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contents Scene 8 Me & Mrs.B… Junior Caroline Burstein on finding your signature style
58
15 Meet Matthew Industry great Matthew Williamson reflects on 15 years in the business
73 Jewellery News
As Vogue releases a set of tomes, Alexandra Shulman reveals some insider secrets
Freshwater pearls and beautiful love lockets
38 Top Trends
Colossal cuffs and studded chokers inspired by the catwalk
From big bold graphics to oriental inspired
40 It Takes Two Go minimalist with monochrome; your timeless fashion ally
21 March Diary The month’s best cultural hotspots
25 A Simple Wish
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33 Under Cover
46 The List
These shoes are made for taxis
74 Jewellery Trend
Health & Family 79 WishList Children’s Fashion Week announces London debut
80 Nursery News
A rare glimpse into the bizarre world of the hotel concierge
50 Spring Forward
The latest little clothes and musthave creature comforts
Style
MAC shares some backstage beauty secrets
82 The Kids are Alright
29 WishList
53 A Passage to India
High Fashion Society raises money for Kids Company
London’s most ethical massage
Interiors
30 Style Update Le Pierre bowling bags, House of Holland eyewear and Mary Katrantzou’s bank-note denim
The ultimate record of Pucci’s lasting legacy
Food & Drink
58 Interiors Inspirations
89 WishList
Woolly wonders, mother-daughter aprons, floral homeware and cutting-edge wallpaper
Male model David Gandy talks whisky and making a difference
60 Caroline Issa at home
Sink your teeth into these fantastic new openings
Tank’s executive fashion director on hectic schedules, scented candles and a new collaboration
Travel 93 WishList The Hawaiian hotel suite designed by Vera Wang
The big fashion houses turn their hands to luxury timepieces
94 Travel in Style
Geneva plays host to the watchlover’s most anticipated annual horology event
70 Watch News The latest trends and offerings from the watch world
38
90 Foodie Favourites
65 WishList
66 SIHH 2013
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85 Health & Fitness News Get ski-season fit and pick and mix your workout routine
Collection
8
hy high fashion isn’t just for W grown-ups. Melijoe.com launches in the UK
55 WishList
15
Hot-spots, cherry trees and festivals
96 Blue Planet Luxury dining, bright white sand and the odd aquatic acquaintance in the beautiful Maldives
100 a river runs through it
Pure relaxation at the Evian Spa
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11/02/2013 14:13
From the editor
W
hat is the definition of a trend? According to the OED, it’s ‘a general direction in which something is developing or changing’. And while Fashion Week comes to our shores only twice a year, feeding consumers with the latest high-fashion must-haves at a time when they’re only just embracing the ‘current’ season’s key looks, it all gets a bit, well, confusing. By the time we get round to the season in question (make that A/W13), I’ll be so sick of the high street versions (which, hands up, I’ll be the first to buy) that I won’t even want the Burberry version come September. Fashion editors will raise a Delevingne imitation eyebrow, but when you think about it, the speed at which we devour this once revered art form is verging on sacrilege. I’m not the only one who thinks so. Caroline Burstein, creative director at Browns and all-round mother of fabulousness “despairs and worries” at the irreverence of it all. Despite discovering industry luminaries such as Christopher Kane and John Galliano, she laments at the lack of ingenuity these days compared to when she started out: “Nothing is new anymore” she says. We talk fashion, feminism and a mutual love for Hampstead Heath (p. 8). While elsewhere, yes, we have showcased the season’s top trends (p. 38-47) what we’ll truly be devouring in our fashion issue are the industry’s top minds. Matthew Williamson reflects on 15 years in the industry and exploring new directions (p. 15). Labelled in Industry Intelligence as “the thinking woman’s style crush”, Caroline Issa, executive fashion director of Tank, has partnered with LK Bennett to create a capsule collection inspired by the East. We get an insight into her vision – and her Marylebone home (p. 60). And for those who want to escape from it all, come with me to the Maldives and the wonderful world of whale sharks (p. 96). You haven’t seen true style until you’ve seen me in a wetsuit.
Kari Rosenberg Editor
ma r ch 2 0 1 3 iss u e 3 2
Editor Kari Rosenberg
Editorial Director Kate Harrison
Assistant Editor Gabrielle Lane
Brand Consistency Laddawan Juhong
Collection Editor Annabel Harrison
Production Manager Fiona Fenwick
Contributing Editor Richard Brown
Client Relationship Director Felicity Morgan-Harvey
Feature Writers Clemence Duron Olivia Sharpe
Head of Finance Elton Hopkins Managing Director Eren Ellwood
Head of Design Hiren Chandarana
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Dear Resident
,
This month we are celebrating the recognition and endorsement by the 2013 Tatler Schools Guide of a great deal of our local schools. Read more on page 21 (Children & Education). You can also visit the Guide online (www.tatler.com) where you can browse multiple prep and public schools for impartial evaluations.
Follow us on Twitter @VantageNW
February is the month when the animal and human kingdoms typically rouse from hibernation, at some safe and convenient point (preferably later in the month when we can truly anticipate spring). With March on the horizon, now is the time to secure a ticket for some of the Belgravia Residents’ Association’s fantastic spring events. These include a private tour of the Wallace Collection (Residents' Culture, page 23) and a talk on the art of fragrance at Floris (The Calendar, page 8). There’s really no better way to feel part of your community and have a great time whilst you're at it.
Belgravia
February cannot pass by without mention of Valentine’s Day. Step out in style at one of your local restaurants, some of which just lend themselves to the occasion (Food for thought, page 12). Don’t despair if you’re not attached; they say of French favourite La Poule au Pot that it is as much a place to begin a love affair as it is to celebrate one. If, like me, you’re equally excited about Pancake Day, a key date for your diary will be 12 February: Shrove Tuesday. Have a liberal supply of milk, flour, eggs, lemons and sugar (bare minimums) at the ready!
Resident’s Journal
Alice
Raising The Barre, p. 12 Like Humans, But More Graceful Photography by Guy Farrow
Left / Martha Parsey’s ‘Safety in Numbers’ at Eleven Fine Art Gallert on Eccleston Street. See page 8.
Editorial Director Kate Harrison
Head of Design Hiren Chandarana
Managing Director Eren Ellwood
February 2013
Editor Alice Tozer
Designer Sophie Blain
Associate Publisher Sophie Roberts
Editorial Assistant Lauren Romano
Production Manager Fiona Fenwick
Client Relationship Director Felicity Morgan-Harvey
Editor-in-Chief Lesley Ellwood
Production Hugo Wheatley, Alex Powell
Publishing Director Giles Ellwood
canary the city m a g a z i n e
wharf
i-Candy
envy-inducing gadgets and techno wizardry
Screen Siren
Scarlett Johansson talks about being a damsel in distress in her new film
Runwild Media Group Publishers of: Canary Wharf, The City magazine, The Kensington & Chelsea Magazine, The Mayfair Magazine
A Spring
romance
fall in love in with colour, texture & tailoring from the new season’s collections
has the trend for gold plating and diamante embellishments on everyday items gone too far?
fool’s gold?
Me
Mrs.B... junior Caroline Burstein, creative director at the quintessential British fashion house Browns, talks fashion, feminism and a mutual love of Hampstead Heath with Kari Rosenberg
8
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to develop your own style and to know who you are, who you want to be and how you want to project yourself. I don’t believe there is ‘fashion’ as such today – of course there are trends, but they come and go, often going round in circles. I don’t think I’ve seen anything truly new – apart from in the textile industry, which is the most progressive thing that I’ve seen in my lifetime – for decades.” Attending the French Lycée school, her teens were often spent experimenting with clothes – “the French have always had a sense of dressing and trends.” She recalls the excitement of the first ever Cacharel fitted shirts and tight sweaters while in her 20s – a novel invention by Sonia Rykiel (who at one point was her brother’s mother-in-law) – a wardrobe staple for most women, of which we think nothing today. “It was revolutionary in the 70s. Anything we take for granted now was completely new then.
Illustration by Crystal Adams
C
aroline Burstein is the woman you hope to be when you grow up. Poised, chic, thoughtful, intelligent – there’s no way she’s stumbled upon success by chance, despite her modest insistence that she hasn’t a business bone in her body. I’m sorry, Caroline, but I’m just not buying it. We’re sitting in a back room at the beautiful Browns Bride shop on Hinde Street which opened in 2004, followed by a Vera Wang stand-alone bridal store a couple of years ago. Caroline’s parents – Joan, the original ‘Mrs. B’ Burstein and her husband Sidney – opened the first Browns on South Molton Street street in 1970, while Caroline joined in 1993, taking over as creative director in 2007. So it’s fair to say she’s seem some changes in the industry, and in the store; some good, many not so. But more on that later. Dressed in a simple black Comme des Garçons wool dress that she’s had for 30 years – “I’ve always been a Comme des Garçon follower. I bring it out every winter because it’s a part of me” – she prizes quality over quantity, and knowing what suits her as opposed to what’s on trend, the latter being an interesting ethos for one of the country’s leading buyers. “You learn that in time. You feel it.” Her hair is cropped into a grey unstyled bob and I’m slightly captivated by her eyes; one a dark brown the other a lighter green, as Sandra Bullock’s Practical Magic spell pops into my head. She is disarmingly tranquil and seems genuinely happy to sit and chat. Like her mother, she has a knack for launching the careers of countless design greats including Christopher Kane and John Galliano, to name but two, a skill she’s extremely proud of. “It’s something special to have known designers from their early beginnings and watch them grow. They always feel like family.” Her favourite designer of all time is Hussein Chalayan; “a true artist that does not compromise – his cut is always superb” and despite emanating such classic, understated elegance – very much a“less is more” look – her fashion icon, ironically, is the “fantastic” Daphne Guinness, although she admits she could never dress like her. Unequivocally, Caroline favours experimentation over conformity: “I’d love to dress the Duchess of Cambridge. She is far too young and attractive to dress in the conservative way that she does, even if she will one day be Queen.” In a world that no doubt favours ‘bright young things’, ageism isn’t really a concern for Caroline. “Of course we don’t like ageism but it’s a fact of life. Fashion does many things for many people. When I was young I was always ‘in fashion’ but it takes time
The consumption of fashion has become so fast. It’s so irreverent I’ve always loved beautifully made things and have always been aware of not wearing things that make me look either too young or too old. And that’s true of any age. I’ve always liked timeless pieces. Anything I’ve bought ‘for fashion’ or to be ‘on trend’, I’ve never been able to wear, or at least not more than once, because if it isn’t me, then it isn’t me. I would never want to be a victim. “I only just last year bought my first Azzedine Alaïa dress. I’ve always admired his designs on other people and thought it was just a bit girlie for me, because I’m not a girlie girl, but I thought before I get too old and lose my figure, I want to own a piece of Azzedine Alaïa. So I bought myself an Azzedine dress which I adore. It’s empowering.” On the subject of empowerment (and a recent Mary Berry faux-pas) would she call herself a feminist? “No. I don’t think I’ve ever felt the need to be part of any group, feminists being one of them. I believe absolutely in women’s equal rights but I am also aware that women and men are different. Some women are much more masculine. I don’t want anything I’ve ever done to be put into a box and I think saying you’re a feminist automatically does that. I am who I am. The French school system with which I was familiar as a child was so egalitarian from a religious and sex point of view that growing up I was never really inhibited. Nor did I suffer from any ‘feminist’ issues per se. Those issues were not my issues. I’ve always felt equal to any man. I was
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always on the same ‘level’ as my male friends and our ‘levels’ changed according to ability, intelligence and success. I can recognise a man who is more capable than me in some fields and less capable in others. And the same goes for women. “My mother is a very empowered and empowering woman. I think my father allowed her to be and gave her the platform that was rightly hers and never stood in her way. But it’s fantastic that feminists fought so that you and I can feel Appleby ith Ke by y Photograph comfortable in our own skin and be happy being women, and not feeling that our sexuality is a handicap.” When Caroline started Molton Brown in 1970 with her “good friend and now ex-husband” (the selling of which she regrets from a “financial point of view” and admits to “occasionally” thinking about going back into the cosmetics industry) she didn’t think about being a ‘female entrepreneur’. “It’s only when I look back that I actually see that we really were ahead of our time.” Keen to avoid any more ‘boxing’, Caroline isn’t particularly political, although she feels strongly about environmental issues (and composting). Nor is she religious, despite being born Jewish and marrying her current husband Keith in a synagogue. “I’m not religious in the technical sense. If following a particular religion helps one become a better, happier, more fulfilled person, then it has a very important place. But unfortunately religion is also the cause for most hatred, conflict and misunderstanding in the world. “I’m Jewish, so I do go to synagogue sometimes, but the words are mechanical. It’s the mechanical side of all religion that turns me off. I didn’t have the typical North West London Jewish upbringing because of where I went to school. I know the community more now through the shop. Many people come in and say ‘I knew your mother’. Both my ex and current husband are Jewish, but that’s a complete fluke. However, I do find myself wishing that my children were a bit more aware of their Jewishness, but that’s my fault.” With Browns Bride the most recent addition to the London-based empire, Caroline cites its opening, in the middle of a recession, as the biggest risk she’s ever taken in business. “I think there are always opportunities to be explored and we never stand still” she says. We’ve never sought huge growth or wealth but I hope in ten years time we will continue
scene
to have value and a strong point of to be appreciated for who we are.” The industry has changed immensely in the last few years, a fact Caroline is all too aware of. “I think it’s overkill. The blogging, the tweeting; I question what sort of people have time to read it all. I realise because of my age there’s a big difference in the way I look at all this and the way someone in their 20s is using it. But at the same time, I despair, and part of me worries. The consumption of fashion has become so fast. It’s so irreverent that most people don’t know what quality means anymore because they have no access to it. Because of the internet, the general public can purchase at the same time as a buyer. They can skip the shop and go directly. The mystique goes. The industry is being dictated by the customer in a way it never has done before. And while I think it’s great that the customer is an educated consumer, I do think the speed of it all devalues the product. It’s become too global. It’s very hard for small independent businesses such as ours. “I didn’t even know what the term marketing meant when people first started talking about it. All I knew was how to make things nice and sell them. It was a different language for me because I came straight from A levels into work. I didn’t have a business studies degree or any of those things that prepare you. I think it was a question of ignorance is bliss. I think I would have liked more of a university education on the business side of things. “Through our website, we’ve also attracted an international clientele. If you don’t have that customer base it’s really hard. I don’t think anyone has loyalty to specific shops anymore. The loyalty is to the price.” Her mourning for the general “dumbing down”, as she calls it, the ‘globalisation’ of it all, and her conerns for the future, extend from high fashion to her local high street, a matter we get stuck on for quite some time. “Just look at Hampstead high street: chain after chain. There are a few little coffee shops left which give it its charm like the Coffee Cup. They’re lovely but they are just a handful. And the Chinese restaurant Goldfish has closed down. I loved it there.” We mourn together the dim-sum shaped hole left in both of our lives. Born in Golders Green, she’s lived in Highgate, Primrose Hill and Belsize Park, but currently resides on the Heath, just round the corner to her mother Joan: “I’ve never lived outside NW”. And despite such grand achievements, it’s the little things in life that make her happy, such as making clay pots (she has a passion for ceramics, but is adamant they’re not good enough to sell), which she gives to friends as presents, and appreciating the beauty of the local area. “Being with my husband, going for a walk on Hampstead Heath, those are the things that make me happy. Putting my boots on and just getting out there. I always think how lucky we are to live here. I love seeing my children and grandchildren. I love cooking. I love travelling. I adore the huge diversity of London; the markets, theatres, restaurants. I don’t do clubs but
I hear they’re great too! I love my local pub to eat in – The White Bear – and taking food home from either Ottolenghi or Melrose and Morgan, my local Delhi.” She also lives near her daughter Charlie who runs the Browns web department and started off in the stock room sweeping the floors. “She has my father’s genes; she’s a natural businesswoman, far more than I will ever be. I still hear my dad’s advice when making those kinds of decisions. Usually a grumble. I say I’m not a businesswoman because in my heart I always just wanted to be in a studio making art.” No doubt things have gone well, but should she be able to go back in time, what would she do differently? “My ex-husband and I were both too creative. I would have balanced our talents with someone who could have added strength in the business side. But when we started off we were both dreamers. Our dream was strong.” And has the dream come true? “I don’t know if I’m at the end of anything quite yet” she says, a twinkle in her eye. Now that, I believe. n
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RAISING
THE BARRE
12
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Vivienne Westwood is helping take ballet from classic to avant-garde through a costume collaboration with English National Ballet, writes Kari Rosenberg
Photography by Guy Farrow
Looks Like a Doll Dances Like a Demon
I
t could be said that Darren Aronofsky has done more for the popularity of ballet in the last couple of years than any PR stunt could have mustered – the buzz around Black Swan incited countless articles, features and debates on the merits and dangers of the ruthlessly competitive dance form. Over in Russia, the Bolshoi Theatre tragedy has propelled the medium to the front pages for a very different reason. There’s no denying ballet is back on the agenda, but with a very contemporary twist. Who better than the queen of anti-mainstream, Dame Vivienne Westwood to help rebrand the art form through a wonderfully outrageous collaboration? Artistic director and internationally renowned ballerina at English National Ballet, Tamara Rojo is looking for a “confident, creative and contemporary” direction, “designed to reflect and support the leadership and vision of becoming the UK’s most creative and most loved ballet company.” Rojo says that the costume collaboration with Westwood marks only the first step in her plans to “forge great partnerships” with key figures in the arts and fashion world. “I am thrilled that Vivienne Westwood has agreed to let us use her clothes in our first campaign. It’s a dream come true to be able to collaborate with someone of such stature. Her designs capture the creativity and ambition of our dancers who, in turn, add drama and movement to the clothes.” Moving away from tights and tutus in variable shades of pastel, the Vivienne Westwood collections were chosen to emphasise a non-conventional yet classic image, recognising the need to modernise combined with a heritage dating back to the 15th century; a combination of provocative avant-garde with grace and elegance. The couture garments used within each image have been specially selected from Vivienne Westwood’s extensive archive, paired with pieces from the latest S/S13 collections. In Westwood’s own words: “My clothes allow you to project your personality, and are theatrical in the sense that they are real clothes, welldesigned, and they give you a chance to express yourself.” Well one thing is for sure: the Dame never passes on an opportunity to do just that. n
www.ballet.org.uk
13
THE COLOUR AND THE GLORY 0844 411 5080 royalascothospitality.co.uk
TUESDAY 18TH JUNE TO SATURDAY 22ND JUNE 2013
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Meet
MATTHEW Days before fashion week, Gabrielle Lane sat down with British designer Matthew Williamson to discuss his 15 years in the industry – and the right time to change tact
T
here is a mini Matthew Williamson manning reception. Sleek hair. Pale blue roll-neck sweater. Tanned skin. Jaunty telephone manner. Theatrical swooning “What…uhhh…day….!” “He hires clones”, I think to myself. Then 15 minutes later, I’m proved wrong. The man on reception looks more like ‘Matthew Williamson’ than Matthew Williamson. And by that I simply mean the designer is nothing like I imagined: he’s more laid-back than his vivid collections would suggest and incredibly articulate for someone you’d think of as a sketcher, not a scribe. We talk. We laugh. He drinks coffee.
