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Color Theory #2

Butch Blum’s Kay Smith-Blum gives a simple answer to a big question.

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Gray2

Slideshow: Go with the gray (and blue/gray, and charcoal, and soft cloud-colored hues) at Butch Blum. Pictured here: Blugirl top; $495, and Alberta Ferretti skirt; $695

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Slideshow: Go with the gray (and blue/gray, and charcoal, and soft cloud-colored hues) at Butch Blum. Pictured here: Blugirl top; $495, and Alberta Ferretti skirt; $695

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Faliero Sarti scarf; $385

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Moschino Cheap and Chic knit dress; $675

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Boglioli knit shirt: $395, Coppley pant; $295, and Timberland Boot Company shoe; $255

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Armani Jeans bag; $235

Fall might be the season when color comes most into play. It’s that whole fall colors thing – we just can’t resist evoking those earth and jewel tones.

But when I went to former Style Counselor Kay Smith-Blum for her take on the color(s) that would ease us out of this season and into the next, she was pretty succinct in her reply.

“Gray is the new black,” the Butch Blum co-owner said.

Fair enough. Where our first Color Theorist waxed long and green on the palette of his mid-summer obsession, Smith-Blum supplied us with this slideshow on current Butch Blum pieces that put a great spin on the idea of a gray day.

What colors are you feeling for fall?

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Tags: Style Counsel, Seattle Menswear

Trending: The Return of the Perm

Lisa Rowell from Sassoon Salon brings frizzy back

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Prada_girls_in_frizz

Slideshow: The perms have returned, as this recent Prada campaign proves

View Slideshow » Photo: style.com

Slideshow: The perms have returned, as this recent Prada campaign proves

View Slideshow » Photo: Style.com

Says Lisa Rowell, “The Louis Vuitton spring 2010 show definitely inspired my own afro. It was refreshing to see the hair play such a big role, and I loved that all the models were wearing different hair colors.”

View Slideshow » Photo: Style.com

Another big hair look from Marc Jacobs’ Louis Vuitton S/S 2010 runway

View Slideshow » Photo: style.com

An Afro’ed look from the Commes des Garcons spring runway

View Slideshow » Photo: Sassoon

Make no mistake though; the official Sassoon fall/winter look is something altogether different. Of this brand new, just-released image from the global chain’s upcoming collection, Lisa Rowell of Sassoon’s Fifth Ave Seattle shop says, “I love a long, bold fringe on a short cut. This look will be terrific for giving clients texture and versatility, which is perfect for a new fall style.”

View Slideshow » Photo: Sassoon

Again, from Sassoon’s fall/winter collection. Says Rowell, “For our clients who like to keep their hair longer, this is a great option that keeps the look modern by featuring a strong fringe that frames the face. It shows clients they can get a gorgeous cut and shape without having to take off a lot of length.”

View Slideshow » Photo: Sassoon

“The sleek, straight texture of this model’s hair works perfectly with the cut. The haircut enhances texture and this particular bob provides a lot of styling options,” says Rowell of this Sassoon fall/winter look.

Have you noticed them around town? Around the world? On your favorite style sites? Or maybe just in these pages? There was the fashionable frame-wearer in this piece about where to shop for eyeglasses, and there is Lisa Rowell, dispensing knowledge on her easy-going personal style and telling you where to get the best Gin Fiz — and the best new world frizz.

Rowell, the creative director at Sassoon Salon downtown, says it was last season’s Louis Vuitton and Prada looks that lit her Afro fire. If you missed those, they’re assembled here in a slideshow.

Now, before you get a chance to say it, I’ll mention it for you. There’s a certain hop, skip, and jump from those giant, ungainly runway ‘fros to our friend Lisa’s adorable but still very (let’s use an industry term) editorial ‘do. Stylish people always know how to interpret the seemingly unwearable. You might shake your head at Marc Jacobs’ LV looks and say “Never,” and you might even sigh at Rowell’s asymmetrically carved, tightly bundled locks and think, “Not that either,” but I bet that as we ride August and September out you’ll see more texture, more fuzz, and more frizz. Little bits of it here and there, and soft, subtle interpretations of the basic idea. And it won’t just be the heat, and it won’t just be our marine air.

If by fall you’re ready for something smooth and straight, what luck. Click through the slides here and get a sneak peek at Sassoon’s cool-to-cold weather collection. Rowell and her team were kind enough to share the images with us; they’re so brand new that you’re among the very first to see them.

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Tags: Style Counsel, Health and Beauty

Color Theory #1

New blog series gets Style Counselors talking color trends

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Mc1betterhomes

Slideshow: Avocado and Aqua, because “neighboring hues are good partners”

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Slideshow: Avocado and Aqua, because “neighboring hues are good partners”

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These images are from Better Homes and Garden … circa before you were born

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Cepress says, “Color relationship is a powerful tool that we should all explore.”

