En Avance celebrates 24 years of timeless elegance

March 24 marked the 24th anniversary of En Avance one of the most long-lived multi brand stores in Miami. Its story, as many other boutiques around the world, started with the vision and impeccable taste of Karen Quinones, an arbiter of taste.

En Avance is an all-encompassing lifestyle boutique, the ones that you enter to be inspired, when you get that shopping itch, you know when you get the 3 pm sugar crave and you don’t want Starbucks, but Laduree. It’s like a moodboard, you enter a world of style, elegance, permeated by chic, Assouline books and Maison Francis Kurdjian fine fragrances included.

The boutique has the Karen imprint allover it from Fornasetti to the Vintner’s daughter couture face oil, from Sacai to Philosophy, from Racil to Donna Karan’s label Urban Zen. The boutique tells a story with each piece hand-picked by Karen who travels extensively during fashion month to the fashion capitals and off season to places and culturally absorbs habits, colors, artisanal techniques and blends everything in a most exquisite high-brow low of taste.

The store is everything I preach in the book: slow fashion, quality, research, chic, elegant, lifestyle, fun, intellectual stimulation, understated luxury, conversation, style. And I am saying this not to flatter myself, but an another way of showing how Italian style can be lived anywhere and it’s not acquired through an hedonistic treadmill of “look at me look at me how perfectly photo-shopped I am, I look like everyone else and you should too”, but by sober normality based on taste, culture, education, curiosity that become habits. Karen is all that, her vitality, profound knowledge and exquisite sense of style perspire in every inch of her boutique.

“Luxury resides in the mind when it revolves around quality not quantity. Time is the only element in your life that is luxurious when it abounds.”
— The Cheat Sheet of Italian Style, page 49

In the occasion of the anniversary celebration, and in true En Avance style, the dynamic duo behind Arje’ was the guest of honor presenting Chapter 1 of their collection. I got to chat with them a bit as it seemed we were drawn to each other from the moment I walked into the store. For Oliver and Bessie it’s all about the origin, the essence of everything, where quality originates. They have taken the engulfed fashion system into pieces and re-elaborated the puzzle into a new formula and reinterpretation of see-now-buy-now

There’s a strong element of fluidity, the collections are chapters, that follow a person’s life and adapt to the experience and the body like rainwater, pure modern luxury. They brought the fashion system back to one single principle relationship. Through the relationship with the manufacturers, built over the years, the have the fabrics produced in the color and nuances they choose for the chapter, and they commit to buy directly the quantity they will be producing and selling, skipping the phase of the sample production, which is at the same time a financial burden that can be avoided and commitment to reduce waste and make the product sustainable.

The cultivate the relationship with the stores and buyers who buy what they see, or “feel” in Arje' language, and sell their clients right away, cutting the wait time, and providing immediate esthetic remuneration. The same way I met Oliver and Bessie during the trunk show, many others have done it during the months of March and April. Instead of selling from a showroom at closed doors, with the trunkshow formula they interact with their ideal clientele, absorb ideas, styles, suggestions, tips, taste the pulse and take notes for the following chapter.

The collections are called chapters, you may have noticed, and not seasons, because it’s not about the weather or the climate, but about the relationship with your body, you change jobs, you move to a new city or country, you change marital status, you have a baby regardless of the seasons, what changes is the essence and with that your body and style evolve.

This idea of the partnership whether is with a vendor or with your own body, is fully reflected in En Avance where you go to build your wardrobe, not to mindlessly purchase to fill in a superficial gap.

The store is that place that shows how sustainability is chic, elegant, unique, sensual, modern. 

The Bucolics of chic

A conversation about the concept of chic arose this past week after the launch of CHIC Fille a new French magazine.

 

It's not about being trendy, wearing the next thing, battling against aging, reckless consumption or chasing the latest trend like a headless chicken. A girl's style and her wardrobe are not a chain production mill of fast-paced fades, it should be cradled as a curated exhibition. 

Jane Birkin

Everyday life is infested by what theorists call the 'megaphone effect', an audience pleasing game where you allure the readership by wearing the latest, the 'un-published', the hot-off-the-runway IT bag to drool over. It doesn't matter whether it's 'tasteful' or not, it's what the designer and the corporation behind him are supporting and will be featuring in the ad campaign. Coming soon to your nearby screen, meanwhile it's on Instagram or Twitter 'as seen' on X, Y and Z.

That 'as seen' means X, Y and Z received it in consignment or as a regalia where gift assumes the double sense of present for the blogger and free advertising before the paid advertising campaign. It's a merry-go-round of freebies where good taste, chic, elegance, eye for details go forgotten.

