The new girl Lissy Trullie The style world’s fallen Trullie, madly, deeply for this model-turned-singer. She performed songs from her debut EP, Self-Taught Learner (Downtown), at the 3.1 Phillip Lim Fall 2009 show, and is the face of MDLR, Moises “Son of Oscar” de la Renta’s clothing line. To back up her buzz, the hottest New-Yorker-with-a-bowl-cut since Karen O will release her first LP in early 2010. The album is like “a big bucket of sweets,” says twenty-something Trullie, whose enviable élan is inspired by cinematic style icons “like Mrs. Robinson, or all the characters in Tim Burton’s Edward Scissorhands.” And unlike some It singers, Trullie writes and plays her own songs.
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
MUSIC: GUITAR HEROINE
The new girl Lissy Trullie The style world’s fallen Trullie, madly, deeply for this model-turned-singer. She performed songs from her debut EP, Self-Taught Learner (Downtown), at the 3.1 Phillip Lim Fall 2009 show, and is the face of MDLR, Moises “Son of Oscar” de la Renta’s clothing line. To back up her buzz, the hottest New-Yorker-with-a-bowl-cut since Karen O will release her first LP in early 2010. The album is like “a big bucket of sweets,” says twenty-something Trullie, whose enviable élan is inspired by cinematic style icons “like Mrs. Robinson, or all the characters in Tim Burton’s Edward Scissorhands.” And unlike some It singers, Trullie writes and plays her own songs.
OH MY LOLA
“I’m very nervous and star-struck right now. I just need to put that out there,” I confess to Marc Jacobs, sitting across from him in his expansive SoHo showroom as we begin our interview. The irony in divulging this to Jacobs, who’s always been forthcoming about his own anxieties—offering them up like hors d’oeuvres at a party—doesn’t occur to me until later. Heightening my nerves is the fact that it’s just him and me; the usual phalanx of eavesdropping PR reps is waiting outside. I feel like a dork with a crush, parked across from this hunky beacon of cool at one of several high-school-cafeteria–like tables. “Don’t be, don’t be! I’m easy, I’m a really simple person,” he assures me.
Hardly the summation you’d expect from one of the most influential designers of the past decade and the head of three global brands: his own labels and Louis Vuitton. Yet what is so fascinating and endearing about Jacobs is that despite creating highly coveted items season after season, he continues to fret about what to do next, and whether his sartorial decisions will be met with approval. “I have tons of insecurities, personally as a human being and as a creator,” he confides. “I worry about pleasing people, because that’s my job.
PINK AND BLACK AND AVRIL ALL OVER
When Avril Lavigne picks up the phone, her voice is so girlie and youthful that I’m taken aback for a second. In the seven years since she burst through with “Complicated,” the pop-punk singer has become part of the old guard—she’s practically establishment. Her lineup of accomplishments includes three albums—a fourth is coming next year—a judging gig onAmerican Idol that airs in January, and a juniors clothing line, Abbey Dawn, sold at Boathouse in Canada. And yet she just, just, turned 25.
Next on the ticket is her first fragrance, Black Star (from $39, at Shoppers Drug Mart). Lavigne wanted the scent to be “a rock ’n’ roll perfume,” and from the packaging on down it reflects her style: The box is decked out in silver studs, the star-shaped bottle is pink—like the streaks in her hair—and topped with a black cap and removable spiked metal ring.
A celebrity with a varied portfolio is no rare thing in the current era, and it would be easy to criticize Black Star as another rubber-stamped brand-building affair. But Lavigne seems genuinely engaged with her creation. Refreshingly, she doesn’t pretend to be a perfumer. There were no stories about a childhood flower garden or a lifelong interest in chypres and fougères. In fact, before P&G Prestige approached her about creating a signature scent, the singer confesses she would just wear “random, different things.”
So why create a fragrance? “It would be something new for me, and I knew it would be fun,” says Lavigne. “It was a really great experience to learn and to expand.”
Elnett, the long-smuggled hairspray, now at Shoppers
In the beauty world, L’Oréal Paris Elnett’s reputation precedes it. This hairspray is cult–the secret of runway stylists and the stuff of legend. Banned in the U.S., though not in Europe, since 1987 due to its use of fluorocarbons as propellants, the 50-year-old “golden can” has been smuggled back in ever since. Happily, for us and the ozone layer, that problem has been solved in a North American version of Elnett Satin ($15) that landed at Shoppers Drug Mart this month.
What’s so great about it? I smuggled–okay,brought–a can home to test.LINK..Divine Life
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