Here’s a few ideas and trends set to kick into high gear in 2009. Hint: Think cheap but leave room for a few guilty pleasures.
Happy hours
Half-priced fajitas and margaritas? No way. Thanks to the recession, chic restaurants such as Cube on La Brea and Riva in Santa Monica now offer early bird food-and-drink specials for the pre-dinner set. Nobu West Hollywoods bar and lounge serves tapas such as Wagyu beef with foie gras gyoza for under $12 after 8 p.m. At the Edison downtown on Friday nights, you can get 35-cent gin or bourbon cocktails and free grilled cheese with tomato soup. Might we suggest a new label for a frugal foodie: the gastronista? (Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)
Gilt (a blouse from the members-only site is pictured), Hautelook, Ideeli and TopSecret.com new online sample-sale sites are cropping up at lightning speed, promising insider only bargains on items such as Judith Ripka fine jewelry and Habitual jeans.
These sales are anonymous, meaning that shoppers dont have to feel guilty about spending. And they also offer good prices and value, says Marshal Cohen, chief industry analyst for market research firm NPD Group. The downturn in the economy has led to massive excess inventories.
This is the one area of retail that will find enthused consumers and be a growth source for designers and manufacturers as they try to move canceled merchandise and keep their factories busy producing product, he said. (Al Seib / Los Angeles Times)
Thrift
Use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without, was the mantra of the post-Depression set, and a modern-day version is likely to be the 2009 rallying cry what eco-friendly was for 2008 even after the economy comes back to life. If theres a dollar-saved equivalent to the carbon-offset credit, expect that to be the next metric by which well all be judged. Conspicuous consumption in the form of wearing a status watch or carrying a luxe handbag will be as gauche as driving a Cadillac Escalade in a gas crisis. (Seth Wenig / Associated Press)
Michelle Obama
Charlize, Keira and Nicole have nothing on Michelle Obama. The future first lady is the woman the worlds designers want to dress right now. She combines youth and beauty with an innate sense of what to wear. She chose clothes by several American designers on the campaign trail, but she mixed them with cheap-chic finds, suggesting that she will have a more daring and down-to-earth fashion identity than any of her recent predecessors.
Quarterbacking her outfit choice for inauguration day has become the fashion equivalent of a parlor game. And Baracks no slouch either, especially when hes shirtless. Thats right, our next presidents a heartthrob. (Ted S. Warren / Associated Press)
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Geometry
Out with florals and in with grids, geometric forms and repeating Op Art patterns. The spring collections were full of them Francisco Costas Cubist dresses with origami-like folds at Calvin Klein; Dries Van Notens black and white stripe jacket and checkerboard shorts; and Dolce & Gabbanas Mickey Mouse ear-shaped jacket sleeves.
The trend carries over to accessories too, on Yves Saint Laurents cage heel pumps, Chanels caged booties, Roger Viviers flats with a prism-shaped buckle and Louise Goldins prism-print toes for Topshop. (Kirk McKoy / Los Angeles Times)
The end of the runway?
If magazine ad sales continue to sink and shoppers continue to stay away from luxury stores, the fashion machine could be poised for a wholesale reinvention.
With most retail buyers doing the bulk of their purchasing before even one model steps out on the catwalk, the logic of runway shows and the cost, fiscally and environmentally, of hundreds of people traveling between the U.S. and Europe twice a year has been under discussion for some time. One thing the flagging economy might do is force the industry to confront it. Vera Wang, Carmen Marc Valvo and Betsey Johnson have already bowed out of Februarys Mercedes Benz Fashion Week in New York, and others are sure to follow. (Louis Lanzano / Associated Press)
Less red carpet glitter?
With the Golden Globes just a week away, its anyones guess how the red carpet will unfurl. Will actresses swan in the face of the recession in frothy gowns and gape-worthy jewels? (Last years WGA revolt and subsequent Globes press conference did leave a lot of ingenues as glum as a prom queen with the mumps.)
Or should we expect to see the same somber tones and minimalist accessories spotted at last years Oscars? Stylists might hear from the publicists that they need to go with a more understated look to be sensitive, says Jay Carlile, who works with Martin Katz Ltd. jewelers in Beverly Hills and loans baubles to celebrities.
In other words, bailout attire could be the new black tie. (Liz O. Baylen / Los Angeles Times)