Photography by David Burton
15
When I started out, a designer’s job was purely about making collections. Now we’re in a digital age...it’s a changing world
I
t’s nine days before London Fashion Week and it’s a miracle we found time to sit down at all. “It’s the thing I find hardest …letting go,” he nods. “To delegate is something I want to do. You obviously have to have confidence in the person you’re delegating to. If something doesn’t go well it can really knock your appetite for delegating, I’m trying to get to grips with that, I guess something’s got to click.” He says that in the next couple of days, the relentlessness will all be worth it. He’ll have one of those moments when he really loves his job. The room we’re sitting in will turn into a “fit room” hung with more than 200 pieces. There will be fittings across three days, refinement by a stylist, model castings and then the Autumn/Winter 13 show on the Sunday. “The old cliché ‘time flies when you’re having fun’ is true,” he smiles. It’s 15 years since he first experienced the cycle – sending Kate Moss and Jade Jagger down the runway for his debut show ‘Eclectic Angels’. “I’ve loved what I’ve been doing and I’m
16
very lucky and fortunate to do a job that I love.” In this year more than ever, what Matthew ‘does’ is evolving. The Spring/Summer 13 collection included shoes for the first time, and from autumn we can expect leather handbags, created by a specialist, under the designer’s watchful eye. At the time of our meeting he’s also days away from flying to Milan to launch a small capsule collection for cashmere brand Ballantyne which will include a selection of pieces for both men and women. As we pick through his upcoming projects, I’m excitable, but he’s noticeably quiet, more pensive. “Would you ever give it all up?” I blurt. He stifles my subsequent apologies. “Yes I can. It’s not a stupid question. I’ve been doing it for 15 years; it’s a long time in any job. I think my plans moving forward would be to shake things up and diversify, to look at things from a different perspective. I’ve got a few ideas, still to do with fashion but I’ve always loved interior design. You know in September I’ve collaborated with Osborne
s c xe n x xe
Photography by David Burton
& Little. I’ve got a big range of home furnishings, fabrics and wallpapers. There’s a whole range.” Matthew hasn’t celebrated a decade and a half in the industry privately yet (“in five years’ time” he will), but the professional milestone was marked with a short film, showcasing some of his most prominent dress designs worn by the likes of Poppy Delevigne and Sienna Miller. The three-minute clip is a beautiful piece of cinematography shot against the backdrop of Aynhoe Park in Oxfordshire which incorporates performers from the National Ballet. If you haven’t yet searched for it on YouTube, you should. “It’s the way the industry is going. When I started out, a designer’s job was purely about making collections. Now we’re in a digital age and with the advent of social media and the change in the way people are shopping, it’s a changing world. A designer is expected to be involved in that kind of world, so a film felt like the right thing to do. “There are amazingly stylish women throughout the decades who stand out and embody that period
of time. For me, Sienna Miller was that,” Matthew explains. “She was a very influential and stylish person that I was drawn to, and still am – I’m drawn to her ability to wear these clothes in a very laid back and effortless kind of way. I’d [also] like to dress Kate Bosworth. I’d like to dress Rita Ora and Florence Welch – talented, great, eclectic girls.” It’s the bohemian feel of Matthew’s collections – the antithesis of the structured form-fitting look – as he puts it, that has led to overuse of the ‘I’ word by fashion critics: the designer has spent time travelling through India and they know it, crediting the country for both the clothing’s vibe and its inspiration, season after season. “I don’t think it’s necessarily true,” he sighs. “The current collection was based on India – so fair enough. There are Indian influences, particularly in the craftsmanship of the garments, but just like for any artist, when you’re constantly being told it’s a certain thing, it can feel boring.” While it’s certainly not all he can do, the high street owes a lot to Matthew Williamson’s ‘laid-back
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When I started 15 years ago, a designer’s job was purely about making collections. Now we’re in a digital age luxe’ aesthetic and his fondness for embellishment. I can think of at least three pieces in my wardrobe that could be the long-lost, more affordable cousins of his designs (to put it lightly). “Don’t they say, ‘imitation is the sincerest form of flattery’,” he smirks. “My business partner once said to me – ‘you’ll be worried when they don’t copy you.’ Thank your lucky stars that someone thinks your designs are good!” One of Matthew’s own favourite pieces is a peacock-print chiffon dress that he created around eight years ago, which, along with every other item he has sent down the catwalk, is stored in a chronological archive in the basement of his flagship store. “[The store] is where I can really see what’s going on, the reality of what I do. What I do dayto-day is make clothes for the runway. When I go in there I see real women with real jobs, real lives and real needs.” He tells me he avoided setting up shop on Sloane Street because what he does feels very different to that of “powerhouse, international brands.” “There’s not a stereotypical customer,” he adds, warming to this theme. “It’s not a bare-foot boho babe floating in a kaftan! She can be 60, 20, large, small, from Korea or Brazil. Interacting with them and seeing the end job – I love that.” Is the man himself as recognisable as his work? “If people know who I am they try not to let on,” he says. “I know when it happens. But it’s not like when you’re on TV where everyone watching is spotting you, it’s a very niche kind of celebrity where one in 50 girls might know. They’re not invading my privacy, they’re just telling their mate. This morning I went for a coffee and a girl was like ‘look who it is’.” To this end, Matthew can have a relatively normal life when at home in North West London. He’s lived in both Primrose Hill and Hampstead over the years and now owns a house in Belsize Park. “It’s my little area. I like that it’s very near to the West End, it’s luxury to be in that central reach of London. It’s leafy, it’s green, there are parks…” he muses. “I would [like to] do boring, normal, mundane things. I would go to the cinema; I’d go dog-walking, restaurants…” If only he had time. n
www.matthewwilliamson.com
Photography by David Burton
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LOCAL Update Covering the whole of North West London
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a Golden Age Spanish artist Bartolomé Estebán Murillo is famed for his religious tableaus and contemporary depictions of women and children, recording the day to day toils of 17th-century life. At the new Painting of the Spanish Golden Age exhibition, you’ll find works not seen together for more than 200 years, including eight masterpieces and several paintings by his workshop associates, Francisco Meneses Osorio and Juan Simón Gutiérrez, previously owned by the fourth Marquess of Hertford.
Until 12 May, Wallace Collection, Manchester Square, W1
Spring fling The British Library’s Spring Festival will celebrate fashion, design and film, with artists coming together to create pieces inspired by the archives. Special events will welcome guests such as BBC Arts Editor Will Gompertz and GQ editor Dylan Jones. Don’t miss the Fashion Flashback LATE including a fashion show, a history of British fashion press display, costume drawing and make-overs.
1-5 March, 96 Euston Road, NW1
Truly Beethoven Rediscover the complete Beethoven Symphonies in a fascinating musical experience at The Forge this month, in association with British Youth Opera and Akouson Classical, a new classical music global network. With unique arrangements and international musicians and vocalists, the Beethoven symphonies have never sounded so good (except when he played them himself, obviously). The program includes arrangements for solo piano and piano four-hands by Liszt and Czerny, a selection of Beethoven/Liszt song transcriptions, and Beethoven’s arrangements for piano trio and British folk songs. On until 13 April, book now or forever hold your peace.
Until 17 April, 3-7 Delancey Street, London, NW1
Just for kicks This month, the Jackson Lane theatre will show an adaptation of The Boy Who Kicked Pigs, a black comedy written by Tom Baker, better known for his lead role in the BBC’s sci-fi series Dr Who as well as the Little Briatin narrator. Robert Caligari is an odd teenager who cannot help himself kicking pigs. The play follows his last day on earth, during which he plans the gruesome killing of several people before being faced with his comeuppance. Shark mutilation and poisonous breakfast cereal all come part and parcel. The play, just like the book, delivers a satirist dark humoured tale that will make you laugh and cry in equal measure.
5-16 March, 269a Archway Road, N6
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LK Bennett Opening Fans of L.K. Bennett’s timeless approach to luxury will be pleased to hear that the international brand has recently unveiled its newest store, right in the heart of Marylebone High Street. The new location’s welcoming, village feel was chosen for its ability to “reflect the contemporary classic mood of the collections within a warm atmosphere” according to retail director, Manuela Carniello. The boutique itself was designed by Architect Tiziano Vudafieri and has been given a refined, sleek look with stainless steel displays and extra-clear glass furniture that combine old-world charm and modern elegance to tempt even the most apathetic shoppers. LK Bennett joins notable fashion brands such as Agnès B, who have set up home in the area within the past year. There goes our March paycheck.
94 Marylebone High Street, W1U www.lkbennett.com
Liberty LOVES JOSEPH PAXTON
A Fragile Existence
March is set to be an exciting month for Welsh-born figurative sculptor Joseph Paxton, who has been invited by Regent Street stalwart Liberty of London to collaborate on the creation of a new window display. The theme of the display is still unknown, but will include examples of the trademark lifesize bronze sculptures exhibited at the prestigious Threadneedle Prize exhibition in 2009, including the haunting ‘Hang Dog’, ‘Owl’ and ‘Fleigh’. The choice is particularly unexpected as Paxton is only the second sculptor to have been asked to collaborate on the Liberty window display – the other being Turner prize-winning artist Greyson Perry.
The Rosenfeld Porcini gallery offers a whole new interpretation of the fashion industry with an exhibition of German artist and costume designer Silvia Hatzl’s works. While the exhibits appear as ordinary blouses and dresses on busts, they seek to explore the illusion of clothing as a concealment of human nakedness. In her provoking pieces, she uses an array of natural materials such as linen, silk and even animal intestines to create sculptures, sparkled with pigments. If you’re looking for an alternative take on the art that is fashion, this exhibit is a must see.
www.josephpaxton.com
Until 7 March, 37 Rathbone Street, W1
innocent and aware This month the Camden Arts Centre will host, for the first time in the UK, a major exhibition of American-born artist Dorothy Ianonne’s works, titled Innocent and Aware. For more than 40 years, the Berlin-based artist has used her feelings, thoughts and experiences to produce songs, poetry and subversive paintings on the themes of sexuality, gender stereotypes, dominance and control, her distinctive style calling viewers to reconsider the nature of love and spirituality. The Dorothy Iannone: Innocent and Aware exhibition brings together some of the artist’s vibrant paintings and sculptures from the 70s and 80s, as well as more recent pieces.
From 8 March, Arkwright Road, NW3
Swap ice and snow for ice and lemon. Winter’s really close, but so is London City Airport. It’s the place to go to get away for some winter sun. And to get you warmed up for your winter break we offer complimentary drinks onboard. What could be better? How about checking-in just 20 minutes before departure? You’ll drink to that. London City to Madrid, Barcelona, Malaga, Ibiza and Majorca. Book now at ba.com/ winterbreaks To Fly. To Serve.
Services operated by BA CityFlyer.
0822821 BA City Winter Sun 297x210_V2.indd 1
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Image courtesy of Graham and Green 164 Regents Park Road, NW1
Simple
Wish From silk suits at midnight to the shipment of live deer, London’s concierges have to deal with some pretty outlandish requests from guests. Makes catering for catwalk models seem like a walk in Hyde Park, writes Gavin Haines
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good concierge will never say no. It doesn’t matter how bizarre the request, how audacious the demand, they are duty bound to cater for the whims and fancy of their guests – and they’ll jolly well look happy about it, too. However, you could have forgiven the capital’s concierges for letting the veneer of professionalism slip away for a split second last month with the arrival of London Fashion Week. Luxury hotels would have been stacked to the rafters with catwalk divas, their bolshy entourage and a swarm of fashion journalists drunk on Champagne and their own self-importance; imagine the dietary requirements, picture the prima donna demands. You’d have forgiven a sigh or permitted a wince from the poor concierges. However, despite their capricious reputation, the demands of fashionistas are nothing compared to some of the other guests at London’s top hotels. Week in, week out, the capital’s concierges deal with the kind of requests that make obtaining the tears of a unicorn seem straightforward. A pain in the backside they may be, but they make for a good yarn, and there are few better at spinning them than Simon Thomas, head concierge at Brown’s Hotel in Mayfair. “One of our regular guests, who is a prince of one of the Middle Eastern royal families, turned around to me one day and said: ‘Simon, it’s my wife’s birthday and she loves the deer at our estate in Beaconsfield, so I want you to ship 21 of them over to my palace for her birthday,’” he says. “It was one of those ones when you’re knocked back a bit but you can’t let that show, so I told him to leave it with me.” Trying to maintain his debonair disposition, Simon had just 24 hours to figure out how to ship the live deer from rural Buckinghamshire to the Middle East – and his sleuthing started in Kent. “I remembered taking my little daughter to Knole Park in Sevenoaks and they have lots of deer there, so I gave them a ring,” he says. Numerous calls later and Simon wound up on the phone to a chap in Scotland, who was an expert in shipping animals and was keen to help. Feeling chuffed with himself, that evening Simon presented the prince with the fruits of his labours and told him about the contact he’d made in Scotland.
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“He said: ‘that’s good, that’s very good’ and then out of his pocket he produced the same name on a piece of paper,” explains Simon. Turns out the prince’s ground staff in Beaconsfield had already worked out how to ship the deer; Simon’s challenge had merely been set as a test. “He turned around to me and said: ‘I just wanted to see how good you were.’ One minute I wanted to laugh, the next minute I wanted to cry.” Working out how to ship live animals abroad is one thing, but keeping half of Savile Row open on a weeknight, when Chelsea are playing at home, to make silk suits for a nocturnal guest, is quite another. “One of our guests is the heiress to quite a big fortune in the States and she lives a really nocturnal life with her son, who is about 14,” explains Simon. “He has been home educated and they go from hotel to hotel in different parts of the world. Everything happens for them at night; they don’t get up until three or four in the afternoon and are awake until the early hours.” One evening the nocturnal heiress contacted Simon, explaining that she wanted matching threepiece suits for her and her son. “She wanted them
The prince’s ground staff had already worked out how to ship the deer in a cobalt blue Thai silk with matching shoes and yellow silk shirts,” recalls Simon. Unfazed by the garish choice, he asked if she had measurements, to which she replied no. “She said: ‘I want the tailors to come and see me – and bring the cobblers too.’ I asked her when she would like to see them and she told me midnight,” he recalls. “I had to call in some huge favours with my contacts at Savile Row – the guys I used at Norton and Son are huge Chelsea supporters and there was a match on that night.” After convincing them it wasn’t a wind-up, Simon coaxed the tailors to the hotel. “All of it had to be done nocturnally; the second fitting and everything else. It was really quite bizarre,” says Simon. “The shoes were a big issue but we managed to get it done.” Frank Laino, head concierge at the Stafford, also had to ring in some favours at Savile Row. “It was when I was working at another hotel in Bond Street,”
he says. “There was this one lady who stayed there and she had this little Italian greyhound. It was a horrible little thing, like a little rat with no hair; a typical handbag dog.” The guest would often plonk her pooch on Frank’s desk while she talked to him. “The thing would sit there shivering away and one day I told her she should get a coat for it. She said she’d tried but couldn’t find one small enough, so I suggested she had one made.” Frank enlisted the services of his friends in Savile Row, who helped with his unusual request for canine tailoring. “We got two bespoke doggie suits made for the little rat,” he laughs. “He was resplendent in these jackets and she was over the moon.” Frank was also asked by an American guest to help him ship a decommissioned Routemaster bus out to the States. “It sounds like a difficult thing to organise, but it really wasn’t.” Much more challenging, though, was convincing Westminster Council to install a bench in Berkeley Square for one of Frank’s regulars. “It meant a lot to this client to have a bench there because it was where he and his wife used to go when they were courting – and it was their 50th wedding anniversary,” says Frank, who purchased the bench for the guest. “Westminster Council didn’t really want to put another bench there, so that took a bit of doing.” However, the most challenging request Frank had to deal with was from a Hawaiian doctor, who wanted to see every single Johannes Vermeer painting in the world. “Apparently there are only 34 Vermeer paintings in the world and he had seen 32 of them,” says Frank. As luck would have it, one of the missing pieces in this arty puzzle happened to be here in London, where the doctor was staying. Trouble is it also happened to be in Buckingham Palace, hanging in one of the state rooms off limits to the public. “He approached me and asked if there was any way of doing it,” recalls Frank. “I can’t go in to detail, but suffice to say we managed to pull it off; he was given a private viewing of the painting.” However, it’s not all tailored doggy suits and private appointments at Buckingham Palace. One concierge, who wishes to remain anonymous, received this rather simple, written request from a regular, who had been to a function at the hotel. “The soup was cold and one attendee was vomited on,” it read. “Perhaps you could get staff to notice drunk people and remove them – or provide bowls.” n
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GUILT-FREE GUCCI Kids Company, the charity founded by West Hampstead resident Camilla Batmanhelidjh has been chosen to benefit from an auction which will see luxury fashion pieces donated by the likes of Sienna Miller and Nigella Lawson go under the hammer. The so-called ‘Wardrobe Raid 2013’ is the brainchild of the team behind the online members’ club, High Fashion Society, which offers styling, personal shopping and other services to the well dressed. The auction will run from 25 February until 17 March with all funds raised benefitting the capital’s youngsters.
www.highfashionsociety.com
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STYLE Update
A BRITISH SUMMER Merino wool is the new leather, if the number of hot young designers jumping on the bandwagon is anything to go by. Jonathan Saunders, Mark Fast, Richard Nicholl and J.W Anderson have lent their support to the ‘cool wool’ campaign and created unique knitwear pieces for S/S13. “Wool appeals to me for every season as it takes colour really well. The drape and its versatility to cross over the various climate territories is really important in today’s market,” said Nicoll.
www.wool.com
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STYLE SUCCESS STORY With Coach now a definitive part of our handbag wardrobe, we were pleased to hear the label is to place increasing focus on its ready-towear collection as it continues to evolve into a fully-fledged lifestyle brand. Sandra Hill, who headed up the creative design team at Paul Smith, has been brought on board to oversee the womenswear offering. Initially we’ll see a growing footwear line, before Coach clothes, watches and jewellery make their debut in late 2013.
76-78 Regent Street, W1B www.coach.com
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IN LOVE WITH PIERRE Take one jewellery designer known for creating swanky, slightly boho accessories, an exuberant French fashion house and a waiting list and you have S/S13’s dream tote. Le Pierre is the suede bowling bag created by Balmain with Aurelie Bidermann. It has lots of space and an original charm attachment and is available in charcoal grey, deep red or camel exclusively in Europe at Harrods.
www.harrods.com
SUNGLASSES AT THE READY
‘Quirky’ and ‘humorous’ aren’t usually buzz phrases in the domain of sunglass design but House of Holland has just launched its first foray into eyewear. The irreverent British design house has unveiled interesting and fun shapes (including adjustable brows and lashes) and bold colours.
www.houseofholland.co.uk
LAID-BACK FASHION FORWARD
if the shoe fits
Nicholas Kirkwood has been chosen to receive a £200,000 grant from the British Fashion Council as the winner of its annual BFC/Vogue Designer Fashion Fund award. Each year an emerging label is chosen on the strength of its three-year business plan and in addition to financial support, the individuals behind it receive bespoke industry mentoring, helping them to grow their business into an international brand.
