April 3, 2009

THE NEWS FROM ASPEN, by Jas Tynan


Winter X Games 13 blew the roof off of Aspen in late January and broke records for TV viewership worldwide. ESPN announced plans to keep Winter X in Aspen through 2012.

After starting off with a record pace snow fall, Aspen has been getting a bit slushy of late, but the skies have been sunny and skiing conditions are still decent for this time of year.

Off the slops, the inaugural Aspen Fashion Week took place recently - an event that featured four days of fashion shows, parties and featured a screening of the documentary film, Valentino, the last Emperor, which the legendary designer himself attended. There were the requisite glitches of a first-year event of this size, but as a whole, AFW was well attended and well received by local and visiting attendees from all around the globe.

Sickest parties of the season include Shaun White's bashes up at the "Target House," Billabong's X Games Party, and the Aspen Extreme Anniversary Party.

Aspen Entertainment Company is filming Cougar Hunting, the Movie in Aspen right now. Thus far, it looks to be your usual low budget ski town comedy. Should be usable for a 4:20 afternoon lounge, if nothing else.

Two relatively new Aspen-based brands have been getting hot in the local market and both expect to start expanding beyond Aspen soon. Joka Vodka and Aspen Brewery have both gained quick popularity in Aspen and both brands are being served in most of the top hotels, lounges, restaurants and bars around the area. Aspen Brewery's beer is fresh, natural and being brewed using clean Aspen water certainly doesn't hurt. Joka Vodka is a corn based vodka with a smooth flavor and they donate all profits to support military veterans.

WILLIAM MORRIS IN FASHION VENTURE, by Samantha Conti; March 19, 2009

LONDON — Get ready, IMG — the talent and literary agency William Morris is stepping into the fashion arena. The agency has formed a partnership with Prima Management, a new talent, media and events company founded by IMG veteran Massimo Redaelli, to pursue fashion-led projects globally.

The partners will work on endorsements, sponsorships, corporate consulting, media and events. Their first projects include Aspen Fashion Week, which had a soft launch earlier this month, and Rio Summer, a South American beachwear showcase that will launch in November.

Redaelli said here that he and his partners at WMA are looking to reach a young, Internet-savvy audience, tap new sources of advertising revenue, drive media attention to younger, less-established designers and explore cross-marketing opportunities for celebrities and brands.

“The trade event is no longer sufficient to reach the consumer — and particularly the young consumer,” said Redaelli, who during his eight years at IMG organized events including fashion weeks in Moscow, Berlin and Mumbai, as well as London’s Fashion Fringe competition for young talent. “The industry has not yet spoken to the young consumer, to the teenager who gets his or her information online. We have to be able to reach out to a wider target audience through TV, Internet, music, books, film — with more exciting content.”

WMA president Dave Wirtschafter said the agency always considered fashion an interesting art and business form, but it didn’t have the right contacts to operate properly in the industry.

“In the past, we’d interacted with fashion intermittently through our clients, but it became obvious that we needed to find someone who was an expert in the business,” he said, adding he was excited that WMA’s “idea base” would be synched up with Redaelli’s “relationship base.”

Redaelli, who was senior vice president and executive director of IMG Fashion Europe, left that company last year to set up Prima, which has offices in London and Paris, and which also acts as a consultancy with clients including Kidrobot.

Although Wirtschafter declined to disclose the investment earmarked for the partnership, he said: “We will invest as much as is needed to do the best job we can. This is not a tangential, arm’s-length project for us, and we see a lot of opportunities out there.”

He talked about the possibility of future linkups between WMA’s artists — who include Catherine Zeta-Jones, Russell Crowe, Quentin Tarantino, Alicia Keys, Rihanna, Duffy and Kanye West — and fashion events, as well as associations between the music and film industries and fashion. Wirtschafter added that one of the goals was to make fashion content — like that of music and film — available to a mass audience. WMA’s fashion clients include Rock & Republic, Swarovski, Cynthia Rowley, Bluefly.com, as well as the producers of “Project Runway: Full Picture,” Bunim-Murray Productions Inc., and Magical Elves.

