Nina Ricci winter2012/2013
This video made by Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin is so beautiful realistic yet so surreal in HD is exquisite to watch.
Sound and music distorted backwards. And by using real time animation. It's done beautifully!
Not to mention what a progressive and modern approach for such a classic, traditional Haute Couture house as Nina Ricci. Well it all started to be progressive already when Oliver Theyksens came as head designer for Nina Ricci.
http://vimeo.com/50306628
Sunday, November 25, 2012
Friday, November 9, 2012
LOUIS VUITTON TO EXPAND INTO STATIONARY, TO OPEN A STATIONERY BOUTIQUE
As a true believer of written notes, to keep my personal
information data-preserved. I’m definitely willing but I gave up just solemnly
believing and trusting in the digital preservation of information. By every time when they invented the ‘newest’ for years to safe and
back-up your information by digital backup devices. Too many times dealt with a
crashed digital gadgets like my digital agenda/diary, digital psion, or even
worse, my Iphone, after being crashed not only once but twice and still missing
an important part between december 2011 and march 2012, including phonenumbers,
data of appointments, little important personal notes and so on. I’m a true
believer of the written script. So I started to write over every
phone number, important dates to remember, appointments or any other information to keep, just with pen and paper. Using my old
Rolodex again which has a good place on my desk. And always carrying my diary- or sketchbook- or notebook with
me.
In my big purse and stuff it in my perception all the neccessities or in other means I carry stuff with me like a pack donkey.
In my big purse and stuff it in my perception all the neccessities or in other means I carry stuff with me like a pack donkey.
For this moment, I’ve discovered the tinier the notebooks, the
more I love it. Already know(n)
for my expensive taste for quality, I prefer the more luxury, exclusive hard
covers made of leather, favorite are crocodile or python, not to buy myself any of such,
prices are rocket sky high. But the exquisite collection offered by Moleskine
makes me very greedy too and it makes me really happy just to get it as a gift
or the moment after purchasing a tiny notebook, or the huge big notebook/
diary.
Stationery it
is and besides fashion another love. How curious I’ve become to hear the news of
the flagship brand of LVMH group LOUIS VUITTON to open a stationery boutique, a space dedicated to writing planned to open in the beginning of December 2012, located
at Saint-Germain-des-Prés, Between the famous Flore and Deux Magots. The
left bank of the Seine at the
corner of 6 Place
Saint-Germain-des-Prés, whose famous
cafes and booksellers have been a magnet for famous writers for decades.
Word has it
that Louis Vuitton, which earlier this year confirmed it would extend its brand
into perfume, is also plotting a move into stationery. According to Reuters sources,
the French leather goods powerhouse — which already markets some pens, agendas,
travel guides and notebooks — plans to upgrade and extend its writing category in paper, pens and stationery upscale. To launch covered
alligator pens, paper and colored ink in inkwells Baccarat crystal, It is understood the product initiative is tied to the
ambitious forthcoming expansion of its boutique at Saint-Germain-des-Prés,
Celebrating
the world of travel and writing through the presence of books and artwork, The brand's
first venture into selling stationery has started half october by its temporary literary exhibition entitled L'Ecriture est un Voyage - meaning 'writing is a
journey' - and runs until New Year's Eve. Space at 170 Boulevard Saint-Germain in Paris.
Louis Vuitton and
LVMH have refused to comment. But will send out an official press release later
Tuesday, November 6, 2012
Fashion
Bidding Balenciaga Farewell: Nicolas Ghesquière's Fifteen Years at the House
by Hamish Bowles
After fifteen years as the creative director ofBalenciaga, Nicolas Ghesquière is moving on.
He leaves a legacy at the house of extraordinary fashion leadership that challenged the idea of what clothing could be, and proved astonishingly potent and profoundly influential.
A self-described “autodidact” Ghesquière, 41, was raised in an area of rural western France that was filled with storied castles, but isolated from the world of fashion. His mother’s interest in clothes, however, and the fashion magazines she subscribed to, fed a nascent interest, and with Jacques Lang as the country’s culture minister, the importance of fashion as a cultural force was reflected in extensive television coverage that gave Ghesquière a further outlet to dream.
