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	<title>Comments for Loja de Luxo</title>
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	<link>http://blog.lojadeluxo.com</link>
	<description>Luxury Store</description>
	<pubDate>Mon, 01 Dec 2008 16:01:38 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>Comment on Bayerische Motoren Werke AG - BMW by Loja</title>
		<link>http://blog.lojadeluxo.com/bayerische-motoren-werke-ag-bmw/#comment-492</link>
		<dc:creator>Loja</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 17 Nov 2007 06:29:14 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>Muito bom!</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Muito bom!</p>
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	</item>
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		<title>Comment on Bayerische Motoren Werke AG - BMW by Sexy</title>
		<link>http://blog.lojadeluxo.com/bayerische-motoren-werke-ag-bmw/#comment-308</link>
		<dc:creator>Sexy</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Oct 2007 17:32:08 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>Good site!!!</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Good site!!!</p>
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		<title>Comment on Rolls Royce Motor Cars Limited by Loja de Luxo</title>
		<link>http://blog.lojadeluxo.com/rolls-royce-motor-cars-limited/#comment-277</link>
		<dc:creator>Loja de Luxo</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 26 Sep 2007 23:45:27 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>Rolls-Royce Opens Shanghai Showroom; China Marque's No. 3 Market

Posted by roboblogger 2 hrs ago &#124; via 4 Drivers Only This link will take you off Topix

Filed in archive Rolls-Royce by Gunnar Heinrich on September 26, 2007 [Image Source: RR] By Gunnar Heinrich The name Rolls-Royce draws lots of associations, but mass quantity is not one of them.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Rolls-Royce Opens Shanghai Showroom; China Marque&#8217;s No. 3 Market</p>
<p>Posted by roboblogger 2 hrs ago | via 4 Drivers Only This link will take you off Topix</p>
<p>Filed in archive Rolls-Royce by Gunnar Heinrich on September 26, 2007 [Image Source: RR] By Gunnar Heinrich The name Rolls-Royce draws lots of associations, but mass quantity is not one of them.</p>
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		<title>Comment on Polo Ralph Lauren by Loja de Luxo</title>
		<link>http://blog.lojadeluxo.com/polo-ralph-lauren/#comment-276</link>
		<dc:creator>Loja de Luxo</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 26 Sep 2007 23:43:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.lojadeluxo.com/polo-ralph-lauren/#comment-276</guid>
		<description>* First Quarter FY 2008 Net Revenues Increased 12% to $1.07 billion

* Operating Income Grew 9% to $146 million

* Diluted EPS Increased 11% to $0.82

NEW YORK -- Polo Ralph Lauren Corporation (NYSE: RL) today reported
net income of $88 million, or $0.82 per diluted share, for the first quarter of Fiscal 2008, compared to net income of $80 million, or $0.74 per diluted share, for the first quarter of Fiscal 2007. The results reflect 10% growth in net income and 11% growth in diluted earnings per share for the first quarter of Fiscal 2008.

"It is especially gratifying to be celebrating our 40(th) anniversary as a company, and our 10(th) anniversary as a public company, at a time when our business is strong and we are positioned for even greater growth," said Ralph Lauren, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer.

"The momentum in our European business is especially encouraging, and we are excited by our new opportunities in Japan. We are fortunate to have the talent and financial strength to pursue multiple initiatives. We recently completed our first American Living line review and I came away even more convinced of the tremendous growth potential for our Global Brand Concepts business," Mr. Lauren added.

