Man Shops Net
A duffel-load of new websites provide shopping-skittish guys with a reason to never leave the house again. It’s a one-click answer to men’s prayers. They want to look put together, but not spend half the day in search of the perfect pair of flat-front pants. In the average man’s mind, shopping for clothes falls somewhere between taking out the garbage and going to the dentist—a necessary evil that subtracts from time that could be spent watching sports, drinking beer and taking naps. But with a wealth of new websites aimed specifically at manly men with a disdain for in-store shopping, getting gear has never been more appealing (or painless).
Sites like the dapper Mr Porter, an extension of Web retail pioneer Natalie Massenet’s empire; avant-garde portal Oki-ni; Southern-bred start-up Lyonstate and flash-sale favorite Gilt Man and its coming full-price site are upending the notion that acquiring cool clothes requires tedious hours spent sifting through mountains of merchandise. Instead, they offer a curated selection of hard-to-find labels and even vintage wares. Information, clean graphics and efficiency are emphasized on the sites, which are designed specifically to avoid the horrors that men’s shopping nightmares are made of. Unlike most women’s sites, which focus on spotlighting product, men’s e-tailers have made a big investment in editorial content that shepherds visitors through the corridors of male personal style. London-based Mr Porter (mrporter.com), which launched in late February, is the most ambitious of the bunch, updating its comprehensive style bible weekly. Editor in chief Jeremy Langmead’s magazine experience—as the former editor of Esquire’s U.K. edition and of Wallpaper—brings a polished sensibility to Mr Porter, offering classics from 80 designers, including Turnbull & Asser, Yves Saint Laurent and Ralph Lauren. It also contains detailed lifestyle tips from well-dressed men, including Hugh Jackman and Pharrell Williams, and get-the-look shopping category_ides based on style icons like Paul Newman and Fiat heir Lapo Elkann. Mr Porter also provides a level of service on par with that of luxury department stores like Bergdorf Goodman, offering brief introductions to each brand they carry, highlighting its strong points along with factoids and sizing. “Content gives us the ability to illustrate an idea while also educating a customer about a brand or a product that is featured on the site,” Mr. Langmead said. “As a retailer, you have to talk and sell to men in a very different way than you do to women. They want information and advice.”
However, men are just as susceptible to impulse buys as their female counterparts—a wager on which Gilt Man (giltman.com), launched in 2009, has built its $100 million business. A subsidiary of the popular site Gilt Groupe, Gilt Man’s “flash sales” are similar to a designer sample sale (minus the threat of violence), selling a limited quantity of discounted product from more than 350 brands—everything from vintage Porsches to John Varvatos suits. This summer, Gilt will move into a new corner of the market, launching a much-buzzed-about full-price men’s site editorially directed by Tyler Thoreson, who has recruited magazine editors from publications such as GQ and contributors like Gay Talese. (The name of the project has been embargoed until closer to the launch date.) According to John Auerbach, president of the new division, the site will adopt a more populist approach than Mr Porter, treating both rarefied luxury goods and wardrobe staples with a degree of irreverence and an eye for utility. “You’ll see a wide range of styles, along with surprise items that you didn’t realize you needed,” he said. If Gilt Man’s blog, Gilt Manual, which was launched last September by Mr. Thoreson, is any indication, it will be less slick and more informal than Mr Porter’s editorial, with a kinetic aesthetic, providing merchandised solutions to practical problems that confront contemporary men, such as “how to sharpen a straight razor” and “how to clash with panache.”
Catering to a much smaller audience, the progressive British site Oki-ni (oki-ni.com) has become a destination for men who can wax poetic on the transcendent virtues of Japanese denim. Launched in 2001, the site was one of the first aimed toward men, offering a mix of both established and up-and-coming labels like Thom Browne, Omar Kashoura and Raf Simons. An early embracer of the now-saturated collaboration concept, Oki-ni has refocused on carrying exclusives, such as suede creeper boots from George Cox. Akin to specialty stores like New York’s Opening Ceremony, the site affords fashion-conscious consumers who live outside of urban centers access to brands they likely wouldn’t have been exposed to.
As an International athlete Tiger Woods represents many people and if he is disrespectful to his own wife then it creates a poor image~ though, a lot of cricism over his personal life may seem very harsh 🙁
Anyone who lives a personal life like that, in my opinion, deserves criticism. I’ve never cared much for Woods’ attitude in general, always coming across as snobbish an arrogant to me. When I found out about his unfaithfulness, I was not surprised; on the contrary, it made sense.
It’s plainly obvious from the way he’s conducted his “not so private” life that he is unable to handle what he has attained. For with much comes much responsibility. I would hope that I am better than this.
Now men are going to be trying to outdo one another in the office and elsewhere! Welcome to the world of Vogue darling!
Vogue Madonna (video)
Kurta Pajama is one of the basic styles of usual Indian wear of men. The kurta is male tunic that is worn out over a Pajama. It is a lengthy and loose-fitting long shirt over pants. The Kurta Pajama can be of full length or short length. The full piece kurta can be till the ankles or till the knees. The mens kurta style can be either formal or casual depending on how it is actually made.