“When I was a boy, I didn’t want to go play with the other kids,” he told me in an extensive interview in early 2011. “Instead, I was drawing all the time—cars and clothes! One day—I must have been ten years old or so—my aunt looked at what I was doing and she said, ‘You know, Nicolas, what you are doing is fashion drawing. You are designing clothes.’ And as soon as I realized that there was this thing called fashion—that there were fashion designers—that was it! I understood instantly that that was going to be my thing. Really and truly, there were no questions after that of what I wanted to do in life.”
At the tender age of fifteen, he applied to a number of fashion houses for internships and was finally offered one by Agnes Troublé of Agnes B whose brand, was “really the essence of the ready-to-wear.” Another internship at Corinne Cobsonfollowed, but he dreamed of working withJean Paul Gaultier. “For me, the Jean Paul Gaultier vision was so right,” he said. “A vision of very free women with an ethnic mix—with a lot of references but yet no references. I think it was so right for his time, that fascinating fashion moment when suddenly you could see the influence of the street.”
At eighteen, he was hired by Gaultier. “I was there for the collection that Madonna modeled,” he recalled, “and the Orthodox Jewish collection, which was so beautiful . . . I was the spectator of all the things I had been dreaming about; the shows, the backstage, the models—Kate Moss,Linda [Evangelista], Christy [Turlington].”
But he eventually left for a lucrative freelance career, designing for the knitwear house Poles, for Thierry Mugler’s second line, and the shoe company of Stephane Kelian, among others.
“There were no shows, no pictures, no press, it was not prestigious at all,” he said, but he was gaining essential experience and making the contacts that would hold him in good stead for the future, among them French Vogue Fashion Editor Marie-Amélie Sauvé, with whom he struck up an immediate friendship that blossomed into a creative working partnership.
One of the freelance jobs that he took on was to design the eccentric collection of licensee accounts for the holding company that owned Balenciaga (Josephus Thimister was then installed as designer for the main line). Here, Ghesquière was working on collections, primarily for the Japanese market, of such niche products as rental wedding dresses, mourning clothes, and golf wear.
But his profile as a designer rose exponentially with the edgily intriguing collections that he designed for the Italian leather house Trussardi.
In 1997, Thimister moved on from Balenciaga, and Ghesquière, who had designed a successful capsule commercial collection for the store, was given the job, with the understanding from the management that was this was an interim arrangement before a “star” name was appointed—at the time Helmut Lang was the company’s rumored first choice.
So at the age of 25, Ghesquière was the force behind runway collections in Paris and Milan. “They gave us 80 meters square of space and all the rest was left up to us,” Ghesquière remembers of his capsule team. “And you know what? I became possessed, fierce. I was on a mission to make it succeed.”
“We wanted a strong and confident and quite austere woman,” he remembered of his image for the brand. “It was a lot about a reaction against what was going on in fashion then. It was quite empowering.”
In 1998, Madonna wore Balenciaga’s gothic-chic dress to the Golden Globes, and Ghesquière was named Avant-Garde Designer of the Year at the VH1/VogueFashion Awards. The following year, Suzy Menkes of the International Herald Tribune lauded Ghesquière as “the most intriguing and original designer of his generation” and Stella Tennant won Model of the Year, dressed in Balenciaga’s patchwork top and hip-slung cargo pants, thus setting a new benchmark for cool. His high-impact, must-have accessories further heightened global brand visibility.
In July 2001, the Gucci Group acquired Balenciaga with Ghesquière at the helm, and he was able to take the brand to new heights.
The Balenciaga team moved into Jean-Charles de Castelbajac’s extraordinary nineteenth-century town house on rue Cassette on Paris’s Left Bank where Ghesquière presented his collections before a highly selective audience in an atmosphere that was always electric with anticipation—his cool, automaton girls moving at lightning speed to the coolest music of the moment, wearing, frankly, the coolest clothes of any given moment.
At this time, the company acquired the remarkable Cristóbal Balenciaga Archive, a resource that Ghesquière had not previously had access to, and being able to examine Balenciaga’s remarkable construction techniques and innovative silhouettes and textiles first hand added a significant new dimension to Ghesquière’s own fanatically perfectionist work for the house. “Suddenly I had access to all these extraordinary things—I discovered the gazar, the balloon shape, the diamond construction,” he has noted. He successfully grafted the master’s signatures onto clothes that were never nostalgic but instead always relentlessly modern and forward-looking, and often incorporated sportswear elements that reflected his childhood interests in fencing, swimming, and riding. Inspired by his discoveries in the archives, Ghesquière added the Edition collection, curating several archive garments a season and translating them into ready to wear whilst scrupulously reproducing the original’s cut, textile, and embellishment.
