Saturday, June 2, 2012

london-fashion-design-schools

London Design Updates: Bridge May Tremble But Not Fashion Schools

Have you ever heard a brave forecast such as this?

Now on a lighter note, consider this: Ramps are more dramatic than bridges. How come? This is because ramps have provided the world with classic items of Burberry to more liberal creations of Jimmy Choo. And these ramps were made sturdy primarily by London fashion design schools. Top fashion designers like Clements Ribeiro, Alexander McQueen, and Sophia Kokosalaki would agree just the same.

What makes it great about earning a degree from a fashion design school in London?

London lies in the central part of England. This is one of the busiest cities in the world. It has taken part in many revolutions. The well known of these revolutions is the so-called the Industrial Revolution.

As years went by, London, during the 19th century, received the spotlight for men's fashion statements under the headship of dandies of Regency including Beau Brummell. Not so long after, around the mid of1960s, London was, once more, for a moment the heart of fashion statements and influence.

London nowadays also lies in the heart of the fashion industry. The same city that has revolutionized many aspects and statements in the fashion industry years ago is the same city that continues a legacy for styles and prevailing modes of life. The key now lies to the competent trainings designers undergo in various fashion institutions and even in the marketplace.

In fact, whatever you want to earn: a specialist course, a fashion school certificate, or a university degree, you will definitely find a school in London that can give you the edge and the guts to get along well with other topnotch designers. Moreover, though there are a thousand of schools all around the world, it is a fact that the UK retail garment market provides training opportunities for high-end fashion, mass market, and even Asian imports. In fact, the market shares a projected $ 50-billion sale, 75% of which account for women's and children's clothing.

If you want to immediately run for a job-entry, a summer program or a year at a London fashion school can provide you with fashion skills that are already in the entry-level. If you are still on a shaky ground, consider enrolling in some international schools with campuses in London.

The following lists of schools have links that will provide other information about some schools in UK:

1. The Royal College of Arts is a school of textiles and fashion (/ UK).

2. London College of Fashion is an international institution for technology, design, sales and administration in the textile, accessories, footwear, and fashion industries (/).

3. Manchester Metropolitan University offers degree courses including fashion, textiles and textiles for fashion, embroidery, and even fashion design with technology (/).

4. University of Westminster, located in Harrow, UK, offers a degree in BA

Fashion Design (/)

5. London-Milan 2006: The Dual City Summer Sessions offer both novice and advanced courses. Campus in Milan is called Domus Academy in Milan and campus in London is the Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design and (/).

No matter what type of school lands as your choice, you can rest assured that you have three-fold benefits: style is globally-renowned, schools have international connections, and the language used is universal, that is English. Thus you can take carry your portfolio with pride.

You can say that a London fashion degree is a passport recognized by the world and its diverse fashions. History, indeed, repeats itself.





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Friday, June 1, 2012

Is it Really a Collection Without Clothes?

A nautical theme for a spring/summer show is nothing new. But the designer Alexis Mabille took the idea down to its fundamentals swimsuits and underwear. His show consisted largely of well-toned men walking the runway in their skivvies, with the odd white hoodie, navy striped shirt or anchor and chain print pants thrown in for good measure.Alexis Mabille, spring/summer 2012 menswear

The lack of actual clothing felt like a shortage of inspiration rather than a design choice. And the result was that, with this collection, Mr. Mabille missed the boat.

Blackbird designers ( left) Sidney Owino and Zeddie Lukoe showcase some of their creations. Courtesy

Kenyan denim-wear designer has caught the eyes of international fashion trendsetters, and it is their voguish stitch trench coats, jeans, boyfriend jackets that have booked them a slot in the upcoming African Fashion Week New York that celebrates African-American and Afro- Caribbean clothes makers.

New York, Paris, London and Milan continue to be the big cities of the fashion industry and for Blackbird Designs jeans and denim outfits to be showcased in these towns, lifts them to a new level above the rest of most Kenyan designers.

Blackbird Designs clothes have been worn by some of the leading entertainers in Kenya, musicians Gabu of P-Unit and Sauti Sol are some of the customers, and is likely to be seen on the streets and clothes shops in New York, Paris and other world cities after the July exhibition.