Redaelli said the Aspen event will be focused on winter resort, ski and technical outerwear. While press and buyers will be invited to the show, he said much of the audience will be local consumers. “There’s an element of direct marketing to the local clientele, and the idea is that they will help to set the trends,” he said.

In Rio, Redaelli said the plan is to build entertainment around the fashion showcase in order to widen its appeal and to get the end consumer buying. “The music element will be strong because of the Brazilian culture, so we’re planning on DJs, parties, and concerts that will be open to the public.” The event will be held on the border of the Ipanema and Copacabana beaches.

Redaelli and William Morris aren’t the first to contemplate broadening the fashion audience and engaging more with the end consumer. IMG has toyed with the idea of in-season fashion shows for consumers, while Victoria’s Secret runway extravaganzas have fired up both males and censors — and crashed its Web site. More than a decade ago, the ABC network tried a short-lived effort to broadcast the couture shows, but eventually dropped the show after poor ratings.

That hasn’t stopped people from trying. Earlier this month, Simon Fuller and Sojin Lee unveiled Fashionair.com, a site that aims to serve up industry news, features, shopping tips — basically fashion as entertainment — to a fashion-hungry consumer audience.

Other projects in the WMA-Prima hopper include trawling for emerging talent in the worlds of fashion, design and art, then marketing it to young consumers. Redaelli also said the partners want to take celebrity brand endorsements to a new level with long-term cross-marketing deals and consistent strategies. “There is a tremendous opportunity out there for celebrities to do long-term deals that maintain their visibility,” he said.

ASPEN FASHION WEEK

W Magazine


CLICK HERE TO CHECK OUT WDESIRES.COM'S AFW OPENING PARTY PAGE

ASPEB FASHION WEEK SHOWCASES HOT STYLES FOR THE SLOPES; March 13, 2009


Although we’ve already shared with you some of the great runway styles we saw during New York Fashion Week, our thoughts recently turned to a show far from Bryant Park. The first Aspen Fashion Week had the streets of the tiny Colorado ski resort abuzz about trends in ski and snowboard wear for next fall and winter.

The runway show at Belly Up Aspen featured new looks from Moncler, Fendi, Rossignol, Ed Hardy SNOW, Under Armour, Obermeyer, Kaestle, Osklen, Circe Snow (shown) and Isaora, which launched its brand-new snowboard-inspired line. Limelight Lodge hosted an event for Aspen fashion designer Gabriel Conroy, who showed his latest gorgeous hand-sewn designs incorporating eco-friendly hemp “silks.” Accessories boutique B’jewel offered up elegant adornments.

Attendees also viewed an exclusive screening of Valentino: The Last Emperor, director Matt Tyrnauer’s behind-the-scenes documentary about the two years preceding the legendary designer’s retirement and Valentino’s relationship with longtime business partner Giancarlo Giammetti. In attendance at the Wheeler Opera House event were Valentino and Giammetti themselves; the audience gave a standing ovation.

We applaud this showcase of winter sportswear. How do you usually find your favorite looks for the slopes and chalet?
Photo credit: Leigh Vogel

VALENTINO ADDS GLITZ TO A GLAM ASPEN FASHION WEEK, by Zandile Blay March 10, 2009;


There's New York, L.A, Miami, Atlanta, and even Baltimore Fashion Week. With a laundry list of American cities shining the spotlight on style one might wonder exactly why we need yet another Fashion Week . But for Lisa Johnson, the mastermind behind the just launched Aspen Fashion Week, the question was why not?

"Aspen has always had a style of its own and is home to more high end designers than most big cities in the country. It's an important market filled with influencers who not only help drive trends but have the affluence to purchase."

In fact, Hollywood celebs like Michelle Pfeiffer, Kurt Russell and Jack Nicholson and uber wealthy politicos like Prince Bandar a former Ambassador from Saudi Arabia to the U.S call Aspen home. The cache they add has attracted several international luxury houses including Chanel, Dior, and Fendi -- all of whom make brisk business selling chic winter gear. Now with the creation of Aspen Fashion Week, which wrapped its debut last week, these same retailers have the opportunity to showcase Aspen's particular brand of winter-chic to a select group of buyers, media and guests.

"Aspen style has always been a celebration of fashion and function," explains Johnson. "It can look great but it must be functional on the mountain as well."

