Saturday, October 19, 2013

Womens Wear Daily Rachel Zoe Baby Talk High Heels and her New Collection

Womens Wear Daily came out when an article yesterday all about Rachel Zoe and her newest collection that will be hitting retail stores in the Fall (so exciting). The best part is that the pricing is totally affordable! (Think Marc by Marc Jacobs/Club Monaco pricing).

Her collection is totally chic with a retro 70s vibe (no surprise there) and sky high heels and boots; she promises that shell have flats and riding boots for us tall girls (Thank You!)

Check out the article below along with some of her sweet styles!


The elevator doors open, and, just like that, the relative calm of a Monday morning is destroyed by a miniature blonde and her 20-person entourage of assistants, hair and makeup and a Bravo TV camera crew. Production on season four of “The Rachel Zoe Project” is in full swing and, behold, a crucial plotline is about to unfold — the debut of the Rachel Zoe collection, Zoe’s first real design effort done in a deal with Li & Fung, which WWD reported in June.

Not an instant can be missed, whether it’s Zoe changing the thigh-high suede boots she arrived in for a similar pair from her own line, fussing with a model or two, or walking a reporter through the racks of clothes.

Among the camera team is her husband, Rodger Berman, president of Rachel Zoe Inc., trailing his wife with his own point-and-shoot, as if capturing the birth of his first child. “It’s always good to have footage,” he says. Maybe it’s a dry run for the real deal: Season four’s other big story arc, a spoiler for no one, is Zoe’s pregnancy. (Also, look out for Mandana, a leggy brunette who seems cast as Brad’s replacement.)

Beneath her white tuxedo jacket and black shift dress is her seven-month bump — which on someone else could pass for a big lunch. If the physical evidence is hard to find, Zoe isn’t shy about her impending motherhood. She initiates the conversation during a phone interview last week, though she stops short of divulging if it’s a boy or a girl. Either something changed over the weekend or she is terrible at keeping secrets, because the pronouns fly on Monday. “It all depends on his arrival,” she says patting her stomach. Not five minutes later Berman swoops down, kisses her belly and declares, “It’s a little boy.” A boy! Who will she dress up in her archive of vintage Lanvin?

Before the fate of that vast collection can be decided, there’s the one at hand. The long-lead press — Vogue, Elle, Bazaar — and buyers will be filing in by the time you’re reading this. The pressure is on.

“I’m a Virgo and I’m more — I don’t want to say negative — but I’m the girl who thinks no one’s coming to my birthday party, no one’s buying my clothes, no one’s reading my book, no one’s watching my show — that’s just how I think,” says Zoe. “The same applies to this. I don’t want to let people down.” That said, she made a pointed effort to shake things up. “I’d imagine everybody is expecting something from me that’s kind of a Seventies, uberboho-glam kind of thing, and, you know, very accessorized. And it’s not.”

The look is predominantly tailored in a chic albeit Seventies way. There’s suiting galore, white jackets and blazers to wear with matching wool trousers that flare over the foot and fall to the floor for an extra-long leg. Variations on the tuxedo come in black-and-white sequined cardigans and a le smoking-esque jumpsuit. Tie-neck blouses are shot with gold Lurex, and party dresses come in frothy layers of organza. Then there’s the outerwear — Zoe’s “obsession” — with an emphasis on capes done with leather trim and hardware toggles, as well as faux fur and leather coats with brass buttons.

Someone hands her a handbag, the first sample she’s seen. “I’m going to scream. Did I just scream?” she says. “I’m sorry. It literally arrived five seconds ago…gorgeous! You would know if I weren’t excited. I’d cancel everything.”

There are also shoes — suede boots and matte croc pumps, most set on no less than a four-inch heel and a giant platform, though Zoe promises that flats and riding boots are on their way.
The collection will be priced at the contemporary level, $250 for a day dress up to $700 for a full tuxedo look. No retailers have been confirmed yet, though Li & Fung is targeting specialty stores and better department stores, where in an ideal world (at least from Zoe’s perspective) the collection will sit alongside Diane von Furstenberg, Marc by Marc Jacobs and Alexander Wang. Imagine that. Li & Fung declined to give sales projections, but Alan Chartash, L&F’s chief strategy officer, is pleased with what he sees. As for approaching the crowded contemporary market rather than something more mass, the favored outlet for celebrity/personality-driven lines, Chartash says, “I think there’s going to be a price balance. We felt that [contemporary] is her audience. She’s already done something affordable for QVC.”

All images from http://www.wwd.com/fashion-news/mother-of-invention-3415348?module=today

Soon to be grounded by motherhood, this is Zoe’s last trip to New York, and anywhere for that matter, which means no fall 2011 shows for her. “I’ve been asked to slow down,” she says. “But to be totally honest, it’s kind of next to impossible when you’re planning your show and launching your collection, and in the middle of award season.” Her idea of taking it easy is watching “Twilight” at night instead of working. Zoe claims she hasn’t had a minute to shop for baby clothes, although, “I’m also Jewish,” she says. “So I’m a little superstitious. I’ve been sent a lot of gifts and things and my team just hides them.”

If season four will be devoid of the “fashion porn” of fashion week, Zoe can still bank on the art of celebrity dressing. This season, Anne Hathaway, one of Zoe’s most loyal clients, is hosting the Oscars. Zoe will be there, eight months pregnant, in four-inch heels, to supervise every outfit change.


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