Correction: Coachella Fashion story | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
Subscribe

Would you like to subscribe to our newsletter?

Current Conditions Sunny  14.4°C

Correction: Coachella Fashion story

This photo provided by American Eagle Outfitters, Inc. shows a navy wide brim Fedora hat from American Eagle Outfitters. “The festival look has always been really free-spirited and Bohemian in general, but in the last few years, we’ve seen this evolution of the ‘70s coming back,” said Preston Konrad, style director for American Eagle, noting the brand’s “destroyed” denim shorts, flared jeans and floaty tops are Coachella-ready. Think hippie meets hipster: lots of fringe and crochet, with a requisite floral headband or floppy sun hat. (AP photo/American Eagle Outfitters, Inc.)

LOS ANGELES, Calif. - In a story April 9 about fashion at the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, The Associated Press misspelled the first name of jewelry designer Jacquie Aiche as Jackie.

A corrected version of the story is below:

Fashion aims to share the spotlight with music at Coachella

With runway shows and pop-up shops, fashion aims to share spotlight with music at Coachella

By SANDY COHEN

AP Entertainment Writer

"Festival fashion" is a thing, and Coachella is the place.

The Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, held in the Southern California desert on two consecutive weekends beginning Friday, is a style destination as much as a musical one — this year more than ever. Besides the ever-growing array of off-site parties and sponsored suites, there are now runway shows and a pop-up fashion store on festival grounds.

So what is the Coachella look? Think hippie meets hipster: lots of fringe and crochet, with a requisite floral headband or floppy sun hat. Just google "Vanessa Hudgens Coachella."

And it goes way beyond the festival, which started humbly in the grunge days of 1999. Because the event comes so early in the spring, when much of the country is still defrosting from winter, "festival fashion" informs spring, summer and resort styles.

Fashionistas say a convergence of cool elements make Coachella a haute spot: It boasts an eclectic lineup of musicians (AC/DC, Jack White and Drake are headliners this year); its proximity to Los Angeles means a high celebrity quotient; and its audience is plugged into Instagram, so images of the festival and its fashion span the world in real time.

"Social media has had a huge influence on everyone getting involved," said Lisa Sugar, founder of lifestyle site POPSUGAR.com, which is hosting three days of fashion events in nearby Palm Springs, California. Brands are seizing the opportunity to be part of the Coachella conversation and see the festival as a place to connect directly with young consumers, she said.

"Millennials love experiences, and Coachella is just one great, big party. It's a huge experience for this audience to really get excited about," Sugar said. "They plan for days what they'll be wearing... So if a brand can offer them something organic, they're engaged."

Among the brands getting in on the action: Pandora Jewelry, which is hosting a three-day "Fashion Experience" of runway shows by designers Tracy Reese, Nanette Lepore, WHiT and Siwy Denim. Other fashion and accessories companies are offering new designs aimed at festival-goers. For Love and Lemons, a maker of high-end clothing and lingerie, collaborated with jewelry designer Jacquie Aiche on a capsule collection for Coachella: Sheer, lace and floral pieces to pair with specially created jewelry pieces that sell for $275 to $2,625.

"Coachella has almost become fashion week for people in California and LA," said Kari Feinstein, a publicist sponsoring a "style lounge" in Los Angeles this week to connect brands with festival-bound celebrities. "It's become sort of an outdoor runway, but not for high fashion. It's more for lifestyle-driven brands."

The Council of Fashion Designers of America is adding the festival to its calendar for the first time this year. CFDA chief Steven Kolb said Coachella shapes today's fashion much like the Woodstock festival did in the early 1970s.

"It's the curation of artists and diversity of music that worked," he said. "That's always been true with music and fashion. Music has always influenced fashion and vice versa... So for our industry to harness that was just a natural evolution."

The festival has even inspired its own namesake clothing line: H&M introduced its sunny H&M Loves Coachella collection worldwide last month. The Swedish retailer, a Coachella sponsor for the past six years, will host an interactive installation on the festival grounds this year that includes a "360-degree Selfie Station" and a temporary store selling exclusive, festival-only products.

"We always thought that Coachella is as much about fashion as it is about music," said H&M spokeswoman Marybeth Schmitt. The collection is available at 3,000 H&M stores around the world, she said.

General admission tickets to the festival cost $375 and VIP passes sold for $899. All are sold out.

___

Follow AP Entertainment Writer Sandy Cohen at www.twitter.com/APSandy.

News from © The Associated Press, 2015
The Associated Press

  • Popular kelowna News
View Site in: Desktop | Mobile