With that in mind Johnson and her team set out to make Aspen Fashion Week the first of it's kind entirely dedicated to showcasing winter resort, ski and snow board collections on the runway.

"We had a mix of designers during the week who embody that intersection (Fendi, Rossignol, Isaora, Ed Hardy SNOW, Circe SNOW, Kaestle, Obermeyer, Under Armour) as well as those that represent the après ski lifestyle (Dennis Basso, Gabriel Conroy) and in store collections from Moncler."

Johson, who is officially the Vice President of Sales and Marketing for the Aspen Chamber Resort Association, and her team lined up sponsors such as W Magazine and Sky Hotel for the event. In addition to boutique style fashion shows, the week featured a host of parties, mixers and a movie screening hosted by legendary designer, Rudolph Valentino.

"I was fortunate enough to see Valentino: The Last Emperor at the Hamptons Film Festival and fell in love with the film," shares Johnson. "I found it to be a beautiful tribute to the life and career of one of the most talented and successful couture designers ever born. It seemed like a perfect fit to kick off Aspen Fashion Week. We knew of Mr. Valentino's love of skiing, mountains and our chic lifestyle and invited him to host the screening at our historic Wheeler Opera House. He graciously accepted. The only other task we asked of him was to enjoy Aspen for a week of skiing and shopping which he did. "

Valentino's appearance was the highlight of a spectacular debut for Aspen Fashion Week. As lavish as the debut was Johnson plans for an even better showing next season.

"The possibilities are absolutely endless. My vision for this was Sundance meets Bryant Park in Wagner Park (our local Aspen park)... And this is really what we'll have in less than a year. Sky is the limit."

Can they top Valentino?

"I have been asked this question and wow, did we set the bar high! However, I think Valentino's appearance here illustrates the magic that Aspen can offer -- it's not a hard sell to get people to want to come to this special place. I don't think we can ever trump Mr. Valentino but we sure will try to continue to impress everyone. "

Clearly, she's just warming up.

ASPEN FASHION WEEK ROUND UP: HEDONISM AND HAUTE COUTURE; by Brandon Wenerd; March 13, 2009 Aspen.com

Obermeyer at Aspen Fashion Week

Kästle at Aspen Fashion Week


Never doubt Aspen’s ability to feast on issues of vanity, even amidst a crippling national recession. “Aspen” –as an idea– is elevated in the American public’s imagination as the self-actualized pinnacle of the American Dream. This remote mountain retreat of soaring peaks, powdery slopes, and wide-open skies righteously touts Gatsby-like success and excess, be it après-ski soirees or outrageous real estate prices. Need more proof? Take a walk past the chichi shoe, fur, and handbag boutiques with easily mispronounced French and Italian names.

Designer-thread retailers are big business in Aspen, a town eponymous for international self-trumpeting festivals and celebrity charity events. Thus, it was merely time and starry-eyed destiny before the fashion world descended on Aspen with the good intentions of hosting an “official” winter fashion week.

Why a fashion week in Aspen? According to an official press release, winter sports products, including ski wear, are a mammoth industry that netted an estimated $3 billion in sales in 2008. Almost $663 million is spent on snow accessories alone, making this sector of the fashion and design world a colossal and growing entity. Obermeyer ski wear, founded in 1947 by active skier and mountaineer Klaus Obermeyer, is a shark in the premium winter wear industry, long calling Aspen his personal and corporate home. These factors, along with Aspen’s international reputation as a billionaire-friendly haute couture hangout, make it perfect for hosting a week of high-altitude hedonism in the snow.

The 2009 Aspen Fashion Week was the brainchild of Aspen-based special event public relations guru Lisa Johnson, who previously served as a puppeteer pulling the strings behind the Aspen Chamber of Commerce and world-famous events like The Winter X Games and the annual Food and Wine Classic. Lisa heavily promoted Aspen’s first annual fashion week to a national audience on ABC’s Good Morning America, drumming up press coverage from outlets like W Magazines, Vanity Fair, and the Los Angeles Times.

