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SMU Fashion Media TV: Arm Parties
By Caroline Foster and Grace Davis
cfoster@smu.edu / gdavis@smu.edu
Capsizing the Mary Jane
By Grace Davis
gdavis@smu.edu
Mary Jane got a makeover this year. Dressed in the hottest hues of the season — the lightest shade of blush, a more adventurous “Salad” green and, of course, understated yet glamorous black – the “Capsize” puts a sultry spin on the classic MJ. The shoe’s silver-pointed cap toe is the perfect complement for flirty floral shifts for day or night this spring.
SMU Fashion Week trunk show
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By Mary Holbrook
mholbrook@smu.edu
On the second day of SMU Fashion Week, fashionistas took a break from Northpark Center and local Dallas boutiques and headed to the Meadows atrium for a little retail therapy.
Yes, that’s right: SMU Fashion Week hosted its very own trunk show right on campus.
So naturally I took a break from classes to do a little spring shopping.
Several fabulous vendors came to show off their spring collections on March 27 at 11a.m..
The Vintagemobile was parked at the flagpole all day, and shops such as Lily Pulitzer, Blinc, Piermarini Boutique, Strut and Rent The Runway were all there showing off their spring trends.
The room was filled with pastels, patterns and neons.
Lily Pulitzer had a spring collection full of colorful shorts and fun accessories.
My favorite pieces were at the Blinc booth. The emerald green dresses and tops provided a refreshing pop of color.
The oversized clutches at the Piermarini Boutique booth caught my eye. The black and neutral would be prefect to match with any outfit, and the electric blue would be fun to spice up a solid top and jeans or white pants.
Strut had a rack of color, stripes and polka dots — I couldn’t help but pull a few fun pieces to update my spring wardrobe.
Grace Davis, the Fashion Week executive chair, was there for the day, greeting shoppers and answering questions about the week. I was able to chat with Davis, who described the day as “having a fun time selling clothing and looking at new spring trends.”
Beauty’s best goody bag-Birchbox
By Grace Davis
gdavis@smu.edu
If you visit a department store on a Saturday, you’ll see beauty sales associates stroking brushes across the cheeks, lips and foreheads of women of every age.
And as you hurry by the counters on the way to your next errand, you may wish that you, too, could sample the latest beauty products.
A fresh new business, Birchbox, brings this same tantalizing in-store experience to your mailbox.
For a mere $10 a month (barely the cost of a nail polish these days), Birchbox mails you four to five samples of the industry’s top new products to test.
New customers answer brief questionnaires about skin tone, hair color and beauty habits to ensure the monthly treats are specifically curated to their needs and tastes.
Birchbox delivers the thrill of discovering a new shade that highlights your cheekbones like never before without even getting in your car – now that’s a real luxury in our errand-weary world.
Behind the scenes with SMU Fashion Week’s executive chair
By Grace Davis
gdavis@smu.edu

Meg Jones, event coordinator of SMU Fashion Week, and I at the SMU Launch Party
“Do you think the girls could be ready by 4:45?”
I asked the head stylist from Osgood O’Neil Friday at 4 p.m., amidst the mist of candy-coated scented hairspray.
His blank face stared back at me, and he then pointed to the stylists wrapping the models’ hair around their sizzling tools.
The culmination of almost an entire school year’s work, and the end to perhaps the most important week of my college career, was about to start in an hour, and I could feel the muscles between my shoulders getting tense.
Five girls had not had their hair done and three had no makeup on, and my phone had zero service inside the Meadows school.
This one moment, right before the SMU Retail Club Fashion Show started, is only a small glimpse into what my life has been like the past eight months.
Planning SMU Fashion Week has been a huge undertaking.
At times, I haven’t felt like a college student because I have been too busy managing the SMU Fashion Week email to think about my classes.
Over Christmas break, I was answering emails and making T-shirt orders.
A day after the T-shirts were ordered, I remembered that the sponsors’ logos had to be on the shirts. That fiasco sent me straight to my computer at 10 p.m. to send an email with the subject, “URGENT CANCELLATION.”
Fortunately, it was fixed the next day.
As the go-to person for any problem, question or confirmation, I would say planning SMU Fashion Week has been a learning experience.

Me standing in front of the PowerPoint at the last SMU Fashion Week panel
Here are some things I learned:
1. Always proofread your emails!
2. Don’t forget your sponsorship agreements.
3. Budget before agreeing to buy something — not after.
4. Be open-minded.
However, for all the “trouble” SMU Fashion Week has caused me, it has been overwhelmingly rewarding, far exceeding my expectations of what my last year of college would bring me.
I have learned things about the real world and gained leadership skills that I know will help me in the future.

Shelby Foster, vice president of Retail Club, and me after the SMU Fashion Week/ SMU Retail Club Fashion Show
I have made friendships with girls whom I greatly admire and hope to work with again in my professional life—one, because it was pure joy to work with them, and two, because they get the job done.
5 p.m. came with the last zipper being zipped.
The red carpet was rolled out, the seats were filled (with plenty of standing observers!), the sun was shining (but not too brightly, thank goodness, or I would have soaked my on-loan silk jumpsuit in sweat), and the DJ’s beats were playing.
When I finally walked out to start the show, I felt a well of emotion spring up from my sleep-deprived self. I held it back though, inspired by a T-shirt I had recently seen.
The show went beautifully.
In fact, the whole SMU Fashion Week went amazingly well, better than I had hoped.
I couldn’t have asked for a better way to end my college experience.
To celebrate, Shelby Foster, a friend I wouldn’t have become as close to without this project, and I went to Neighborhood Services and ate to our hearts’ content, including sharing a huge banana split.
Quite literally the cherry on top.

