Sunday 21 April 2013

& Other Stories

You will have had to have been under a fashion-deprived rock not to have heard of the launch of & Other Stories.  It fills me with shame that I haven't posted about this sooner as I feel bashfully late jumping on the old band wagon.  But flat hunting/sofa surfing has left little time for retail therapy (you can't hold your head  high in a nice retail space if you're lugging your life around in a bag.)  So the other day, post meeting, I whizzed into the Regent Street located store to report to anyone else who hasn't visited yet.



Now for the history bit.  The brand is from the same family tree as H&M and COS (that's enough to get serious fashion hearts a-flutter) and is the epitome of 'Scandi Cool'.  Three years in the making and originally starting as a beauty brand, the label has grown into a full lifestyle label and leans towards the more minimal, premium COS, but with more of a flair for visual merchandising.




Whilst available online, the retail experience at present is only within the walls of the old Mamas & Papas site just off Oxford Circus.  The first thing that hits you is the smell.  Various lotions and potions (all with that typically chic, stripped back packaging) are dotted around amongst the fashion, then as you reach the back of the store it is a cosmetic haven with big clunky white porcelain sinks for testing the smelly stuff.




Jewellery, too, is delicately and sparingly placed amongst the rails rather than the H&M style of having loads in one rather unsightly area.  Not that I'm complaining.  H&M does the best statement pieces for the best ever prices and a lot more my style than the uber clean, basic almost masculine styling of & Other Stories.



Upstairs lies a whole shoe and bag area.  Beautiful.  Buzzing.  And of course, all very cool.  Extra points for the gorgeous lingerie and swimwear too.  Minus points for having to be no bigger than a C cup.  Damn my mother's ample chest and for passing it down to me.  Flat, unsexy boy boobs are so much chicer in a Scandinavian concept store.   



And then there's the clothes.  The brand is ignoring fast fashion trends and instead focusing on four key style groups or 'stories' which will evolve each season - ‘Poetic & Dandy’, ‘Sophisticated & Architectural’, ‘Minimalism and Contradiction’ and ‘Industrial & Effortless’.   Everything is simple, timeless and clean.


What I loved was the haphazard visual merchandising - strips of clunky industrial tape, office-style lamps highlighting the mannequins, little postcards of the campaign imagery stuck in random places.   I didn't want to buy anything, it's all a little too minimalist for me (sorry, I guess I'm not that cool) but you must visit for some serious Nordic chic.   


Monday 15 April 2013

Dream A Little Dream....

Well readers, it's not great news.  I still have no where to live.  It' unsettling and I'm confined to a bag of clothes so I'm repeating outfits a lot.  Shameful.  Thanks to some lovely, amazing, generous friends I am sleeping in the odd spare bed (bliss) and sofa surfing.  And so I've decided to conjure up my dream sofas.  For surfing.   Or for my future home.  Should it ever be discovered.


Velvet.  Plush.   Magazines stacked nearby.


Stripes in a summer palette.  Peonies earn extra points.


A big, plump couch to match the foliage.


Mismatching cushions and fashion clutter.  Dreamy.


Stripped back.


Hang a colourful or iconic print over a simple gleaming white sofa.


Crochet cushion + print cushions + simple couch


My grown up sofa.  No coloured liquids allowed.


Pink and pretty.  Love the 'darling' print.


Tranquil for undisturbed slumber.


Arty, with haphazard pillows.


Yep.  it's not gonna be the snuggliest of sleeps.  But this looks super slick.


I would pay someone to gently rock me to sleep.

For a couch makeover all you need is a great throw folded over the arm (ready to be used for an impromptu nap) and some cushions.  Stick to a core colour palette if you want it to look slick and cosmopolitan.  For a country vibe, mix all kind of prints.  The key is texture, texture, texture.  
Places to do this on a budget include Zara Home, TK Maxx, Marks and Spencer, Next (if you can bear to go in and ignore the rest of the product) and the ever sublime Ikea.  

imagery - pinterest

Event Alert!

Got no plans tonight?  Are you a denim fan per chance?  Yes?  Well get yourself down to Chelsea for Love Lust Like favourite Donna Ida's flagship reopening.  With denim and designers galore, there is also nails by Essie (a good reason to turn up anywhere) and the first 50 people to make a purchase will receive one hell of a goodie bag.

Happy shopping x