"We achieved substantial milestones during the first quarter of the year, all of which should strengthen the foundation of our business to support long-term growth," said Roger Farah, President and Chief Operating Officer. "Fiscal 2008 is an investment year both financially and operationally as we integrate recent acquisitions into our existing infrastructure and prepare to launch entirely new businesses. As always, we remain focused on executing with excellence throughout the entire company."</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>* First Quarter FY 2008 Net Revenues Increased 12% to $1.07 billion</p>
<p>* Operating Income Grew 9% to $146 million</p>
<p>* Diluted EPS Increased 11% to $0.82</p>
<p>NEW YORK &#8212; Polo Ralph Lauren Corporation (NYSE: RL) today reported<br />
net income of $88 million, or $0.82 per diluted share, for the first quarter of Fiscal 2008, compared to net income of $80 million, or $0.74 per diluted share, for the first quarter of Fiscal 2007. The results reflect 10% growth in net income and 11% growth in diluted earnings per share for the first quarter of Fiscal 2008.</p>
<p>&#8220;It is especially gratifying to be celebrating our 40(th) anniversary as a company, and our 10(th) anniversary as a public company, at a time when our business is strong and we are positioned for even greater growth,&#8221; said Ralph Lauren, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer.</p>
<p>&#8220;The momentum in our European business is especially encouraging, and we are excited by our new opportunities in Japan. We are fortunate to have the talent and financial strength to pursue multiple initiatives. We recently completed our first American Living line review and I came away even more convinced of the tremendous growth potential for our Global Brand Concepts business,&#8221; Mr. Lauren added.</p>
<p>&#8220;We achieved substantial milestones during the first quarter of the year, all of which should strengthen the foundation of our business to support long-term growth,&#8221; said Roger Farah, President and Chief Operating Officer. &#8220;Fiscal 2008 is an investment year both financially and operationally as we integrate recent acquisitions into our existing infrastructure and prepare to launch entirely new businesses. As always, we remain focused on executing with excellence throughout the entire company.&#8221;</p>
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		<title>Comment on Polo Ralph Lauren by Loja de Luxo</title>
		<link>http://blog.lojadeluxo.com/polo-ralph-lauren/#comment-275</link>
		<dc:creator>Loja de Luxo</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 26 Sep 2007 23:42:30 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.lojadeluxo.com/polo-ralph-lauren/#comment-275</guid>
		<description>Polo Ralph Lauren Corporation engages in the design, marketing, and distribution of lifestyle products primarily in the United States, Canada, Europe, and Japan. The company offers apparel products, including a collection of men’s, women’s, and children’s clothing; accessories, including footwear, eyewear, jewelry, and leather goods, such as handbags and luggage; home furnishing products that include bedding and bath products, furniture, fabric and wallpaper, paints, broadloom, tabletop, and giftware; and fragrance products under Glamorous, Romance, Polo, Lauren, Safari, Blue Label, and Black Label brands. It sells its products to department stores, specialty stores, and golf and pro shops i...</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Polo Ralph Lauren Corporation engages in the design, marketing, and distribution of lifestyle products primarily in the United States, Canada, Europe, and Japan. The company offers apparel products, including a collection of men’s, women’s, and children’s clothing; accessories, including footwear, eyewear, jewelry, and leather goods, such as handbags and luggage; home furnishing products that include bedding and bath products, furniture, fabric and wallpaper, paints, broadloom, tabletop, and giftware; and fragrance products under Glamorous, Romance, Polo, Lauren, Safari, Blue Label, and Black Label brands. It sells its products to department stores, specialty stores, and golf and pro shops i&#8230;</p>
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	<item>
		<title>Comment on Dolce &#038; Gabbana by Loja de Luxo</title>
		<link>http://blog.lojadeluxo.com/dolce-gabbana/#comment-274</link>
		<dc:creator>Loja de Luxo</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 26 Sep 2007 23:42:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.blog.lojadeluxo.com/dolce-gabbana/#comment-274</guid>
		<description>Polo Ralph Lauren Corporation engages in the design, marketing, and distribution of lifestyle products primarily in the United States, Canada, Europe, and Japan. The company offers apparel products, including a collection of men’s, women’s, and children’s clothing; accessories, including footwear, eyewear, jewelry, and leather goods, such as handbags and luggage; home furnishing products that include bedding and bath products, furniture, fabric and wallpaper, paints, broadloom, tabletop, and giftware; and fragrance products under Glamorous, Romance, Polo, Lauren, Safari, Blue Label, and Black Label brands. It sells its products to department stores, specialty stores, and golf and pro shops i...</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Polo Ralph Lauren Corporation engages in the design, marketing, and distribution of lifestyle products primarily in the United States, Canada, Europe, and Japan. The company offers apparel products, including a collection of men’s, women’s, and children’s clothing; accessories, including footwear, eyewear, jewelry, and leather goods, such as handbags and luggage; home furnishing products that include bedding and bath products, furniture, fabric and wallpaper, paints, broadloom, tabletop, and giftware; and fragrance products under Glamorous, Romance, Polo, Lauren, Safari, Blue Label, and Black Label brands. It sells its products to department stores, specialty stores, and golf and pro shops i&#8230;</p>
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	<item>
		<title>Comment on Polo Ralph Lauren by Loja de Luxo</title>
		<link>http://blog.lojadeluxo.com/polo-ralph-lauren/#comment-273</link>
		<dc:creator>Loja de Luxo</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 26 Sep 2007 23:41:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.lojadeluxo.com/polo-ralph-lauren/#comment-273</guid>
		<description>Ralph Lauren