The four-year old fashion house, owned by Zeddie Lukoe and Sidney Owino, will be the first male designers from East Africa to take part in this prestigious fashion week in one of the most influential cities when it comes to fashion. It will be our first international platform to show our designs, says Mr Owino.

This is a great opportunity to grow our house, he said. The Blackbird Designs house specialises in African urban fashion street wear with their primary fabric being denim. They design and stitch trench coats, jeans, half coats, boyfriend jackets and print t-shirts on demand for both men and women.

The African Fashion Week New York started in 2008, with the slogan Where Fashion Began, and is held every year in July. It is a luxury multi-day that include runway shows, vendor exhibition, and industry networking events, with the sole purpose of raising awareness of African fashion and entertainment professionals all over the world.

The event attracts world clothes buyers and industry influencers who get a chance to talk one-on-one with the African designers as well over 2,000 people in attendance. The buyers will be looking for talent. So we have to make sure that the designs are different and on point, said Mr Owino.

Impressed

So how did they manage to get an invite to the African-much admired fashion show? While attending a local music event, the two designers met an American lady who works at Calvin Klein an American design house that has revolutionised the way the world thought about jeans. She challenged them to design and make her something that she would not find in New York, where she lived, or anywhere else.

They made a trouser, she was impressed and asked them to send photos of their work. Then next thing they got in their e-mail was an invite to showcase their work in the African Fashion Week New York along with KikoRomeo, another well known local designer. The event has 25 designers showing including the winner ofOrigin Africa Designer Showcase that was held in Mauritius in March of this year, Fikirte Addis from Ethiopia.

Blackbird Designs plan to show a collection of 15 garments; five for women and 10 for men. The fashion house makes 70 per cent men wear and 30 per cent ladies wear, targeting young professionals. This being their first international platform, they sorted the mentorship of John Kaveke to put their collection together. Mr Kaveke is one of the leading male fashion designers in Kenya and has wealthy of experience in putting together runaway collections.

Fashion house

For Mr Lukoe and Mr Owino, who met in high school in a fine art class, fashion has give them the chance to practise what they love most art. In fashion, they say, the cut is what is the art bit and is the fundamental part of any piece of clothing. If the material is not cut well, the end result will be an appalling garment.

Having known each other for a long time, the partnership works well because they have learnt to listen to each other. They usually come up with designs together. They love for denim shows in their non-denim outfits like the riveting the pockets. This is a common detail in jeans and denim jackets.

You can do so much with denim it is so volatile and unisex, says Mr Lukoe.

Nostalgia

Backstage after the Julius show, the Japanese designer Tatsuro Horikawa was feeling nostalgic. His summer 2012 creations were a look back, he said, to the birth of the brand.

For fans of the label, this meant a familiar collection. The Toyko street style clothing had fitted wrinkled leather jackets, an asymmetrical layering of fabrics and an urban color palette of asphalt, concrete and white. The show was visually striking, concisely encompassing the urban warrior vibe that the brand is known for, but forward motion is always a crucial ingredient for any brand yearning to grow.





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Thursday, May 31, 2012

Fashion Tips For Teen Boys

If most grown men have a hard time with fashion, then young men can use all the help they can get. If you are a teenaged male, here are some fashion tips that will prevent you from looking like an idiot.

1. Pull your pants up! The exposed boxer look has been played more than your Xbox.

2. Leave the eyeliner alone. Sure there are lots of girls who like guys who wear makeup and skinny jeans. The emo fad is just that...a fad. Years from now you'll look at a picture of yourself with your girly haircut and guy-liner and feel the same way my mom does when she looks at picture of herself with a spiral perm, teased bangs, and a Def Leppard t-shirt.

3. Don't wear tank tops or muscle shirts unless you actually have muscles.

4. Explore outerwear. Yes, there's more to outerwear than hoodies. Pea coats, cardigans, sweaters, jackets and trench coats are just some examples.

5. If you are a white kid from Omaha, don't dress like a gangsta. You ain't fooling no one, home slice.

6. They make lots of different types of shoes, not just sneakers.

7. If you can only afford one really great and expensive piece of clothing, buy a great pair of shoes. Good shoes can make a bad outfit look great, and bad shoes can make even an Armani suit look awful.

8. Avoid wearing any kind of shirt that has the likeness of a race car driver emblazoned on the front, unless you're going to Walmart.