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A vintage Mikasa set in a similar colorway

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Cepress’s reversible avocado and aqua vests are for sale at Velouria on the Hill

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Cepress’s pieces are always impeccable; they feel artisan-made in the best way

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Cepress’s workroom, where color theories get put to the test

Color Theory #1 asks local menswear designer Michael Cepress to tell us what shades and hues he’s currently obsessed with. And, as is often the case here, it’s all about the slideshow. To hear from more Seattle Met Style Counsel subjects, stay tuned.

Michael Cepress: While any number of things inspire me and the work I create, one of the most critical and essential components is indeed color. In our lives today a host of elements can collide in an aesthetic experience – cultural references, patterns, textures, histories, traditions…and this is very much the case in my work as a designer. Every garment I design comes to reference a heap of different times and places (in my own mind as designer, at least!) and in the end it is COLOR that ties the entire experience together. While attitudes and styling and combinations change, it is often color that we rely on to help make an entire look “make sense.”

One particular color experience I have been obsessing over lately is the pairing of turquoise and olive…or as the interior design trend forecasters of the 1960s called it: “Aqua and Avocado”. In smarty-pants art school lingo we’d label this an analagous color scheme, as the chosen colors sit beside one another on the color wheel. True colorists would use an even more complex description, but I won’t go there! Upon chatting up my artist friend Emily Pothast about this subject, I came to learn that she has not only been featured on this style blog….but was also wearing the very color scheme I’m focusing on today! Serendipity!

This particular pairing is a good one, and one that has been on my mind for years. I remembered – and revisited – a copy of a 1960 issue of Better Homes and Gardens Decorating Ideas (see the slideshow for more) that featured a host of glorious interiors from the period that favored this very scheme. In my personal life I live with this scheme by way of our bathroom towels (a gift from my dear friend and Seattle composer Byron Au Yong) as well as a wonderful set of Mikasa brand dishes in which I prepare my morning coffee.

I’ve gathered these little moments of inspiration and poured them into one particular fabric that continues to inspire me and is featured in some of my newest spring designs. The plaid fabric I speak of blends the handsome aqua and avocado scheme into a range of blacks and greys that make the fabric even more suited to the wardrobe of most any man. We all know guys have closets full of blue, black, and grey, so why not bring in an exciting accent?

A new series of vests made of the fabric are now on the racks at Velouria here on Capitol Hill, the hub for MC ready to wear. And these particular vests offer some “two-for-one” appeal as they are entirely reversible. One side features the plaid I love so much; the other side showcases a solid color in your choice of olive, navy or black, backed with a very fun and sophisticated black and grey stripe. These price at $118 and they’re available right now!

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Tags: Locally Made, Style Counsel, Locally Designed, Seattle Menswear, Color Theory

Sale: Promesse

Save on stylish must-haves for moms and babes

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This Hoss Intropia dress – originally $315, on sale for $254 – comes with its own matching knit belt, or you can sub in your own (as shown on model).

Where: Promesse

What: The mastermind behind Promesse – you may remember her from this trend-savvy style counsel piece – is now offering up to 50 percent off spring and summer styles for women and little ones. The sale spotlights Lauren Moffatt, Vanessa Bruno, Roberto Collina, Genetic Denim, Chie Mihara, Olivia Harris, and Inhabit for women as well as Feather Baby, Ferd Kids, and Cloud B for children, to name a few.

When: Now through mid-August

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Tags: Kirkland, Style Counsel, Spring/Summer sale 2010, Promesse, Hoss Intropia

Behind the Scenes

Link Trader: The Design Student

April Style Counselor Ben Fuglevand loves long vests, obscure architecture blogs, and democracy webcasts

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Hellooks

A recent image from Hel-Looks, one of April Style Counselor Ben Fuglevand’s favorite blogs

This month’s Style Counselor, Ben Fuglevand, likes scouring Seattle’s vintage shops, sure, but he has a few favorite spots on the web, too. As part of our on-going link trading, he’s here with six of his favorite URLs, and a word or two of explanation.

Building Blog
Maybe my favorite design blog on the net. Geoff Manaugh combines fascinating and often obscure instances of architecture with a writing style that evokes something close to a children’s bedtime story or a Marques novel. His blog is a wonderfully reimagined view into the world of architecture and design.

Victory Garden
This is the newest offering from Seattle knitwear designer and close friend Anna Sharp. Her blog, full of stylish imagery and trademark wit, documents her chic take on the often overlooked world of knitwear. Looking for a giant doily that doubles as shoulder wrap? This is where you’ll find it.

Hel-Looks
Really cool blog from two hipsters on the streets of Helsinki, Finland. They capture street fashion that won’t hit the states for at least another year. It’s good way to keep ahead of the curve.

