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Shopportunity

Men’s Fragrance at Barneys

Guys, here’s your chance to smell amazing.

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Scent of a man: Odin, at Barneys New York at Pacific Place.

WHERE: Barneys New York

WHAT: A fragrance event—for the guys. Up on the second floor level, the store’s scent specialists will assemble masculine offerings from Byredo, Odin, Costume National, Comme Des Garcons, Serge Lutens, and more. They’ll be there to answer questions and explain the nuanced lingering of orange and tobacco notes, and to help shoppers navigate new products and classic elements.

As assistant manager Matthew McDonald put it, “like a Genius Bar for fragrance.” But you know, they’ll also be there to give away samples.

I love the idea of a room full of well-dressed Seattle men interested in upping the ante with a gorgeous fragrance, but as a woman who’s always been drawn to traces of wood and tobacco—not, say, geranium and jasmine—I’m hoping that Barneys won’t mind if the rest of us show up, too.

WHEN: Thursday, May 10 from 5:30 to 7

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Tags: Seattle Menswear, Health and Beauty, Grooming, Barneys

Celebrity Appearance

Simon Doonan at Barneys New York

A lengthy discussion about nuts, shame, and style with the author of Gay Men Don’t Get Fat in advance of his January 26 appearance.

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Not-fat gay man Simon Doonan shares his secrets in Gay Men Don’t Get Fat. On January 26 from 5 to 7, he’ll be at Barneys in downtown Seattle to sign copies and be fabulous.

Barneys New York creative ambassador at large Simon Doonan tells stories the way he dresses windows. That is, with headlong humor, wild (but wildly on) pop culture references, and a forward-thinking, U.K.-rooted sense of style that feels bawdy and high-brow, buttoned-up, and completely undone. His latest is called Gay Men Don’t Get Fat, and if you don’t get that pop culture reference, Mireille Guiliano would like to introduce you to a cheese plate and a croissant.

But first, I’d like to introduce you to Simon Doonan. You can meet him for yourself on Thursday, January 26 at the downtown Barneys where you can pick up a signed copy of his pink-jacketed gem. He’ll be there from 5 to 7, and you’ll need to RSVP by calling 206-622-6300 ext 221.

WWW: Obesity is such a huge medical problem in America right now. Does Gay Men attempt to deal with that at all?
Doonan: It’s a humor book. I have friends who struggle with their weight and I’m enormously sympathetic to that. My book is fluff. It’s about having a good chuckle. The goal of my book is to encourage people to live in a flamboyant, fun way regardless of whether they’re gay or straight, fat or thin. People have historically attributed a finesse and knowledge to French women. The reason gay people have a similar cache is because of their outsider, idiosyncratic status. We embrace a lifestyle that is flamboyant and fun. That attitude could empower you to make changes if you’re overweight but I’m not qualified beyond that—I’m stupid and fashiony. I eat the same thing everyday.

Yes, in the chapter that delineates certain foods as gay or straight (sushi is the former, Mexican food is the latter), you share your daily diet—All-Bran cereal, soup, brown rice, broccoli.
I’m very much a lesbian when it comes to food. Growing up in post-war England, we didn’t have an interesting food culture. It was disgusting and frightening and there was never enough. Food wasn’t a comfort, and my mom was a health food nut. She thew out all the white sugar in the ’60s. My gay sister and I eat exactly the same way; very crunchy, lots of nuts and seeds.

I think I might be a lesbian, too. I just had steamed spinach with kimchi and chia seeds for lunch.
Hellllllloooo.

The book is so immediate and fun. It’s the kind of thing you should bring on a three-day beach vacation—but you’d run the risk of totally devouring it before the plane lands. On one hand, you’re such a visual storyteller—a window at Barneys can say so much about character and narrative and time and place—but on the other hand, I’m addicted to those Moth podcasts and the couple of yours that I’ve heard are pretty great. And this is your sixth book.
Engaging with people, whether with a window or an anecdote, is not dissimilar. The Moth is very exhilarating and scary. It’s ten minutes of madness. But I’m not nervous when I do them because the audience is rooting for you—for everyone. I’ve seen people stop and forget their place, well the audience just cheers them on. I’ve learned that people are essentially good natured. Being gay, you learn to navigate negativity and enjoy life. You leave shame and guilt behind. When people say, “What’s your guilty pleasure?” I don’t have an answer for them. I’ll watch some crappy TV show if I feel like it and I’m certainly not going to feel guilty about it.

