28 Agustus 2008

Ten Gender-Bending Fall Fashion Looks



Pairing a double-breasted suit jacket with a starched shirt and oversized bow tie is one of fall's most anticipated trends.
But if you think Karl Lagerfeld created this look for a man, think again. This suit jacket-bow tie combo is part of Lagerfeld's fall line for women.
And Lagerfeld is not alone. Paul Smith, Nina Ricci and Max Azria are also blurring fashion's gender lines. Elbow patches or a stitch that gives the illusion of an elbow patch will be seen on womens' jackets and sweaters, while hats and caps and cuffed pants will also be reinterpreted from men's wardrobes. And designers of accessories such as shoes and handbags have added masculine details like studding and vintage hardware, says Benjamin Belton, president of a four-store retail chain selling women’s and men’s apparel in western North Carolina.
What's more, handbags are no longer solely a woman's accessory; men will also find oversized leather bags for personal items. And purple in all shades and tones will be a staple for both men and women heading into fall.
In Pictures: 10 Gender-Bending Fall Fashion Looks
"Business casual in the workplace has really opened up the blur in gender lines," says Cynthia O'Connor, founder and CEO of Cynthia O'Connor + Company, a fashion and accessories showroom with locations in New York City and Los Angeles. "The ability for both men and women to dress down at work is presenting more options for wardrobing."
While women's clothing began adopting masculine undertones in the 1920s, such details are at the forefront of many designers' fall lines. Lagerfeld and Carolina Herrera incorporated bow ties into their womenswear collections, while Smith, Gianfranco Ferre and Costume National created women's suits with flat-front pants, stiff, white, collared shirts and pinstripes.
Related Stories Fall Fashion's '20s-Inspired Looks
How To Invest In Estate Jewelry
Marc Jacobs is more literal in his interpretation of menswear for women--his fall collection features womens' pantsuits almost identical to traditional men's styles.
Even dresses are looking more like suits. Azria's loose shirtdress with men's dress-shirt trimming on the sleeves, collar and hem is paired with a men's cap, skinny-heeled ankle boots and a ladylike, oversized clutch. Philip Lim pairs a fitted gray jacket over a dress and a long cardigan vest over a shorter dress.
But women aren't the only ones "cross-dressing."

Barack Obama's Power Suit



Move over, Michelle. Another Obama is becoming a style-setter.
Sen. Barack Obama will wear a custom-made Hart Schaffner Marx suit (left) when he accepts the Democratic nomination in Denver on Thursday night.
The two-button suit is made of solid navy and worsted wool, with pleated pants that have an inch and a quarter cuffs.
"It's a flattering fit and has a soft drape, and the material has a nice feel against the skin," says Lisa Wells, director of public relations for Hickey Freeman, a subsidiary of Hartmarx Corporation (nyse: HMX - news - people )--formerly Hart, Schaffner & Marx. "The silhouette is a classic fit; he's a 40 long with a 33-inch waist."
The Hart Schaffner Marx team personally tailored Obama in Chicago.
"Hart Schaffner Marx had appointments with him in the past for fittings that had been canceled when he was on the campaign trail," says Wells "I guess they finally caught up with each other now that he was home before the convention."
The suit would retail at department stores such as Nordstrom (nyse: JWN - news - people ) for $1,500.

4 Agustus 2008

The Candidates

The Candidates

Details on John McCain, Republican presidential candidate, and Barack Obama, the Democratic candidate.


Bio

Barack Obama Democrat U.S. Senator
· Age: 46
· Residence: Chicago

Born to a free-spirited white mother and a black Kenyan absentee father, Mr. Obama spent his childhood in Hawaii and Indonesia. As part of a younger generation of black leaders, he represents the success — but not the historic struggle — of the civil rights movement. And his upstart campaign for the Democratic nomination, using a mantra of hope and change combined with tech-savvy, unconventional organization, helped him surpass one of America's most prominent political establishments, the Clintons, to become the first African-American to lead a major party ticket.
Between earning degrees at Columbia and Harvard, Mr. Obama spent two years as a community organizer on Chicago‘s impoverished South Side. Left frustrated by the experience, he decided to pursue change as an insider and won a seat in the Illinois state senate. Mr. Obama has written of his “spooky good fortune” in politics, but his career includes one glaring political miscalculation — an ill-fated bid to unseat Bobby L. Rush, a former activist and a hero to black voters, in Congress.
Some accused Mr. Obama of impatience when he chose to seek the Democratic nomination just two years into his first U.S. Senate term. He faced a difficult decision after his keynote speech at the 2004 Democratic National Convention, when his proclamation that “We worship an awesome God in the Blue States, and we don‘t like federal agents poking around our libraries in the Red States” propelled him to party stardom. Armed with his charisma and his public stance against the Iraq war before the 2003 invasion, Mr. Obama chose to run despite his comparatively little experience on the national stage.
Mr. Obama, known for his emphasis on the big picture and a tendency to delegate, has been called “post-racial” and “post-partisan.” “I am like a Rorschach test,” he said in an interview with The New York Times this past summer. “Even if people find me disappointing ultimately, they might gain something.” Mr. Obama has carefully eschewed identifying too closely with his party, despite a fairly liberal voting record. His campaign‘s innovative internet organization both dovetailed with his call for a new kind of politics and helped him raise record amounts of money from small and large donors alike. He is a regular on the basketball court and at the gym, and his comparative youth and lofty oratory inspired comparisons to John F. Kennedy.
Despite his focus on unity, his victory over Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton caused lingering resentments among her supporters. Critics call him an empty vessel, a charge fueled by his decisions to decline public financing and support an expansion of government surveillance powers after the election, both shifts from earlier positions.
Mr. Obama lives with his wife, Michelle, and two daughters in the Chicago neighborhood of Hyde Park.