The Label

Since its inception in 1968, Ralph Lauren has become a powerful brand that’s put its stamp on everything from tuxedos to tennis uniforms. It all started with the famous Polo shirt, which Lauren created to embody the spirit of American aristocracy (something the middle-class boy from the Bronx only imagined while growing up). After launching his collection with a wide tie that became a must-have among New York's young and stylish, the designer expanded his repertoire to include the famous polos, then women's wear, formalwear and a bigger selection of sports clothes. After a brief setback in the late-1980s, when casual preppy attire was replaced by slick business suits by Armani and Dolce &#038; Gabbana, Lauren struck back with licensing deals for fragrances and home lines, plus the Ralph Lauren blue label, which quickly became an empire on its own for classic, elegant eveningwear. Purple and Black Labels followed, and Ralph Lauren's sporty Polo brand was soon balanced by fancier, more expensive lines offering silk ball gowns and six-ply cashmere cardigans. Today, Lauren's formula for creating effortlessly chic style is a hot commodity—and often imitated.
The Look

Sweater-tied prep school style for the Gatsby in all of us.
The Designer

Born in the Bronx, the young Ralph Lauren would work weekends to earn money for new clothes. After receiving a business degree from the City College of New York, Lauren worked as a glove salesman, and used his company's factory (and a $5000 loan) to produce his first line of wide ties, sold under the label Polo Fashion. When the ties took off, he invested his profits back into the company and began the larger collection of sportswear that eventually spawned his empire. Lauren has made his business a family affair, with wife Ricky and son David both intimately involved in the brand's day-to-day operations. Worth an estimated $1 billion, the designer remains the creative director of his entire brand, which now includes linens, cosmetics and even a line of house paint.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Ralph Lauren</p>
<p>The Label</p>
<p>Since its inception in 1968, Ralph Lauren has become a powerful brand that’s put its stamp on everything from tuxedos to tennis uniforms. It all started with the famous Polo shirt, which Lauren created to embody the spirit of American aristocracy (something the middle-class boy from the Bronx only imagined while growing up). After launching his collection with a wide tie that became a must-have among New York&#8217;s young and stylish, the designer expanded his repertoire to include the famous polos, then women&#8217;s wear, formalwear and a bigger selection of sports clothes. After a brief setback in the late-1980s, when casual preppy attire was replaced by slick business suits by Armani and Dolce &#038; Gabbana, Lauren struck back with licensing deals for fragrances and home lines, plus the Ralph Lauren blue label, which quickly became an empire on its own for classic, elegant eveningwear. Purple and Black Labels followed, and Ralph Lauren&#8217;s sporty Polo brand was soon balanced by fancier, more expensive lines offering silk ball gowns and six-ply cashmere cardigans. Today, Lauren&#8217;s formula for creating effortlessly chic style is a hot commodity—and often imitated.<br />
The Look</p>
<p>Sweater-tied prep school style for the Gatsby in all of us.<br />
The Designer</p>
<p>Born in the Bronx, the young Ralph Lauren would work weekends to earn money for new clothes. After receiving a business degree from the City College of New York, Lauren worked as a glove salesman, and used his company&#8217;s factory (and a $5000 loan) to produce his first line of wide ties, sold under the label Polo Fashion. When the ties took off, he invested his profits back into the company and began the larger collection of sportswear that eventually spawned his empire. Lauren has made his business a family affair, with wife Ricky and son David both intimately involved in the brand&#8217;s day-to-day operations. Worth an estimated $1 billion, the designer remains the creative director of his entire brand, which now includes linens, cosmetics and even a line of house paint.</p>
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		<title>Comment on Donna Karan by Loja de Luxo</title>
		<link>http://blog.lojadeluxo.com/donna-karan/#comment-272</link>
		<dc:creator>Loja de Luxo</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 26 Sep 2007 23:40:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.lojadeluxo.com/donna-karan/#comment-272</guid>
		<description>Young girls waiting to grow into full-time fashionistas will get a chance to experiment with couture as designer Donna Karan and cosmetics chain Sephora open shops in the virtual play-dress world of Stardoll.