Creative Applications
Looking for technology and design that should be straight out of a science fiction film but actually exists? Iphone applications that look more like interactive art works? This is where I go to get my fix of both. Technology is everywhere, why not be hip about it?

Democracy Now
If you really want to know what is going on in the world, you should be listening to Amy Goodman. Her daily videocasts are some of the best news reporting I’ve ever seen. Refreshingly absent are the cable news talking heads.

We Are Hunted:
This site is where I get my jams. It categorizes and plays the top 100 most searched for songs on the internet in real time and makes it super easy way to find good ear candy the minute it hits the airwaves.

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Tags: Design, Style Counsel, Link Trader

What's in Store

The Collector’s Collection

A look at the Stella Love collection by recent Style Counsel star Maresa Patterson.

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Jacket

Slideshow: Maresa Patterson’s premier Stella Love collection (available at Jack Straw)

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Slideshow: Maresa Patterson’s premier Stella Love collection (available at Jack Straw)

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You read the fine print at the bottom of February’s Style Counsel page, and you’ve been waiting for a look at Maresa Patterson’s premier Stella Love collection. Well here it is.

The collection is at Jack Straw, where women’s wear is a brand new addition.

Toward the back of the shop, which feels like a vintage American folk song hummed on a modern side street in Antwerp, the hard-to-find Sofie D’Hoore line and those gorgeous Dries Van Noten tribal mash-up pieces hang alongside Patterson’s locally designed, locally and impeccably made midcentury influenced dresses and one perfect, ready-for-the-prairie (or the port) plaid coat.

Preview them here then get to Jack Straw to see them in person.

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Tags: Locally Made, Style Counsel, Locally Designed, New for Spring

Scene

True Story

An open reply to the MN reader who sent me an email asking, “What should I wear when I’m in Seattle?”

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Maresa Patterson, this month’s Style Counsel subject. On-trend, organic, and locally made. This is what Seattle looks like. Sometimes. Other times, it doesn’t look like this at all.

Dear Visitor,

Thank you for your kind note regarding the dress code of our city. Your inquiry shows a kind of humble respect that I sometimes fear American travelers have abandoned. You know, the kinds of travelers who venture to seaside South American cities without learning simple phrases like, “Me gustaría pagar con tarjeta de crédito.” So kudos to you, Visitor, for asking.

People around here do like to question the nature of Seattle style. I suppose every city has its version of this topic. Maybe. But maybe not. Do they, in New York, trouble over the essential nature of their civic wardrobe? I guess I kinda think not. But then, that’s one of the luxuries of being a New Yorker. A cool nonchalance comes with the area codes.

The simple fact is that, for seven or eight months out of the year, rain and drizzle come with our area code, and that pervasive dampness does, in fact, color our collective look. And — and I appreciate this — our out-of-the-way station allows us freedom from playing the sartorial hero. What I mean is: As a rule, Seattleites don’t twist their ankles stepping around mud puddles in high suede heels or delicate calfskin oxfords in January. We wear solid but beautiful European-made boots and classic Red Wings. We pretty much live in boots, all made for walking. (If you think San Fran is hilly, call me after you’ve given us a try.)

And the thing is this, Visitor: They wear the sensible look in Italy, too. The whole heritage brand thing? Tough-to-impossible to pull off without a key piece or two from Filson, the timeless gear and clothing company of pioneering Seattle hipstsers since 1850.

So, you know, did we take it from them or did they take it from us? I mean, really. People around here get annoyed when you invoke the G word too often, so I will, for the most part, leave that topic where it last leapt up and demanded to be noticed, but let’s just say that we’ve already been co-opted at least once.

Still, what you’ve heard about fleece, Gortex, and Birkenstocks is true. Socks and sandals. Guilty. I mean—not personally, but it happens. Boy does it happen. Even at this time of year. On a recent sunny but sharp, bitter-cold post-holiday afternoon, I saw a mailman in short pants, socks (the kind they make those monkeys out of), and Teva sandals. Not a proud moment. Or one I could wrap my head around.

Sometimes bad things — or at least really … different things happen to good people. Even in Seattle. And sometimes, as Adam Sinding of Le 21eme Arrondissement is fond of documenting, Seattleites do show up in studded stilleto boots, cuffed, cropped pants, and directional trenches.

It’s important that you know that we don’t walk around in yellow slickers underneath umbrellas all the time. In fact, it’s almost as if the degree to which we really feel we’re O.G. Seattle, we wear layers and layers of knits and biker jackets instead of Outdoor Research rain gear. Cashmere, wool, and cotton knits work for four-seasons in Seattle, so you’ll see a lot of them.

Then again, the archetypes don’t exist for nothing. Seattle-based sportswear company Eddie Bauer calls their guy the casual sportsman and you will see him and his female equivalent all over town.