With the trend for prints and florals showing no sign of abating, the work of Mary Katrantzou is set to be as popular this season, as it was last. An interesting way to wear the trend is through Katrantzou’s S/S13 collaboration with American denim brand Current/Elliot, a wardrobe staple in its own right. You can find her new banknote and travel stamp motifs splashed across flattering button down shirts, skinny jeans and sleeveless dresses at My Wardrobe.
www.mywardrobe.com
New Zinc showroom now open 1 Chelsea Wharf, 15 Lots Road, London SW10 0QJ
0679_Zinc Kensington & Chelsea Ad_Apr12_AW.indd 1
09/03/2012 16:51
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cover As Vogue released four literary profiles of design greats, its editor Alexandra Shulman hosted an evening with the authors. Gabrielle Lane was invited to hear them speak
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© Michael Roberts/Maconochie Photography
tremendous library of source and photographic material, the Vogue archive has given rise to the first four biographies in a series documenting the lives of fashion’s luminaries. Designers Coco Chanel, Elsa Schiaparelli, Christian Dior and Alexander McQueen are the first to have had their secrets laid bare and some of the most fascinating anecdotes from their careers were shared at the evening in the presence of Condé Nast International President Nicholas Coleridge.
The secret of Vogue’s success throughout history is that it constantly reflects the society in which it is made and continually redefines the content that is appropriate for a fashion magazine Alexandra Shulman
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From Left to Right: © Cecil Beaton/Vogue © Serge Balkin/Vogue © René Bouet-Willaumez/Vogue © Tim Walker
“Chrisian Dior wanted the clothes to wear the woman”
CHRISTIAN
DIOR
Christian Dior favoured a style that was unapologetically glamorous and incongruent with the post-war austerity which served as a backdrop to his first collection of 1947, entitled ‘New Look’. Inspired by architecture, he created dramatic silhouettes with corseted tops, padded hips and a decadent use of material in skirts. “He wanted the clothes to wear the woman,” explained Charlotte Sinclair. “Original images in the Vogue archive were annotated with the words ‘exercises again!’” Controversial for their sense of ostentation, Dior’s punishing gowns also received complaints from men who said they could not hold their wives properly through such corsetry while dancing. The result? The release of the structured waist and the emergence of the A-line cut in later years. Dior also reinvented his shapes with each collection to garner press attention. Above all, he was a master publicist, granting many interviews, giving collections a one line description to convey his ideas and being sure to always include a pair of trousers for ladies to shock. His flagrant self-promotion worked; he received thousands of letters of fan mail every single week.
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ELSA
SCHIAPARELLI “Schiaparelli described her own design style as ‘hard chic’” A relatively short but intense career ended when Elsa Schiaparelli declared herself bankrupt in 1954. Arriving on the Paris fashion scene in 1926, she lived off the charity of friends and traded on a noble title she had gained through marriage. “She owed her career to Vogue,” asserted Judith Watt. In 1927, Schiaparelli’s first collection was drawn to beautiful effect in the magazine’s pages by artist Douglas Pollard and she was surely inspired by illustrator Christian Berard’s use of red and rose in his sketches when she patronised the colour “shocking pink” in 1937, launching it into the public consciousness. The lady herself was painfully shy, at odds with the naughtiness she captured in her work through collaborations with surrealists such as Salvador Dali: on the eve of Wallace Simpson’s wedding to the Duke of Windsor, Vogue photographed her wearing a Schiaparelli dress adorned with a Dali image of female genitalia. Schiaparelli’s tamer and more frequent quests for modernity in dressing came through the use of zips and buttons and she described her own design style as “hard chic”.
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“The creation of Chanel No 5 is actually a love story”
ALEXANDER
COCO
CHANEL Love underpinned much of Chanel’s work. Chanel No. 5, the most iconic of fragrances, was actually based upon a Russian perfume adored by her boyfriend Grand Duke Dmitri Pavlovitch and mastered by an acquaintance he introduced her to while on a romantic road trip to the South of France. Marketed stealthfully at first – she spritzed the changing rooms of her boutique with the scent in order to capture the attention of the ladies who shopped there – customers soon came to find the fragrance as sensual and exquisite as she did. Similarly, Chanel pearls were based upon a necklace owned by Dmitri’s aunt and everything about them was carefully modelled. Coco spent hours calculating a sheen for the beads which was equivalent to the real thing and measured out precise lengths for each chain. She was able to do this because she worked with artists, supporting the work of independent companies such as Gripoix, throughout her 58-year career. Yet the love of her craft was balanced with restraint. “Coco did not want to create more than one handbag,” Bronwyn Cosgrave said. “To her, the one she had already created was perfection.”
MCQUEEN “McQueen courted and resisted publicity in equal measure” “The McQueen woman strode out of the past, into a digital future,” says Chloe Fox. And this powerful woman did so wearing hipster trousers, as McQueen attacked the conventional waist band and surrendered it to the subversive cultural melting pot of the early 1990s. He ripped and shredded garments, toyed with darkness and light and created spectacles that were purely for the catwalk, giving rise to the fashion show-cum-art installations we see now. He aimed to shock. It was lauded style editor Isabella Blow who launched McQueen’s career by purchasing his entire graduate collection in 1992 and thrusting him into the limelight, which, contrary to popular perception, is something he is said to have courted and resisted in equal measure (especially if the nodding from Alexandra Shulman is anything to go by). However, McQueen’s rebellion was coupled with tradition. He was a Savile Row trained tailor who could draw and cut a piece of clothing to perfection. Honed by a period working with the atelier at Givenchy, his designs were inimitably complex and it was his young assistant Sarah Burton who used to make 3D paper doll versions of them in order to grasp their intricate assembly. It is fitting that three years after his death it is she who holds the position of creative director of the house.
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OUTTAKES Alexandra Shulman speaks out:
Fashion
RESPECTS THE YOUNG AND OLD
It isn’t just about young designers. There are some fabulous mature women in fashion. Look at Miuccia Prada or Phoebe Philo at Celine.
CHANGING DIRECTION
PLANS
“The Vogue On... biographies currently in the works cover Ralph Lauren, Vivienne Westwood and Balenciaga. We are currently working on an exhibition for Vogue’s centenary in 2016.”
Designers
of the Past
I wonder, how do you think they would cope with the need to be available to the press, to open their homes…?
Digital
RETOUCHING
“When people talk to me about digital retouching, I always say ‘a scalpel is what they use to use’, physically carving away at the line of a photograph. The idea of creating the ‘fashion woman’ is not new.”
© Conde Nast Publications Ltd
“When I took over in 1992 we moved away from the construct of perfection into something that was more realistic, reflecting the grunge aesthetic. I also introduced contemporary celebrities like Victoria Beckham. I would love to do an illustrated cover but I’d probably be fired.”
FUTURE
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P L E A S E E N J OY O U R C H A M PA G N E R E S P O N S I B LY DRINKAWARE .CO.UK
Trends S/S
13
Christopher Kane
Vivienne Westwood Gold Label
Moschino
Jean Paul Gaultier
Akris
Vivienne Westwood Gold Label
Hermès
Etro
Michael Kors
Oscar de la Renta Giambattista Valli Emilio Pucci
princess
We’re calling this style ‘the princess’ – prepare for flurries of tulle, gemstone embellishment, appliqué and pretty colours, quite often at the same time
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oriental
Eastern inspirations were cited for a second successive season and played out in rich, vivid silks
CITRUS
Nothing says summer quite like an acid hue; the brave will wear it full-watt, top-to-toe
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David Koma
Prada
Michael Kors
Gucci
Preen
Ermanno Scervino
Paul Smith
Christian Dior Ermanno Scervino
Marc Jacobs Issa
Roksanda Ilinicic
monochrome
A look which pervades the other mini trends for graphic prints and stripes, black and white have been taken beyond mere ‘safe options’
geoMETRIC Art meets fashion in the form of Kandinsky-esque shapes and blocks of colour
IT TAKES
Two Make minimalist monochrome your fashion ally this season STYLIST: Tarra Chong PHOTOGRAPHy: Antony Nobilo Studio Art director and Producer: Wendy Tee
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Equipment shirt, £280, available at Harrods, 020 7730 1234 Silk dress, from a selection, Bally, www.bally.com Black pointed heels, £345, Daks, www.daks.com
Dress, from a selection, Alexander McQueen www.alexandermcqueen.com Cut-out heels, ÂŁ679, Camilla Skovard, www.my-wardrobe.com
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Blazer, from a selection, Club Monaco, www.clubmonaco.com T-shirt, £95, Zadig & Voltaire, 23-24 Hampstead High Street, NW3 Sunglasses, £140, Ksubi, www.ksubi.com Leggings, £780, Helmut Lang, available at Harrods, 020 7730 1234 Heels, as before
Leather blazer, £770, Zadig & Voltaire, 23-24 Hampstead High Street, NW3 Black knit top, £295, and check shorts, £595, both Pringle of Scotland www.pringlescotland.com
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Black silk jumpsuit, £589, Vivienne Westwood Red Label 020 7439 1109 White and black bodysuit, £79, Shakuhachi, www.shakuhachi.net Heels, from a selection Gucci, www.gucci.com
Photographer’s assistants: Steve Turvey & Katrine Gode MAKE-UP: Andriani Vasiliou using Benefit Cosmetics (www.benefitcosmetics.co.uk) hair: Stephen Lacey model: Amy G at Select LOCATION: Thanks to Dimi Pantazi at Beach Blanket Babylon, Notting Hill (www.beachblanket.co.uk)
Walk the
WALK Photography: Rachel Pearce STYLING: Gabrielle Lane
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1 Anouk in Gold Glitter Fabric, £365, Jimmy Choo, www.jimmychoo.com 2 Suede Platform Sandals with Metallic Heel, £1,120, Miu Miu,www.miumiu.com 3 Anglomania Shoes, £184, Vivienne Westwood, www.viviennewestwood.co.uk 4 Magenta Suede Wafer Platform Sandals, £715, Giuseppe Zanotti, www.stylebop.com
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5 Platinum Leather Wafer Platform Sandals, £450, Guiseppe Zanotti, www.stylebop.com 6 Destiny, £825, Gina, www.gina.com 7 Karin Ponyskin Sandal, £830, Brian Atwood www.harrods.com 8 Anouk in Black, £365, www.jimmychoo.com 9 Almond Metallic Sleeper Sole Stiletto Pumps, £374, Camilla Svogaard, www.mywardrobe.com
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best of
BEauty
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1. Beauty products are definitely working harder this year, and as we try to capture a spring glow, we do so with St Tropez’ Gradual Tan Plus Anti-Ageing for Face. The formula is enriched with hyaluronic acid, kalpariane (an algae extract) and powerful peptides to plump and hydrate the skin.
£22, St Tropez, www.st-tropez.com 2. One of two releases from Chanel to make our March wishlist is Les Beiges. Its Healthy Glow Sheer Powder is feather light and has pure dressing table appeal.
£38, Chanel, available at Selfridges 3. In honour of the very first Chanel jewellery collection and the year of its creation, Chanel launches ‘1932’ mid-month. The diamond in the fragrance is jasmine, layered with iris, vetiver and musk. Grapefruit and pear essence ensure the perfume remains light and crisp.
From £110, Chanel, available at Selfridges 4. Quite honestly, you’ll either love or hate the Leather Effect polish from Nails Inc which is inspired by S/S13’s focus on texture. We’re in the first camp – fascinated by the way the vanish dries to give a faux fabric feel. We’ll be wearing the black shade, Noho.
£12, Nails Inc, www.nailsinc.com 5. Preened and flawless is very much the Italian beauty dream and sometimes, only medium to full coverage will do in a base. Dolce & Gabbana’s Perfect Matte Liquid Foundation evens tone and gives a velvety soft finish.
£39, Dolce & Gabbana, www.harrods.com 6. If you were never quite enamoured with the fuchsia lip, MAC Cosmetics is about to unveil Everyday Diva, our favourite shade within its new Mineralize Rich Lipstick line. Described as a true red-cream, it’s punchy but with a cooler, more wearable tone.
£20, MAC Cosmetics, www.maccosmetics.co.uk 7. Based on the toothbrush application techniques of seasoned pros, Dior created its Diorshow mascara for the catwalk. More than ten years later, the XXL brush has been given extra curve and with it, an extra glamorous effect.
Diorshow Iconic Overcurl, £20 Dior, www.dior.com
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SPRING FORWARD
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MAC Cosmetics’ senior artist Rachel O’Donnell shares backstage beauty secrets from the S/S13 shows I am so lucky to do a job I love. I have so many favourite shows – but any time that I work as part of Paris Couture, there’s something really magical about it. It has a completely different feeling and mood to that of other runway shows. My day is geared towards getting the job done. Sometimes we have a three-hour call time but it’s typically only two. The key artist who is heading up the show demonstrates the look on one model. We then have to replicate it; we spend more time with our first model to really understand the look, but then it’s manic with models often rushing in from other shows. Sometimes we only have five minutes. For Spring/Summer there has to be a tan trend. This season it’s called Pure Tan. Unlike for other seasons, it’s more about a feeling of bronze – a sepia story. It suggests a tan rather than placing it everywhere, by using desert tones and creamy textures. It leaves the skin washed in warmth. When you’re changing your make up or taking it off, make sure it’s all completely gone. I like skincare that doesn’t feel present on my skin and I like that for models too. They have so many rich products on their skin all of the time, you don’t want to use anything that’s too heavy. When I see dehydrated skin I use the MAC Care Blend oils which you can also add to moisturiser. Think about your own skin when choosing foundation. What kind of texture is it? Is it matte or light-reflective? What colour is it? Skin is the biggest area we see on the face so make sure you’re using the right colour product that sits on your skin well.
at your features and think about changing a single product you use on your brows, or the shape that you’re using so you can enhance them.
PROFILE Rachel O’Donnell is a professional make-up artist based in Highgate. Responsible for the striking beauty looks of both fashion editorial and runway shows, she is also the go-togirl for celebrities who want to look camera ready.
The most common mistake I see is people wearing too much makeup. Taking something away is more impactful than adding more. If you’re wearing really strong lipstick, maybe think about not wearing eyeshadow.
S/S13 TRENDS
Psychedelic is a real colour trend with conviction. It’s placed in graphic shapes but is organic in its structure – it follows natural lines of the eyes and the lips and is all about hyper-pigmented, bold colours. Nuance is a soft colour trend. We use pastel colours with flashes of metallic in a way that’s buffed into the skin. It’s almost like sunset colours, so not too stark. Signature is all about luxurious skin, enhanced in its textures and in its tone. The highlights and products are very considered for a balmy and natural finish. n
www.maccosmetics.co.uk The MAC Mineralize SPF Foundation has been a cult product backstage. That’s definitely a favourite of mine. It gives really good coverage but it still looks like skin. It’s gold dust! We also have new pressed pigments which are good for the colour stories. A pressed pigment is a good product to have because you can manipulate it and have it appear quite ‘washed’ on the skin. As you get older, it’s really important to feel comfortable with your make-up. You don’t need to reinvent everything that you do. Look
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tllon.info@chuanspa.com
www.chuanspa.co.uk
AUCKLAND • BOSTON • HONG KONG • LONDON • LOS ANGELES • MELBOURNE • SHANGHAI
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A passage to A salt scrub and Ayurvedic massage at the St. Pancras Hotel leaves Kari Rosenberg in a state of almond-smelling bliss
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afts of almond, cinnamon and nutmeg filled my nostrils as my therapist Lianna’s expert hands ensured not an inch of skin went unscrubbed. Not dissimilar to the feeling of wet sand clinging to every crevice after a day on the beach (cue nails-on-a-blackboard shiver), she insisted this salt scrub would leave me silky smooth and smelling like an Indian bakery. A fan of almond cake, I obliged. Warm and tingly, it provoked an almost menthol sensation as the salt worked its way into my pores and performed its rehydrating magic. I can’t say, in all honesty, that this was my favourite segment of the treatment, but I knew the best part was yet to come. After a warm shower down, I really could feel the difference already; my dry February skin felt baby-bottom soft, which I tested against my cheek, just to be sure. Then came the Ayurvedic pressure-point-pushing and pummelling, sending me into an almost coma-like state of pure relaxation, a challenge considering the morning’s stresses. Orange lights twinkled in the toasty treatment room, as a slow rhythmic ‘Hare Krishna’ soundtrack played in the background. My eyes firmly closed, my body completely relaxed, the chanting sent me into an almost meditative state, and I resisted the urge to let out a yogalike “ommmm”. Making my way through the warren-like spa in the hotel’s basement to the relaxation hub, I was surprised at its vast size, especially by London hotel standards. Beautifully yet simply decorated, the relaxation room comprised a few beds scattered in a softly lit, cosy room; healthy snacks and herbal teas were presented in beautiful glass teapots, while books and magazines invited me to settle in, wrapped in my super-fluffy robe, and avoid venturing back to King’s Cross. If you prefer the smell of sweat to dessert, the gym is open 24 hours. The Tiger Tracks treatment is available throughout March, with £10 of the cost being donated to the Save Wild Tigers charity. Now you’ll have to try it. n
90 Minutes, Monday-Thursday £150, Friday- Sunday £170. St. Pancras Renaissance London Hotel Euston Road, NW1. www.savewildtigers.org
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Design by Philippe Starck
STARCK. A CLASSIC REVIVED.
Sanitaryware, bathroom furniture, bathtubs, shower trays, wellness products and accessories: Duravit has everything you need to make life in the bathroom a little more beautiful. More info at Duravit UK, Milton Keynes, Phone 0845 500 7787, Fax 0845 500 7786, info@uk.duravit.com, www.duravit.co.uk
interiors
Marchese Emilio Pucci di Barsento was a captivating aristocrat of exceptional Italian pedigree. With ancestry extending back to the 14th century, he was born and bred among opulence and beauty. Known for his ground-breaking use of colour and pattern, style, design, and early grasp of branding, his first boutique on the isle of Capri found favour with the stars through the 50s and 60s. His biggest fans included Marilyn Monroe and Jackie Kennedy, who adored his ‘Capri pants’ and signature silk scarves. In this new book documenting Pucci’s vision and legacy, you’ll find hundreds of photographs, drawings, and shots from the archive of the Emilio Pucci Foundation, capturing the essence of the designer and his place in fashion history.
Emilio Pucci, £44.99, Taschen Available spring 2013
Palazzo pyjamas with printed silk turban embroidered with Swarovski crystals, from the Fall/Winter 1969 Collection © Gian Paolo Barbieri
wish list
PRINCE OF PRINTS
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Interiors inspiration
woolly wonderland
wall power We know we feature them practically every month, but as soon as we get wind of the latest design, we just can’t help ourselves. We’re wallpaper fiends, and we need help. These funky new prints will sit well in any study, library or young lad’s bedroom; fantastical, dreamy and oh so original. Must. Resist. Refurb.
www.cole-and-son.com
If you’re not familiar with the Campaign for Wool, let us fill you in: the world’s top interior designers and artisans have come together, in all their fleecey glamour, to raise awareness around efficiency and sustainability. Their newest venture – Wool House – will see Somerset House turned into a woolly wonderland. Curated by Arabella McNie, expect exclusive room designs from interior designers Kit Kemp, Donna Wilson, Ashley Hicks, Josephine Ryan, Anne Kyyro-Quinnand and Mary Fox Linton all featured alongside a huge wool installation commissioned from the acclaimed Dutch tapestry artist, Claudy Jongstra. Artisan in residence, Jason Collingwood will present a public, rugcreating loom while other pieces include Shauna Richardson’s ‘Crochetdermy’ Bear, previously exhibited at the V&A.