There’s a lot of pressure to be well-read and high-brow these days.
Women are going through a very masochistic period. You have to look like Angelina Jolie, pop out loads of children, and be professional. When I meet women who are really self-critical I’m just like, “Fuck it, enjoy life.”

So where do Kim Kardashian and all those Real Housewives of Whatever fall into all that? Into that pressure to be superwoman?
Kim Kardashian is a plucky nut who puts herself out there in a way that’s pretty mind boggling. The problem with her and Paris Hilton is that they spawn millions of imitators. I mean, where did all those tanned girls with blonde hair and a purse on the crook of their arm come from? Not Tilda Swinton. My issue is that it becomes conformist. I encourage individuality. All my books are clarion calls to develop a sense of individuality. To use fashion and style not as a rod to your back but as a form of self expression. And I know that’s hard for some women. I say it and they nod and then go, “What shoes should I wear with this?” They freak out when I say there are no rules. The only rule is using fashion and style—using it to express yourself, whether you’re Snooki or Tilda.

Well put. People ask me to define what ‘stylish’ means and I always say it’s certainly not about following the examples in Vogue. I appreciate all kinds of well-defined style—it doesn’t have to match my style. Develop your own sense of style, and do it with conviction.
I could never be Queer Eye for the Straight Guy. I’m not that. If I met a goofy straight guy with a mullet I would just encourage him to use a good conditioner so it was nice and soft and luxurious. Otherwise he’d go from being someone noteworthy to just being ‘acceptable.’ It all comes back to Diane Arbus; I want to see a smorgasbord of humanity.

Doonan

(It’s because they’re “French women with penises” and they eat like lesbians.)

In terms of American culture, there’s been such amazing progress in terms of gay culture and this whole melting pot situation. I mean, your book might not have been contracted much less placed in megamall bookstores ten years ago.
The evolution of gay rights is an ongoing thing but there’s definitely been a leap forward. When I came to this country they didn’t give green cards to homosexuals. That was late ‘70s, early ’80s. That’s unimaginable now—it’s like I’m making it up. Oh, I lied about it then because I had to, but I’ve always been very out, even when it was problematic to be out. It seemed like a good idea to be straightforward. Telling the truth seemed to have intrinsic power. That’s the key with discrimination: you can’t take it personally because it’s not really about you. I coach kids to be unoffendable. Don’t take it personally.

That makes me think of Lady Gaga’s antibully thing—she’s definitely a gay icon and friend-of-Barneys.
As well as your own Dan Savage. I think he’s just great. Jonny and I listen to his podcasts and just laugh hysterically. I recently uploaded a video to his It Gets Better project. I think if he does nothing more with his life this will be enough.

Do you know Dan? Will you see him when you’re here?
I’ve never met him but I should send him a copy of my book.

Okay, one final question. Given your new categorization technique for the sexuality of food as well as Washington state’s latest developments in the gay marriage department, I have to know: is wedding cake gay or straight?
Fabulous question! English wedding cake is straight. On the inside it’s this very tough fruitcake and on the outside, it’s rock-hard icing. Altogether, it’s a very butch undertaking. American cake is all nelly and gay. The fluffy icing situation is very gay, there’s definitely a transatlantic divide there.

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Tags: Celebrity Interview, Barneys

Gift Guide '11

Give It Up: Lady Gaga Giftables

Barneys has a Lady Gaga themed shop-within-a-shop. There are stiletto stockings (like, the hung-on-the-chimney-with-care kind) there.

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Goodbye Santa Claus, hello Lady Gaga. It’s a whole new season at Barneys New York.

Who gets it: The Gaga lover on your list.