Heralded in promotional press releases as “the stunning backdrop of the Rockies with Bryant Park glamour," the international fashion cognoscenti descended on Aspen for the inaugural fashion week between March 1st and 4th. As was expected, Fashion Week increased the ski town’s already astronomical fur-to-high-heel ratio and filled the streets with slender models, fashionistas, the crème de le crème of the glossy fashion rag press corps, and blazer-wearing male jetrosexual hanger-ons, assumedly attempting to seduce the model crowd in the post-après ski hotel hot tub scene.

Aspen Fashion Week kicked off with splashy and bling-tastic champagne and liquor-drenched extravaganza at the super-swank Sky Hotel sponsored by W Magazine, Burberry, and Jaeger Le-Coultre. Soho and Rodeo refugees lined up around the block, spilling into the Sky’s swanky 39 Degrees Club to get as close as possible to the action.

Never mind Aspen’s Fashion Week overlapping with Milan’s fashion week and piggybacking on New York’s Mercedes Benz Fashion Week. This didn’t stop the garment and runway icon Valentino Garavini from descending upon Aspen, cold and all, for a Wheeler Opera House screening of the documentary Valentino: The Last Emperor. The retired designer, who boasts homes in Rome, Paris, London, Gstaad, Tuscany and New York, attended an au courant post-screening party at the Tuscan Villa, a multi-million dollar private residence. Other high profile notables in attendance included Gucci Group CEO Domenico del Sole and New York-based millionaire matchmaker Janis Spindel. According to an article in the Aspen Daily News, Spindel, who moonlights as a dating self-help author, came to Aspen’s during Fashion Week with a loyal assistant and the intentions of updating her Rolodex with potential clients. The newspaper profile had her fishing for rich, single men at fashionable events and upscale haunts like 39 Degrees and the Caribou Club.

As for the fashion highlights, in-store promotions and showcases occurred throughout the week. The titans of the skiwear and snow wear industry displayed trendy collections for the upcoming 2009/2010-ski season at downtown retailers like Moncler. A March 4th runway show at the Belly Up featured name-brand designers and sporty winter garb from the likes of Fendi, Rossignol, Isaora, Ed Hardy SNOW, Gabriel Conroy, Under Armour, Obermeyer, Kästle, Dennis Basso, and Circe Snow.
Fashion Week’s red-hot attitude and voguish predisposition didn’t exactly bring out everyone’s best. According to police reports and the Aspen Daily News, a part-time male model allegedly punched a waiter at La Cantina after the ski-wear fashion show at the Belly Up.

These liquor-fueled setbacks won’t deter preparations for next year’s fashion week. According to an official press release, 2010 will include full-scale runway productions and outdoor tents. Think Bryant Park-once-removed with snow, skiing, more top-shelf intoxication, and hot tubs. Lisa Johnson is quoted in a press release saying, “The positive response from designers, sponsors, media, and consumers proved that there is a need for an industry event that puts a spotlight on the booming ski and sportswear category.”

It is too soon to tell what an event like Aspen Fashion Week could eventually evolve into. Will it descend into madness and just another week of awkwardly dressed inebriated models strapping on skis and over-inflated hotel prices during prime snow seasons? Or will it eventually solidify into a venerable celebratory occasion of substance like the Aspen Institute's Ideas Fest? There are a lot of “weeks” and “festivals” in this town. Hopefully Aspen Fashion Week becomes a positive projection to the world outside the snowy and sometimes-myopic wonderland of Aspen. Indeed, all the cards are in place for Aspen Fashion Week to become another marquee event for a town with a year-round population of 6,000 that can burn like a 7-billion megawatt bulb.
Photo credit: Leigh Vogel

MOUNTAIN MAYHEM: HAUTE COUTURE; May Selby, March 14th, 2009



Aspen Fashion Week celebrated its inaugural run from March 1 – 4 at various venues around town.

Designed to show case and market winter resort, ski and technical outerwear, the destination event was appropriately set in the home and playground of the most stylish consumers. With informal presentations, après showings, on mountain events and late night fashionable soirees, it put a spotlight on the booming skiwear industry, involving many local clothing boutiques.