13-24 March, Somerset House, WC2
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interiors
ADDED BONAS Eclectic interiors, jewellery, accessories – and everything-inbetween – store Oliver Bonas has recently opened another NW outpost, giving us twice as many reasons to spend our Saturdays perusing the shelves for our weekly fix. Joining Bo Concept and Habitat at the O2 centre, Finchley Road, it’s quickly becoming a homefurnishings hub. We’ve had our eye on this cabinet for a while and plan to take the plunge pretty sharp-ish.
cosy cool Comfy and chic, the best thing about this tan cowhide pair is that they’ll only get better with age. Kids, wear and tear away.
Charlie Bean Chair, £395, Charlie Bean Pouffe, £195, 164 Regent’s Park Road, NW1
Percy Bedside Cabinet, £285 O2 Centre, 255 Finchley Road, NW3
fancy florals Designer’s Guild’s spring Seraphina collection is certainly not shy of a bloom or two. If you hate florals, this isn’t your thing, but if, like us, you’re partial to a petal, then this could make the ideal addition to a holiday home or conservatory. Go ultra beach-house minimal with whitewashed wooden floorboards and neutral upholstery, or embrace a touch of crazy pattern-clashing and team with snake skin armchairs and striped rugs. Available in pretty pinks or pastel blues, we would use the print for sheer floaty curtains.
www.designersguild.com
What’s new, pussycat?
ready steady cook
Internationally acclaimed artist Rory Dobner has been making magic in his Hampstead studio, alongside some fanciful four-legged friends. If you missed his in-house, tile-personalising session at Liberty’s last month, fear-not; there are still plenty of fabulous designs to be had. Among our favourites is this super-suave tophatted canine, a monocle-sporting cat, a Union Jack waving ladybird and a fag smoking fish.
Mother’s day is fast approaching (10 March) and most mums would agree that it really is the thought that counts. These mother-daughter (or son) aprons are not only practical, but will lead to hours of fun in the kitchen. After all, time is the most precious gift of all. After diamonds.
Liberty, Regent Street, W1
£34, www.notonthehighstreet.com
AT HOME
CAROLINE I 60
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Tank’s executive fashion director talks to Gabrielle Lane about life in New York, Paris, Milan… and Marylebone
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hen Caroline Issa, style bible Tank’s executive fashion director, steps through the door of her Marylebone apartment, relaxation is high on the agenda. “I light a scented candle, make sure the lights are just so and take some time to let my brain wander a bit,” she writes. “I travel a lot but I don’t take anything with me from my home, I’d rather get back and enjoy all of my home comforts there.” Caroline is answering my questions via email, on a plane bound for New York Fashion Week and an impending photo shoot. She’s prompt and super friendly and I wonder if it’s because – heading up the team at the directional fashion and culture bi-annual – she knows the drill. Issa (not to be confused with the dress label favoured by HRH) has become the front-row poster girl, a contemporary and edgier Carine Roitfeld clad in sleek tailoring and graphic prints – with a crazy schedule to match. February saw the launch of a capsule collection of shoes and bags she designed for LK Bennett. Under her editorship, shopping and scene website www.becauselondon.com is updated constantly and 14 years after its inception, Tank magazine continues to be viewed as the radar for all things creative and cool. Net-a-Porter even has a ‘Caroline Issa’ filter, which highlights pieces that could come from the wardrobe of the lady herself. “I’m certainly not going to complain about it,” Issa says. “It’s wonderful to be recognised as someone who has style and a point of view, but I am one of many stylish women who are lucky enough to constantly be inspired by interesting people on a daily basis, which certainly influences me.”
E WITH
ISSA
My 2013 resolution is to do much more entertaining at home My first thought when looking at the photo shoot from her Marylebone loft, is where she keeps all of the clothes she must amass. “I have no idea how many clothes I have but I don’t have a lot of space, and I would rather mostly wear what I have so I tend to give away my clothes if I haven’t worn them in a year,” she says. “There are definitely some things I’ve regretted giving away though, I can tell you that! And I do have some key pieces which I will not part with as they form part of my fashion memories.”
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Relentless country-hopping with work means Caroline has resolved to do more entertaining at home during 2013. She won’t be cooking, describing her efforts as “terrible”, but she’s going to try and add to the unintentionally minimalist décor. At the moment the living area features a BO Concept sofa and an of-the-moment utilitarian shelving unit stacked with books. “I haven’t had time to buy much furniture. I’m looking for some great bedside tables and I’ve been salivating over some Cole & Son wallpaper for the guest room,” she admits. “Plus I have been collecting more and more white pots for the plants and I’m hoping to bring some back from my travels now that I’m amassing them.” Additions will likely come from Caroline’s favourite local businesses – praise indeed from a lady whose motto is “buy less, but buy better.” “I love Alfies Antiques Market and the antique dealers up on Church Street for all of their beautiful things that are on my wishlist. Then there’s the fromagerie off Marylebone High Street where I stock up on cheeses and crackers so that my home is practically replicating their shop! I love the village feeling in Marylebone – the amazing cafés and restaurants. I love how central it is.” n
www.tankmagazine.com
Photography: Andrew Lamb, www.andrewlambphoto.com
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Exclusive Modern Furniture Made in Germany
Harrods Heal’s
3rd Floor Knightsbridge | www.hulsta-harrods.co.uk
1st Floor Tottenham Court Road | www.hulsta-heals.co.uk
Hülsta-Westend Hülsta-Bristol
23-25 Baker Street | www.westend.hulsta.co.uk
33 Wine Street, Bristol | www.bristol.hulsta.co.uk
www.hulsta.co.uk | the german furniture brand
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Swiss movement, English heart
Made in Switzerland / Worldwide limited edition of only 100 pieces / Sellita SW 200-1 self-winding ĂŠlabore movement / 38 hour power reserve / 43mm 316L surgical-grade, hand-polished stainless steel case / Anti-reflective sapphire crystal / Galvanic blue one-piece metal dial / Premium-grade Louisiana alligator deployment strap
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08/02/2013 10:07
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designers do time By 1945, Hermès was developing its first wrist watches with leading Swiss watchmakers including Jaeger-LeCoultre and Audemars Piguet. More recently, other French fashion houses have followed in Hermès’ wake, creating luxury timepieces which have been lauded by the industry. In 2005, Dior celebrated the 13th anniversary of its timepieces and in April of that year, its Chiffre Rouge collection was similarly recognised at Baselworld. Chanel established its wristwatch division in 1987 but it wasn’t until the release of the J12 that watches became a recognised Chanel marque. Burberry joined the watch brigade in 2012 with the launch of The Britain for men and women, as pictured here, proving that it is never too late to enter the industry.
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SIHH 2013 Horolophile Timothy Barber travelled to Geneva in January for the event which kick-starts the watchmaking industry’s action-packed annual calendar; Salon Internationale de la Haute Horlogerie
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very January the cavernous halls of the Palexpo, a huge, brutalist exhibition centre hulking above the motorway next to Geneva Airport, are given over to some of the most delicate, microscopically realised feats of human craftsmanship imaginable. The Salon Internationale de la Haute Horlogerie (or SIHH if you don’t relish Gallic tongue-twisters) is a trade show for those dealing in wristwatches with price tags so lofty they induce nosebleeds. It’s Fashion Week for horolophiles and the first place to spot some of the most important new pieces of wrist candy. Most of the 16 brands displaying their wares at SIHH belong to luxury behemoth Richemont Group (including Cartier, Panerai and Jaeger-LeCoultre)
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while a few independent houses come along too, like Audemars Piguet and Richard Mille. Last year it was all about China, since only the Chinese were buying watches. 2012 being the Year of the Dragon, you couldn’t move for bejewelled monsters curling round the dials of collector-edition timepieces. Then, of course, the Chinese economy put the breaks on and suddenly there isn’t a dragon, snake (2013 is the Year of the Snake) or other Chinese zodiacal beasty to be seen, bejewelled or otherwise. Instead the watch industry has got cautious. It’s sticking (mostly) to the tried and tested, playing things down, keeping things sensible. Watches are getting smaller. Those giant wrist carbuncles of a few years ago are becoming rare; even Panerai, the brand that defined the big-watch trend, produced a very fetching
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Fashion Week for horolophiles, it’s the first place to spot some of the most important new pieces
This page: Baume & Mercier, Clifton M0A 10060 Handwound Opposite, from left: A Lange & Sohne - 1815 Up/Down; Jaeger-LeCoultre, Duomètre Unique Travel Time; Ralph Lauren, Sporting Worldtime
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42mm piece, the Radiomir 1940 PAM00512, that sits perfectly snugly on a smaller wrist. Smaller still, at 40mm, was the entry-level new watch in IWC’s Ingenieur range. The Ingenieur (engineer) family is IWC’s tough, industrial-looking tool watch collection that received its look in the 1970s thanks to uber-designer Gérald Genta. The whole range has been rebooted to mark IWC’s partnership with the Mercedes AMG Petronas F1 team – there are racy chronographs, highly-engineered ceramic pieces, a collectors’ item with a socking great tourbillon in the dial, and a very sporty version made of carbon fibre, the stuff used for the bodywork of F1 cars. But it’s that entry-level 40mm job, a harkening back to the style and easily wearable size of Genta’s original, which really nails the form/function equation. Baume & Mercier, Richemont’s junior brand (in price point terms) produced the only entirely new family of watches this year, under the name Clifton. These are rather suave, traditional pieces that will make great all-round options for those needing an everyday watch for the office. Collectors can shell out for the gorgeous pink gold model with an exclusive handwound movement. There’s much to be said for handwound watches, actually, despite the enjoyable frisson of an automatic watch’s rotor swinging around. Handwound pieces bring that little bit of interaction and effort, while their rotor-free, asymmetric movements have their own aesthetic charms. That’s particularly the case when your handwound watch is made by A Lange & Sohne, Germany’s little haute horology specialist that’s fast
A Lange & Sohne’s 1815 Up/Down was for me easily the most handsome watch of the fair
pulling away from the traditional watchmaking crowd. Its watches are sensationally handsome, and its new 1815 Up/Down, which gives you the time on the main dial and adds two subdials in the bottom half of the watch for the seconds and a power reserve, was for me easily the most handsome watch of the fair. Then, of course, there’s that whole other strata of watches where haute horology brands don’t so much throw caution to the wind as fire it out of a cannon and run away laughing hysterically. Take, for example, the new watch from Richard Mille designed for Yohan Blake, the second fastest sprinter in the world. On first sight it’s a green, plastic trinket in an odd shape containing peculiar luminous green bridges that fan out like a claw. But it’s not plastic and it’s no trinket: made from high-tech translucent composite injected with carbon nanotubes, if you please, it’s strong and ultra-light, with an intricate tourbillon movement inside. Those bridges are meant to resemble a claw (Blake’s trademark gesture). It’ll cost you £438,000. Perhaps the craziest watch of the show came from the reliably eccentric Roger Dubuis stable: the humongous Quatuor comes with four separate, tilted escapement wheels, which somehow balance each other out to improve accuracy. We say: why stop at four? Perhaps this can become the Gilette razor of insane horology – I want SIX escapements, Roger Dubuis, do you hear me? By the way, there’s a version with a case made of silicon that’ll set you back well over a million pounds. Lastly, a trend from last year continues into 2013: traveller watches which display either a second time zone or else all 24 time zones at once, are all the rage. Ralph Lauren’s all-blue Sporting World Time is perhaps the brand’s coolest watch yet, while Montblanc produced different worldtimers for different hemispheres. Jaeger-LeCoultre wins the travel watch prize, however, for its Duomètre Unique Travel Time, that elevates the extra time zone function into something rare, collectible and beautiful. And that, in many ways, is what SIHH is all about.
From left: Montblanc, TimeWalker World-Time Hemispheres; IWC, Ingenieur Automatic 40mm; Richard Mille, RM 59-01 Yohan Blake
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We prefer not to be measured by dimensions. Unless it’s a new dimension of accuracy.
No fewer than four exceptional mechanisms enhance the precision of the RICHARD LANGE TOURBILLON “Pour le Mérite”: the tiny fusée-and-chain transmission, the delicate tourbillon, the ultra-thin Lange balance spring, and – not least – the patented stop-seconds device for the tourbillon which makes it possible to
set the watch with one-second accuracy in the first place. Never before has an A. Lange & Söhne watch been endowed with so many complications that simultaneously enhance its rate accuracy, settability, and readability. And so, this remarkable timepiece truly deserves the honorary attribute “Pour le Mérite”.
Arije 165, Sloane Street London • George Pragnell 5 and 6, Wood Street, Stratford-upon-Avon Hamilton & Inches 87, George Street, Edinburgh • Harrods 87–135 Brompton Road, Knightsbridge, London Watches of Switzerland 16, New Bond Street, London • Wempe 43-44, New Bond Street, London Lange Uhren GmbH • Tel. +34 91 454 89 82 • www.lange-soehne.com
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watch news A Very English Affair It seems opening their flagship store in Mayfair last summer has only fuelled the Bremont boys’ commitment to bringing watch manufacturing back to the UK. Co-founders Nick and Giles English have just announced the launch of their brand’s new watchmaking facility in Henley-on-Thames. The company will be assembling and finishing off key movement and case components in the beautiful oak-framed building. “Britain has an illustrious history of watchmaking and considerable engineering talent for us to utilise; we intend to make the most of it,” said Giles.
Bremont, 29 South Audley Street, W1K www.bremont.com
Through the Looking Glass Greubel Forsey announced two new novelties at SIHH. Its first timepiece with a titanium case and rubber strap, the Double Tourbillon Technique Black caught our attention but the Art Piece 1 left us awestruck. Although a work in progress, by incorporating a micro-sculpture by British artist Willard Wigan within its case, the timepiece typifies the artistic approach to watchmaking for which the brand has become famous. It will be customised according to the wishes of the collector who can choose the micro sculpture inside. Look through the microscope on the left-hand side of the watch; you won’t believe your eyes.
www.greubelforsey.com
Captured in Complications
Cutting Edge Each month we select our timepiece of the moment from the watch world’s most exciting pieces
Made of liquid metal, water resistant to 600 metres and featuring a decompression system, the Planet Ocean Big Size was built to be taken to the extremes. It looks handsome in the boardroom too Seamaster Planet Ocean Big Size £5,460, Omega www.omegawatches.com
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A grandfather of the industry, GirardPerregaux has been pushing watchmaking boundaries since 1791. Testament to craftsmanship, that has seen the brand earn a reputation alongside the likes of Audemars Piguet and Patek Philippe, is the newest addition to the 1966 Collection. Comprising the three complications from which it takes its name, the GirardPerregaux 1966 Minute Repeater, Annual Calendar and Equation of Time Watch (£209,000) is sure to impress those with an interest in mechanical watchmaking.
www.girard-perregaux.com
c o l l e c txi oxn x
Made in
Britain As an industry returns to its roots, British watchmaking continues to go from strength to strength. Richard Brown meets Christopher Ward co-founder, Mike France, to find out why
G
eorge Daniels’ death in October 2011 triggered widespread mourning within the watch world. A year later, as Sotheby’s auctioned his personal collection of watches and clocks, the same industry braced itself for the sale of one of the most important collections ever assembled. So revered was Daniels’ talent for watchmaking – a talent considered by many as second only to that of AbrahamLouis Breguet – that the 130-plus piece lot achieved more than £8.2 million. In the passing of Daniels, Britain lost the man behind the co-axial escapement, a mechanism considered the most important horological development for 250 years, and one of the few modern watchmakers who could create a complete watch by hand. Bolstered by a reconnection with its illustrious past, the industry Daniels left in his wake, however, was anything but ailing. Indeed, as anyone who attended SalonQP 2012 will testify, the sector is experiencing something of a revolution. There, within the auspicious confines of the Saatchi Gallery, the UK’s only fine watch exhibition showcased an impressive array of horological delights. While the international offering stretched from the likes of Bulgari to Zenith, noteworthy was the presence of so many British brands. In addition to companies such as Bremont, Robert Loomes and Schofield, Speake-Marin was also on hand to promote the best of British while the attendance of the Meridian Watch heralded the entrance of a new watch-making marque altogether.
One brand not at SalonQP - they sell directly to consumers over their website rather than to wholesalers - but as instrumental in the revival of British-watchmaking as any that were, is Christopher Ward. Now celebrating its eighth year, the company sold more than 15,000 watches in 2012, one in every five to the American market. What, then, has spurned this international interest in British watchmaking? Christopher Ward co-founder, Mike France, believes it lies in the kudos that surrounds British luxury brands. “Britain has always had a reputation for high quality craftsmanship, a singular approach to design and a wellestablished ‘old money’ relationship with luxury. “I think many people are rather tired and embarrassed by the bling approach of many watch brands and see the more relaxed, understated approach of British brands as increasingly appealing.” Christopher Ward’s unique business approach – the company aims to make “the cheapest most expensive watches in the world” by keeping marketing costs to a minimum – has made bespoke movements available to punters at much lower price points than their Swiss counterparts currently offer. In the C9 Jumping Hour and C900 Single Pusher Chronograph, for example, customers are able to acquire luxury timepieces at prices that until now haven’t been possible – probably one of the reasons why Christopher Ward has been the fastest-growing British luxury watch brand for the past seven years. What of the future of the British watchmaking industry? “It’s going to grow at an increasingly fast rate,” says Mike. “This will mean more young people will see watchmaking as a viable career. If we can turn that growing interest into college courses, apprenticeships and eventually real jobs, then after five years we may have created a platform for sustainable growth and the eventual re-establishment of Britain as an important watchmaking centre.” Despite what some people would have you believe, Mike is quick to point out that this is still a long way off. Then again, rewind the clock ten years and few would have bet on Britain’s watchmaking industry becoming a serious business within the decade. n www.christopherward.co.uk
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CONTESSA To own a rare Argyle pink diamond is to own a truly magnificent heirloom. Contessa, beautifully handcrafted in Platinum and 18ct Rose Gold, features an exquisite combination of stunning craftsmanship and the rarest of Australian Argyle pink diamonds. Simply, they are the rarest diamonds in the world and are revered for their unique provenance and intrinsic beauty.
UNITED KINGDOM The Royal Arcade, Old Bond St, Mayfair London W1S 4SW AUSTRALIA Sydney Gold Coast calleija.com
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jewellerynews Black Swan An aquamarine and pearl suite belonging to the ‘black pearl’ of the ballet world, Tamara Toumanova, will be one of the star performers at the BADA Fine Art & Antiques Fair, taking place between 13 and 19 March. Her dark eyes and raven black hair provided the perfect backdrop for this exquisite Ruser Suite, designed by jeweller to many of Hollywood’s leading ladies William Ruser, around 1950. The design can be instantly attributable to Ruser, who was well-known for his use of freshwater pearls in the 1950s and 60s. Each piece is entirely mounted with off-set aquamarines and pearls in the form of stylised mimosa flowers. As well as Toumanova, Ruser also supplied exquisite pieces to Hollywood star and jewellery aficionado Elizabeth Taylor, a pair of whose own Ruser earrings recently fetched an impressive $698,500 at auction ($648,500 over the high estimate). The Suite will be on sale at the Fair through Sandra Cronan.