Why: Life is better with an anthem—and a few related accoutrements—and it’s probably not their fault that they were born too late for Madonna.

Where you’ll find it: Barneys New York across the country, or, you know, the one downtown. It’s a very Gaga season as far as the well-humored high-fashion department store is concerned, and they’re dressing up windows and peddling spiked jewelry, fingerless gloves, and weird makeup in its honor.

The Seattle shop-in-shop isn’t much more than a card table set up between the cosmetics counters and the designer shoes, but it’s worth a visit.

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Tags: Barneys, Gift Guide '11

Shopping Event

Report: Fashion’s Night Out

Here’s what went down where we were at last night.

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Slideshow: Seattle style blogger Adria Saracino from The Emerald Closet shared a few of her snaps from #FNOSea, as I’ve come to call it. Check her blog on Monday for more of her shots.

Though generally speaking I’d have to be categorized as anti-man bag, this fellow here is definitely an exception to my admittedly short-sighted ‘rule.’ I like that he’s just full-on owning it with this great clutch.

View Slideshow » Photo: Adria Saracino for The Emerald Closet

Slideshow: Seattle style blogger Adria Saracino from The Emerald Closet shared a few of her snaps from #FNOSea, as I’ve come to call it. Check her blog on Monday for more of her shots.

Though generally speaking I’d have to be categorized as anti-man bag, this fellow here is definitely an exception to my admittedly short-sighted ‘rule.’ I like that he’s just full-on owning it with this great clutch.

View Slideshow » Photo: Adria Saracino for The Emerald Closet

Love that Adria got a picture of this gal; I had seen her also but then she was gone by the time I crossed the street. It’s a completely agreeable look from top down; love the cropped tee.

View Slideshow » Photo: Adria Saracino for The Emerald Closet

If this woman wore those shoes all over downtown for the whole of Fashion’s Night Out, I’d like to buy her a cocktail. Get in touch, lady!

View Slideshow » Photo: Adria Saracino for The Emerald Closet

Somehow this captures the mood of the night, which really felt more like a ‘day,’ or at least an evening, owing to the gorgeous weather and the slightly surreal giddiness of shopping en masse.

View Slideshow » Photo: Adria Saracino for The Emerald Closet

Skirt length: past the knee. Let’s do this.

You know you’ve had a good time in downtown Seattle when your parking tab at Pacific Place is $26.

We definitely started Fashion’s Night Out early. We were checking in on shops like Nancy Meyer well before anything you would have called “Night,” but we had serious ground to cover and we were determined to make all the requisite stops.

And here’s the thing: making those stops, especially early on, afforded us the opportunity to chat with shopkeepers, not just about #FNOSea but about, well, life in general. And the block party aspect of the event—the whole get-to-know-your-local-retailers thing—is integral to what Fashion’s Night Out is all about.

Of course, FNO is also about a good time. Wherever we went, as we ran into friends and acquaintances, the first round of questions concerned where we’d been, what they were doing there, and what they were pouring. At Mario’s, for instance, it was vodka cocktails, spiked with a photobooth.

But just as important as the booze was the activity, celebration, and/or parade of fashion; what FNO’ers really wanted to know was where the action was. They were looking not just to shop but to do or see or partake—at Alhambra that meant watching as models in fresh fall gear posed rather valiantly in the First Ave windows, while all manner of passersby got up on the glass to inspect them. At Baby and Co. it meant wrapping up in a scarf-tying demo. At Barneys it was a party vibe with a DJ and inventive snacks; at Nordstrom, the savvy department was flooded with friend groups getting in on some newfangled, editable, digital step and repeat situation.

While there was plenty of good stuff going on, it wasn’t necessarily easy to sense the critical mass of it, simply because it just isn’t possible to be everywhere at once. Trucking from, say, First and Union to Sixth and Pike, you were bound to miss moments of retail bliss, sartorial celebration, and fashion-on-the-loose here and there. Even with our early start and extra hours built in, it wasn’t easy to get to all the stops let alone take some time to stop, shop, and enjoy them. And send up a few Tweets about it.