A Balenciaga retrospective at the Musée de la Mode at the Louvre in 2006 presented a chronology of Cristóbal’s work on one floor, and a dynamic installation of Ghesquière’s identity for the house upstairs, and the following season, Ghesquière’s collection was heavily influenced by his investigations at the archive and the museum. “All his work is abstract at the end,” he said of Cristóbal’s oeuvre. “The mystery is unique.”
“I like a weirdness. I like strange beauty,” he told me. “I like natural girls who are not true beauties. I like when there is a certain architectural quality—I like when it’s not an easy thing to understand—although it’s not about being conceptual. It’s not done to charm. That’s what I notice with Cristóbal. I like it so much, that philosophy. I’m not the continuity of Cristóbal, but I’m supposed to say something about my moment with the element, the influence of Cristóbal, if it’s possible. And his work is so radical and not charming at all. It’s not done to seduce, it’s almost monastic.”
No future plans have yet been announced, but Ghesquière’s single-minded focus and soaring, protean talents will surely find exciting expression in new fashion adventures.
“You never want to stop,” Ghesquière told me in 2011. “Because it says that you are alive and you are living in that moment. Because every collection reflects a moment of your life which is no more . . . I think inspiration is the way we live. To be a designer is not a job. It’s a way of living.”
He leaves a legacy at the house of extraordinary fashion leadership that challenged the idea of what clothing could be, and proved astonishingly potent and profoundly influential.
A self-described “autodidact” Ghesquière, 41, was raised in an area of rural western France that was filled with storied castles, but isolated from the world of fashion. His mother’s interest in clothes, however, and the fashion magazines she subscribed to, fed a nascent interest, and with Jacques Lang as the country’s culture minister, the importance of fashion as a cultural force was reflected in extensive television coverage that gave Ghesquière a further outlet to dream.
“When I was a boy, I didn’t want to go play with the other kids,” he told me in an extensive interview in early 2011. “Instead, I was drawing all the time—cars and clothes! One day—I must have been ten years old or so—my aunt looked at what I was doing and she said, ‘You know, Nicolas, what you are doing is fashion drawing. You are designing clothes.’ And as soon as I realized that there was this thing called fashion—that there were fashion designers—that was it! I understood instantly that that was going to be my thing. Really and truly, there were no questions after that of what I wanted to do in life.”
At the tender age of fifteen, he applied to a number of fashion houses for internships and was finally offered one by Agnes Troublé of Agnes B whose brand, was “really the essence of the ready-to-wear.” Another internship at Corinne Cobsonfollowed, but he dreamed of working withJean Paul Gaultier. “For me, the Jean Paul Gaultier vision was so right,” he said. “A vision of very free women with an ethnic mix—with a lot of references but yet no references. I think it was so right for his time, that fascinating fashion moment when suddenly you could see the influence of the street.”
At eighteen, he was hired by Gaultier. “I was there for the collection that Madonna modeled,” he recalled, “and the Orthodox Jewish collection, which was so beautiful . . . I was the spectator of all the things I had been dreaming about; the shows, the backstage, the models—Kate Moss,Linda [Evangelista], Christy [Turlington].”
But he eventually left for a lucrative freelance career, designing for the knitwear house Poles, for Thierry Mugler’s second line, and the shoe company of Stephane Kelian, among others.
“There were no shows, no pictures, no press, it was not prestigious at all,” he said, but he was gaining essential experience and making the contacts that would hold him in good stead for the future, among them French Vogue Fashion Editor Marie-Amélie Sauvé, with whom he struck up an immediate friendship that blossomed into a creative working partnership.
One of the freelance jobs that he took on was to design the eccentric collection of licensee accounts for the holding company that owned Balenciaga (Josephus Thimister was then installed as designer for the main line). Here, Ghesquière was working on collections, primarily for the Japanese market, of such niche products as rental wedding dresses, mourning clothes, and golf wear.
But his profile as a designer rose exponentially with the edgily intriguing collections that he designed for the Italian leather house Trussardi.
