SIENNA MILLER
Films have always played a huge role in shaping fashion and trends, past and present. What better way to reference ensembles and styling techniques than through our favorite stars and storylines? For all of you fashionistas who have yet to see one, two, or all of them, we highly recommend you watch these timeless films for your creative, fashionable needs. Hopefully they will leave you just as inspired as they left us!
Last night, W Magazine’s Editor-in-Chief, Stefano Tonchi, partnered up with Global P&G Prestige President, Joanne Crews, to host the Ever Changing Face of Beauty event at our big apple’s Park Avenue Armory. In the frenzy of Fashion Week, W pulled out all the stops using the massive arena-like space to welcome more than 600 guests. If there was ever a fashion week party worth clawing your way into, this was it.
The event celebrated a video installation by world-renowned fashion photographer, Sølve Sundsbø and had a celebrity guest list that could go on for days. The video featured 2 large screens representing man on one, and woman on the other. Throughout the video, both screens show the outcomes of evolution in beauty around the world and its consequences.
It's all about the side part this spring. But not just any, plain-Jane side part; this season's approach to hair parts is deeper than ever. The extreme side part is not only the easiest hairstyle since the ponytail, it's also beautifully versatile. Seen on the spring runways as well as on celebrities' heads galore, this classic creation is attainable within less than a minute.
The best way to find where your deep part should lay on your head is by placing a comb flat against the side of your head. Wherever the top edge of the comb hits on your hair, that's where the part belongs. Although naturally parts are often slightly crooked, the one rule to this one is to keep it straight as a pole.
The actress says she has every reason to believe that Murdoch journalists hacked into her cellphone to listen to her voicemails. That's why she decided to take legal action against Murdoch's group, even if it means never working again for 20th Century Fox.
“I’m not really too concerned about never working for Fox because it’s about standing up for myself in a way that’s more important than anything. If that’s the case, then that’s the case. It means more to me to make a stand against that than it does anything else in my life.”
Jude and Sienna first met on the set of Alfie in 2003. At this time, the actor was married to Sadie Frost and they had 3 children together, Rafferty, 14, Iris, 10, and Rudy, 8. They eventually got divorced. Jude and Sienna can now show the world how madly in love they are.
They got engaged in 2004, split in 2006 because Jude preferred the nanny, then they got back together in 2009 and have been dating ever since. Now it's over, again. But for how long?
"It is mutual and amicable and they are still friends," a friend of the actors says.
She might be the solution to boost the French economy...!
The British model enjoyed some of her spare time doing some shopping in the City of Lights and looked cute and casual in a grey fedora and a black jacket.
One week after her birthday, the runway beauty bought herself a little present: a new home in North London, just next to Jude-Sienna Miller's house. It's a $12 million property that includes seven bedrooms and a wine cellar.
"Kate was completely fed up with her old house. She wanted to get out of there and the new house is beautiful. She is friendly with Jude and has been asking him about the area. He has been a big help to her. Kate wants a fresh start and she is keen to have more children. This will be a fantastic family home." said a source
If you need help for your move Kate...
Hi Joonbuggers !
Its been a whole month since I have been here, Seems like much longer right ?
Lots to catch up on, I’ve been a busy boy so lets get right into it.
Style and Nightlife, that’s what Chet, Joonbug's Editor-In-Chief said when they asked me to start writing this column. Well, those of you that have been avid readers will know that there has been a lot of nightlife, but very little style apart from when I went on Fashion's Night Out. In this week's piece of my diary we are going to change all that because instead of me doing a 5 Questions in 5 minutes I am going to write a small piece all about Andrew and Julia Clancey, two very stylish Brits who both love New York and Los Angeles.
