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Style

Kettner’s Coquette

Having watched those ravishing ladies glide into the bar, dresses swishing as they walked, and Vivienne Westwood handbags draped adoringly over their arms, I felt as though I was on the front row at a pre-40s fashion show.

Packaged as the ultimate girly day outing – one of those days filled with beauty tips, hair styling and an eclectic assortment of classes suited to all girls in search of a glut of quintessential Englishness – Kettner’s Coquette and its infused forties feel seemed to have it all. As I wound myself up their spiralling staircase, flashes of red Louboutin heels peppering my vision, I tried to catch snippets of the animated chatter of said ladies, and the increasingly high pitch of their voices as we came closer and closer to the entrance.

With treasure map in hand, my thoughts found room to realign themselves. Did I head to the Room of Prophecy and Promise to have my tarot cards read, or, not being one to say no to early afternoon cocktails, opt for the Room of Indulgence and Intoxication?

Before I could linger any longer I found my arm moving and a sudden strange sort of pressure on my palm… then a man’s voice speaking of strong creativity and judgment and a rapid realisation that a palm reading was only another treat of the day. The mysterious aura of the palmist only added to the foreboding atmosphere as I pushed for more secrets about my future. With more questions than answers, and with my mind caught, I pursued my tarot reading with a feline ferocity that may have just unnerved the Riddler somewhat.

Pottering from room to room, I scooped up GU puddings, found that some had turned kissing into a very serious art, and danced (courtesy of a professional dancing instructor) into a forties up-do by Lipstick and Curl. Then, aided by a suitably fitting live soundtrack by The Polka Dots, I wondered through a collage of vintage clothing, with free flowing cocktails and quintessential English afternoon tea taken with rain tarnishing London’s streets outside the window.

This was a secret, forbidden dalliance, an escape that one makes when one wants to re-emerge again as the ideal of ones coquettish imagination. And that escapism, so cleverly fabricated in this notorious London spot, is exactly what the day manages to do so well.

A fitting charade for a hen party, or a coming together of mother-and-daughter in like-minded company, or a gaggle of friends ready for a day of luxurious retro feel pampering, this decadent and ultimately surprising event is certainly one not to be sniffed at.

www.kettners.com

Desert Charms

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Tommy Nutter: Rebel on the Row

Tommy Nutter produced bespoke tailoring with a particular brand of eccentricity that can only be described as ‘English’. A generous smattering of the witty but perfectly formed creations he produced during his twenty year career, can be seen at the Fashion and Textiles Museum all summer long.

The museum has been transformed into Savile Row circa 1969 with iron railings and sketched building facades framing Nutter’s distinctively cut and flamboyant suits. His tongue-in-cheek approach offset with masterful cutting dragged Savile Row, kicking and screaming (perhaps), into the modern age.

Accompanied by a host of celebrity clients, Nutter blew the cobwebs out of the corners of a cloistered world and thrust it into the limelight. The exhibition features suits worn by Mick Jagger, Elton John, The Beatles, Charlie Watts and Robin Gibb, which make the descriptive labels read like a rock-and-roll Hall of Fame.

The exhibition is co-curated by Timothy Everest who trained with Nutter in the late 1980s and provides us with an invaluable insider view on Tommy’s world. Everest’s personal memories of working with Nutter have helped recreate the ambience of the Nutter atelier, with both the studio and shop floor having been authentically replicated, giving the visitor an idea of what went on behind the shiny black doors and big brass door knockers of Savile Row.

The flair and individuality of the clothes on display is a testament to bespoke tailoring which can realise personal taste in a way no other mode of fashion can. So if you fancy yourself a dramatic black and white all-in-one pantsuit then get yourself an appointment at Savile Row.

The museum are also running a range of events, so if you, like a certain young gentleman I know, think that you can make a dazzling pair of suit trousers by drawing around your legs and sewing it together, then you might just learn a trick or two by booking into the tailoring workshops on offer during June and July. For more information click here.

The Tommy Nutter- Rebel On the Row exhibition is at the Fashion and Textiles Museum, near London Bridge. Opening times Tues-Sat 11am- 6pm.

