they have never received a shipment of them and have only seen returns. I have even looked on ebay, but I don't know that I would want to pay more than $60 for it...gosh, I am just so frusturated. I had to vent here because my boyfriend thinks I am crazy and doesn't understand why I would want to wear a shirt that "looks like it has a bra on top of it!"
 
wildeyedundine, you arent crazy. i dont think the blue bustier was ever even "officially" on sale. if youll go back a few pages or so..you'll see that we found hidden links to the Proenza merchandise in january. we were able to purchase the items well ahead of the official start date and have them shipped to us. this was picked up by other blogs and word spread. jack and lazaro even commented in the press that some of the pages had 4,000 hits on them before they were officially on sale. also we have resellers to blame for the shortage, hence the wall street journal posted below.
 
cuppycakes said:
I picked up the Stripe Crop Sleeve Jacket yesterday and I am really impressed.

I have that jacket as well :heart: It's one of my favorite jackets I own; it's so versatile.
 
Gosh, the WSJ should do better research. So many of those prices (both retail and eBay) are wrong. I am amazed how mainstream newspaper are always many steps behind when it comes to eBay. The eBay Marketplace data only goes back 90 days, but it still doesn't explain the errors in the retail price.
 
I have one of the blue bustiers - I bought it via the links that were let slip a week or so before the line was supposed to debute. I never saw them in the stores, or on the website.
 
^I believe the bustiers I saw nearly two weeks ago in a Target were blue, although they could have been purple...In any case, they're certainly popular!
 
Does anyone know if there's a size difference between the purple and blue bustiers? I have two purples, but the XS is too snug and the S too loose.
 

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