BADA Fine Art & Antiques Fair, 13-19 March Duke of York Square, by Sloane Square, SW3 www.bada-antiques-fair.co.uk
LV Lockit Legend has it that love padlocks first originated in Hungary more than 80 years ago but it was not until recently that their appearance has spread around the world. In the undoubted capital of romance, Paris, thousands of couples have been sealing their love for years by attaching ‘love locks’ to the railings of the Pont des Arts bridge. French fashion house Louis Vuitton has drawn inspiration from these padlocks with its latest Lockit collection. Consisting of 15 pieces in 18-karat yellow, rose and grey gold, including pendants, rings and bracelets, each item features the rendered padlock inscribed with the famous LV logo. This is not the first time the house has been inspired by the love padlocks, which were attached to the original Louis Vuitton steamer trunks.
www.louisvuitton.co.uk
New Ownership
Cutting Edge Glittering and gorgeous, Leviev has achieved the near impossible for a luxury jeweller; the company produces jewellery that is not only high-end but also possesses innate fashion sensibility. The pieces, while always glamorous and classic, have that added flamboyant edge which makes them truly unique
For an engagement ring with personality, look to Leviev for its collection of flower rings, comprising blue and petalshaped white diamonds, or the cluster rings with a stunning central stone
Diamond engagement ring, from a selection at Leviev, www.leviev.com
Swatch Group recently became the proud owner of luxury jewellery company Harry Winston. 100 per cent of the shares of the American jeweller have been acquired, including 535 employees worldwide and the production company in Geneva. Although the takeover took the industry slightly by surprise, Chairman of the Board and CEO of Harry Winston Robert A. Gannicott commented that the brand’s new home would “provide the skills and support that it deserves to realise its true potential.” We look forward to seeing what this will mean for the future of Harry Winston watches, an area which has seen increasing growth over the years.
www.harrywinston.com
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Wild,
1
Versace S/S13
Wild West
Be inspired by Django Unchained with multi-tassel earrings and plenty of fringing
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Alexander McQueen S/S13
Choked Up 4
Alexander McQueen caused a sensation this season with its bee-studded chokers
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1 Vintage hoop tassel drop earrings, £65, Jamie Jewellery, www.jamiejewellery.co.uk 2 Fringe bracelet, £515 Versace, www.versace.com 3 Sequin chain cuff, £277.65, B*+S, www.farfetch.com 4 Faceted glass cluster necklace £58, Butler & Wilson, www.butlerandwilson.co.uk 5 Tess Necklace, £593, Dannijo, www.kabiri.co.uk
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Dolce & Gabbana S/S13
Bigger is Better
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Accessories were supersized at Dolce & Gabbana and Etro, both featuring shoulder-length, multi-coloured earrings
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Colossal cuffs
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Pair a simple outfit with a stone-studded, metallic cuff for that statement look
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Long crystal double pear shape drop earrings, £58, Butler & Wilson, www.butlerandwilson.co.uk 7 Beaded hoop earrings, £90 Isabel Marant, www.net-a-porter.com 8 Flash crystal and horn clip earrings, £255, Marni, www.marni.com 9 Tribal patchwork palladium-plated Swarovski crystal earrings £355, Erickson Beamon, www.net-a-porter.com 10 Gold-plated quartz and crystal cuff, £660, Emilio Pucci, www.emiliopucci.com 11 Gold metal Lock Me cuff, £605, Louis Vuitton, www.louisvuitton.co.uk 12 Silver cuff, POA, Etro, www.etro.com
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Etro S/S13
22 - 24 March Exclusive Discounts* Fashion Shows CANARY WHARF
BARS & RESTAURANTS • FASHION & STYLE • ARTS & EVENTS canarywharf.com
*Terms and conditions apply, see overleaf for details.
SHOPPING Reamma Skinny Jeam, £79, Ted Baker Canada Place
Alex Monroe Pearl Ring, £126 Charles Fish Cabot Place
Lily And Lionel Zebra Scarf, £100, Whistles Jubilee Place
Bryony Cropped Leather Jacket, £325 Reiss Womenswear Cabot Place / Reiss Jubilee Place
Organza Floral Top £35, Dorothy Perkins Canada Place
Rika Enamel Bobble Matinee, £75 Ted Baker, Canada Place
Granted Strap Sandal £69, Dune, Cabot Place
step into spring This season, take inspiration from the catwalks at the Canary Wharf Spring / Summer Fashion Weekend. With many stores offering discounts of up to 20% between 22 and 24 March, it’s the perfect excuse to refresh your wardrobe RE3138 Shooter £178, Ray Ban David Clulow Cabot Place and Jubilee Place
Frith Leather Weave Bracelet in Tan, £25 Reiss Womenswear Cabot Place / Reiss Jubilee Place
Cheetah Frill Top, £47 French Connection Jubilee Place
Kensington Mini Shopper £95, Aquascutum Cabot Place
Suki Metallic Leather Flat in Gold, £95 L.K.Bennet, Jubilee Place
Mini Check Shorts, £35 Oasis, Jubilee Place
www.canarywharf.com
@yourcanarywharf
Floris is delighted to announce the opening of a new Bespoke Perfumery Boutique at 147 Ebury Street, Belgravia, 282 years since Mr and Mrs Floris opened the doors to their first Perfumery at 89 Jermyn Street.
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The Little Shop of Wonders We’ve been waiting with baited breath ever since we heard whisperings about a Children’s Fashion Week, organised by the founders and owners of luxury online children’s emporium Alex and Alexa. And guess what? The first ever of its kind has dismissed Milan and Paris for its global debut, and instead has settled on little old London. And we couldn’t be happier. Taking place over two days, from 19-20 March, the showcase will feature two key events. The first (press only – sorry), will highlight key A/W14 trends from super-chic labels such as Paul Smith Junior, while the second will be dangling all the spring musthaves right in front of our noses. The two-day line-up will also include activities for children and parents, in collaboration with the Victoria and Albert Museum of Childhood.
Public fashion show tickets available on Ticketmaster www.alexandalexa.com www.kidsco.org.uk
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nurserynews Riviera ready Kiddies favourite Bon Point is kicking off the summer season with two collaborations. Working with Rivieras to bring a new twist to the sporty beach-ready shoe, expect four exclusive new colours – coral pink, ‘shell’, vibrant green and sky blue – while keeping the comfort factor. And onto the second... Bon Point has teamed up with Parisian jewellery designer Aurélie Bidermann, giving way to a collection of bracelets and necklaces covered with multi-coloured shells and guitar pendants, ideal for a Californian beach look. Awesome.
52-54 Marylebone High Street, W1
Book worm New Year’s resolutions of getting your little ones to read more already fading away? World Book Day on 7 March is a great way to get them back on track. To celebrate children’s literature, eight books by incredible authors and illustrators have been chosen as part of the Token books scheme. The World Book Day £1 token can be redeemed in book shops until 24 March.
www.worldbookday.com
Local style Amaia is a local gem when it comes to stocking up on spring wardrobe essentials. Fuss free, with a guaranteed adorability factor, think smock dresses, floral motifs and hair bows for any occasion, be it christenings, communions, or just the latest round of Sharky and George-curated birthday bonanzas. Bouncy-castle proof, good quality is top priority. If you’re out of ideas on outfit pairing, let the Amaia team help, combining navy Mary Janes with rose hued casual cardigans like nobody’s business.
11 New Cavendish Street, W1
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Flower power
run rabbit Several generations before us – and most probably after us – have followed the adventures of Beatrice Potter’s mischievous character Peter Rabbit. This season, Baby Gap pays homage to the fluffy critter and his magical world with a collection for girls and boys, from new born to 24 months. Whimsical illustrations inspired by the timeless tale cover jumpers, dresses and babygrows.
Who doesn’t own something rosey from Cath Kidston? Now spring is in sight, florals take centre stage. Kids can add flower power to their outfits with the summer kids lines; Ring a Ring O’ Roses and Strawberry Field. The collection boasts covetable numbers to be worn with matching sunglasses and suitcases. We’re mentally fastforwarding to July already.
51 Marylebone High Street, W1
35 Hampstead High Street, NW3
Dsquared2 The Canadian twins Dean and Dan Caten, who are behind the Dsquared² brand, are joining the childrenswear market with a ‘fun, fun and more fun’ ethos. Although junior collections are now a dime a dozen, we’re expecting Dsquared² to go for the unexpected when it launches next spring.
THAT’S A Wrap Baby showers always demand useful, practical, and “ooo-ah” provoking gifts that should bring a smile to the motherto-be’s face, just as the extra pounds are starting to take their toll. The Little Baby Bundle Company presents handcrafted baby gifts in a quirky – and almost edible – way. From clothes folded as cupcakes, blankets wrapped up in flower bouquets and socks tucked into jam jars, your best friend credentials just soared.
www.littlebabybundlecompany.com
rner
co Pet’s
Purrfect for cats Cats may be more independent than dogs but they still deserve the creature comforts of their canine counterparts. Fortunately, Mungo & Maud offers everything to please demanding felines. We’re always on board with pastel hues but these goodies are also suitable for your pet’s outdoor adventures. When they tire of chasing real birds, those catnip knit toys come in handy for indoor playtime.
www.mungoandmaud.com
Dawg scent The Pepper & Tanky dog perfume range, available at Harrods, provides a fresh final touch post bath time. With a choice of four scents – Puppy Love, Big Dawg, Peach ‘n’ Cream and Vanilla Woof – there is something for every taste. Whether you prefer opulent scents or light, refreshing tones, just spray your pooch after the bath and he’s ready to woof.
Available at Harrods www.harrods.com
The Kids
Are Alright Does that come in my size? Kari Rosenberg meets Nathalie Christen-Genty, founder of super-luxe French childrenswear site Melijoe.com
“I
’m going to be a baby stylist…. I’m going to help babies learn how to accessorise, what colours to wear, what clothes are slimming...” Jennifer Aniston’s sentiments were ringing in my ears as the Melijoe press release landed in my inbox, proclaiming FROWworthy ensembles for the under 12s (“Do babies care if they’re stylish?” Rachel asks her Friends co-star Amy). Maybe not, but their parents certainly seem to. Enter Nathalie. With exclusive lines and capsule collections from Scotch & Soda, Dolce & Gabbana, Petit Bateau, Chloé, Kenzo, Repetto, Missoni and Monnalisa, to name but a few, luxury online children’s retailer Melijoe.com has been recession-busting flourishing since its conception only five years ago.
CEO and founder, Nathalie Christen-Genty is unnervingly glamorous and impeccably turned out in a lace black shift, dressed in a way only the impossibly chic and impossibly French, can achieve. With four children under 10 (Mattis, 10, Anton, 9, Méli, 2 and Neva, 1), and a retail emporium almost bursting at the seams, that’s no mean feat. I search for wrinkles or a HiPP smear, but alas, there are none. We meet in Covent Garden at the Spring/Summer preview, her marketing manager and translator Hervé, all hair flicks and horn rimmed glasses, sat between us. The idea for the site grew from a “passion for fashion; I’ve been reading Vogue since I was 13” combined with a degree in Communication and Web studies, says Nathalie. She realised
“I am a mother of four children and I never buy a piece that isn’t practical”
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there was a gap in the childrenswear market for “fashion-oriented kids” once she had her first child. “Everything was presented by size and price, and not by trends like in the adult fashion world. I knew I could bring something new to the industry.” Championing a few key looks – neon, tropical, army, and blue – in many different shades, as well as a “daring the total look trend”, there’s no denying the outfits are cute, wearable, and range in price, all in a very net-a-porter.com style. “At Melijoe, I focus on the fashion aspect more than other websites do.” Having already moved office six times to cope with the business growth, Melijoe was quick to find favour with the stylish (and wealthy) Parisian market, a consumer base which is still increasing on an almost daily basis. From there it quickly reached Russia and the Middle East, and is now launching in the UK. A mother as much as she is a buyer, practicality is not forgotten, even when it comes to silk Dolce & Gabbana tea dresses: the new Sicilian print piece, inspired by the adult collection, is one of her favourite items this season, as well as a Monnalisa Pink Panther dress which sold out within days. “I am a mother of four children and I never buy a piece that isn’t practical or convenient for them. On the other hand, I adore fashion, for my own purposes, but also for my children. As well as the glamorous ensembles, we always stock jeans, T-shirts and leggings. “But the main point is that while some people love fashion for themselves, others love fashion for their children as well. Some designers have very lovely pieces for kids and I think the price tag is often
justified by the quality of the item – some brands, including Ermmano Scervino, are entirely made in Italy. If people have the budget, then why not? Some customers will spend £100, others £10,000.” And of course her children are just as fabulous as she is: “They don’t have any favourite brands yet, but they are style-oriented already. One of my boys is attracted to the Galliano style while the other one has a more casual, Scotch & Soda look. With my girls I tend to mix brands, they wear Monnalisa, Little Marc Jacobs and Dolce & Gabbana”. Seemingly unflappable, achieving a work life balance is “just a question of time and brackets” – breakfast with the children and weekday evenings working in Paris while her husband resides in their London home. “On the weekends, though, spent between the two cities, my time is solely dedicated to my husband and children.” With 40 new brands joining the site this year, including Burberry and Il Gufo, further plans are oriented towards the luxury travel industry, and all the suitcase essentials that go with it. “We’re creating a magazine called Travel Jam. The concept is to present five-star hotels around the world through the eyes of children, with photo shoots and fashion stories alongside our products. ” Picture a freckled eight-year-old girl, head to toe in Fendi, her younger brother sporting the latest from Roberto Cavalli Kids as they discern between the various merits of the Mandarin Oriental’s sushi selection and The Ritz Carlton’s milkshakes. They turn to one another and sigh: “Well, at least we’ll always have Paris.” n
Your Heart
in Your Hands When you lead a busy life, sometimes the hardest thing to admit is a problem with your health.
Think about your heart this month and make an appointment 020 7483 5000
If you’ve recently experienced central chest pain, a dull ache, heavy feeling, or mild discomfort in your chest, don’t push these matters of the heart to the bottom of your priorities. Speak to your GP who can refer you to see a specialist. The Wellington Hospital has an international reputation for excellence in cardiac care, offering a full range of Outpatient Cardiac Testing, Daycase and Inpatient Cardiac treatments.
www.thewellingtoncardiacservices.com
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health & fitness piste of cake West Hampstead residents might have walked past Movers & Shapers’ fitness centre thinking it was a boutique. That’s because it’s designed to be familiar and cosy, welcoming residents to pop in between school runs and office hours for an express but efficient 30 minute class. If, like us, cold and overcrowded gyms put you off exercising, you will love the more ‘intimate’ philosophy here. Ideal if you’re planning an end-of-season ski trip, we recommend the new Ski-fit classes. Organised in small groups of up to five people, Power Plate technology helps to focus on the key muscle groups used when skiing, working your balance and coordination. Look out for us on the black run.
148 West End Lane, NW6
best of Betty ‘Style + Performance in motion’ is the motto of Sweaty Betty’s S/S13 collection. And since looking stylish is still a concern while working out (to us at least), we knew we’d want every single piece, even before seeing it. From tiedye yoga leggings to stripes and neon, inspiration comes from the underwater world with references to glowing sea anemones, tropical fish and coral. A workout never looked so good.
35 Heath Street, NW3
Pick and Mix When it comes to exercising, there’s no worse motivator-breaker than routine-fatigue. That’s where the ‘Pick and Mix’ package at Matt Roberts centre in Hampstead comes in handy. Combining tailored gym sessions with a personal trainer and one-to-one pilates classes, the package offers a variety of exercises that will challenge your body into making progress. Using the principles of Alan Herdman, famous for acting on specific points like strength, conditioning, flexibility and posture, the class is an invigorating way to complement the gym workout. If the prospect of quick results doesn’t have you on board already, another vantage point is its modern and spacious studios, situated at the edge of Hampstead Heath. So if machines aren’t your thing, you can get on the green for a post pilates run instead.
Jack Straw’s Castle North End Way, NW3
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Right Before Your Eyes 86
health promotion
Your eyes and your vision are precious and you shouldn’t make any compromises when it comes to eye surgery. The decision to have vision correction surgery is an important one that you should make after carefully considering the options available Mr Allon Barsam MA, MBBS, FRCOphth, is a Consultant Ophthalmic Surgeon at the Luton and Dunstable University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust and at the Western Eye Hospital, where he specialises in Cornea, Cataract, Laser Vision Correction and Refractive Surgery. He has published more than 30 peer review publications, six book chapters and is the co-author of a comprehensive textbook of Ophthalmology, used by Ophthalmologists around the world. Here he outlines some essential elements to consider when choosing your surgeon. 1. Should hold or have held a substantive NHS Consultant post. In the UK training to become an NHS Consultant Surgeon is long and rigorous, with UK NHS-trained surgeons remaining highly regarded throughout the world in terms of experience and surgical expertise. Therefore, this should be a minimum standard for the surgeon. 2. Trained in cornea, cataract and refractive surgery. A surgeon’s calibre, training and experience mean they can respond appropriately when unpredictable situations arise. 3. Personally carry out high volume surgery on a monthly basis. Your surgeon should be carrying out at least 50 vision correction and cataract procedures each month. 4. Should have published and presented their own original research into the conditions that they treat. To be considered an international expert in their field your surgeon should be regularly
invited to speak around the world and have presented and published work on every condition they treat and intervention they offer. 5. Be able to offer you and personally carry out more than just one type of procedure. Every person’s visual needs are different and your surgeon should have the training and experience to be able to offer and carry out exactly what is best for you. 6. Do a little research. Don’t assume that just because a company or website claims their surgeons are expert, they actually are. Type the surgeon’s name into a search engine and see what comes up from independent sources. Be careful trusting an institution’s good name, a mixture of doctors with varying degrees of skill may make up the team. Make sure you know exactly who your surgeon is. 7. Don’t put blind faith in the technology. Laser vision correction is surgery on the cornea, modern technology allows for the maximum safety and results. However problems can and do happen. No surgical procedure is ever guaranteed a 100 per cent success rate. The surgeon’s calibre, training and experience allow him/her to respond appropriately when unpredictable situations arise and to manage them safely 8. Think twice about word of mouth recommendations. One happy patient does not guarantee that you are in the best hands for the treatment you need. Ensure your surgeon has the skills that are required. www.allonbarsam.com @AllonBarsam
GP SESSIONS: Common Eye Problems in Children Dr Lisa Anderson, Private GP at The Wellington Hospital, looks at common eye problems in children There are many eye conditions and diseases that can affect a child’s vision. Early diagnosis and treatment are critical to maintaining your child’s eye health. They can be split into two areas, focus and alignment disorders that affect vision and childhood eye diseases. Focus and alignment disorders • Lazy eye – this occurs when the vision is much better in one eye than the other. The eyelid appears to droop in comparison with the normal eye. • Squint – is a condition where your eyes look in different directions. One eye turns inwards, outwards, upwards or downwards while the other eye looks forwards. It is very important that a squint is picked up and treated as early as possible to
avoid vision problems developing. • C loudy eyes – if the surface of the eye is cloudy not clear then a cataract may be present. This should have been checked at the six-week check-up. Common childhood eye diseases • Conjunctivitis – can be viral or bacterial or allergic. The eye looks red due to inflammation of the conjunctiva and in bacterial cases there is a yellowy discharge. It is particularly common in babies under one year of age where it is often due to a blocked tear duct. • Stye – this is a red, sore lump near the edge of the eyelid; it is caused by an infected eyelash follicle. • Chalazion looks like a small lump on the eyelid, and may occur when a meibomian gland (an oil-secreting gland in the eyelid) becomes clogged. It is not caused by infection. • Cellulitis is an infection where the tissues around the eye appear red and painfully swollen. The child may have a fever. It is a serious condition that requires urgent medical attention.