London’s New Wardrobe

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A Right Royal Round Up

The 29th of April 2011, is the day Prince William will break a thousand hearts as he marries his soon-to-be princess Miss Catherine Middleton. Wherever you are in the world there is no escaping the Royal Wedding, so instead of booking a one way flight to Necker Island, why not try out one of the fantastically royal treats we have found for your enjoyment. One is amused…

A Right Royal Treat
A fanfare selection of royally inspired treats complete with bejewelled his ‘n’ hers crowns, royal carriage, delicate wedding cake, and even a miniature Westminster Abbey – all packaged in a beautiful commemorative tin.
The Biscuiteers limited-edition Royal Wedding tin contains 16 biscuits and is priced at GBP38.50.
www.biscuiteers.com

A Country Affair
Why not escape the madness of London, and indulge your Royal Wedding obsession at Sanctum on the Green in the heart of rural Berkshire. Watch William and Kate walk down the aisle live on the big screen, take an afternoon dip in the pool, sip Pimms at the rustic vintage style bar and delight in the menu created by Michelin star chef John Burton-Race.
Room rates from GBP120
www.sanctumonthegreen.com

A Little Thank You
Thanks to the upcoming Royal nuptials, the humble British public have an extra day off from the office. So what better way to show your appreciation for the happy couple than with one of the commemorative ‘Thanks For The Free Day Off’ plates from John Lewis.
Priced at GBP12
www.johnlewis.com

The Crown Jewels
Indulge your taste buds and your royalist passion with the ‘Royal Bejeweled Afternoon Tea’ at Flemings Hotel in Mayfair. Sip a Queen Bee Champagne Cocktail a la Miss Middleton, and sample the glittering Victoria sponge, rose and honey Madeline’s and jeweled lavender cupcakes. Fit for a princess indeed.
The Royal Bejeweled Afternoon Tea is available at GBP32.50 per person
www.flemings-mayfair.co.uk

A Regal Feast
You are cordially invited to a Royal gala dinner, courtesy of Quaglino’s. A sumptuous 3 course dinner, a live swing band and a £10 donation to the happy couple’s Charitable Gift Fund make this a no brainer: celebrate in style with some British favourites – we’re talking smoked salmon, crab, asparagus and a delightful sounding lemon tart – and give Wills and Kate your own little wedding gift.
GBP
60 pp, including a GBP10 donation to William and Kate’s Charitable Gift Fund.
www.quaglinos-restaurant.co.uk

‘It all started with a cup of tea’
Nothing screams British more than a good old cup of tea; these little beauties from Liberty of London are the perfect addition to any Royal Wedding breakfast. It’s not everyday that you can have Wills and Kate reclining in your cup, casually draping their arms over the rim and brewing you up a treat.
Liberty
of London, GBP4.95
www.liberty.co.uk

I Heart Wills & Kate
Anya ‘I’m not a plastic bag’ Hindmarch may well have outdone herself with her Royal Wedding Kit. A special William and Kate Union Jack flag (to wave like mad), a pocket of red white and blue confetti (heart shaped to shower them with your love) and a Wills & Kate crest tattoo (just to confirm your devotion) all come lovingly packed into a specially designed Anya Hindmarch tote.
Anya Hindmarch,
GBP30
www.anyahindmarch.com

Camp Royale
London’s biggest sleepover with a distinctly royal theme is coming to Clapham Common this weekend. Join fellow Wills & Kate fans at Camp Royale, for 3 days of camping and garden party delights fit for a King. There are giant screens to watch the wedding itself, and a village fete vibe with coconut shies and wet sponges, face-painting and balloon modelers. Acrobats, a silent disco and wedding reception tunes will keep the party going long into the evening.
Weekend camping tickets are priced at
GBP75
www.camproyale.co.uk

Royalty Al Fresco
Who needs an invite to the palace when you can enjoy a veritable feast straight from a Fortnum’s wicker picnic basket? Start with some beef carpaccio and horseradish, or tuck into dressed lobster and garden salad. A slab of Cropwell Bishop Stilton might take your fancy – especially with walnut wafers – while a red fruit tart and Fortnum’s finest champagne truffles will make it the picnic to end all picnics, washed down smoothly with a bottle of Touraine Sauvignon.
Fortnum & Mason, GBP200,
www.fortnumandmason.com

Donnafugata – A Golfers Journal

This is my first visit to the Isle of Sicily. I imagined it like this, with the breathtaking views of Mount Etna, robed in pearly clouds as we descend into Catania Airport. I’m here for the five star golf experience, about an hour or so drive from Catania Airport. On this winding route, I sit back and let the hedonistic beauty of Sicily invade my senses – with its dry stone walls, vineyards, Baroque villages and country villas.