Spearheaded by Lisa Johnson, Oliver Sharpe, Frances Gregos and Laurence LaVingne, Aspen Fashion Week debuted with a Sunday night kick-off party at The Sky hosted by W magazine, Burberry, and Jaegar Le-Coultre. On Monday evening, the acclaimed documentary, “Valentino: The Last Emperor,” was screened at the Wheeler Opera House. The legendary designer participated in Aspen Fashion Week as a special guest, lending instant credit to the event week simply by association. Valentino’s fashion house is among the world’s most famous haute couture and prêt-a porter clothing empires.

The festivities concluded with an Aspen Peak Runway Finale on Wednesday night at Belly Up, presenting 2009-'10 winter, ski and snowboard collections from Moncler, Fendi, Rossignol, Ed Hardy SNOW, Under Armour, Obermeyer, Isaora, Gabriel Conroy, Kaestle, Osklen, and Circe Snow.

PAUL E. ANNA: HIGH POINTS; Pheromones and Fashion; by Paul E. Anna; March 6, 2009


The first Monday of March saw another of those “only in Aspen” kind of nights. On an evening that began with an Olympian and ended just blocks away with an Emperor, I was once again reminded how special this place is.

The night began shortly after sunset as a distinctly local crowd surged into the Hotel Jerome’s ballroom in numbers that would have tested the fire code. All had come to watch Greg Poschman’s compelling documentary film “A Call to Action. For the Forest.” Presented by the Basalt-based nonprofit organization called, fittingly, For the Forest, the film outlines the inevitable march of the mountain pine beetle into our local forests and the options used to prevent the destruction of our trees.

Introduced and narrated by 2002 Olympic Bronze medal winner and Aspen local Chris Klug, the film was a powerful call for all of us to get on board and help fix this potential calamity. Two speakers who had helped the community of Merritt, British Columbia, fight the mountain pine beetle with great success followed the film. Tom Lacey, a fire-control specialist, showed video of just how quickly stands of the red, dead pine trees can erupt into fireballs if left unchecked. Dr. Nancy Gillette presented her studies on how the use of “push/pull” techniques with natural pheromones attract and/or drive the pine beetles out of the forests.

The crowd was clearly made up of tree-huggers, but as I left the room and looked back at Red Mountain I couldn’t help but think how no area in our community is at more potential risk from wildfire than that densely populated, heavily treed hillside. Let’s hope the message resonates before a catastrophe hits. You can find out more at www.fortheforest.org.

Over at the Wheeler Opera House a well-coifed crowd converged to watch Matt Tyrnauer’s film “Valentino: The Last Emperor,” a presentation made in conjunction with Lisa Johnson’s extremely successful Aspen Fashion Week event.

The film is a documentary about the final two years of the esteemed Italian fashion designer’s 45-year career, but the narrative covered so much more. It told the story, or rather the principals told the story, of the half-century collaboration between Valentino and his friend, lover, caretaker, business partner and yes, even muse, Giancarlo Giammetti. The two built an empire that since the completion of the film has been overtaken by the same financial interests that have changed the world of fashion forever.

As the final credits rolled the audience erupted into a standing ovation for Giancarlo and Valentino, who were in the first row of the Wheeler’s balcony. Tyrnauer, who debuted the film at the Venice Film Festival and then screened it at the Toronto and Chicago festivals, commented that the Wheeler was “by far the most beautiful theater” the film has played in.

Congratulations are in order for both Poschman and Johnson for taking ideas and turning them into reality.

They both inspire.

FENDI GETS GEAR, by Carol Han; March 9, 2009


"Fendi looks were a favorite in the Aspen Fashion Week grand finale."


On the last night of Aspen Fashion Week, I attended the grand finale fashion show that combined the best snowy-weather looks from a variety of designers, including Ed Hardy Snow, Circe Snow, Rossignol, Under Armour, Kaestle, Isaora, Obermeyer, Fendi, Gabriel Conroy, and Dennis Basso. All of the designers had some amazing pieces to show, but the ones that had me dreaming of retiring my Macbook Pro and spending the rest of my days in a chalet on the snow-peaked mountains were the ones from Fendi. They were EXACTLY what I would want to wear head-to-toe on a day of snow sporting. Think Kate Moss on the slopes. Chic.