For further information or if you’d like to arrange an appointment at The Wellington Hospital, please contact the hospital Enquiry Helpline on 020 7483 5000 or visit www.thewellingtonhospital.com
LET THE SUN SHINE
The new terrace at The Rib Room Bar & Restaurant in Knightsbridge is the ideal destination for summer. A secluded and sophisticated venue for morning coffee or light meals, the terrace becomes a cigarist’s paradise in the evening with an extensive choice of whisky, cocktails and wine complementing a new cigar menu. For more information visit theribroom.co.uk or call 020 7858 7250 Jumeirah Carlton Tower, Cadogan Place, Knightsbridge, London SW1X 9PY
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food&drink
wish list
THE FASHIONABLE AFTER-PARTY Leading British male model and self-confessed whisky lover David Gandy has become the face of Johnnie Walker Blue label, endorsing its ‘Game Changer in the World of Whisky campaign’ which recognises individuals in the luxury market who ‘make a difference’. Gandy kick-started his ambassador role with an exclusive photo shoot at the Artesian Bar at The Langham in Marylebone. “Johnnie Walker Blue Label has continually changed the game in the world of luxury whisky and I try to forge new paths for myself and the men’s fashion industry as a whole, so it’s a great partnership,” said the offensively handsome man-god.
www.johnniewalker.com
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Foodie favourites GLITZ AND GRILL Established in 1865, it is here that Oscar Wilde went googly eyed over Lord Alfred Douglas and Mick Jagger, the Beatles and Elizabeth Taylor boogied on down. The gold-encrusted Grill Room at the Café Royal has reopened as a Champagne and caviar lounge, in all its glitz and glory. Quite possibly the most ornate eatery in London, fine-dining connoisseurs will enjoy marvelling at their reflections in the multitude of mirrors that don the lavish walls while choosing between the Russian Oscietra and Iranian Belgua. The sea scallop tartar with avocado, truffle and hazelnut certainly floated our boat.
68 Regent Street, W1
FOR ALL THE TEA IN MARYLEBONE Amanzi Tea has launched its first London flagship store – and our teapots couldn’t be happier. The shop (and bar) houses a variety of 40 traditional and bespoke loose leaf blends in a fabulous tea wall and boasts authentic beautiful samovars (heated metal containers) on display at the tasting stations. Combat winter flu cobwebs with honey, lemon and ginger infusions or go for something a bit more exotic, such as iced tea lemonades and virgin cocktails (the lychee mar-tea-ni is something else). The bubble teas, however, are an acquired taste where the tapioca bubbles come whizzing through the straw, straight to the back of your throat. Child-friendly, naturally caffeine-free blends include Coco Loco – a rooibos tea blended with a creamy milk chocolate flavour. We say tea is the new coffee – see ya, Starbucks.
24 New Cavendish Street, London, W1
GRAPE EXPECTATIONS Marylebone regulars will need no introduction to Orrerey, where the impeccable chef Igor Tymchyshyn – who earned his credentials under Marco Pierre White and Jean Christophe Novelli – rustles up what could quite be the best duck and foie gras we’ve ever tasted. But pommes mousseline and Riesling jelly aside, dessert is where our heart lies this month. Pairing up with tasty neighbours Rococo Chocolates, who turn 30 this month, foodies can indulge in a little chocolate and wine tasting, conveniently held in time for Mother’s Day. We’re not sure how well the two go together, but if you’re looking for a guinea pig, Igor, we suppose we’ll just have to oblige.
Thursday 14 March at 6.30pm, 55 Marylebone High St, W1U
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Restaurant Review
The Art of
EATING
Gabrielle Lane is pleasantly surprised by some fanciful offerings at Rotunda
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he saying goes, ‘don’t judge a book by its cover’. Here on out, it’s an expression that also applies to menus. I’d heard great things about the Northumberland steak and lamb cuts that Rotunda specialise in and couldn’t wait to tuck in. The starters, however, made me apprehensive… crubeens? Judas ear? Chickweed? – cue an email to the friend I was taking along: “is chickweed not something that helped them swim underwater in Harry Potter?!” Well, let me tell you now that the quirky offering is unreservedly fantastic, to be enjoyed and by no means afraid of. We started with Champagne – for courage, of course – and tried table bites of candied walnuts, quails eggs with mayonnaise and seasoned English radishes. We then moved on to the best scallops I’ve ever had, served with water celery, lemon and anchovy, as well as duck blood sausage. My friend chose cod cheeks with the aforementioned Judas ear, bacon jowl and chickweed, which turned out to be a winning combination of light fish, slithers of bacon and herbs. Our host told us the herbs were sourced by foraging. And if there’s one thing Rotunda is big on – it’s foraging. The salad of ‘winter-foraged hedgerow leaves’ is exactly that – naturally grown, hand-sourced leaves with earthy flavours and a definite nutritional punch. The restaurant’s ethos is all about the countryside; its meat is reared on its own farm and prepared by its own chefs and this is where Rotunda comes into its own and gives a North West London feel to the wave of steak restaurants dominating London at present. Okay, it’s technically in King’s Cross but it’s cosy, uncommercial and a bit different. My friend and I sat at a table overlooking the canal, we drank fullbodied red wine and for once we stopped, thought about what we were eating and spoke about it. For this reason, Rotunda is a brilliant date venue. You’ll marvel over what things on the menu actually are, you’ll probably even laugh about them, but above all – you’ll eat great food. So to the steak. Tender, well-seasoned and delicious with peppercorn sauce, it is best served with triple cooked chips in beef dripping and a watercress salad. We both opted for rump, but there were also fillet, T-bone, sirloin, a 1kg rib offering and flat-iron varieties too. Lamb lovers can choose a hay-baked cut with rosemary and mint, a roasted eight-bone rack or a slowroasted shoulder, which all looked delicious. To finish you can go sweet or savoury, but we didn’t get past the melt-in-the-middle chocolate cake with salted caramel ice-cream. You’ll wait ten minutes while it’s prepared, but you’ll need that time to digest all of the wonderful dishes you’ve consumed beforehand. What can one say about a chocolate cake? It was indulgent and moreish. But unlike many of the other plates on the menu, predictably so.
Kings Place, 90 York Way, N1 www.rotundabarandrestaurant.co.uk
Hitting the
slopes
can hurt
Regardless of skill level, muscles can become tired and fatigued whilst skiing, with the third day of a ski holiday being the most common time for an injury to occur. If you return home and continue to suffer pain, speak to your GP who can refer you to see a specialist to manage the condition. Led by eminent consultants, The Wellington Hospital offers a range of orthopaedic services to help you regain your health and return to the slopes.
Call us today
and get that injury seen to 020 7483 5000
www.thewellingtonhospital.com
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aloha, vera If you’re ever, you know, just passing through Hawaii and are, like us, a bit fashion obsessed, then you will feel delightfully at home at the Halekulani Suite, personally designed by none other than Vera Wang. One of our all-time favourite designers, who once called herself an ‘arbiter of taste’, took a sophisticated route when designing this boudoir by mixing a relaxed island-inspired décor with a good dose of sophistication, and of course, a little splash of romance. The experience, though, doesn’t stop there; enjoy spectacular panoramic views of Waikiki beach and Diamond Head. If you’re planning a honeymoon anytime soon, drop Vera a line: you never know, she may put a word in for a dress-holiday package.
www.halekulani.com
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TRAVEL in style HOT SPOT in March
Choose beach huts in the Bahamas designed by Biba founder Barbara Hulanicki
Harbour Island, Bahamas
why
The ever sunny Bahamas is a dream destination all year round. But come late February, we crave a vitamin D fix and the feel of sunshine on our skin, especially as summer trends that we can’t wear for months fill the shop floors. Harbour Island, situated in the Out Islands of the Bahamas (a 20-minute flight from Nassau) hosts on its shores the most highly rated beach in the country. The crystal clear waters – and believe it or not, the pink sand – beg you to spend your entire trip at the sea’s edge, dabbling in a bit of snorkelling and reef fishing. While you’re there, don’t miss the chance to explore the nearby Eleuthera Island.
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The Pink Sands resort is a haven of exclusive luxury. Situated amid lush grounds where tropical birds thrive, the resort is dotted with 25 pastel-coloured cottages designed by Biba founder Barbara Hulanicki. These ocean-view rooms give guests privileged access to the beach and the best sunbathing spots to boot. Complete with fresh water swimming pools, two tennis courts, and close enough access to the top boutiques, this resort ticks all the boxes. www.pinksandsresort.com
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Blossom season In Japan, March is one of the most iconic months of the year as it marks the peak of the blooming season. Magnificent Sakura flowers come to life on cherry trees, revealing their distinctive pink hue. The Peninsula Tokyo is perfectly placed in the centre of the city. To celebrate the cherry blossom season, it turns into a fairy-tale residence with special arrangements of cherry blossoms and Japanese lanterns in the lobby and restaurant. You won’t need to go far to join the nation in the traditional Ohanami celebration: the Peninsula’s cherry blossom viewing party is one of the best in town. www.peninsula.com/Tokyo
Spring Festivals short haul: Spain
Las Fallas in Valencia is one of Spain’s least known but most animated festivals. Between 15 and 19 March, the city doesn’t sleep, as the ‘festival of fire’ stretches on, day and night. As well as daily fireworks, giant papier-maché sculptures are paraded through the city and set alight. Rest your sore feet after a week of partying at the Westin. www.westinvalencia.com
This could be... Head to Rotterdam this spring for a contemporary installation of The Fashion World of Jean-Paul Gaultier, held at the Kunsthal exhibition centre. The showcase includes more than 140 original creations from the early 1970s to the present day, as well as pieces from his haute couture collections and ready-towear lines. Most of the garments are being exhibited for the first time in the Netherlands. www.kunsthal.nl
LONG haul: Australia Some might think Melbourne is a long way to go for a meal. But the Melbourne Food and Wine Festival, from 1 to 17 March, is worth the trip. Showcasing Australia’s most fantastic culinary delights and courses with celebrity chefs, the Langham Hotel, Melbourne, will host its own classes, too, and is ideally situated on the Yarra river. www.melbourne.langhamhotels.com
mid-afternoon in paris Our Parisian hotel of choice, located on the corner of Avenue Matignon and Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré, Le Bristol was the first in France to receive the prestigious ‘Palace’ title. Fashionistas are flocking here for its close location to Fashion Week spaces, while throughout the year, ‘fashion Saturdays’ allow guests to admire edited collections from top designers – Yves Saint-Laurent, Givenchy, Chloé, Lacroix, Céline and Ungaro, to name but a few – with a tip top pastry in hand. www.lebristolparis.com
BLUE
PLANET It’s more than just a honeymooners’ paradise. Prepare for an otherwordly underwater encounter in the Maldives. Kari Rosenberg dives in
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hincodon typus. The biggest fish in the sea. Whatever you want to call it, nothing will prepare you, should you be lucky enough, for your first encounter with a whale shark. Having qualified and obtained by PADI scuba diving-licence more than a decade ago, I’ve witnessed my fair share of underwater wonders; hovering nose to nose with a school of fully-grown bull sharks (who, unlike the whale shark, prefer the taste of Brit flesh to plankton); pitch-black, winding stalactite covered Cenotes; deep-sea shipwrecks and sleeping clown fish on a late night excursion. But still unticked on my mustsee list (until now) was the whale shark. And it’s an encounter I’ll remember for the rest of my life. Most will associate the Maldives as a honeymooner’s paradise, and of course, it is. Few places are as tranquil, romantic or beautiful, so much so that it’s almost impossible to describe without pulling out the obligatory clichés, so I’ll get it over with quickly; the sand could not be whiter, or softer, so you can leave your shoes at home; the sea is crystal clear, a blue so striking and inviting that you’ll want to spend your entire trip fully immersed, marveling that yes, you can see the bottom no matter how deep it gets. As you take off on the sea-plane from Malé to the paradise island that awaits, you’ll spend the half an hour journey taking postcard perfect aerial shots, as you can’t quite believe that such a place of wonder actually exists, and that you’re there to witness it. I stayed at the Conrad, which lies in South Ari Atoll, three degrees north of the equator and split between Rangalifinolhu and Rangali Island. Linked by a flood-lit bridge, frolicking manta rays liked to gather there for a communal night-time roley-poley and to collect the plankton accumulating at the light source.
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When I first read how big the hotel was, I wondered if it may feel a little too large for a ‘paradise island’, but it just isn’t so. If anything, the vast size adds to the desert island feel. And with one island dedicated to families and the other to adults holidaying alone, you can choose between two types of holiday, both equally luxurious. Staying on the ‘adult’ island in a beautiful water villa, I’d finish each day perched on the verandah, feet in the Jacuzzi, gazing out to sea and listening to the soft clinking of the waves against the steps. The other advantage of the Conrad’s size is its choice of restaurants, because there’s no ‘off island’ meal-plan option, unless you want to catch a plane or boat. With seven eateries, four bars and around 14,000 bottles of wine, you won’t go hungry, or thirsty, and you certainly won’t get bored. Having visited the Maldives previously, splitting my time between the Four Seasons and the One and Only, the extensive culinary choice certainly set the hotel apart, in that respect, from its multiple ‘six-star’ competitors.
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Ithaa – the world’s first all-glass underwater restaurant – serves French food with an Asian twist, and will be a hit with kids of all ages (including the middle-aged) with fish peering in as you consume tuna tataki and spring rolls (slightly unsettling if you’ve gone for a gilled option). Fun as it was, it’s by no means the most chic or impressive watering hole on the island. Food centered entertainment is big at the Conrad; wine tasting is hosted in the wine cellar by the resort’s sommelier where the floor is covered in cool black sand, in keeping with the bare-foot luxury ethos of the island (even the staff go bare). There is also a cheese and wine bar, home to 101 types of cheeses, where pairing can fill a whole evening or just an hour, depending on how fromage friendly you’re feeling. By far the best place to wine and dine was the Koko Grill, a small open-air restaurant offering an eight-course Japanese-inspired tasting menu, while ten or so diners sat in a row facing the horizon as the chef prepared the feast right there. Nothing could be more romantic. The Vilu restaurant offered à la carte Mediterranean fine dining; Sunset Grill a beach-side lobster BBQ; and Mandhoo, organic and bio-dynamic cuisine for the health conscious. Between the other eateries, no request was too large, or craving too obscure: you want it, you’ll get it, and quite possibly, it’ll be the best you ever had. All in all, the food is fantastic across the board, and in the week I stayed I almost longed for the feeling of a hungry rumble if only to justify one more meal or at least justify the gluttony. As well as two adult spas; (one over-water offering fantastic holistic treatments with the other specialising in luxe colour – and chakra – therapy
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rituals, complete with a serenity spa deck and open-air Jacuzzi) there is one for children, too. The Ice Cream Spa, so it is named, offers the works; massages and facials as well as temporary tattoos and face painting, all using super-sweet inspired (and smelling) products. But no, having tried and failed, adult treatments are not available. Aside from exquisite food, outstanding service, myraid spa treatments and the opulence of a water villa (so awe-worthy it required a video tour via FaceTime to the jealous fiancé at home), the water activities on offer is where, for me, the real excitement began. Whale shark and dolphin snorkelling; turtle conservation trips; manta ray spotting; deserted island hopping; submarine hire; private yacht excursions and big-game fishing, were just a few options available. And while marine life isn’t unique to Conrad, (there’s no turtle-barring gate at the doors of the Shangri-La), barely a moment went by without there being a creature of some kind in sight. Most looking forward to the whale shark excursion, the group set out – a little nervous, extremely excited, and unsure exactly what to expect – on board the dive boat. Snorkel in hand and ready to jump in on cue, the first was spotted within minutes, as the boat crew stamped their feet on the top deck to signal for us to get in. Having tried and failed a number of times to swim with the beautiful beasts before, I could hardly believe my luck so soon. We saw a total of three altogether, swimming so close you could reach out and touch them, although it isn’t advisable, for their safety more than yours. They are gentle natured and extremely docile, and have no taste for Jewish princesses, so the trip is totally safe for youngsters, and no previous experience is required. An other-wordly experience, we swam alongside the third and largest (which was around 26ft) for at least 15 minutes, uninterrupted. Home to the whale shark conservation charity, the staff were incredibly knowledgeable about their subject, their excitement still evident despite doing this day in, day out. After days of languishing on the sand, enjoying fresh fruit cocktails, wine, fine food and a taste of decadence almost unimaginable, it was time to return home. Having flown business class with Turkish Airlines, I knew the opulence would last a little longer, or at least until touchdown at Heathrow. With a short stopover in Istanbul, we planned, and succeeded, in making full use of the incredible facilities. It’s a destination worth seeing in itself with its numerous food stalls, cinema, play areas, and the décor and service of a five- star hotel. We were already planning which pastries to select for the pit stop (the vanilla custard-filled filo was a hit on the way out). With a slightly longer transit slot going home, we fitted in a short city tour of Istanbul, a wonderful bonus to finish off what was already the trip of a lifetime. So accustomed was I to the Conrad way, that come Monday morning (and the chores of shoes and Oyster cards) that a return to office life was almost unbearable. No cocktails on command? No tea-time turtle spotting? No pool-aide on hand to brush off my lounger? Like a fish out of crystal clear water. n
NEED TO KNOW: Daily rates at Conrad Maldives Rangali Island start from $625 (approx £388) plus taxes, based on two adults sharing a Beach Villa. To make a reservation or for more information, visit www.conradmaldives.com or call 009 60-668-0629 Return fares from London Heathrow to Malé from £623 for economy class or £1,968 for business class, including taxes and charges. For more information, visit www.turkishairlines.com or call 084 4800 6666
Turkish Airlines Flagship Lounge in Istanbul, children’s play area
A River
Runs Through It Is there a commodity more precious than crude oil, diamonds or gold? Yes, says Rowena Marella-Daw: pure mineral water at Evian Spa
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vian mineral water comes from the rain and glacial snow settling on the French Alps and is filtered through glacial sand. The journey takes a minimum of 15 years, during which time the water is purified, acquiring a delicate balance of minerals before it reaches the Cachat Spring in the town of Evian-Les-Bains and the bottling plant. The healing properties of water from the Sainte Catherine spring were discovered in 1789, when the Marquis of Lessert, who was at the time suffering from kidney and liver ailments, drank from the spring during his regular walks. Over time, his health improved, which he claimed was due to the “miraculous” water. Local doctors began prescribing it to their patients, and in 1878, the French Ministry of Health gave Cachat water its stamp of approval. A
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marker bearing the name “1789 Source Cachat” can be seen above the source at Evian-Les-Bains, where local residents come to fill their jugs, free of charge. The resort comprises two luxury hotels, Hotel Ermitage, and Hotel Royal, the Evian Golf Masters Golf Club, and recreation facilities for children. Both hotels are graced with sweeping views of the lake, manicured gardens and lawns, although they each exude a distinct charm and character. Since its inauguration in 1909, the Hotel Royal has been frequented by members of Europe’s high society and distinguished guests, including the Aga Khan. The hotel has seen some dramas and transformations in its time, and today still retains an air of elegance and sense of tradition with its grand salons and period features. The restaurant is equally luxurious, and dining here feels like a special occasion. In contrast to
