Posts Tagged ‘Libertine’

Maxfield does Beverly Hills

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

Tommy Perse, co-owner of Maxfield boutique, has moved in next door to his son, well-known knit designer James Perse here in Beverly Hills. Maxfield is undoubtedly one of the most avantgarde, statement-making stores on the West Coast. Now, its “on-sale version”- Maxfield Bleu, has moved to Canon Drive in Beverly Hills! Maxfield Bleu houses designers like Rick Owens, Comme des Garçons, Yohji, Stella McCartney, and Libertine. And while it may be a bit limiting, it conveniently carries some of the most hard to find must-haves you won’t see anywhere else. I am thoroughly excited that my hometown of Beverly Hills is finally making a shift towards more avant garde stores such as this, Taschen Books, and the gorgeous Maison Martin Margiela store now open on Little Santa Monica. Out with the old, in with the new!

Entrance of Maxfield, West Hollywood

Paper Magazine launches its 2nd 24-hour department store on Sunset Blvd.

Monday, November 10th, 2008

Paper Magazine opened up its new department store in the heart of the Sunset Strip with a kick this Friday. The store, designed my architectural designer Johnston Marklee, stayed open for a straight 24-hour shopping experience upon opening weekend, featuring 17 live bands which helped to duplicate the magazine’s oh-so ecclectic tone. The store features a “black market meets high street”  approach with artist vendors anywhere from high-fashion to low-fashion and anywhere in-between, in the true spirit of the magazine itself. Artists and designers include Rodarte, Band of Outsiders, Libertine, Henry Holland, Jeremy Scott, and Slow and Steady Wins The Race,  some of  which are personal favorites of mine, mainly stemming out of L.A. Paper Magazine’s co-founder and editor-in-chief Kim Hastreiter, graduate of CalArts, tapped into Los Angeles’ pop art scene quite successfully with the opening of the Paper store, the fourth arrival of Paper to the Westcoast. Passing by its doors, located across from the Viper Room on Sunset Blvd. at 2 a.m. on Friday night, the crowd was still thriving and the music, still blaring. Stores like this go to show that no matter how terrible the economy might show itself to be, there is still a huge market base in Los Angeles of ever-trend-chasing, fashionista-aspiring kids looking to spend some cash. As it turns out, Hastreiter’s opening of the Paper Magazine department store on Sunset is exactly what Los Angeles needs, an opportunity to show just how well L.A. could compete with - or compliment - the New York fashion scene. I have great confidence that pop-up stores like this will continue to do well regardless the economy. And frankly, I was pretty excited to explore its booths myself.