John McCain Republican U.S. Senator
· Age: 71
· Residence: Phoenix
Senator John McCain has worked to build a reputation of taking no one‘s orders but his own. Mr. McCain‘s image as a maverick remains a central justification for his presidential campaign, though that image has been diminished somewhat by his efforts to mend fences with some Republicans during his quest to become president.
The son and grandson of Navy admirals, Mr. McCain went from the bottom of his class at the Naval Academy to war hero after refusing preferential treatment and enduring five years as a prisoner of war after his plane was shot down over Hanoi in 1967. His military experiences continue to inform his views about war.
Though always supportive of the Iraq war, Mr. McCain was harshly critical of the Bush administration‘s — and especially former Secretary of State Donald H. Rumsfeld‘s — handling of the conflict. He was an early proponent of troop escalation in Iraq, which was adopted in early 2007. He has also confronted the White House for its advocacy of interrogation methods that he considers torture.
Upon returning from Vietnam, Mr. McCain got his first taste of Congress as the Navy‘s Senate liaison, where the dry, hip, macho war hero became a favorite. He won his own House seat in 1982, and he came to the Senate four years later a rising star. But he was nearly brought down in 1991 by his involvement in the “Keating Five” scandal. Though he was ultimately exonerated, an ethics inquiry determined that Mr. McCain used “poor judgment” in intervening with federal regulators on behalf of a political contributor‘s savings and loan operation.
“It was certainly the most difficult experience in my political life,” he said of the period, and friends say it influenced his crusade against the influence of money in politics, angering Republicans by putting his name to the so-called “McCain-Feingold” campaign finance reform bill. Republican frustration with Mr. McCain is not limited to campaign finance. His presidential campaign was nearly destroyed in 2007 by his support of comprehensive immigration legislation, and in the past he called some leaders of the religious right “agents of intolerance.” Nonetheless, the constituency he built up during his 2000 race and his propensity to switch sides on a number of issues have made him one of the Senate&lsqou;s most influential figures. His efforts in recent years to mend fences with some Republican factions has compromised his independent persona somewhat, including meeting with the evangelical leader Jerry Falwell, voting to extend Mr. Bush‘s tax cuts and backing an enforcement-only immigration bill.
Mr. McCain lives in Phoenix with his second wife, Cindy Hensley McCain, an heiress to a beer distribution. The couple has four children. Mr. McCain also has a daughter from a previous marriage, which ended in divorce in 1980.

Events

Barack Obama Democrat U.S. Senator

· Barack Obama in Lansing, Mich. August 4
· Barack Obama in Boston, Mass. August 4
· Barack Obama in Youngstown, Ohio August 5
More Events »

John McCain Republican U.S. Senator
· John McCain in Sturgis, SD August 4
More Events »

Money

Barack Obama Democrat U.S. Senator

· Total Raised $349,785,288
· Total Spent $278,114,964
· Cash on Hand $71,670,320
Through June 30, 2008

John McCain Republican U.S. Senator

· Total Raised $144,071,946
· Total Spent $117,289,717
· Cash on Hand $26,782,228
Through June 30, 2008

Recent Coverage
· Obama Asks Panel to Restore Votes By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE The request to give full voting rights to delegates from Florida and Michigan at the national convention is likely to be granted.
· McCain Takes a Page From Clinton’s Playbook By JOHN HARWOOD At times this spring, it appeared that Barack Obama’s fight with Hillary Rodham Clinton would never end. In some ways, it hasn’t.
More »
· McCain Takes a Page From Clinton’s Playbook By JOHN HARWOOD At times this spring, it appeared that Barack Obama’s fight with Hillary Rodham Clinton would never end. In some ways, it hasn’t.
· McCain Leans Toward a Compromise on Offshore Drilling By BRIAN KNOWLTON A day after Barack Obama said he would consider permitting some offshore oil drilling, an aide to John McCain said that he might support such a compromise.
More »