But we need your help in deciding the name of it! Vote to the right!
To help, we try to describe it here....It is a new women's contemporary line with a bridge price point to be sold in stores like Barney's Co-op, trendy boutiques (Eva, Opening Ceremony, Butter) To describe the line, here are some words:
"ironic, light-hearted, elevated casual, tom-boyish/not too feminine"
Designers in the same genre might be Philip Lim, Twinkle.
Celebrities who might wear these clothes could be Kirsten Dunst, Sienna Miller, Chloe Sevigny, Gwen Stefani.
Does this help? Write some other name ideas in the comments section...
9 comments:
I went with "little a" because Iggy Namae sounds like bad Japanese. And Margot sounds old. But I think there could be something better out there. Of course I'm not familiar with Philip Lim or Twinkle and I'm not sure what ironic clothing looks like so...yeah.
i like a __________ for reasons i explained to ange before. but little a is a close second
awesome feedback guys! thanks. hmmmm. . .so if we did a_____, what would we call it when we describe it to people, "a blank?"
Of the choices I like little a.
My write in vote would be suhweet.
the choices leave me to vote for "little a" which i'm assuming will just be "a" described as little a? so a Fashion? or "no shift a"? that leads me to further inspiration from my keyboard - "Caps Lock" fashion, "Tab" fashion, "Esc" fashion. As you an see I can go on. ooh "Num Lock" fashion. (Not being sarcastic)
oooh, how about 'option a' or 'alt a?'its on my mac. kinda fun.
you know i was agreeing with christopher that margot sounds kinda old, but of course, reminds me of margot from royal tenenbaums so that's pretty cool. and it's kinda random which i like as well. especially for two asian designers. margot. how'd u guys come up with that one anyways? sorry, i know i'm not being too helpful!
"alt a" is genius.
margot is from royal tennenbaums. but i didn't like it as much because she's such a recent and strong visual reference. i like characters from books and older movies because they're easier to reinvent. . .
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