We are not here for bitching though. 

Mademoiselle Coco Chanel

Here we are in the realm of the naturally chic, instinctively refined, honestly sophisticated that doesn't happen overnight, but we believe in it. It's like going to school to learn how to cross stitch like good wives to be used to have to: it takes time, there's no crash course available, you have to climb the steps. Same happens when you decorate a house and you decide to hire an interior decorator, a landscape designer, buy pieces at flea markets and hang your child's pre-school hand-crafted masterpieces and dress your bed with family's heirloom monogrammed linens.

When people show they rely on you, they count on you and they consider you good at 'being chic', you are first surprised, baffled by the role and proud to take it seriously. 

Ines de le Fressange

... that’s how I ended up with this reputation for being the ultimate Parisian. I didn’t choose it, but I am very proud of it.
— Ines de le Fressange

It happened to Ines de la Fressange, unofficially crowned the Ambassador of French awesomeness. There are various misconceptions and rules, but the most important secret lays in learning the balance of being unpretentious. 

How are you being chic? 



a week in words

BABY IT’S COLD OUTSIDE

it’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas: the weather in the Southern Riviera is still very hot during the day but mornings and evenings are perfect for cashmere scarves, leather jackets, boots … 

YES: we pull all that off in Miami, it’s winter overall and stores, designers, stylists and good taste have enough to offer to our wardrobe to adapt to the weather of the rest of the western hemisphere. which brings to the next subject.

MIAMI CHIC. 

the room was full of uber chic fashion & design savvy experts, all coming from different backgrounds but with one thing in common: CHIC. the question was: how come we all look sharply ravishing (@ 7pm coming straight from work!) and the PERCEPTION of Miami Style is … something that happened years ago and got stuck to that “Versace living in Ocean Drive, Sylvester Stallone meets Madonna and Ingrid Cesares type of vibe”?????

It is like IMPRINTING and we got to ruffle it out of our shoulders. Sooner or later, we all got that sneering NY expression of  ”ohhhhhh, you live in Miami” which means “sure honey, dust off your wooden sandals, corset top, 7 jeans and long mane, do you even own a winter coat?”. 

Miami needs PR of fabulousness and all of us, circle of insiders, can provide it a bit at a time.

I have started here.

So: I walk around and either see atrocities (like men in tanks and flip flops in winter at the movies plus date and less pedicure) that don’t help your day or see random images of fabulosity (simply Hunter boots in a rainy day) I witness them in an effort of shifting percetpion.

'Til then, yours truly.

PS: have you purchased the Christmas tree yet? This year I felt extremely empowered by the “all american way” and bought it online. It will be delivered after Art Basel week (what a relief!).

Source: https://www.facebook.com/FrancescaBelluomi...

f.b.c.reations + themanunderneath

it was another hot Sunday afternoon in the Southern Riviera.

the set: 4 great male models, 2 gracious and beautiful female models, champagne, a zillion dollars penthouse’ roof top in Miami Beach, The Man Underneath and f.b.c.reations.

under the direction of Jonathan Soto (uber fab stylist) and accessories stylist Daniella Solis. and the photographer, and the make up artist, and the hair stylist.

fierce layout for the gilrs thanks to KRELwear + f.b.c.reations

it was a lot of fun. thanks to all. can’t wait to see the finished product.

this is just a sneak peak.

a navy pantsuit re-edited.

A simple, plain, usual pantsuit revisited.

Three things can happen: it’s a silent presence in your closet, is still in good conditions, it lingers there. Good chances are it hurts getting rid of it or if you have given it as a gift to someone, you will see that someone rocking it. Chances could be, you changed jobs (or retired early) and you don’t need to wear corporate attire anymore, however it is still perfectly modern and not outdated in shape or length. The opposite could be the truth, that is, you have changed jobs, have been promoted and you want to wear it again. Either way, here are some options. 

FIRST LOOK.


Split it and wear the jacket with a “harem pants” strapless jumpsuit in cranberry and an oversized ethnic carry all. Flats would be best, either Toms or espadrilles or Repetto ballerinas.

SECOND LOOK.


Pull off an unusual nautical look. Wear the jacket, with a plain tube top and some high waisted white cotton popeline pants with giant  navy blue spots, knotted at the side with a big bow, red espadrilles and gold and red necklaces.

THIRD LOOK.


This is more appropriate for a late afternoon cocktail: one shoulder silk embroidered top, beaded mini purse and a single earring with feathers. 

Source: http://www.stylecaster.com/people/26848/fr...