“Are you seeing lots of people? Is everyone here?” That was another thing we asked each other—only that too was difficult to gauge. Same reason.

Only solution: Next year, every single downtown retailer and restaurant stays open til 9 and we really turn this thing inside out. Or, maybe by then science will have made some progress on the whole being-two-places-at-once thing.

Still, when we wound up at MistralKitchen at the end of the night (have you had the Thai popcorn there? insane) there certainly weren’t any regrets. Sure, it would be cool to be in New York for FNO where the event kicks off New York Fashion Week (and $26 buys you twenty minutes of parking), but walking down Westlake last night and looking up at the moon in our uncluttered, clear blue-black sky, I wouldn’t have wanted to be anywhere else.

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Tags: Mario's, Nordstrom, Barneys, Fashion's Night Out '11, Baby and Co.

Guide: Fashion’s Night Out

Follow us, literally and digitally, for good times and great outfits.

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These fold-out Fashion’s Night Out maps, with full info on all participating stores, are included in our September issue; if you’d like one, feel free to stop by our offices on Western Ave and pick one up. Thanks to the amazing UK-born Seattle-based fashion illustrator Izzie Klingels for the artwork on the map.

Whatever the reason, there’s a sort of critical mass this year as far as Seattle and Fashion’s Night Out are concerned.

The Bravern is doing it, U Village is doing, heck, even Alderwood Mall is doing it.

And downtown Seattle is most definitely doing it. And so are we—we being a pack of Seattle Met’sters and friends. Mia Harrison from Fashion Network Seattle and Melissa Middleton from JeNeSeQua are joining Ethan Miller and Jamie Fish from Heffner Model Management and our Seattle Met posse as we do the shopper’s version of a pub crawl at a fashion-centric block party.

The whole lot of us will be armed with mobile devices to Tweet and Facebook what we see and who we see; we’ll be looking for FNO’s Best Dressed, tagging and uploading contenders to the Seattle Met Facebook page and my Twitter feed.

Meanwhile, the Heffner crew will be scouting for new faces. So bring your top model dreams, your summer-to-fall style, and let’s hang out.

Be sure to like us on Facebook and follow me on Twitter now so that when we cross paths and digitally verbalize our mutual admiration, we can tag and “@” you and all that.

And, be sure to use the Downtown Seattle FNO hashtag, #FNOSEA

Here’s our itinerary. (Warning: it’s a lot to take in; we’re completists and we’re intent on getting to all the spots at all the right times—backtracking be damned.)

+ 2:45 to 3:30 Swink Style Bar Where else would we start? As I don’t have much hair to blow out, I’m just getting my makeup done. I’m thinking liquid liner and nude lips.

-3:30 to 5 Pacific Place vendors: Ann Taylor, J.Crew (those who spend $150 or more on FNO get a free custom Fashion’s Night Out tote), and True Religion Brand Jeans (gift with purchase!) to Nancy Meyer (yes, absolutely, underpinnings are an essential element of fashion) to Eileen Fisher (more champagne! sweet treats! raffle prizes!) to Mario’s (for a spin through the photobooth while the DJ plays our song; they’re starting early—4!—and ending early—7!—so don’t miss out, and do check out small bites, signature cocktails, exclusive Fashion’s Night Out merchandise, and prizes from Hugo Boss)

-5 to 6:45 Columbia Sportswear (to check out their new City Collection) to The Finerie (for Fashion’s Night Out specials, signature cocktails, and a chat with designer Abigail Glaum-Lathbury) to Free People (we’ll see who’s enjoying the 20 percent discount and complementary feather extensions—with purchase of course) to Alhambra (where there will be a live fashion show, live music, and champagne—and, for those who spend $200, a $50 gift certificate) to Baby and Co. (we’ll take 10 percent off of the scarf bar and some “how to” demo’s, yep, thanks).

-6:45 to 7:15 We’ll be at RN74, refueling, even if we have to pay full price. The buzzed-about joint is offering a late night happy hour from 9 to close for FNO’ers; all items on that menu will be $5.