Top Three Parties: New Yorkers for Valentino, Performance Anxiety, and Girl Power by Vanity Fair; March 6, 2009


New Yorkers for Valentino
What: A Valentino party for New Yorkers for Children.
Where: The Valentino store, New York City.
Who: Bebe Neuwirth, Fern Mallis, Selita Ebanks, Geraldo and Erica Rivera, Maggie Rizer, Erin Fetherston, Tinsley Mortimer (who cut a rug last week with husband Topper at the Frick Ball), Real Housewife Alex McCord and her husband, Simon van Kempen, CNN’s Alina Cho, and Maggie Betts.
Why: Because Valentino is hot right now.
Talking Point: The Valentino movie screening at Aspen Fashion Week, and Beatrice Inn’s Paul Sevigny (victorious at Tuesday night’s Art War Party), who was manning the turntables.

Best in Snow Style: Isaora



One of my favorite parts of attending Aspen Fashion Week was getting introduced to a new snowboard-inspired line called Isaora that takes the typical look of snow gear and cleans it up, making it much more streamlined and sophisticated than anything else I've seen on the market.

I love snowboarding, but the clothes that go with it? Not so much. I'm not exactly one for donning snowflake-patterned baggy pants and brightly striped oversized jackets. When I met Marc Daniels, the co-founder and CEO of the Isaora, he told me that "snowboarding used to be known as an alternative sport and the attire really matched that mentality. Now, it's much more mainstream, but the clothes just haven't caught up. We wanted to make gear with a grown-up aesthetic without sacrificing technical performance."

Well, it looks like that mission was well-accomplished. The models making their rounds through the presentation space looked like they would fit right in hanging out on the streets of Williamsburg or the LES--in some cases, one woudn't even be able to tell that the clothes were designed specifically for snow, unless you looked closely at, say, a thinly padded insular lining on a plaid men's jacket.

Eiher way, one thing's for sure: this is one line that's getting me excited to get suited up for some winter sport.

FASHION WEEK HEATS UP ASPEN by Peter Kray


Aspen, Colo. (Ski Press)-The first-ever Aspen Fashion Week put a spotlight on the booming skiwear industry with four days of special events, including parties, in-store presentations, a film screening, and an exclusive runway event on the final evening.

Highlights of the four-day event included a kick-off party hosted by W magazine, Burberry, and Jaegar Le-Coultre, daily presentations by designers at luxury stores throughout downtown Aspen, and an exclusive screening of the acclaimed documentary, VALENTINO: THE LAST EMPEROR.

The inaugural event concluded with a runway event at The Belly Up Aspen featuring 2009/2010 winter, ski and snowboard collections from Moncler, Fendi, Rossignol, Ed Hardy SNOW, Under Armour, Obermeyer, Isaora, Gabriel Conroy, Kaestle, Osklen, and Circe Snow.

7th Avenue Freeze-Out


New York? Paris? Milan? They all have their fashion weeks, true that. What they don't have is the gorgeous Rocky Mountains, sweeeeeet powder snow, 3,267 verts and Aspen, Colorado's singular style.

Aspen Fashion Week (AFW) kicked off its inaugural season with a HUGE bang this week. The whole town was glam-o-rama --- to the max.

Fashionistas abounded and models were everywhere, and we loved it. The AFW style squad: Lisa Johnson, Oliver Sharpe and Frances Gregos created a new and exciting series of fashion events, right here in Aspen. Resources such as Fendi, Obermeyer, Gabriel, Ed Hardy Snow, Rossignol, Isaora and more showed off their "stylie" lines for next season. The schedule was filled with parties, fashion shows, events, open bars etc, etc. Did we mention the models---it was awesome, we liiikeeeeee. Don't miss the pix of our new pal, haute couture fashion icon, Valentino (scroll down). He was in Aspen in conjunction with AFW to host a "sneak peak" of the new documentary film Valentino: The Last Emperor. It doesn't get more fabulous than that.

We need to thank AspenSpin.com's own fashion sponsors KJUS, CLOUDVEIL and IBEX. These outdoor oriented fashion brands will surely make a splash at next Winter's Aspen Fashion Week. Mark it on the calendar boyz, bring the heat to Aspen, ....and bring the models too.