In 1997, Thimister moved on from Balenciaga, and Ghesquière, who had designed a successful capsule commercial collection for the store, was given the job, with the understanding from the management that was this was an interim arrangement before a “star” name was appointed—at the time Helmut Lang was the company’s rumored first choice.
So at the age of 25, Ghesquière was the force behind runway collections in Paris and Milan. “They gave us 80 meters square of space and all the rest was left up to us,” Ghesquière remembers of his capsule team. “And you know what? I became possessed, fierce. I was on a mission to make it succeed.”
“We wanted a strong and confident and quite austere woman,” he remembered of his image for the brand. “It was a lot about a reaction against what was going on in fashion then. It was quite empowering.”
In 1998, Madonna wore Balenciaga’s gothic-chic dress to the Golden Globes, and Ghesquière was named Avant-Garde Designer of the Year at the VH1/VogueFashion Awards. The following year, Suzy Menkes of the International Herald Tribune lauded Ghesquière as “the most intriguing and original designer of his generation” and Stella Tennant won Model of the Year, dressed in Balenciaga’s patchwork top and hip-slung cargo pants, thus setting a new benchmark for cool. His high-impact, must-have accessories further heightened global brand visibility.
In July 2001, the Gucci Group acquired Balenciaga with Ghesquière at the helm, and he was able to take the brand to new heights.
The Balenciaga team moved into Jean-Charles de Castelbajac’s extraordinary nineteenth-century town house on rue Cassette on Paris’s Left Bank where Ghesquière presented his collections before a highly selective audience in an atmosphere that was always electric with anticipation—his cool, automaton girls moving at lightning speed to the coolest music of the moment, wearing, frankly, the coolest clothes of any given moment.
At this time, the company acquired the remarkable Cristóbal Balenciaga Archive, a resource that Ghesquière had not previously had access to, and being able to examine Balenciaga’s remarkable construction techniques and innovative silhouettes and textiles first hand added a significant new dimension to Ghesquière’s own fanatically perfectionist work for the house. “Suddenly I had access to all these extraordinary things—I discovered the gazar, the balloon shape, the diamond construction,” he has noted. He successfully grafted the master’s signatures onto clothes that were never nostalgic but instead always relentlessly modern and forward-looking, and often incorporated sportswear elements that reflected his childhood interests in fencing, swimming, and riding. Inspired by his discoveries in the archives, Ghesquière added the Edition collection, curating several archive garments a season and translating them into ready to wear whilst scrupulously reproducing the original’s cut, textile, and embellishment.
A Balenciaga retrospective at the Musée de la Mode at the Louvre in 2006 presented a chronology of Cristóbal’s work on one floor, and a dynamic installation of Ghesquière’s identity for the house upstairs, and the following season, Ghesquière’s collection was heavily influenced by his investigations at the archive and the museum. “All his work is abstract at the end,” he said of Cristóbal’s oeuvre. “The mystery is unique.”
“I like a weirdness. I like strange beauty,” he told me. “I like natural girls who are not true beauties. I like when there is a certain architectural quality—I like when it’s not an easy thing to understand—although it’s not about being conceptual. It’s not done to charm. That’s what I notice with Cristóbal. I like it so much, that philosophy. I’m not the continuity of Cristóbal, but I’m supposed to say something about my moment with the element, the influence of Cristóbal, if it’s possible. And his work is so radical and not charming at all. It’s not done to seduce, it’s almost monastic.”
No future plans have yet been announced, but Ghesquière’s single-minded focus and soaring, protean talents will surely find exciting expression in new fashion adventures.
“You never want to stop,” Ghesquière told me in 2011. “Because it says that you are alive and you are living in that moment. Because every collection reflects a moment of your life which is no more . . . I think inspiration is the way we live. To be a designer is not a job. It’s a way of living.”
– November 06, 2012 8:26a.m.
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Wednesday, October 10, 2012
Sunday, September 30, 2012
THE BURBERRY FLAGSHIPSTORE THAT
MAKES APPLE STORES LOOK LIKE VICTORIAN
In one of my earlier posts. In
my post I’ve written about multi sensory experience high end fashion stores. In
a world where the average person sees 3,000 advertisements a day, the only way
to stand out is by delivering a multi-sensory experience customers won’t
forget. Creating, engaging experiences by using music, video and digital
signage, messaging, scent, and audio/visual systems to personify and enhance
brands to create lasting connections that encourage customer loyalty.