9. Avoid wearing any kind of shirt that has an immature saying on the front. Save the shirt that says "Certified Bikini Inspector" for college, where you can blend in with other immature hormone-driven frat boys wearing shirts with stupid slogans printed across the front.

10. Develop your fashion sense by reading and studying magazines like GQ or Esquire. You'll be surprised how much you can learn with a magazine subscription.

Fashion sense is something that is developed with time and life experience. Don't be fooled into thinking that fashion sense is something you have to be born with. That simply is not true. By following the ten tips and suggestions listed above, you can develop a decent sense of fashion before you head off to college.





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Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Why Writing Articles Is Much Better Than Search Engine Optimization

This article is dedicated to those who are afraid to challenge themselves and go out on the edge and prove that if they can do it so can I.

While, no one manual can teach anyone affiliate marketing or how to market a business successfully online, there is one method that can.

And that is: The method of trial and error, where failure is not an option.

So with that said, I would like to prove without a doubt;

Why Writing Articles Is Much Better Than Search Engine Optimization.

There Is No Competition When It Comes To Writing Articles.

Do you know that one keyword rich article can bring you thousands of hits for years to come?

To discover this, I jumped into the article publishing business and started reading every article I could find on how to write and publish artilces online.

Well, this is not easy for newcomers, but I had to prove that if they could do it so could I. So, I wote my first article and kept checking the search engines. The increase in traffic grew steadily and my article started a life on it's own. That one article was being distributed all over the net.

I had absolutely no one competing with me only websites picking up my article and adding it to their article directories. My life as publisher began, and every week I wrote another article, getting more exposure for free.

Search Engine Optimization Is For Experts, Articles Don't Have Changing Algorithm.

While Search Engine optimization is the best method for getting free traffic from the search engine, you have to be a SEO expert to remain in the top ten for highly competetive keywords. The search engines are constantly changing and updating their algorithm, making it more difficult to maintain top positions.

Now, with article writing on the hand, I don't worry about any algorithm changes, all I have to focus on is keyword rich content and quality information that readers will be happy to get their hands on.

You Don't Have To Exchange Links To Increase Your Ranking.

Would you believe me if I told you that your ranking will increase with all the back links you get from one top article.

Yes, it's true. If you can get one hot article online, you will be amazed to see how many article directories will post this article on high PR pages (yes, pages with PR6 or higher).

All these links will be pointing back to your site, giving you a boost in your ranking.

Now, as for Search Engine Optimization, you will have to come up with a great internet marketing strategy to get high PR sites to add your link to their site. You will have to do some Join venture deals or give them one of your own products for free, or just try plain old fashion email, and hope you will get a response.

All It Takes Is A little About Box At the Bottom Of Your Article.

This is often over looked by many affiliate marketing article publishers. You wrote such a great article and there is no link back to your website, so your name is spreading all over the Internet, but your sight is suffering from lack of traffic.

If your going to write articles, please don't ever forget to add your signature file in the about box. If they don't have one just append it to the end of your article. Make sure that the about box is allowing HTML, if not just add your website link.

I have to admit, that my first couple of articles got my name out there, but the about box had no link back to my site.

Now for Search Engine optimization, there are many factors you have to consider and I must admit that your better off purchasing a SEO-Book that will teach you the proper way to optimize your pages. Don't overlook this fact, but you need a little of both to make thing just perfect. So, Search Engine Optimization and Article writing go hand in hand.

Anyway, I do hope that you see the importance of article writing and that you will be bold enough to venture out into cyber space and publish your first article. It only takes one, to see the effect.

About The Author

Alexander Marlin, Ebenezer St. Maarten A.N.

Has been actively marketing on the Internet

for over 3 years, he knows how to build a web site using search engine optimization. One of his many websites can be found at





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Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Why Was My Article Rejected

Article marketing has become a huge trend in Internet marketing today. Many marketers are using articles as their primary, and even sole, form of traffic generation and search engine optimization. However some marketers lament that article marketing doesn't seem to work for them, especially as their article submissions are often rejected.

I own and maintain three article directories. One is a general directory and two are niche directories. Every day I receive hundreds of article submissions and every day I reject dozens. When I first started I would carefully include a specific reason for each rejection but now submissions are so high it is all I can do to keep my head above water. Frankly, I feel it is more important to try to turn articles around in as timely a fashion as possible so I am all about speed now (and am still weeks behind with my general directory).