-7:15 to 8 Barneys New York, where they’re doing it up party-style with Trophy Cupcakes, light bites from Alan Davis of Scout Provisions, and a DJ (store manager Chris Nardi promised me Boy George—or was it Culture Club?). Please note: Barneys is outta here at 8. We’re sort of hoping they’ll let us flip the ‘open’ sign to ‘closed’ … or something like that.

-8 to 8:30 Morton’s the Steakhouse where bar bites are $6, but depending on how rigorously you’ve been shopping, you might just go for the steak and seafood three-course menu for $54.99.

-8:30 to 9 Ah, how many nights have we been at Nordstrom for last call? They’re serving up entertainment, refreshments, prizes, exclusive merchandise, and, of course, the latest trends. We’ll be there.

-9 to ? MistralKitchen, because, c’mon, we’ve only just begun. The official after-party spot is offering specials on food, cocktails, and champagne from 9 to midnight.

Of course, we certainly won’t be the only thumb-typing style hunters out and about on September 8. Seattle fashion bloggers and of-the-minute shopping news updaters Jess Estrada from Fresh Jess, Tina Witherspoon from Glamspoon, Ashley Breckel from Style Umbrella, and the Emerald Closet folks from the blog of the same name will all be out and about. Hope you will, too—we can’t wait to connect!

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Tags: Mario's, Nordstrom, Barneys, Fashion's Night Out '11, Baby and Co.

Sales: Mario’s, Barneys, Nordstrom, Blackbird, Neiman Marcus [Updated]

It’s a great week to be a woman in Seattle—and it’s not a bad time to be a guy, either.

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Lanvin, on sale at Mario’s.

Ladies, check it out: You’ve got the Nordstrom half-yearly sale for women and children in full-effect; markdowns in Collectors, the designer department, and designer shoes and handbags, started yesterday and continue tomorrow.

Beginning today, you’re also wanted on the second floor of Mario’s, where the women’s summer sale is commencing. You’ll find prices cut on pieces by Prada, Lanvin, Helmut Lang, Brunello Cucinelli, Vince, and more.

And then there’s Barneys, where savings of up to 40 percent kicked off yesterday.

Now, gentlemen: Don’t feel left out. That Barneys sale includes clothes, shoes, and accessories for men and women, and on top of that, the designer sale at Blackbird in Ballard started yesterday and continues as long as the merchandise is there.

UPDATE: Hey! Neiman Marcus is on sale too! Women’s designer is up to 40 percent off and you’re invited to save up to 33% on menswear.

Your biggest headache is where to begin. Just keep one thing in mind, okay? Yes, you can shop online at a number of these stores, but if you’re planning to hit Nordstrom sale and/or the Barneys one, do your community a favor and hit them in person. Not by pointing and clicking. Why? Because doing so means one of your neighbors gets the commission, not some computer. (Go ahead and shop online with Blackbird, that money will stay in town regardless since they’re totally local; with Mario’s, virtual shopping is not an option.)

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Tags: Mario's, Nordstrom, Barneys, Blackbird

Join Us at Barneys

Spend Saturday at Barneys with me, some vodka cocktails, and brand new looks from your favorite style engineers.

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The beach? Who goes to the beach for Memorial Day Weekend in Seattle? Come hang out with us at Barneys. We can all try this color-blocked A.P.C. dress on. (One at a time, please.)

Yeah, you could invite a person to Sasquatch for Memorial Day weekend. I mean, if you’re into that kind of thing.

Here’s hoping that those of you who are into clothes, will appreciate this invite from yours truly and Barneys New York.

This Saturday May 28 from 1 to 4, we’d like it if you hung out with me in the Co-Op department on the second floor of the downtown shop and checked out brand new pieces by Etoile by Isabel Marant, A.L.C., Rag & Bone, and more while taking advantage of lemon-lime vodka spritzers and fully loaded gift bags.

You see, the staff at Barneys asked me to curate a couple racks of my favorite things, and then be available should you enjoy the collaboration of a like-minded clothes hunter. Figure on a day of trying out new styles, trying on new looks, and (here’s where those cocktails might come in extra handy) getting some great new ideas while others do the same.