As on 26 April 2012 starts
Burberry with BURBERRY WORLD LIVE, Burberry worlds of British Heritage,
Fashion, Music and Weather to celebrate the opening of the Burberry Taiwan
flagship store at Taipei 101.
The online
community Burberry created as a digitally elevated audiovisual
shopping experience, connecting consumers with not only their products, but
integrating music and video as well to engage and entertain.”
Last
week on Thursday 28-09-12 Burberry opened a new flagship store on London's
Regent Street, packed with technological goodies and huge video walls that
magically interact with you when you walk up to them. One
of the biggest projects ever undertaken by the fashion house, the huge store on
Europe's premiere shopping street includes "immersive audiovisual
experiences" from nearly 500 speakers and 100 screens that "closely
engage customers through emotive brand content including disruptive digital
takeovers, such as rain showers synchronised across all screens and speakers at
selected moments throughout the day".
Surprising
new shopping trends and unexpected gender twists are pushing big name luxury
brands to new heights. A new breed of big spenders is out in full force, where
men shop like ladies and women spend like men. Beyond the role reversal there’s
a new group of shoppers with a spending habit that’s setting the luxury world
on fire.
Thursday, September 6, 2012
EXCLUSIVE BALENCIAGA RESORT 2013 VIDEO
Nicolas Ghesquière may have been thinking ballet when he designed his Resort 2013 collection for Balenciaga,A surprise discovery of costumes that Cristobal Balenciaga made for a ballet performance of Ravel'sBoléro in the 1930's inspired Nicolas Ghesquière's new pre-collection. Not just the fluidity but also the color palette: baby blue, baby pink, and a barely-there shade of yellow he called bergamot.
But when it came time to create a video for the season, his mind had turned to opera.
It’s worth a watch, as gorgeous as the Steven Meisel-shot clip premiering online on sept.6th.
Sunday, August 26, 2012
FASHION FETISH
Browsing through the newst/ latest fashion films. I always
take a look at showstudio SHOWstudio - the home
of fashion films.
Between March 22 and June 1th of
this year, SHOWstudio decided to offer an EXHIBITION made up of exclusively
women artists looking at sex and nudity - examining a woman's version of a
woman and asking how it differs from a man’s.
Titled provocatively - and
philosophically – SELLING SEX it examines the 'self-other' relationship by featuring
all female artists and examining their unique relationships to sex and the
female nude. As it is a well known fact that the majority of images we
consume are created by men. Only 8% of the work exhibited at the Museum of
Modern Art is created by women, that the Tate’s female holdings amount to a
meagre 15%, and that the statistics are similarly bleak in commercial
galleries, it's a pretty shocking state of affairs. What's more, this imbalance
doesn't only exist in fine art. In FASHION major campaigns are predominantly
shot by top male photographers. And it's in film, where women hold only
33% of all speaking roles and only 7% of all directors in Hollywood are women.
And there remain only three industries in which women earn more money than men
- pornography, prostitution and modeling. What does that tell us?
Alongside the 2012 SHOWstudio
Shop exhibition Selling Sex, SHOWstudio launches a unique project under
the provocative title Fashion Fetish. Created entirely by women working
in fashion - including Ruth Hogben, Daphne Guinness, Liberty Ross, Rei Nadel,
Asia Argento, Aimee Mullins and Dasha Zhukova of Garage magazine - these
fashion films, performances and multi-media pieces make a comment on the fusion
of fashion with fetish, a contentious and provocative subject. One piece will
be released each week for the duration of the Selling Sex exhibition,
and beyond.
If, historically speaking, a
fetish is a manufactured object which has magical powers, or one that people
are irrationally devoted to, fashion is a veritable fetish-factory of 'It'
shoes, 'Now' bags, and garments that magically propose to make your life
indefinably better. On a less abstract level, fashion has been obsessed with
sexual fetishism for centuries. The subtle constraint of the corset, the
snugly-gloved hand, a shiny boot of leather - all staples of the well-dressed
man or woman, and equally the well-equipped Sado-Masochist. At the turn of the
twentieth century, the Pandora's Box of fashion fetish was blown apart - from
Vivienne Westwood and Malcolm McLaren's proposal of 'rubberwear for the office'
in their seminal London boutique SEX, to Gianni Versace's sanitised
'Bondage Chic' of 1992, to the power of John Galliano's 'Sado-Maso' haute
couture collection for Christian Dior in 2000, designers articulated the
sexual peccadilloes of a select few across the international catwalks. It's
fetish as fashion.