It’s not for nothing that Bauer and other sportswear companies are based here in the Northwest, But neither do high-end, locally owned department stores like Butch Blum and Mario’s as well as smart, innovative, globally bookmarked online boutiques exist in some vacuum without us locals.

I suppose the question isn’t very easy to answer. Or so it would seem by this long-winded, back and forth reply. We are very much a city of contradictions. In a good way.

Geographically isolated, yes, to some degree, but our population is anything but homogeneous. We love that certain elements of our culture - our approach to food, wine, and dining for one, our cutting edge technology for another - give us Big City cred all over the world, but we cherish the small-town vibe of our neighborhoods and we fight to protect the integrity of the greenbelts and waterways that surround us.

Yes. Contradictions. Imports working on the casual software campuses in our suburbs wear Marni, and when our indie rock exports appear on late night television variety shows, they wear whatever they’ve been wearing for the last eleven days. We hold fast to ripped denim, old cowboy shirts, and eclecticism even as global luxury brands come to town and set up shop. We do sometimes wear jeans to the ballet, but only sometimes.

I like how Maresa Patterson, a local dress designer and style-maker featured in our February issue, puts it.

“There’s a willingness in Seattle to be casual and to combine things in quirky ways,” she told me. “I respond to that.”

I do, too, and I hope, Visitor, that you will also.

Sincerely,

Laura

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Tags: Seattle Style, Seattle Street Style, Style Counsel, reader mail, Filson, Heritage Brands, Grunge

Wear What When and Who

Dress Code: 80s Edition

A new, recurring post requiring you to dress for every occasion

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I’m guilty of it too, but I dislike hearing people complain that they have nowhere to wear their most out-there outfits. One of my 2010 action items is to blog about events — art openings, rock shows, New Age Tupperware parties, whatever — where the dress code all but requires your most directional, special, and this-hardly-ever-leaves-the-closet best.

Remember Team Gina, our December 08 Style Counselors? I’m gonna go ahead and guess that they’d be totally on-board with this initiative.

Except, that is, they’re breaking up. There will soon be no Team Gina to agree with anything. I got word earlier this week that Seattle’s politically minded, 80s-obsessed synth poppers are breaking up.

But before they do: Two last bashes, and thus, two chances to rock roller skates with high-waisted teal skinny jeans and a pair of those Marc by Marc Jacobs bunny ears.

Team Gina plays on January 24 with that wack-job Har Mar Superstar (oh and what will he be wearing?) at Chop Suey and on January 31 at the Comet with something called Punk Bunny.

Go Jazzercise chic (there’s a contradiction in terms) for the former and a MTV-era Madonna for the latter. And let us know how it goes.

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Where do you go to dress up? Any high, high-low, or gloriously middle-brow style opportunities you think we oughtta know about? Get in touch!

AND while we’re at it, if you’re the type of person who enjoys neon knits and brightly colored statements, do check out Snow Business, this month’s Spree page.

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Tags: 80s, team gina, madonna, neon, Style Counsel, Dress Code

Great People, Links

Behind the Scenes: Blogger’s Blogs

Style Counselor Taylor Kieburtz shows us her links (and then I show you mine)

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If you read the fine type in the print edition of this month’s Style Counsel page, you’ve been expecting a post wherein Hipsters with Kids blogger Taylor Kieburtz and I trade the morning shuffle – a.k.a. a selection of favorite blog links.

So here goes.

Says Taylor, who works by day crafting creative branding, visual solutions, and the like, ‘I mostly read design / graphics, art and music blogsfashion is always evident throughout.’

Taylor’s list:

Design You Trust
Which feels like the universe’s collective junk drawer (in a good way) o’ ideas

Purple Diary
The not-very-secret life of art arbiter Olivier Zahm and company

Planet Awesome Kid
Just what the name implies

Fashion Gone Rogue
Editorials, ad campaigns, and other painfully awesome images

and the friends and family plan:

Metaphorical Child
One woman’s ultra-modern online art museum

Wolves vs. Lions

Black Books

Hunter/Gatherer
Gorgeous textiles and far eastern-feeling minimalist design

And, a handful of my favs; a just-so mix of style, fashion (yes, two different things), design, and my own inner circle of the blogosphere:

Common People
Like Flickr with a special moody / dreamy filter

Ready Set Fashion
Fashion magazine librarian pits 80s ad campaigns and 90s editorials against current spreads

Backyard Bill
Mostly men’s style, all amazing portraiture

An Ambitious Project Collapsing
The world gets bigger and bigger and more thoughtful, and this site becomes more essential every time

Friends:

Remember Me
What it misses in every-day updates it makes up for in the perfect balance of chaos and order

Picture of the Day
A proto-blog by an experimental, obsessive mind

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Hope you found something you like enough to bookmark yourself.

Now it’s your turn. What’s on your daily must-read list?

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Tags: links, Seattle Toys, Design, hipsters, music, Style Counsel, Link Trader

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