Retail Site Raids a Big Closet
by Eric Wilson
SINCE its debut in February, Moda Operandi, the online retailer that  sells designer clothes right off the runway, has become a surprise  competitor on the lucrative trunk-show circuit. During the September  fashion shows, for example, the average transaction on the site reached  $1,800, and one customer, on a single visit, spent $42,000 on clothes  that won’t be available in other stores until spring.        
 Now the site is becoming a competitor to traditional department stores  and magazines for personnel, as well. Roopal Patel, a longtime executive  in the fashion offices of Neiman Marcus and Bergdorf Goodman, will join  Moda Operandi this month as its fashion director. And Taylor Tomasi  Hill, formerly the style and accessories director of Marie Claire, will  become its artistic director. 
 “We want to continue to build our relationships with major brands,” said  Aslaug Magnusdottir, a former Gilt Groupe executive who founded Moda  Operandi with Lauren Santo Domingo, a contributing editor at Vogue, who  is the creative director of the site. “We plan to increase the number of  trunk shows we will show on the site, with more ready-to-wear,  accessories and jewelry.” 
 Ms. Patel and Ms. Tomasi Hill are among the industry insiders who have  become broadly known through popular blogs that obsessively track their  style. Ms. Patel, who was most recently the senior women’s accessories  editor of Neiman Marcus, will oversee merchandising. Ms. Tomasi Hill  will focus on the editorial components.        
 Moda Operandi has been growing rapidly, Ms. Magnusdottir said, and more  so since September, when Condé Nast invested in the company, a move that  coincided with its deal with Vogue to link some of its sales to runway  images on 
Vogue.com. An  increasing number of designers are making their collections available  there, making it a further threat to stores like Bergdorf and Barneys.  Designers like Diane Von Furstenberg, Derek Lam and Proenza Schouler  were among those available this season.        
 Ms. Magnusdottir said that as the business grows, there will be more  magazine-like displays to guide customers, “to identify the items they  absolutely can’t miss.” 
nytimes