I like the way she wants to
show how latex can look and what it can do to as many people as possible. As
she talks about superwoman. I like the complete picture which is more like Catwoman then Superwoman to me. As I still can remember the Movie Batman and
Catwoman. And Michelle Pfeiffer as catwoman, dressed in the most tighter then tight
catsuit made of latex. Which also happens to be also the first time not to have any
resembles of cheap outfits made by latex. And more fashion related the cover
the `Magazin the FACE Phoebe Philo (now headdesigner of Celine, just to know for
the few not knowing) wearing sunglasses by Sophia Kokosalaki a model of
Catwoman.
As this movie is quite long and
pretty slow, it might be the subject, I don’t know, but it kept me watching
it, till the end…
Tuesday, July 3, 2012
2012 London Olympics, 1 ticket USA Team Volleyball (VO030A) SOLD
I have 1 ticket to sell, I put it on ebay as a listed items, starting today, for the London 2012 Olympics Men’s Volleyball (VO030), Category A
Date: August 6, 2012 20.00-23.30
Venue: Earls Court, Row 8, Seat 278
Events scheduled at the session include:
20:00 - 21:30 Men's Preliminary Pool B USA v TUN 22:00 - 23:30 Men's Preliminary Pool B BRA v GER
I have the ticket in hand and are ready to ship. I am not a broker.
International shipping costs track, trace and secured 30 us Dollars
National Shipping costs 6.75 euro, track-trace and secured 13.50
I will only accept PayPal as the method of shipment.
No returns accepted
http://my.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?MyEbayBeta&CurrentPage=MyeBayNextSelling&ssPageName=STRK:ME:LNLK:MESEX
Monday, June 18, 2012
Buying session: See By Chloe in Antwerp
The little-sister line to Chloé took its first (virtual) steps onto the runway today. See by Chloé became the second label, after the relaunched ICB by Prabal Gurung, to strut into the online ether as part of Digitalfashionshows.com, which allows an invite-only crowd to screen prerecorded shows. It's hard to imagine Chloé ever making such a move—especially as it gears up to celebrate its 60th anniversary this year—but little sisters are often more adventurous than their elders. Especially when they've got parents in high places pushing them along. "It felt right to support this strong and directional collection and to promote See by Chloé via an innovative and new digital platform which allows optimum visibility to the label," Chloé CEO Geoffroy de la Bourdonnaye said.
The See aesthetic riffs on that of the Chloé main line, especially in its emphasis on long, fluid lines, soft volumes, and a pretty, feminine bent. For Fall, the femme got flirty with an emphasis on sheer mesh tops and dresses in silk georgette, viscose, and silk, fineness that played off the roughness and slouch of oversize outerwear and, in denim and wide-wale corduroy. Piece by piece, you could see items that should energize customers on the sales floor, but overall, the message wasn't as distinctive as the medium.
The little-sister line to Chloé took its first (virtual) steps onto the runway today. See by Chloé became the second label, after the relaunched ICB by Prabal Gurung, to strut into the online ether as part of Digitalfashionshows.com, which allows an invite-only crowd to screen prerecorded shows. It's hard to imagine Chloé ever making such a move—especially as it gears up to celebrate its 60th anniversary this year—but little sisters are often more adventurous than their elders. Especially when they've got parents in high places pushing them along. "It felt right to support this strong and directional collection and to promote See by Chloé via an innovative and new digital platform which allows optimum visibility to the label," Chloé CEO Geoffroy de la Bourdonnaye said.
The See aesthetic riffs on that of the Chloé main line, especially in its emphasis on long, fluid lines, soft volumes, and a pretty, feminine bent. For Fall, the femme got flirty with an emphasis on sheer mesh tops and dresses in silk georgette, viscose, and silk, fineness that played off the roughness and slouch of oversize outerwear and, in denim and wide-wale corduroy. Piece by piece, you could see items that should energize customers on the sales floor, but overall, the message wasn't as distinctive as the medium.
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