Donna Karan's DKNY label and Sephora, both owned by French luxury goods conglomerate LVMH, will begin on Wednesday to offer virtual clothing and makeup to Stardoll members in specially designated online stores.

Stardoll's rapidly growing Web site has a large audience of teen girls who create Internet personas of themselves and spend hours dressing them up in fantasy costumes and socializing.

Several popular online clubs for children--such as Club Penguin and Gaia Online--as well as the adult world's Second Life--have drawn the interest of marketers because the sites have devoted fans.

For Stardoll, however, the entry of two global brands could mark the start of a new advertising business on the site, which has grown to 6 million unique monthly visitors since its creation, in 2004. Until now, members could choose from eight fictional clothing labels created by the company's in-house designers.

"Our users have been craving for real brands on the site," Mattias Miksche, chief executive of privately held Stardoll, told Reuters. "We've been getting mail from our users from day one."

The company has compiled a list of the 100 brands most popular among its 10 million registered users, and is in talks with several companies on the list about building similar virtual shops on its site, Miksche said.
Now on News.com
Intel has ARM in its crosshairs Emphasis on the new at DemoFall 2007 FAQ: What does digital TV switch actually mean? Extra: Knocked off by an online 'bargain'

Stardoll is also in talks with advertisers beyond the fashion and cosmetics industries who are also eager to reach a concentrated audience of preteen and teenage girls.

"Our business model is selling virtual items for real money ... we have 26 different exchange rates," Miksche said. But if the site's virtual stores take off, creating links to real clothing purchases may not be far behind, he said.

While DKNY fashions are pricier in real life, dressing up an Internet alter-ego also costs real money. Members pay $1 in U.S. currency for 10 "star dollars" to spend on the site, and a virtual DKNY outfit of cargo pants, sequined tank top and pair of booties would cost 31 star dollars.