Figure on saving a little money maybe, too. Or, well … spending some free money. If you took advantage of that whole Purple Card thing a while back, this is your chance to redeem those bonus bucks.

Speaking of bonus: Customers who make a purchase get a $25 voucher from our friends at the nearby Sassoon salon.

Just keep in mind, there is no Barneys at the Gorge. See you downtown.

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Tags: Barneys

In Person: Thom Filicia

Three opportunities to meet one of those Queer Eye for the Straight Guy guys.

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Photo: Neil Craver

Need tips for creating rooms you’ll love? Thom Felicia wants to help. He also wants you to go to the Pio Square Masins on Thursday, May 19 and the W Hotel and the Masins in Belleuve on Friday, May 20.

Where: Downtown’s W Seattle; 1112 Fourth Ave, Seattle AND both locations of the home store Masins

What: The W Seattle can entice you with Grey Goose cocktails, they can lure you with bites from Earth and Ocean, but DIFFA’s best shot at getting local and area design industry folks to come hang out lies with celebrity designer and product developer Thom Felicia. The former Queer Eye for the Straight Guy star has a new book, Thom Felicia Style: Inspired Ideas for Creating Rooms You’ll Love. He’ll be signing the book at the fundraiser; live DJs and dancing? Yes, those are on the agenda, too.

You can also meet Felicia in what might be termed his natural environment. At the interiors shop Masins in Pioneer Square; the party involves cocktails, a wine bar, luxe silent auction, and a fashion and jewelry presentation from Barneys and Alvin Goldfarb Jeweler.

The Bellevue Masins location is hosting, along with Northwest Society of Interior Designers an even more low-key book signing and meet-and-greet.

When: May 19 from 6 to 9 at Masins Pioneer Square. Cost is $40 or $75 (are you a VIP? Pony up for the latter). Tickets can be purchased via DIFFA Seattle.

May 20 from 3 to 5 at Masins on Main Street in Bellevue. RSVP to Bellevue (@) masins.com. This event is FREE.

May 20 from 6 to 9 at the W Seattle. Cost is $30 and includes cocktails and appetizers. RSVP to Christina Madden at rsvpevents.wseattle (@) whotels.com or purchase tickets on dot429.com.

All proceeds from all events benefit DIFFA.

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Tags: Reality TV, Home Decor, Barneys, Celebrity Stalking

Purple Card Promotion at Barneys

Spend some, get some at the downtown shop.

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Starting this Thursday, May 5 and running through Sunday, May 8, Barneys is encouraging you spend a little by giving you a little whenever you do.

Here’s the deal:

When you spend $250, you’ll get a $25 gift card
Spend $500, get a $50 gift card
Spend $750, get a $75 gift card
and on and on …

Gift cards may be redeemed after an approximately month-long waiting period.

Hm. So will it be $250 on mom, $25 for you? Or the other way around maybe?

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Tags: Barneys

Win Tickets for FACE

Land two free tickets to Seattle’s best runway show on Tuesday, April 26.

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A runway image from last year’s FACE show.

The super-anticipated FACE fashion show, in which top trends from Barneys New York are paraded around Pnk Ultra Lounge while you bid on amazing local goods and services for the benefit of beautiful young minds in India, is just five days away.

Have you scored tickets yet?

No? Here’s your chance.

Use the orange email the editor link to the right of this post (underneath the image of me seemingly examining my navel) and send in your name, email, and phone number for a chance to win two free tickets for the Tuesday, April 26 event.

Your email must have the words “I heart FACE” in the subject line, and you may only submit one entry. Those who enter more than once will be disqualified and publicly disgraced.

Entries must be received by Tuesday April 26 at 3; a winner will be selected at 4, and notified via phone and email. The winner and his/her guest will claim their tickets at check-in a few hours later.

Don’t want to chance it? Ensure a seat with a visit to the Brown Paper Tickets site.

For more on FACE, please visit their website and Facebook page.