its older sister, Hotel Ermitage has a more intimate, contemporary setting. Vibrant colours, textures of velvet, leather and contemporary art bring the style up to date, although I was pleased they retained the more traditional revolving entrance door made of darkwood, glass and polished brass handles. On a cold winter’s night, dining at the La Table restaurant provides a cosy corner, with just the right amount of tables and a creative menu using seasonal, locallygrown ingredients. Seize any opportunity to enjoy a meal or cocktail on the terrace in the sunshine. The resort has three havens for pampering – Le Spa Quatre Terres at Hotel Ermitage, Spa Evian Source at Hotel Royal, and Evian Les Thermes, in Évian-les-Bains. Le Spa Quatre Terre’s signature ritual, Soin Complet du Corp “Quatre Terres”, starts with an exfoliating salt scrub, followed by warm clay and volcanic mud smothered all over the body. Mud treatments can feel sticky and uncomfortable, but worth enduring – after rinsing it off, without exaggeration, my skin turned to silk. A lovely ending is a gentle sleep-inducing massage using basalt stone and aromatic oil. The concept of purity permeates throughout – from the minimalist white lobby to the treatment rooms. Compared to most spas where the lights are dimmed and aromas of oil pervade, this one is bright and airy, sparse and bordering on clinical. With very little idea what my treatment involved, I was ushered into a room to find a spotless white tub filled with warm Evian water. For 25 minutes, I lay blissfully as massage jets worked their way from my feet to my shoulders, each area synchronised with underwater lights of magenta, cobalt blue, green, orange and yellow. The floating sensation was amazing and I didn’t want it to end. In between spa sessions, a trek along the foothills of the French Alps and through the woods, hamlets and farms was an energising exercise, with a few stops to take in views of the valleys and hills around the region and learn about healing herbs and flowers from our expert guide. This culminated in a delightful alfresco lunch in a typical Alpine restaurant, La Fétiuère in Bernex, Rhône-Alpes, where we tucked into typical French country delights, such as fondue, scrumptious Beignets de Pomme de Terre (potato fritters to you and me), crusty bread, cured hams and salad. It’s tee time at the Evian Masters Golf Club and its 6,064-metre track of technically challenging contours and slopes, with only views of Lake Geneva and Alpine peaks to distract. The world’s top professional female golfers come here to compete, but no pressure, though – many come to learn at the training centre, play a round or practise their swing. At the end of my journey, I came to appreciate that Evian Resort is not just about consuming copious amounts of spring water. It provides guests an opportunity to de-stress and kick-start a healthy lifestyle. It also made me more discerning about what type of bottled water I drink. Pure and healthy is just how I like it. And I might even take up golf. n
Photography by J.N Reichel
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NEED TO KNOW: A four-night stay at the Hotel Ermitage on a B&B basis costs from €586 per person based on double occupancy, and includes one signature spa treatment per person. The Hotel Royal is closed until 28 February 2013 and re-opens on Friday, 1st March 2013. A four-night stay at the Hotel Royal on a B&B basis costs from €638 per person based on double occupancy, and includes one signature spa treatment per person. Evian Resort, BP 8, 74501 Evian-Les-Bains, France +33 (0)4 50 26 85 00, www.evianresort.com
listing See below for estate agents in YOUR area
Arlington Residential 8 Wellington Road NW8 9SP 020 7722 3322
Hanover Residential 102 St. John’s Wood Terrace, NW8 6PL 020 7722 2223
Marsh & Parsons 35 Maida Vale, W9 1TP 020 7368 4458
www.hanover-residential.com
www.marshandparsons.co.uk
www.arlingtonresidential.co.uk
Aston Chase 69 / 71 Park Road NW1 6XU 020 7724 4724
Ian Green Residential De Walden House, Allitsen Road St Johns Wood, NW8 7BA 020 7586 1000
800 Finchley Road NW11 7TJ 020 8455 3538
www.iangreenresidential.com
Kay & Co Hyde Park & Bayswater office 24-25 Albion Street, W2 2AX 020 7262 2030
Bargets 16 Park Road NW1 4SH 020 7402 9494
Marylebone & Regents Park office 20a Paddington Street, W1U 5QP 020 7486 6338
Knight Frank 5-7 Wellington Place, NW8 7PB 020 7586 2777
120a Mount Street, W1K 3NN 020 7483 8349 Hamptons International 99 St John’s Wood Terrace NW8 6PL 020 7717 5319
www.knightfrank.co.uk
21 Heath street, NW3 6TR 020 7717 5301
Laurence Leigh 020 7483 0101
www.hamptons.co.uk
www.laurenceleigh.com
RUNWILD A
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www.propertydivas.com
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www.rescorp.co.uk
79-81 Heath Street, NW3 6UG 020 7431 8686
www.foxgregory.co.uk
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Property Divas Limited 34a Rosslyn Hill, Hampstead, NW3 1NH 020 7431 8000
Rescorp Residential 58 Acacia Road, St John’s Wood, NW8 6AG 020 3348 8000
Fox Gregory 102-104 Allitsen Road St John’s Wood NW8 7AY 020 7586 1500
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192 West End Lane, NW6 1SG 020 7794 7111
www.kayandco.com
www.bargets.co.uk
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8a Canfield Gardens, NW6 3BS 020 7625 4567
www.parkheath.com
www.astonchase.com
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Parkheath 208 Haverstock Hill, NW3 2AG 020 7431 1234
Savills 7 Perrin’s Court, NW3 1QS 020 7472 5000 15 St John’s Wood High Street NW8 7NG 020 3043 3600 www.savills.co.uk
If you would like to appear within the property pages of VANTAGE, contact Felicity Morgan-Harvey, property manager, on 020 7987 4320 or f.morgan-harvey@runwildgroup.co.uk
Vantage P R O P E RT Y
showcasing the Image: Devonshire Place, Marylebone Courtesy of Kay & Co, p. 142
finest HOMES & PROPERTY from the best estate agents
Regency
townhouse Beautiful marylebone homes
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Knight Frank
Mackennel Street, St John’s Wood NW8 Stunning new build home
An elegant house offering levels of outstanding living and entertaining space, complemented by a large roof terrace. 4 bedrooms, 5 bathrooms, 3 reception rooms, large roof terrace, private parking. EPC rating B. Approximately 357.5 sq m (3,848 sq ft) Freehold Guide Price: ÂŁ5,750,000 (SJW100086)
KnightFrank.co.uk/St-Johns-Wood stjohnswood@knightfrank.com 020 7586 2777
Knight Frank
Cavendish Avenue, St John’s Wood NW8 Newly refurbished six bedroom house
The property features well planned living accommodation, with ample outside space. Master bedroom with en suite bathroom, 5 further bedrooms (4 with en suite facilities), family bathroom, reception room, eat in kitchen, dining room, media room, gym with steam/ shower, balcony, terrace garden. EPC rating TBC. Approximately 359.7 sq m (3,872 sq ft) Freehold Guide Price: ÂŁ6,950,000 (SJW130021)
KnightFrank.co.uk/St-Johns-Wood stjohnswood@knightfrank.com 020 7586 2777
Knight Frank
Loudoun Road, St John’s Wood NW8 Rarely available low built lateral house
This bright and spacious detached family house is situated on a large westerly facing plot with off street parking for several cars. 6 bedrooms, 5 reception rooms, 5 bathrooms, large garden, patio, terrace, media and leisure facilities. EPC rating D. Approximately 420.3 sq m (4,524 sq ft)
Freehold Guide Price: ÂŁ8,750,000 (SJW130008)
KnightFrank.co.uk/St-Johns-Wood stjohnswood@knightfrank.com 020 7586 2777
Knight Frank
Stormont Road, Hampstead Garden Suburb N2 Super prime luxury home
An immaculate newly restored and brilliantly finished double fronted detached house with a large 122’ west facing garden set behind electronically opened gates. Master bedroom with en suite bathroom and dressing room, 6 further bedrooms (5 with en suite bathrooms), family bathroom, kitchen/breakfast room, dining room, reception room, study, office, utility room, cinema, gymnasium, swimming pool, garage, EPC rating C. Approximately 850 sq m (9,149 sq ft) Freehold Guide Price: £14,495,000 (HAM120110)
KnightFrank.co.uk/Hampstead hampstead@knightfrank.com 020 7431 8686
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REGENT S COURTYARD
LONDON NW1 An exclusive gated development of five contemporary houses bordering Regent’s Park, each featuring an abundance of living space and private patio gardens. The houses provide an entire floor dedicated to a luxurious dual aspect reception room, perfect for relaxing or entertaining and further benefit from luxurious principal bedroom suites and indulgent home cinemas. Residents can move from car to house securely and comfortably with direct access from the underground car park to each house. The development is secured with CCTV throughout and benefits from an onsite 24 hour uniformed concierge.
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JOINT SOLE AGENTS
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UPPER PARK ROAD BELSIZE PARK NW3 £4,999,950 FREEHOLD A unique opportunity to purchase a semi-detached Victorian home (367.3sq m/3,954sq ft) situated in this popular road. The house features well planned accommodation with a bespoke 28' kitchen/breakfast room leading directly onto a private 60' landscaped rear garden. Upper Park Road is ideally located close to the boutique shops and cafés on England’s Lane and Haverstock Hill whilst within walking distance of Belsize Park Underground Station (Northern Line) and the open spaces of Hampstead Heath. ACCOMMODATION AND AMENITIES Principal Bedroom with Dressing Room & En-Suite Bathroom, 3 Further Bedrooms, Family Bathroom, Shower Room (En-Suite), Fully Fitted Kitchen/Breakfast Area, Reception Room, Dining Room, Family Room, Study, Guest Cloakroom, Unconverted Loft, Utility Room, Larder/Store Room, Boot Room, Built-In Sound & Lighting System, Air-Conditioning to Bedrooms, 60’ Landscaped Rear Garden, Off-Street Parking for a further 3 Cars. JOINT SOLE AGENT
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REGENT’S PARK OFFICE 69–71 PARK ROAD LONDON NW1 6XU T –020 7724 4724 F –020 7724 6160
FORMOSA STREET LITTLE VENICE W9 £3,950,000 FREEHOLD A rare opportunity to purchase a stunning Victorian town house that has been meticulously restored throughout to an exceptionally high standard. The house provides bright and spacious well planned accommodation featuring expansive entertaining areas skilfully combining contemporary amenities with the original period features. The property also benefits from a stylish south facing patio garden and a charming open aspect over Bristol Mews to the rear. Formosa Street is conveniently located only 100m from both Warwick Avenue Underground Station (Bakerloo Line) and The Regent’s Canal, in addition to which, London Heathrow Airport is only 15 minutes away on the Heathrow Express from Paddington. The extensive sporting facilities of Paddington Recreation Ground (2.7 acres) and the restaurants, shops and boutiques of Clifton Gardens are both less than 3/4 of a mile away. ACCOMMODATION AND AMENITIES Principal Bedroom with Dressing Room and En-Suite Bathroom, 3 Further Bedrooms (1 with En-Suite Shower Room), Family Bathroom, Reception Room, Dining Room, Utility Room, Guest Cloakroom, Kitchen/Family Room/Breakfast Room, RoofTerrace, Underfloor Heating, Sonos Sound System, Patio Garden. JOINT SOLE AGENT
The Coach House NW3 ÂŁ1,300,000
Unique to the area, a white stuccofronted Coach House forming part of a traditional Belsize part-stucco villa, on a tree-lined road close to Hampstead Heath.
1276 sq ft 3 bedrooms 3 bathrooms 2 reception rooms Share of freehold
With potential for interior refurbishment, the Coach House is complete with a secluded rear patio garden and off street parking for two cars.
Contact Belsize Park Sales Office 020 7431 1234
South Hampstead Sales 020 7625 4567 Lettings 020 7644 0800 nw6@parkheath.com
Belsize Park Sales 020 7431 1234 Lettings 020 7431 3104 nw3@parkheath.com
West Hampstead Sales 020 7794 7111 Lettings 020 7794 7111 192@parkheath.com
Property Management Tel 020 7722 6777 pm@parkheath.com
www.parkheath.com
GoldhurstTerrace NW6 ÂŁ3,500,000
In the heart of the South Hampstead Conservation Area, a substantial semidetached family house arranged over three storeys.
3452 sq ft 7 bedrooms 3 reception rooms 100+ ft rear garden Off street parking
With period features throughout, the property also offers a large south-facing Contact West Hampstead Sales Office 020 7794 7111 rear garden and off street parking.
South Hampstead Sales 020 7625 4567 Lettings 020 7644 0800 nw6@parkheath.com
Belsize Park Sales 020 7431 1234 Lettings 020 7431 3104 nw3@parkheath.com
West Hampstead Sales 020 7794 7111 Lettings 020 7794 7111 192@parkheath.com
Property Management Tel 020 7722 6777 pm@parkheath.com
www.parkheath.com
Belsize Park NW3 ÂŁ1,325,000
Flexible accommodation can be found within this 1st and 2nd floor maisonette, which boasts a stunning contemporary finish and wood flooring.
1078 sq ft 2/3 bedrooms 2 bathrooms 24ft reception Share of freehold
Set within a typical Belsize stucco villa, Belsize Park Sales Office the property is conveniently located for Contact 020 7431 1234 the excellent shopping and transport facilities of Belsize Park.
South Hampstead Sales 020 7625 4567 Lettings 020 7644 0800 nw6@parkheath.com
Belsize Park Sales 020 7431 1234 Lettings 020 7431 3104 nw3@parkheath.com
West Hampstead Sales 020 7794 7111 Lettings 020 7794 7111 192@parkheath.com
Property Management Tel 020 7722 6777 pm@parkheath.com
www.parkheath.com
Upper Park Road NW3 ÂŁ1,345,000
A contemporary upper maisonette set across the second and third floors within an impressive period house near the Heath.
1436 sq ft 3 bedrooms 2 bathrooms 100+ ft rear garden Off street parking
Bright and spacious the property offers Belsize Park Sales Office an impressive 35ft entertaining space as Contact 020 7431 1234 well as a 26ft master bedroom.
South Hampstead Sales 020 7625 4567 Lettings 020 7644 0800 nw6@parkheath.com
Belsize Park Sales 020 7431 1234 Lettings 020 7431 3104 nw3@parkheath.com
West Hampstead Sales 020 7794 7111 Lettings 020 7794 7111 192@parkheath.com
Property Management Tel 020 7722 6777 pm@parkheath.com
www.parkheath.com
In THE
know Marc Schneiderman, director at Arlington Residential, answers questions about the property market
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mail, buying sandwiches for board room meetings, photocopying maps and running errands. I am still in touch with the person who employed me some 30 years ago and without him first giving me a job, and then asking me if I would like to stay on after, I wonder what I might be doing today. Have you invested in property? Yes, you can’t be a cobbler with no shoes! What would your advice be to anyone looking to invest in property now? My advice would depend on the sum of money the investors in question may have at their disposal. Assuming the profile of the majority of our clients I would encourage buying St John’s Wood freehold town houses or period houses in the price category of £1.5£4m. This market has seen phenomenal capital growth over the last ten years and impressive rental returns. What has been your largest sale to date? There are a number of house transactions that my firm has been involved with in excess of £20m. What has been your biggest investment to date? Properties, in general. How did Arlington Residential start? Arlington Residential was formed in 1993, prior to which I had been working for a West End firm of residential agents for six years where I had developed a real appetite for dealing with sales at the middle to top-end of the market in central and North West London. Notwithstanding that, for the first few months I sat alone in a big empty space with a solitary desk, I was quietly confident that I had made the right decision to start my own business. Quickly the business grew, thanks to the loyalty of a number of clients I had previously worked with. Within my first few months, Arlington Residential transacted two large sales which proved to be good building blocks, on which my firm could grow from. What was your first job? My first job was working for an estate agent friend of my father’s at their head office in Manchester Square in the West End. I started work the day before my 16th birthday. It was supposed to be a job just for the summer holidays before I went back to school to do A-Levels. However, the then joint managing director asked me after four weeks if I might like to carry on and continue working for his firm. This proved to be irresistible to me at the time. The idea of working in the West End earning money or going back to school to study for exams really needed little thought. I continued at their head office franking the
If you could change one thing about the system what would it be? I would like there to be more efficiency. There can be a lack of professionalism from some in the estate agent industry, and it needs addressing. It is also a flaw in the system that at any time during the sales process, prior to exchanging contracts, buyers and sellers can change their minds. It leads to frustration with all concerned in the transaction and wastes time, energy and money. With regards to money, what is the most important lesson you have learnt in life? Actually there are two things I would say. The first is that I have learnt not to judge people or make assumptions about people until I have really got to know them. Most of our clients are quite unassuming – ‘money talks, wealth whispers’. Secondly, I have learnt that if a person has money it doesn’t make them any better than somebody without money. In reality a rich person is nothing but a poor person with money. n
Arlington Residential 8 Wellington Road NW8 9SP 020 7722 3322 www.arlingtonresidential.com
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A bright fourth floor ApArtment within this sought After gAted development within A few moments wAlk of hAmpsteAd heAth And hAmpsteAd high street. the flAt provides 1,628 sq ft/ 151 sq m of AccommodAtion with the benefit of 2 underground gArAge spAces, lAndscAped communAl gArdens And two bAlconies.
3 bedrooms, 2 bAthrooms, shower room, double reception room, study/bedroom 4, kitchen
shAre of freehold price ÂŁ1,650,000
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A bright And well-presented grAde i listed house within this sought After nAsh terrAce in regent's pArk. the house provides 2,583 sq ft/240 sq M of AccoMModAtion And feAtures An elegAnt first floor drAwing rooM with floor to ceiling windows. chester plAce is superbly locAted on the eAstern side of regents pArk providing eAsy Access to the west end And the city. principAl bedrooM with en-suite bAthrooM, 3 further bedrooMs, fAMily bAthrooM, shower rooM, fully fitted kitchen/breAkfAst rooM, double length drAwing rooM, dining rooM, study, guest cloAkrooM 95 yeAr leAse price ÂŁ3,995,000
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102 St John’s Wood Terrace, St John’s Wood, London NW8 6PL
t: 020 7722 2223 e: info@hanover-residential.com w: hanover-residential.com
Castellain Mansions, Maida Vale W9
Ossulton Way, Hampstead Garden N2
A delightful three bedroom (996 sq ft / 93 sq m) apartment situated on the third floor of this highly regarded mansion block in the heart of Maida Vale. The property boasts an excellent reception room with period fireplace and a sizeable eat in kitchen and access to stunning communal gardens to the rear of the block. EPC: E
A detached 1930’s Art Deco family home, comprising of four bedrooms, two bathrooms and two reception rooms. The property benefits from a secluded garden, detached garage and is well located for the amenities and transport links of Hampstead Garden Suburb. This house is in sought after location within easy access of Northern Line Tube Station. The property benefits from a garage, off street parking and private garden. EPC: F
Joint Sole Agent
Share of Freehold
£875,000
Sole Agent
Freehold
£999,999
Rose Joan Mews, West Hampstead NW6
The Yoo Building, St Johns Wood NW8
An exceptional three bedroom, two storey mews house (1,332 sq ft / 123 sq m) located within this exclusive modern development. The reception room features a curved vaulted ceiling and sliding doors leading onto a south-facing terrace. Other features include a floating staircase, large sky-light, under-floor heating, comfort cooling, storage room, private courtyard and two underground parking spaces. EPC: C
A fantastic two bedroom two bathroom apartment boasting a large reception room with open-plan kitchen, wooden floors and high quality fixtures and fittings. Additional benefits include 24hr porterage, secure allocated parking and a passenger lift. The apartment is well located for all the amenities and transport links offered by both St John’s Wood and Maida Vale. EPC: D
Sole Agent
Leasehold
£1,050,000
Principal Agent
Leasehold
£1,250,000
Blazer Court, St Johns Wood NW8
Aberdeen Court, Maida Vaile W9
A well-presented two bedroom two bathroom apartment (1,017 sq ft/94 sq m) set within this modern purpose built block benefitting from a double reception/dining room and a fantastic 20 ft west facing terrace. Blazer Court has 24 hour porterage, secure underground parking and is located on St John’s Wood Road, directly opposite the world famous Lord’s cricket ground. EPC: C
A beautifully presented two double bedroom (formerly three bedrooms), two bathroom apartment (1,654 sq ft / 154 sq m) located on the second floor of this smart mansion block in Little Venice. The apartment is offered in excellent decorative condition and features a stunning double reception room, separate dining room and vast entrance hall; offering tremendous entertaining space. EPC: D
Principal Agent
Share of Freehold
£1,275,000
Principal Agent
Leasehold
£1,595,000
Kidderpore Avenue, Hampstead NW3
Stockleigh Hall, St Johns Wood NW8
A beautifully presented four bedroom apartment (2,113 sq ft / 196 sq m) situated on the ground floor of this period detached house. The apartment affords its own private entrance and features a stunning 29’ reception room, a ‘Boffi’ kitchen and direct access to its own patio leading onto the 137 ft communal garden. Kidderpore Avenue is a residential, tree lined road within walking distance of Hampstead Heath and Hampstead village.
