•
Karl Lagerfeld, who designed Diet
Coke bottles distributed in France last year, is designing three more aluminum bottles for the company, which will be available in Europe this April. [
WWD] • While we’re on the subject, Diet Pepsi just released some new “skinny” cans, supposedly in hopes that it will appeal to stylish folks. [
Fashionista]
•
Tommy Hilfiger is holding separate men’s and women’s shows this season. [
Page Six/NYP]
•
Tibi designed a line of stationery printed with illustrations of editors like Italian
Elle’s Eva Fontanelli and
Teen Vogue’s Jane Keltner deValle. [
Catwalk Queen]
• In a commercial for
Heidi Klum’s new show,
Seriously Funny Kids, Klum gets lectured by a little girl for wearing a shirt with holes in it. [
Modelinia]
•
Teen Vogue has invited a slew of bloggers to the WWDMagic trade show in Las Vegas, including Jane Aldridge of
Sea of Shoes and Erica Domesek of P.S. I Made This. The magazine will also be launching their new blogger network, Fashion Click, there. [
Fashionista]
•
Michael Kors: “Initially, my clothes couldn’t be expensive enough. I went from thinking fashion was only the provenance of big-city affluent people, to thinking you could be 14 or 80, live in the city or suburbs, have endless money or a limited budget, and buy something great-looking at the right price for you. The world has changed, and people look and feel better for it … I always say, ‘If you blurred your eyes, would the wealthiest person in the world want to wear it?’ If the answer is no, we don’t make it.” [
Fashionologie]
•
Ryan McGinley shot Annie Lennox’s daughter Tali, Lou Doillon, and Lauren Hutton for Club Monaco’s latest ads. [
WWD]
•
Naomi Campbell won her 2001 lawsuit against British paper
The Daily Mirror for publishing photos of her attending a Narcotics Anonymous meeting, but now the decision has been overturned due to new evidence. [
Vogue UK]
•
Louis Vuitton is planning to unveil a new line of men’s leather goods at its men’s show in Paris tomorrow. [
WWD]
Related articles