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Tags: Seattle Street Style, Seattle Fashion Show, FACE, Barneys

UPDATED Runway: Zandra Rhodes, The Stranger, FACE, and Trends for Treehouse

Save these dates for upcoming fashion events around town.

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Brit designer Zandra Rhodes appears at a spring 11 runway show of her couture looks at Neiman Marcus on April 7; the incricate costumes she designed for Seattle Opera’s Magic Flute will be on display inside the store from April 1 through April 10.

Who says there are never any fashion events in this town? Here are four to put on your calendar now.

EDITED Where: Neiman Marcus

What: Together with the Seattle Opera, the Bravern anchor brings the super-colorful Brit designer Zandra Rhodes to town for a look at the couture looks in her spring ‘11 collection. Ms. Rhodes designed the costumes for the Seattle Opera’s production of the Magic Flute; those pieces will be on display in the store from April 1 through April 10.

When: Thursday, April 7; Seattle Opera is taking reservations for the event. Call 206-676-5568 or visit www.seattleopera.org/zandrarhodesevent for more information.

THERE HAS BEEN A CHANGE TO THIS EVENT Zandra Rhodes will be making a public appearance at Neiman Marcus on Friday, April 8 from 1 to 4. There will not be a runway show, but her spring ‘11 collection will be modeled and on display. This event is free and open to the public. Her costumes for the Opera’s Magic Flute production will still be on display from April 1 through April 10 in the Neiman Marcus windows.

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Where: ACT Theatre

What: The Stranger presents the first annual Worn Out, in which some up-and-coming Seattle designers (some of whom you’ve seen here and here and here) show their stuff.

The weekly paper has asked yours truly to help judge a Vitamin Water–sponsored contest portion of the event, so I’m looking forward to that. At least I think I am.

When: Friday, April 8; tickets are $20 and they’re on sale now.

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Where: Pnk Ultra Lounge

What: This year’s FACE promises all the big city glamor of year’s past—the runway looks are from Barneys, the models are top talent from local agencies, the crowd is exactly the kind you want to be a part of. Of course, the benefactors—homeless and orphaned children in schools built entirely with Seattle dollars in Nepal and India—are exactly the kind you want to be involved with also.

When: Tuesday, April 26; tickets range from $50 to $125 and are available through Brown Paper Tickets.

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Where: Westfield Shopping Center

What: Trends for Treehouse raises funds to provide area foster children with the help and services that they don’t otherwise have access to. The show also puts hot looks from Banana Republic, Escape Outdoors, Gap, The Limited, Macy’s, and more on the runway.

When: Thursday, May 12; tickets are $50

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Tags: Eastside, Seattle Fashion Show, Fundraiser, FACE, Barneys

Following Up: the Shipley & Halmos Book

’We’re An American ________’ is out, and Seattle, it features you.

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The Shipley & Halmos spring collection is on its way. The Shipley & Halmos book, ’We’re An American ___________’ is already here.

Remember back in August when I told you that neo-classic sportswear designers Shipley & Halmos would be rolling through the downtown Barneys with a tricked out photobooth and a mission?

The mission is complete.

Consider the small run (just 40 copies for now – we’ll see if they print more) of their image-based ’We’re An American _____________’ a sort of pre-cursor to their spring collection. Consisting of cheerfully stark photographs of shoppers, curious extroverts, and oh-what-the-heck-I’m-game joiners-in the book launches their newly minted S & H Publishers imprint.

While I like what the NY-based designers do for your closet (particularly if you’re a guy), I really like the line’s hang tags, logo, branding, and printed matter. I always have. So it made sense to me when I heard they were moving into the realm of bound paper. And, as a friend and I were discussing the other night, it’s always heartening to see designers of one discipline swim into another. Well, okay, I take that back. It’s not always heartening. But when it’s done well, it’s so right.

So anyway, as I was reminding you, these guys were in San Fran, LA, Chicago, and your town and now there’s art-book proof. (Little-known fact: Sam Shipley is actually a native Northwesterner.) Check out this peek at ’We’re An American’s’ portraits and see if you don’t recognize a few faces.

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Tags: Books, Shipley & Halmos, Barneys, Fashion

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