A delightful three bedroom, three bathroom apartment situated on the third floor of this prestigious and sought-after purpose built block on Prince Albert Road. The apartment is presented in good decorative condition and features an impressive 25ft double reception room. Stockleigh Hall is located opposite Regents Park and benefits from 24 hour porterage, passenger lift and a share of the freehold. EPC: D
Principal Agent
Share of Freehold
£2,350,000
Sole Agent
Share of Freehold
£2,500,000
102 St John’s Wood Terrace, St John’s Wood, London NW8 6PL
t: 020 7722 2223 e: info@hanover-residential.com w: hanover-residential.com
Castellain Road, Maida Vale W9
Avenue Road, St John’s Wood NW8
A beautiful two bedroom apartment located in a quiet residential street, overlooking exquisite, park-like communal gardens. This garden-level property comprises two bedrooms, family bathroom, spacious kitchen and reception leading to private decked terrace which itself leads to a giant communal space. It has been lovingly constructed over time by its owner-occupiers and represents a rare opportunity in Maida Vale living.
A superior two bedroom, two bathroom apartment located in a beautifully-maintained apartment block perfectly situated for the shops, transport links and amenities of St Johns Wood and Swiss Cottage. Located on the first floor and with ‘first come, first serve’ parking, the property comprises modern eat-in kitchen, spacious reception, two double bedrooms and two bathrooms (one en-suite).
£595 per week
£675 per week
Fairfax Place, South Hampstead NW6
Sunny Mews, Primrose Hill NW1
A recently renovated three bedroom, two bathroom mews house located in a quiet cobbled mews. This stunning property offers three good size bedrooms and a luxury kitchen open plan to the reception room. The reception room features bi-folding sliding doors onto a delightful patio garden, ideal for entertaining.
Located behind an electric gated entrance is this recently built development of six contemporary Mews houses. This house offers a fully fitted kitchen, a double aspect reception room leading to a bridged terrace, three double bedrooms, one with en-suite bathroom, an additional family bathroom and one allocated parking space.
£895 per week
£1,000 per week
St James’ Close, St Johns Wood NW8
The Yoo Building, St John’s Wood NW8
A fabulous four bedroom apartment situated on the third floor of this well maintained block on Prince Albert Road. This property comprises a stunning reception/dining room with balcony overlooking Regents Park, master bedroom with walk-in wardrobes & ensuite bathroom, three further bedrooms, eat-in kitchen, en-suite shower room, second bathroom, guest WC and parking space.
A stunning two bedroom apartment situated in this modern purpose built block designed by Phillip Starck. The apartment boasts a large reception room with an open-plan kitchen, wooden floors and high quality fixtures and fittings. The Yoo Building features impressive 24 hour concierge and a secure gated parking space.
£1,500 per week
£1,300 per week
Hamilton Gardens, St John’s Wood NW8
Collection Place, St Johns Wood NW8
A very well presented family house (2062 sq ft / 191 sq m approx) discreetly located within this quiet enclave in the heart of St John’s Wood. Hamilton Gardens is situated on the West side of St John’s Wood just off Abbey Road within half a mile of the many boutiques and restaurants on St John’s Wood High Street and the Underground Station (Jubilee Line).
Collection Place is a landmark development created by award-winning architects. This stunning four bedroom, three bathroom contemporary house is offered in immaculate condition and secure underground parking for two cars. Luxury features include comfort cooling, Crestron Automation, under floor heating, limestone and timber floors, decked roof terrace, 24-hour concierge and CCTV.
£1,495 per week
£2,500 per week
savills.co.uk
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SPECTACULAR PENTHOUSE WITH SENSATIONAL VIEWS ACROSS LONDON columbas drive, nw3 3 reception rooms ø study ø kitchen/breakfast room ø 3 bedrooms ø 3 bathrooms ø swimming pool ø gym ø 24hr porter ø underground parking for 4 cars ø terrace ø lift ø 336 sq m (3,616 sq ft) ø EPC=C Guide £6.5 million Share of Freehold
Savills Hampstead Peter Brookes pbrookes@savills.com
020 7472 5000
savills.co.uk savills.co.uk
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AAMAJESTIC MAJESTICHEATH HEATHSIDE SIDEPOSITION POSITION spaniards spaniardsend, end,nw3 nw3 3 reception 3 reception rooms rooms øø kitchen kitchen øø 5 bedrooms 5 bedrooms øø 3 bathrooms 3 bathrooms øø west-facing west-facing garden garden øø permission permission forfor demolition demolition and and redevelopment redevelopment øø consented consented plans plans forfor approximately approximately 800 800 sqsq mm (8,600 (8,600 sqsq ft) ft) øø currently currently 410 410 sqsq mm (4,418 (4,418 sqsq ft) ft) øø EPC=C EPC=C
Guide Guide £7.5 £7.5 million millionFreehold Freehold
Savills Savills Hampstead Hampstead Peter Peter Brookes Brookes pbrookes@savills.com pbrookes@savills.com
020 020 7472 7472 5000 5000
savills.co.uk
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A STUCCO FRONTED VILLA LOCATED ON THE DESIRABLE WEST SIDE OF ST. JOHN'S WOOD springfield road, nw8 A newly refurbished semi-detached villa ø 4 reception rooms ø cinema ø kitchen/breakfast room ø 4 bedrooms ø 2 bathrooms ø 2 guest cloakrooms ø utility room ø patio ø front and rear gardens ø off-street parking ø 385 sq m (3,064 sq ft) ø EPC=D Asking £4.2 million Freehold
Savills St John's Wood
2
Zach Madison zmadison@savills.com
020 3043 3600
A REFURBISHED HOUSE SET WITHIN THIS MUCH SOUGHTAFTER LOCATION chalcot crescent, nw1 Double reception room ø dining room ø kitchen ø 2 bedrooms ø 2 bathrooms ø utility room ø garden ø garage ø off-street parking ø newly refurbished ø 187 sq m (2,021 sq ft) ø EPC=C Guide £3.5 million
Savills St John's Wood Zach Madison zmadison@savills.com
020 3043 3600
2847
Hampstead Village NW3 A sensational interior designed maisonette, with stunning views towards the London skyline and the Heath, situated within an impressive period residence in a most desirable village enclave.
This exceptional three bedroom apartment has been comprehensively renovated to a very high specification. The property provides bright and well proportioned living space, featuring an outstanding 34ft double reception room with open plan kitchen with large glass windows. The property further comprises principal bedroom with en suite shower room, 2 further bedrooms and second bathroom. Enviably positioned in a historic location only moments from Hampstead Heath, together with the many boutiques, pavement cafes and restaurants in Hampstead Village. EPC rating = E.
Guide ÂŁ1.75 million 999 Year Lease
284768_GHSav_Vantage_Mar13 1
11/02/2013 10:54
Hamptons St. John’s Wood Office Sales. 020 7717 5487 stjohnswood@hamptons-int.com
Consort Lodge, NW8 A spacious three bedroom apartment on the first floor of this sought after 24hr portered building overlooking Regents Park. The apartment benefits from a large reception/dining room, impressive master bedroom and two further bedrooms (all with en-suite bathrooms), fitted kitchen, and outdoor terrace space. Hamptons St. John’s Wood Office 020 7717 5487 stjohnswood@hamptons-int.com JSA Savills
£3,000,000 Share of Freehold Three Bedrooms Two Reception Rooms Three Bathrooms Roof Terrace Garden Private Parking
Hamptons Hampstead Office
Sales. 020 7717 5449 hampstead@hamptons-int.com
Broadlands Road, N6 Dating from 1879 this Grade II listed house is set back from the road behind a driveway, with a 103’ frontage and offers 6,000 square feet of magnificent family accommodation. Outstanding entertaining rooms with a plethora of original features are complemented by generous bedrooms and a recently refurbished self-contained apartment. Hamptons Hampstead Office 020 7717 5449 hampstead@hamptons-int.com
Guide Price £5,000,000 Freehold 5 stunning reception rooms 8 bedrooms 4 bathrooms Gorgeous ½ acre grounds Gravel driveway & detached garage Stunning period features
Hamptons St. John’s Wood Office Lettings. 020 7717 5487 stjohnswoodlettings@hamptons-int.com
Woronzow Road, NW8 £2,400 per week
A fantastic house, offering spacious accommodation in an enviable location close to St. John’s Wood High Street. This stunning property set over four floors comprises four double bedrooms, three bathrooms, a large reception room, an extensive kitchen and dining room, and patio area.
Hamilton Terrace, NW8 £975 per week
A beautiful three bedroom apartment set on this desirable tree lined road in a red brick conversion. The apartment comprises a large reception room ideal for entertaining, fitted kitchen, three bedrooms, three bathrooms and access to a communal garden.
Hamptons St. John’s Wood Office Lettings. 020 7717 5487 stjohnswoodlettings@hamptons-int.com
Hamilton Gardens, NW8 £2,950 per week A newly refurbished, mid terrace Victorian house offering spacious and contemporary accommodation. The property comprises a double reception room with wood floors, a fitted kitchen leading onto the dining room, a west-facing rear garden, four double bedrooms and three bathrooms (two en-suite).
Templar Court, NW8 £1,350 per week A bright and airy three bedroom, two bathroom duplex apartment situated on the first and second floors of this sought-after block. The property benefits from a 24 hour porter, secure underground parking, a lift, and a private balcony.
Marlborough Place ST. JOHN’S WOOD NW8
A classically inspired Regency style residence (481 sq m / 5,177 sq ft) designed by Robert Adam architects and originally constructed by Galliard Heritage in 2004. The house, which has been maintained by the current owners to an exceptionally high standard, features elegant entertaining areas with period proportions, as well as a charming conservatory leading onto a private rear garden. Marlborough Place is ideally located within close proximity of the shopping and transport facilities of St John’s Wood High Street, including St John’s Wood Underground Station (Jubilee Line) and the American School in London.
Accommodation and Amenities Principal Bedroom with En Suite Bathroom & Shower Room & ‘His & Her’ Dressing Rooms, Bedroom 2 with Dressing Room & En Suite Shower Room, 2 Further Bedrooms, 2 Further Bathrooms (1 En Suite), Drawing Room, Fully Fitted Kitchen/Breakfast Room, Dining Room, Family Room, TV/Sitting Room, Conservatory, Utility Room/Kitchenette, Guest Cloakroom, Plant Room, Underfloor Heating, Comfort Cooling/Heating, Video Entryphone, Integrated Music System, South Facing Landscaped Split Level Walled Rear Garden, Double Width Integral Garage, Driveway Providing Secure Parking for 2 Further Cars with Underdrive Heating. EPC/C. FREEHOLD
JOINT SOLE AGENTS
£6,950,000
Your reward for all the lonely dinners at your desk.
We believe that every building is one-of-akind. Every design is created to a unique, specific and personal vision. And every project requires individual understanding, research and planning. Blending architectural flair with building surveying professionalism. Collaborating with clients, suppliers, engineers and builders. Together we create original and beautiful bespoke houses. We are experienced and pragmatic, fresh thinking and innovative; we are Pennington Phillips.
Pennington Phillips 16 Spectrum House 32–34 Gordon House Road London NW5 1LP t: 020 7267 1414 f: 020 7267 7878 design@penningtonphillips.co.uk
foxgregory.co.uk
Spacious Detached Family Home
St John’s Wood Borders Price on Application Joint Sole Agent
A low built detached family home which offers spacious and well planned accommodation over three floors. The house has been refurbished in recent years and features two intercommunicating reception rooms as well as a large eat in kitchen which leads directly onto a pretty south facing rear garden. The property benefits from off street parking and a large garage.
Fox Gregory, 102 Allitsen Road, London NW8 7AY 020 7586 1500 enquiries@foxgregory.co.uk
Two decades of independent thinking
Blenheim Road NW8
LET
Frognal Lane NW3
Ordnance Hill NW8
Avenue Road NW8
foxgregory.co.uk
The Lane NW8
St John’s Wood Road NW8
LET
South Lodge NW8
Loudoun Road NW8
Abbey Lodge NW8
LET
Avenue Lodge NW8
Imperial Court NW8
Grove End Road NW8
London House NW8
Melina Place NW8
Harley House NW1
LET
Stockleigh Hall NW8 Fox Gregory, 102 Allitsen Road, London NW8 7AY 020 7586 1500 Sales | Lettings | Investments
Springfield Road, St Johns Wood, NW8 An elegant and imposing, semi-detached family house situated on this extremely desirable tree lined avenue. The accommodation (3,181 sq ft/ 295.90 sq m), which is arranged over four floors, is offered in excellent decorative condition. The house boasts a wonderful open planned garden level floor, including a Mark Wilkinson kitchen and benefits from a delightful landscaped south facing rear garden. There is also CAT5 cabling throughout the house. Springfield Road is located on the west side of St Johns Wood within half a mile of The American School London. EPC rated - E
Freehold Guide Price: ÂŁ4,850,000
www.laurenceleigh.com / 020 7483 0101
JSA - Behr & Butchoff
Prices hit a record in 2008. But you know what records are for.
2012: Kay & Co has helped break previous highs for sale prices in London W1 and W2. Indeed, we’re achieving +13% compared with the previous peak of four years ago. Now, what can we do for you?
Hyde Park & Bayswater 020 7262 2030 Marylebone & Regent’s Park 020 7486 6338
kayandco.com Property with Intelligence
kayandco.com
W1
Harrowby Street, Marylebone
020 3394 0013 sales.marylebone@kayandco.com
ÂŁ3,150,000 Leasehold An attractive penthouse in superb condition situated atop this sought after apartment building. This property benefits from a double height reception room as well as terraces, two car parking spaces and a concierge service. Flats of this size and calibre very rarely come to the market. Energy Rating: C
W1
Devonshire Place, Marylebone
020 3394 0013 lettings.marylebone@kayandco.com
ÂŁ2,200 Per Week Furnished A beautifully-presented three bedroom, two bathroom garden flat located in the heart of Marylebone Village. With over 2,000 sq ft of living space and interior-designed to the highest standard, this property features a large reception with wood flooring, a modern fully-fitted kitchen, private decked terrace leading to a private garden, utility room, study/playroom and excellent storage throughout. Energy Rating: D
kayandco.com
W1
Montagu Square, Marylebone
020 3394 0013 sales.marylebone@kayandco.com
ÂŁ2,700,000 Leasehold The epitome of fine Marylebone living; a beautifully refurbished three bedroom, three bathroom duplex apartment with the benefit of a private town garden as well as the use of the communal gardens of Montagu Square. Featuring a delightful reception room and dining room with very high ceilings. Energy Rating: D
W1
Bulstrode Street, Marylebone
020 3394 0013 lettings.marylebone@kayandco.com
ÂŁ1,050 Per Week Furnished/Unfurnished A newly refurbished two bedroom, two bathroom apartment on the third and fourth floor of this soughtafter block. The property features a spacious open plan kitchen to reception room, a private roof terrace and good built-in storage. Energy Rating: C
The spirit of St John’s Wood Rescorp Residential are pleased to offer for sale two beautifully refurbished apartments located on London’s Avenue Road in St Johns Wood. Also on offer for let are two spacious and bright apartments located only minutes from both Regents Park and Primrose Hill.
Avenue Lodge £1,250,000
Avenue Road £1,345,000
This raised ground floor recently refurbished apartment features a large reception room with a fully fitted modern open plan kitchen. The large master bedroom has an en-suite bathroom and there is a further bedroom with an en-suite shower room and a guest toilet. The apartment also benefits from 24hr porterage service.
This newly refurbished apartment features a large reception room with a fully fitted modern open plan kitchen. The large master bedroom benefits from an en-suite bathroom and two further bedrooms, a shower room and a guest toilet. The property also benefits from 24hr porterage service.
Clive Court £700 per week
Imperial Court £850 per week
A recently refurbished three bedroom apartment situated on the third floor of a sought after period mansion block. The apartment comprises of a bright reception and dining area with wooden flooring, a fully fitted open plan kitchen, master bedroom with en-suite bathroom, two further bedrooms and a family bathroom. Clive Court also benefits from a 24hr porterage service.
This bright and spacious apartment comprises of a large reception room, a fully fitted kitchen, a large master bedroom with an en-suite bathroom, a second large bedroom with an en-suite bathroom and a guest toilet. Also benefits from 24hr porterage and an underground parking space.
Please call us for viewing arrangements.
Vic Chhabria Director
SALES
LETTINGS
MANAGEMENT
58 Acacia Road, St Johns Wood, London NW8 6AG - T: 0203 348 8000 www.rescorp.co.uk
ÂŁ775,000 Freehold Sole Agent
Asmuns Place, Hampstead Garden Suburb, NW11
A charming and character filled three bedroom cottage comprising 836 sq ft / 77.7 sq m located on this desirable tree lined street on the south side of the Suburb situated within easy walking distance to the shopping and transport amenities of Temple Fortune. The property has been lovingly restored by the current owner, is offered in good condition throughout and benefits from gardens to both the front and rear. EPC Band : D
Property Divas Limited, 34a Rosslyn Hill, Hampstead, NW3 1NH 020 7431 8000 info@propertydivas.com www.propertydivas.com
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SALES
See all of our properties online: marshandparsons.co.uk
Blomfield Road W9 ÂŁ1,950,000 This beautiful interior designed apartment is situated on the upper floors of an imposing period house in the heart of Little Venice. The bright accommodation boasts an excellent triple aspect reception room with a modern, well equipped kitchen, a spacious master bedroom with a beautiful en suite bathroom, two further double bedrooms and a stunning family bathroom. Leasehold. EPC=D. Sole Agents LITTLE VENICE: 020 7993 3050 sales.lve@marshandparsons.co.uk
Warrington Crescent W9 ÂŁ1,550,000 Located in the heart of Little Venice with access to stunning communal gardens, this rarely available apartment boasts an elegant, open plan kitchen/reception room with high ceilings, a master bedroom with en suite bathroom, two double bedrooms with en suite shower rooms, a further bedroom and a family bathroom. Warrington Crescent is a sought after road, ideally located for Formosa Street and Clifton Road. Share of Freehold. EPC=E. Sole Agents. LITTLE VENICE: 020 7993 3050 sales.lve@marshandparsons.co.uk
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