Head Automatica – Brooklyn is Burning
Head Automatica came to me in my freshman year of high school. I was sitting in my sister’s car, waiting to see what the music would be for our ride to some unremembered errand. She was dating a skateboarder at the time, and her musical selection at times, much to my dismay, mirrored that. When she popped in Head Automatica, the first song that played was “Beating Hearts Baby” – which, I think, I initially was thinking, “Good God, more scream-y, whine-y punkish music? Really?” because that's totally not my scene, not my taste, and certainly something I have almost zero patience for. But by the end of the song I was slowly betraying my premature reluctance and noticed that, PERHAPS, my foot was tapping along to the beat. But when “Brooklyn is Burning” came on, I was so completely into it and, not wanting to seem overly-impressed with my sister’s music choice, (why do siblings do that?!) I casually asked her, “Who is this, again?” Head Automatica, ah, okay. Never heard of them…
Almost six years later, I’m still very much into the song. As I write this column while listening to it, I’m currently trying to keep myself from getting up and dancing around. Head Automatica has this very impressive ability to blend rock with punk and pop in a way that is not convoluted, annoying or unsuccessful. It’s a great way for me to get an eclectic mix of sounds and genres all within one song. Something like “Brooklyn is Burning” could be played in a club, bar or party. It has that mold-able sound that can fit anywhere. Will it fit for you?
Massive Attack – Inertia Creeps
Welcome to the first of many, many, many Massive Attack entries. They are one of my top five favorite artists, and so many of what I find to be the greatest songs in the world have been birthed by them. My first introduction to the band came from, I believe, randomly watching MTV one day and catching the middle part of the music video for “Teardrop”. Whoever I was watching television with at the time changed the channel before the end credits could show, so I had no idea what the name of the song was or whom it was by, but I remember the vocals, lyrics and sound start to etch their place in my head, igniting the flames of love that now burn with crazy fervor for this amazing band.
A few years later, the movie Go came out. My sister and I rented it one night and discovered another gem of theirs on the movie’s soundtrack – “Angel.” Although I didn’t run out and buy their album that night, I became aware of them as a band and their strength in alluring Trip Hop that kept latching its relentless hooks in my young and impressionable taste.
Around the same time, Victoria’s Secret aired a commercial that used “Inertia Creeps,” a sexy, drum-heavy song, pulsing with provocative lyrics, as a backdrop to one of their new lingerie ad campaigns. Once again, Massive Attack was inadvertently colliding with my ears and it was getting to the point where enough was enough: I WANTED IN.
It wasn’t until 2000 or 2001 that I actually bought their album, Mezzanine. It was one of the first CDs that I remember purchasing on my own. It was winter and a few days after my family and I had taken one of our much-anticipated trips into Manhattan to sightsee (i.e. be tourists), so I always associate Massive Attack – or, at least, that album - with my childhood craving to live in the city – even now, as I currently live here.
At only 25 years old, celebrity stylist Lindsi Lane's talent for style and glamour has set her apart in an industry that's filled with veterans of the field. Having already achieved a great deal of notoriety so early in her career, Lane's success can be attributed to her uncompromising focus on her clients, as well as her dedication to flattering their most appealing features and characteristics. Lane states that it is "so important to love your body. So much pressure is put on people to look a certain way. I am so honored and blessed to help change people's confidence through fashion." It is her own sense of confidence that has supported her throughout her career.
Cathy Pill debuted her ready-to-wear collection at Paris’ Couture week yesterday, and, personally, I am a fan. Based in Brussels, the 27-year-old newlywed and soon to be mother just keeps getting better. Previous collections contained elegant dresses that turned into complex tangles when customers took them into dressing rooms. With this collection, everything seems to be worked out as she tells style.com, “I want to do dresses that are as easy as T-shirts to put on.”
Her talent lies not only in her geometrical approach to draping, but also in her knack for manipulating images into modernist prints. For this line, Pill used a combination of Xerox-manipulated images of a piece of rock to create her prints and clever dye distribution, creating the illusion of layers within a single piece instead of creating bulk by actually layering. Pill is definitely one to continue watching.




