Ill Carrubo and Nero d’Avola in the Piano Bar

Arriving at the resort a little behind schedule, the pristine views were shrouded in darkness. The golf would have to wait until morning. Lead to our rooms, the seemingly boundless number of buildings gave Donnafugata Golf & Spa the feel of a self-contained village, at once modern, and, like some of the luxurious art hotels popping up in such places, in serene harmony with the fragrant shadows that lean in from all sides.

The hotel has three alternate dining venues, usually serving at different times of the day. The finest dining can be found at Il Carrubo, a restaurant which focuses on Sicilian cuisine – quite in keeping with the tranquil, new-old-world aesthetic of the resort, offering meals with a formal edge, accompanied by delicious local wines which leave one feeling wistfully quixotic. After dinner, my muse found reflection in the pool room, piano bar and a quaint chapel across the courtyard. To both the travel-weary and those with senses dulled by one glass too many of Nero d’Avola, the place can feel like a bit of a maze on one’s first night. Arrested at the hotels attentive semi-circular bar by those ever-friendly comrades-of-the-quill, I sat down for a few well made cocktails, in the knowledge that I had an early appointment with one of the greatest golfers of all time the following morning.

Golf for the Aesthete

From my notebook – ‘The golf is a little rusty. I will hit a few balls before my questionable golfing skills are exposed by the Black Knight. Many of my fellow golfers have had the same thought process and I meet them walking into Il Ficodindia – a high-ceilinged dining room, with chandeliers and handsome copper pipes running throughout, serving a vast breakfast buffet and rich espresso like only the Italians can do. Out on the Parkland Course, the morning dew evaporates with the first rays that creep above the undulating vista.

My first ball hooks wildly off to the left. I am quick to realise that my game is not what it used to be, but dark forebodings flutter away on site of the first flag. As my swing count accumulates, my confidence rises with the morning sun.

Between 9th and 10th there’s a clubhouse fittingly named the 19th Hole; we sit down and call our shots into question, the autumn sun telecasting my newly found red hue. The bar is best enjoyed whilst looking over the golf course, drinking in the calm of hills that roll along the coast while the sun sets, capped by something cold and sparkling.’

The Legend Appears

Gary Player is a golfing legend, an extraordinarily charismatic man and true crowd-pleaser. He’s on the course with us, launching the first ball, casually relating a short history of golf – inspired anecdotes that name-drop some of golf’s biggest characters, remarkable insights from a man celebrating the 50th anniversary of his first Masters win.

Fine first shot – both straight enough and a solid distance. Only then did Player appear, smiling encouragingly; ‘may I finish the hole with you?’ he asks, the sparkle in his eye intimating that he has been watching our approach from the sidelines, and knows a thing or two about making it cooler, smarter, slicker. Having a nine-time major winner standing over you as you negotiate a tricky approach shot doesn’t bode well for my club or shot selection.

Later, primed with Prosecco, the hotel hosts a reception (Sicilian food at its best, with fish that couldn’t be fresher), and I learn the brutal truth; my drive was working for me, but the following approach would need some work. I retired to the hotel bar to reflect on his words; savouring my now habitual Manhattan nightcap, I wondered whether I might not take advantage of the Sotogrande Golf Academy; if I couldn’t revive the pro circuit dream, I might at least improve my handicap somewhat.

This Side of Paradise

So preoccupied had I been with perfecting my drive that I had almost overlooked half of the reason this spectacular hotel was created in the first place.

Donnafugata’s Spa was awarded the “Traveller Favourite Overseas Day Spa for 2010” by Condé Nast Traveller. Making maximum use of natural light, guests unwind to wide horizons of green and blue as the remedy takes effect – lavish treatment rooms, a swimming area, three different types of hydro massage, steam room, luminous sauna and herbal teas in the chill-out lounge.

By now there was a true party atmosphere. We sat outside and made the most of the wonderful luxuries, aware that I had yet made it to the Greek necropolis of Camarina, the Roman Theatre at Syracuse, Noto, Modica, or the wonders at Ragusa Ibla and Scicili. And so it was that the stay was far too short, and we all pretended to ignore that this was our last night on Trinacria.

Sicilia Open European PGA Tour

Book now to drive out on the same path where the greatest champions of the European Tour played in the past Sicilian Open Golf tournament. Stay exclusively reserved and limited.

www.donnafugatagolfresort.com

A Night of Fashion Firsts

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Blown Away at Hershesons

It’s a Friday morning and I’m walking through Old Soho on the way to Quintessentially HQ; my nails are minxed to perfection, my new KG heels are shining and thankfully pain free (for the moment at least) and I’m looking forward to a weekend away ‘Oop North’ celebrating two very good friends recent entry into the world of the affianced.