However I can share these tips in an open letter to article marketers who do not understand why their articles are rejected by my directories -- and likely other article directories as well.

The primary reasons articles are rejected by me include:

Reason 1: Active links in the body of the article. The only place I want to see an active link is the author resource box. This is fairly standard with most article directories.

Reason 2: The article does not belong in this directory. Usually this is true of a large percentage of my niche directory rejections. If the directory is about Internet promotion don't submit your articles about breast augmentation!

Reason 3: The article was not submitted to the right category. If I'm in a nice mood or I'm really interested in the article then I might recategorize it. If I recognize an author who regularly delivers quality content I might recategorize it. If it is in the right broad category I might move it to a more specific subcategory. However if it was submitted with no apparent thought or effort then I will most likely reject it. If the author can't be bothered to select the right category then why should I take the time?

Reason 4: Substandard English. If there are typos or poor grammar in the headline or summary then I am not impressed and will most likely reject the submission.

Reason 5: Subject spamming. If I receive a number of articles on the same subject and by the same author with similar titles and summaries then I will suspect article spamming. Rather than sort out which articles might offer quality unique content I simply reject them all.

Reason 6: Obscure topics. If I don't think that your article about New Jersey Divorce Lawyers will really add anything to my directory then I might just choose to reject it. Similarly if I can't tell what your article is about from the title, summary, or first paragraphs then I'm not going to read any further.

Reason 7: Blatant advertising. These are article directories so I don't want press releases or straight advertisements. Articles should include information about something other than whatever business you are trying to promote.

The simple fact is that these are my directories so I use my own editorial judgment about the appropriate content. I use the feeds and articles from my directories on my web sites and in my blogs, and my bottom line is that the article should offer interesting and/or appealing information to the target audience. If it isn't an article I want to see on my site then I choose to reject it.





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Monday, May 28, 2012

Article Plagiarism the Next Internet Ripoff

Content is King! shout the search engines. That's what the search engines love. We also love the non-reciprocal links that we get for our websites when our articles are published on other peoples' sites with our resource boxes dutifully appended below them.

To create a well written article takes time and effort. We have to get everything right: it has to be of relevance to the reader in that subject field; it has to be well researched; all spelling, punctuation and grammar must be correct; it has to be a genuine contribution to that particular area of specialization, and so interesting that the editor will jump at the chance of publishing it. And, oh yes, all the right keywords have to be there, of the right density and in the correct proportions.

The well-crafted article must satisfy both the reader and the bot; both the aesthetics of the eye and the strictures of the code. So those of us who try and be at least a little bit serious about things know that a second draft is always necessary, and then a third. Then it's best to sleep on it. Even after that, we know that we have to forget about it for a few days until we are able to come back to it again with a freshly critical mind. You prune it and nurture it. You take off the sharp edges and you tighten it up. If necessary you know when you have to tear it up and start over again.

Only after we have got it absolutely right - and then after spending many hours submitting to directories, editors of ezines, article announcement sites and individual webmasters - are we rewarded, perhaps, with those hard-won non-reciprocal inbound live hyperlinks.

But wait. There seems to be a problem. It appears that an increasing number of people are quite happy to simply copy and paste our work onto their own sites without a link back. Or they don't bother to check if the link is 'live'.

That would be bad enough. But there are other people who print our articles and then don't even bother to name the person who wrote it.

But there's far worse: those people who print our article and then announce to the world that they wrote it themselves! Some of those even have the temerity to add the copyright sign next to their name!

I may be being a bit too harsh. Perhaps these people don't realize that they're doing anything wrong. After all, the Internet was originally conceived as ownerless and based upon free and open source information. And I can think of nothing more Public Domain, in fact or in spirit, than the World Wide Web.

Yet just consider what it is these people are doing. They are stealing other peoples' work and passing it off as their own. They are effectively also stealing the web traffic that goes with it, the traffic that our labors should be rewarding our websites with, and diverting it to their own. This is blatant plagiarism. It just should not happen. Theft is theft, in whatever medium.