Stardoll is backed by venture capital firms Sequoia Capital and Index Ventures.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Young girls waiting to grow into full-time fashionistas will get a chance to experiment with couture as designer Donna Karan and cosmetics chain Sephora open shops in the virtual play-dress world of Stardoll.</p>
<p>Donna Karan&#8217;s DKNY label and Sephora, both owned by French luxury goods conglomerate LVMH, will begin on Wednesday to offer virtual clothing and makeup to Stardoll members in specially designated online stores.</p>
<p>Stardoll&#8217;s rapidly growing Web site has a large audience of teen girls who create Internet personas of themselves and spend hours dressing them up in fantasy costumes and socializing.</p>
<p>Several popular online clubs for children&#8211;such as Club Penguin and Gaia Online&#8211;as well as the adult world&#8217;s Second Life&#8211;have drawn the interest of marketers because the sites have devoted fans.</p>
<p>For Stardoll, however, the entry of two global brands could mark the start of a new advertising business on the site, which has grown to 6 million unique monthly visitors since its creation, in 2004. Until now, members could choose from eight fictional clothing labels created by the company&#8217;s in-house designers.</p>
<p>&#8220;Our users have been craving for real brands on the site,&#8221; Mattias Miksche, chief executive of privately held Stardoll, told Reuters. &#8220;We&#8217;ve been getting mail from our users from day one.&#8221;</p>
<p>The company has compiled a list of the 100 brands most popular among its 10 million registered users, and is in talks with several companies on the list about building similar virtual shops on its site, Miksche said.<br />
Now on News.com<br />
Intel has ARM in its crosshairs Emphasis on the new at DemoFall 2007 FAQ: What does digital TV switch actually mean? Extra: Knocked off by an online &#8216;bargain&#8217;</p>
<p>Stardoll is also in talks with advertisers beyond the fashion and cosmetics industries who are also eager to reach a concentrated audience of preteen and teenage girls.</p>
<p>&#8220;Our business model is selling virtual items for real money &#8230; we have 26 different exchange rates,&#8221; Miksche said. But if the site&#8217;s virtual stores take off, creating links to real clothing purchases may not be far behind, he said.</p>
<p>While DKNY fashions are pricier in real life, dressing up an Internet alter-ego also costs real money. Members pay $1 in U.S. currency for 10 &#8220;star dollars&#8221; to spend on the site, and a virtual DKNY outfit of cargo pants, sequined tank top and pair of booties would cost 31 star dollars.</p>
<p>Stardoll is backed by venture capital firms Sequoia Capital and Index Ventures.</p>
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		<title>Comment on Donna Karan by Loja de Luxo</title>
		<link>http://blog.lojadeluxo.com/donna-karan/#comment-271</link>
		<dc:creator>Loja de Luxo</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 26 Sep 2007 23:39:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.lojadeluxo.com/donna-karan/#comment-271</guid>
		<description>STYLE DESK
FASHION REVIEW; Designers in a Time of Many Dresses, Some Terrific
By CATHY HORYN

The New York collections ended with Donna Karan and Isabel Toledo of Anne Klein each taking on that most feminine of summer staples: the dress, writes Cathy Horyn.
September 13, 2007 Style Review

    * Three Notable Shows From Three Notable Women
    * A Fashion Week Wrap-Up

THURSDAY STYLES
Front Row; Agreed: We All Love Narciso
By CATHY HORYN

Jerry and Jessica Seinfeld host a dinner for Narciso Rodriguez in celebration of Mr. Rodriguez’s new partnership with Liz Claiborne.
June 7, 2007 Style News
METROPOLITAN DESK
A Few Adaptations Suit the New Reality
By CATHY HORYN

It would be better to call Donna Karan’s tent dresses and lightweight coats a vignette of her recent travels to Africa and the Middle East rather than a collection by a leading Seventh Avenue designer.
September 18, 2006 New York and Region News

    * New York Collections
    * Spring Fashion 2007 Wrap-Up

THURSDAY STYLES
Front Row; Project Parsons: Fashion School as Star
By ERIC WILSON

"Project Runway," the reality show filmed at Parsons the New School for Design, has made the school quite fashionable.
April 20, 2006 Style News
METROPOLITAN DESK
Fall Forecast: Dark, Solemn and Lagerfeld
By CATHY HORYN

In closing the New York season with predominantly black and brown clothes, Karl Lagerfeld confirmed the shift toward a more solemn outlook for fall.
February 13, 2006 New York and Region News

    * SLIDE SHOW: New York Collections

METROPOLITAN DESK
FASHION DIARY; The Next Great Look Is Written in the Stars
By GUY TREBAY

You know the prospects for the coming fashion season are dicey when the body-mind-spirit people seem to be calling the shots.
February 6, 2006 New York and Region News
HOUSE &#038; HOME/STYLE DESK
In Search of a Sofa To Go Under the Schnabel
By GUY TREBAY

At Art Basel Miami Beach, the annual art and design fair and aesthetic feeding frenzy, furniture is an object of desire.
December 8, 2005 Home and Garden News

    * SLIDE SHOW: Performance Pieces

THURSDAY STYLES
Front Row; Bob Mackie Is Selling A Share of His Excess
By ERIC WILSON