Then disaster strikes; the skies darken at lightening speed and the heavens open, at which point I realise my trusty umbrella is sat on my desk on the other side of Soho Square.

Fast forward three minutes and I’m looking at the remains of my carefully curled locks that have been tangled into a mess of dreadlock proportions thanks to the good old British weather. So what’s a girl to do? The she-lion look I’m currently sporting is definitely not going to work, and short of dashing to Oxford Street and buying a hat, the situation looks pretty hopeless.

And then I’m thrown a lifeline, in the form of Hershesons Blow Dry Bar in the hallowed depths of Topshop on Oxford Circus. The Hershesons concept of ‘stealth styling’ is truly miraculous: in just 30 minutes they can take a hair disaster and turn it into your ultimate hair fantasy – and the best part? You don’t even need to book an appointment.

On entering the bar, the team obviously saw the look of panic in my eyes and ushered me calmly to my seat, produced a glass of ice cold water and showed me the hair menu from which I could chose my new look.

There are 10 styles on the menu ranging from the classic up do in the shape of ‘The Bardot’ to the more avant garde ‘Rag-a-billy,’ a mass of plaited punk perfection.

My stylist informed me that ‘The Audrey’ is the current favourite given the London girls love of the messy bun, but I opted for ‘The Wavy Gravy’ a ‘tousled beach babe meets rock chick’ look – Sienna eat your heart out.

As the warm water soaked through my hair and my scalp was massaged to perfection, I finally began to relax and delight in the luxury of being pampered in the middle of my working day, knowing that I would be back at my desk before my lunch hour was even over.

Using a myriad of Hershesons own brand styling tools (the incredible Hershesons tourmaline waving wand is already on my wish list) my hair was gently blow-dried to give it some added oomph, then the ends were wrapped around tongs and cajoled and teased into perfect curls. A quick brush of my stylist’s skilful fingers to finish, and the mirror revealed a mane of perfect boho waves and one very happy girl!

In just 30 minutes I had gone from drowned rat to Primrose Hill princess and all for just GBP 24. With three salons in London including a brand new store in One New Change in the heart of St Paul’s, there isn’t any excuse not to head to Hershesons and try the Blow Dry Bar experience for yourself. In fact with the sun shining and a hot date on the cards, I think I will be heading back there tonight.

That’ll teach the weather to rain on my parade.

www.hershesons.com

Campaign for Quintessentially

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McQueen’s Shoe Sculptures

There has long been an indivisible connection between fashion and art; both follow trends, pass comment on the state of society and speak ostensibly of riches and the high life.

Today, the line between these convergent worlds is more blurred than ever. Modern art edges towards belonging on the runway, while ambitious catwalk creations could equally jostle for position in the world’s finest galleries.

Shoe design undergoes experiencing revolution after revolution – none more so than at Alexander McQueen. Given the tragedy surrounding the unexpected death of Lee McQueen in February 2010, the eponymous designer’s final collection of outrageously ostentatious 10-inch platform creations, pushing the boundaries of footwear to the extreme, have almost paled into insignificance.

These wonders took fashion by storm; almost alien in appearance, they were bedecked in everything from rich jewels and animal hides and should have belonged to the mythical creatures and mermaids of the imagination. But that was the beauty of McQueen: unfalteringly ambitious and unfazed by the boundaries of normal logic.

Needless to say, McQueen’s successor and right-hand woman, Sarah Burton, had more than a lot to live up to with her Spring/Summer 2011 collection. Her latest footwear creations undoubtedly put her own spin on McQueen’s ambitious legacy.

Elegant spring foliage defies the need for heels; leaves gently intertwine as though they’ve just been plucked from a spring tree, seamlessly linking together and flowing as they wish. Handcrafted, life-size butterflies perch effortlessly on beautifully thin straps, recalling that precious moment when a delicate creature comes to rest for a moment, before flying onwards and upwards in the next. Other designs are covered by dense feathers, with contrasting colours that blend with a natural ease and demonstrate an unprecedented level of expert craftsmanship – each pair a work of art in their own right.

At £2,300 a pop, these wondrous creations have sculpture-like prices to match their status as paragons of design; that these are an once-in-a-lifetime investment is a given. What remains is a decision: to turn your toes into a work of art – for these are perfectly wearable – or to lovingly admire them from afar. Either way, there’s no way in hell these beauties will stay hidden in a dusty shoe-box for long.

www.alexandermcqueen.com

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