I wrote an article a few months ago on Internet marketing for small businesses. A search for the title of that article on Google now returns 10,800 pages, so at least the title itself has been reproduced that number of times and in that number of different places. A search for a chunk of text from the middle of the article returns 536 pages, which suggests that the article text has been published in its entirety no fewer than 536 times. Great! So now I have 536 inbound links from that one article! Wrong.

I looked at individual entries of the article and in a surprising number of cases there were no backlinks at all. Also surprising - and somewhat sickening - was the number of individuals who wantonly attached their own names to my work.

I recently posted the same article to a fresh source of publishers. I was astonished at the response of one editor of a well-known directory who had rejected the article on the grounds that it was not mine! She had seen the same piece on many other websites under different names, she said, and it was not her policy to publish work that had been produced using "cookie cutter" techniques. I wrote back saying that it really was my own work, citing the URL of SitePro News where it originally aired as that day's headline feature. She apologized and was even good enough to supply me with a list of names of people and sites who had published it as their own. I'm so tempted to publish their names here (perhaps I will on my blog; so watch out!) but have decided that discretion should rule. For the moment, at least.

But I think there is a clear message here. The fashion for article writing and publishing for content and backlinks is going through the roof at the moment. It's like a mini Internet boom all of its own. And like any other boom it has attracted its own inevitable pack of rat-racers, chancers, charlatans and cheats; shysters who go for the shortcuts every time, while remaining quite happy for other people to do their work for them.

For the record, the convention is this: distribute and publish the article freely by all means. But it must be published in its entirety and unedited, and MUST include the resource box with a live hyperlink back to the author's site (or wherever the author wants, for that matter).

Hey, now even my lawyer understands!

Next time I will publish their names gleefully, and be damned.





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Sunday, May 27, 2012

art-auctions-art-deco

Art Auctions: Art Deco

In the field of modern art, art deco plays a large and impressively lavish role. The strong colors and sweeping curves lend art deco the trademark boldness that expressed much of the progress and modern advances of the twentieth century. Art auctions around the world still move many art deco pieces of various kinds. If youre interested in collecting art deco, there are many art auctions both online and off that deal primarily in art deco.

In the twentieth century the decorative arts converged in what is known as the art deco movement, which grew to influence architecture, fashion, the visual arts as well as design. The term art deco was derived from a Worlds Fair held in Paris, France, called the Exposition Internationale des Arts Decoratifs et Industriels Modernes in the year 1925.

Though the movement and term comes from the Exposition Internationale des Arts Decoratifs et Industriels Modernes, the term was not widely used until the late 1960s. Especially pre- World War I Europe influenced the art deco movement, though many cultures influenced and were influenced by this art movement. Much of the world was experiencing similar shifts in modern technological advances.

For the most part, the art deco movement was brought about and inspired by the rapid advances of technological and social facets of the early twentieth century. As culture responded to these increasingly changing times, the art deco movement was an outgrowth of these modern phenomena.

Art deco is considered generally to be an eclectic type of decorative modernism that was influenced by a variety of artists and particular art forms. Art deco includes furniture, metalwork, clocks, glasswork and screens as well as paintings and other fine art types of pieces.

The art deco style is known for its lavishness and epicurean flairs that are attributed to the austerity of culture brought about by World War I. Strong patterns and bold colors and shapes were used, as were many particular motifs used universally.

For example, the sunburst motif was used in everything from the Radio City Music Hall auditorium, images of ladies shoes, the spire of the Chrysler Building and several other pieces of art, architecture and design. Other ubiquitous motifs found in art deco were stepped forms, the zigzag, chevron patterns and sweeping curves.

In the West, art deco lost its steam around the Second World War, but continued to be used all the way into the 1960s in colonial countries such as India, where it served as a gateway to Modernism. Then in the 1980s art deco made a comeback in graphic design. Art decos association with 1930s film noir led to its use in both fashion and jewelry ads.

Today art deco is revered by many and dismissed as old news and overly gaudy by others. Though it undoubtedly played a major role in art history, as with most art, individual taste frames the individuals interpretation and like or dislike of art deco styles.

Art deco is one of the most well known art movements. This is mostly due to its wide base of influences and influenced art forms and cultures. Since much of the world was experiencing many of the same advances in technology and mass production, many of the same ideas and symbols were relevant in various parts of the world.

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