The fashion designer will be selling a chunk of his archives on Tuesday at Christie's, cleaning out his closets and taking a long look back at his career.
November 17, 2005 Style News
METROPOLITAN DESK
BOLDFACE
By CAMPBELL ROBERTSON; WITH MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT

Reporting Is the New Snarky.
November 4, 2005 New York and Region News
STYLE DESK
New Slavs of New York: All Bling and No Borscht
By NATASHA SINGER

From fashion to film, from art to sports, New York is having a Slavic moment, peopled by ambitious socialites, emerging artists and exotic beauties.
October 2, 2005 Health News</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>STYLE DESK<br />
FASHION REVIEW; Designers in a Time of Many Dresses, Some Terrific<br />
By CATHY HORYN</p>
<p>The New York collections ended with Donna Karan and Isabel Toledo of Anne Klein each taking on that most feminine of summer staples: the dress, writes Cathy Horyn.<br />
September 13, 2007 Style Review</p>
<p>    * Three Notable Shows From Three Notable Women<br />
    * A Fashion Week Wrap-Up</p>
<p>THURSDAY STYLES<br />
Front Row; Agreed: We All Love Narciso<br />
By CATHY HORYN</p>
<p>Jerry and Jessica Seinfeld host a dinner for Narciso Rodriguez in celebration of Mr. Rodriguez’s new partnership with Liz Claiborne.<br />
June 7, 2007 Style News<br />
METROPOLITAN DESK<br />
A Few Adaptations Suit the New Reality<br />
By CATHY HORYN</p>
<p>It would be better to call Donna Karan’s tent dresses and lightweight coats a vignette of her recent travels to Africa and the Middle East rather than a collection by a leading Seventh Avenue designer.<br />
September 18, 2006 New York and Region News</p>
<p>    * New York Collections<br />
    * Spring Fashion 2007 Wrap-Up</p>
<p>THURSDAY STYLES<br />
Front Row; Project Parsons: Fashion School as Star<br />
By ERIC WILSON</p>
<p>&#8220;Project Runway,&#8221; the reality show filmed at Parsons the New School for Design, has made the school quite fashionable.<br />
April 20, 2006 Style News<br />
METROPOLITAN DESK<br />
Fall Forecast: Dark, Solemn and Lagerfeld<br />
By CATHY HORYN</p>
<p>In closing the New York season with predominantly black and brown clothes, Karl Lagerfeld confirmed the shift toward a more solemn outlook for fall.<br />
February 13, 2006 New York and Region News</p>
<p>    * SLIDE SHOW: New York Collections</p>
<p>METROPOLITAN DESK<br />
FASHION DIARY; The Next Great Look Is Written in the Stars<br />
By GUY TREBAY</p>
<p>You know the prospects for the coming fashion season are dicey when the body-mind-spirit people seem to be calling the shots.<br />
February 6, 2006 New York and Region News<br />
HOUSE &#038; HOME/STYLE DESK<br />
In Search of a Sofa To Go Under the Schnabel<br />
By GUY TREBAY</p>
<p>At Art Basel Miami Beach, the annual art and design fair and aesthetic feeding frenzy, furniture is an object of desire.<br />
December 8, 2005 Home and Garden News</p>
<p>    * SLIDE SHOW: Performance Pieces</p>
<p>THURSDAY STYLES<br />
Front Row; Bob Mackie Is Selling A Share of His Excess<br />
By ERIC WILSON</p>
<p>The fashion designer will be selling a chunk of his archives on Tuesday at Christie&#8217;s, cleaning out his closets and taking a long look back at his career.<br />
November 17, 2005 Style News<br />
METROPOLITAN DESK<br />
BOLDFACE<br />
By CAMPBELL ROBERTSON; WITH MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT</p>
<p>Reporting Is the New Snarky.<br />
November 4, 2005 New York and Region News<br />
STYLE DESK<br />
New Slavs of New York: All Bling and No Borscht<br />
By NATASHA SINGER</p>
<p>From fashion to film, from art to sports, New York is having a Slavic moment, peopled by ambitious socialites, emerging artists and exotic beauties.<br />
October 2, 2005 Health News</p>
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	<item>
		<title>Comment on Dolce &#038; Gabbana by Loja de Luxo</title>
		<link>http://blog.lojadeluxo.com/dolce-gabbana/#comment-270</link>
		<dc:creator>Loja de Luxo</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 26 Sep 2007 23:38:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.blog.lojadeluxo.com/dolce-gabbana/#comment-270</guid>
		<description>D&#038;G Fall/Winter 2007-2008 Collection  	
INSPIRATION: London Glamour - the D&#038;G woman is fascinated by the mythical London boutique BIBA, which in the late 70's revolutionized the rules of style, becoming the must have stop for rock stars and students alike.

THE WARDROBE: Short dresses, shorts, short and long fitted pants, bellbottoms, tracksuits, slip dresses, chiffon mini-dresses, dresses with paillettes, tailored suits, angora and cashmere sweaters, fox furs. 14 ocelot printed chiffon gowns inspired by BIBA.

SHAPES: Fitted and tailored, with the exception of bellbottoms.

FABRICS: Satin, lacquered chiffon, crepe de chine, duchess silk, cotton, cashmere, sweaters in Lurex, angora and cashmere, denim and lacquered denim, paillettes, red, black or ocelot printed fox fur.

COLORS: Black, red, white and gold.

PRINTS: Ocelot, black and white floral, black and white polka dot. The ocelot print is featured in the entire collection: shoes, bags, chiffon, cotton, sweaters and furs.

ACCESSORIES: Stilettos and peep toe with cone shape heels in python, patent, suede, mordorè leather in gold, black, ocelot or gold and black houndstooth. High heel gold sandals. Oversized bags in wrinkled or plain patent. Mordorè leather mini evening bags. Rabbit fur hats. Small watches.

The D&#038;G Fall/Winter 2007-2008 Ad campaign, photographed by Mario Testino, is one of the best.
Featured in this campaign are Iekeliene Stange, Rachel Clark, Johanna Jonssson, Erin Heatherton, Milagros Schmoll, Guy Robinson, Eddie Klint, Eugen Bauder, Malte Heininger and Hampus Ahlquist.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>D&#038;G Fall/Winter 2007-2008 Collection<br />
INSPIRATION: London Glamour - the D&#038;G woman is fascinated by the mythical London boutique BIBA, which in the late 70&#8217;s revolutionized the rules of style, becoming the must have stop for rock stars and students alike.</p>
<p>THE WARDROBE: Short dresses, shorts, short and long fitted pants, bellbottoms, tracksuits, slip dresses, chiffon mini-dresses, dresses with paillettes, tailored suits, angora and cashmere sweaters, fox furs. 14 ocelot printed chiffon gowns inspired by BIBA.</p>
<p>SHAPES: Fitted and tailored, with the exception of bellbottoms.</p>
<p>FABRICS: Satin, lacquered chiffon, crepe de chine, duchess silk, cotton, cashmere, sweaters in Lurex, angora and cashmere, denim and lacquered denim, paillettes, red, black or ocelot printed fox fur.</p>
<p>COLORS: Black, red, white and gold.</p>
<p>PRINTS: Ocelot, black and white floral, black and white polka dot. The ocelot print is featured in the entire collection: shoes, bags, chiffon, cotton, sweaters and furs.</p>
<p>ACCESSORIES: Stilettos and peep toe with cone shape heels in python, patent, suede, mordorè leather in gold, black, ocelot or gold and black houndstooth. High heel gold sandals. Oversized bags in wrinkled or plain patent. Mordorè leather mini evening bags. Rabbit fur hats. Small watches.</p>
<p>The D&#038;G Fall/Winter 2007-2008 Ad campaign, photographed by Mario Testino, is one of the best.<br />
Featured in this campaign are Iekeliene Stange, Rachel Clark, Johanna Jonssson, Erin Heatherton, Milagros Schmoll, Guy Robinson, Eddie Klint, Eugen Bauder, Malte Heininger and Hampus Ahlquist.</p>
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