Coffee and Toffee Banana Split at Neighborhood Services in Dallas
SMU Fashion Week
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By Mary Holbrook
mholbrook@smu.edu
A year ago, Grace Davis, a senior Chemistry major and Psychology and Fashion Media minor at SMU, was looking at online photos of Fashion Week at the University of Pennsylvania, where her brother is a freshman. Penn’s Wharton Retail Club has sponsored a fashion week for several years running, and the event looked fantastic.
Why, she wondered, can’t we do this at SMU?
One year and lots of hard work later, Davis has her answer: we can. This spring marks a new event being held on the Southern Methodist University campus. In conjunction with the new Fashion Media minor, fashion-minded SMU students will celebrate style with a whole week dedicated to fashion and the fashion industry: SMU Fashion Week, from March 26 through 30.
“I thought it could be an event that could be very successfully replicated on the SMU campus, especially with the induction of the Fashion Media minor program,” says Davis, Fashion Week executive director.
In August of 2011, Davis made a phone call to Camille Kraeplin, director of the Fashion Media program, who liked the idea and agreed to act as faculty advisor for the student-led project. Kraeplin says she is amazed by what Davis and her team have accomplished.
“I could not be more excited,” says Kraeplin.
Team Fashion Week
Davis and her executive team have been hard at work organizing all the events, making phone calls and galvanizing student support for the week-long event, which promises both opportunities to learn about the fashion industry as well as lots of fun.
After that phone call to Professor Kraeplin, one of Davis’ first steps was to recruit an executive team to help execute and publicize the event. That team includes SMU Retail Club President Rebecca Marin, who will work with Megan Jones, the team member responsible for coordinating the Retail Club Fashion Show, which will cap off the week Friday night.
“As the Coordinator for SMU Fashion Week I have assisted Grace in planning events, scheduling guest speakers, setting up the vendor fair and planning the Fashion Show,” says Jones.
Other executive team members include design & website directors Julia Eggleston and Laura Rogala; sponsorship directors Lauren Adams and Alexandra Harvel; external public relations director Kelsey Reynolds, internal public relations director Bree Unger, and social media coordinator Paige Parker.
Davis herself has focused on both the “big picture” and the small details, as well as steering her board in the right direction.
“I have overseen all of the planning of the events, as well as securing sponsors and speakers,” she says. “I have also led weekly meetings with all the executive board members.”
What, When and Where
Fashion Week will be Monday through Friday, the week of March 26-30. Most of the events will be on the SMU campus, with the exception of the Monday launch party, which will be held at Tootsies, a fashionista favorite retailer at 8300 Preston Road.
Different events will take place each day of the week. Marin, an SMU junior and communication studies and creative advertising major, says she and Davis have been working closely together to plan the week’s events and panels.
“All of the panels and events are set to start around 6 p.m. and are free and open to both students and the public,” she says. “There will also be events on campus throughout school hours that week that students can participate in.”
On Tuesday through Thursday, panels will focus on different professions and opportunities within the fashion world. The panel format was chosen over single speakers to provide a livelier, richer exchange.
“The event will bring great speakers to campus, speakers who will expose students to all aspects of the fashion industry,“ Kraeplin says.
The opening party at Tootsies (6:30 p.m. Monday) will include beauty demos, clothing previews and goody bags filled with essentials for any fashionista.
The Tuesday evening panel will feature fashion journalists and bloggers, including SMU alum Amber Venz, former FD Luxe editor Tracy Achor Hayes, Texas Monthly’s Kristie Ramirez and Dallas style blogger Tina Craig.
Wednesday evening is the business and fashion panel with guest speakers John Piermarimi from Piermarimi Boutique, JoannaLewis, director of Stanley Korshak online, and jewelry designer Amanda Sterett.
Thursday’s panel is dedicated to styling and designing. Tammy Theis, stylist and owner of Wallflower Management, and Tamar Minassia, Tootsies’ in-house stylist, and Nikki Trizza, assistant stylist at Neiman Marcus, will share their tips about how to create the perfect look for any occasion. Dallas designer Elizabeth Aynaa and SMU sophomore Kira Plastinina will expound on their experience as fashion designers.
On Friday, the annual Retail Club Fashion Show’s models will stroll down the runway outside of the Meadows School of the Arts wearing looks tailored to common SMU themes, says Marin.
“Boulevarding, formals, going to class and going out. I’m excited to see the end result,” she says.
“Our team had been working so hard, I’m so proud of all of them. More details are still being processed right now, but the venue, models and DJ information is well on its way.”
Also during the week there will be on-campus trunk shows and an appearance by the Vintage Mobile to entertain students between classes.
A Little Help from Friends
Several local organizations have stepped up to act as Fashion Week sponsors, contributing funds, goods and services to ensure the event’s success.
High-end retailer Stanley Korshak and its sister store, The Shak, are providing all the clothes for the fashion show.
D Style Sheet shot photos for the ad campaign — where the models wore clothes from Luxe Boutique.
In addition, these retailers as well as several other boutiques have agreed to participate in the “10 for 10” card promotion to help fund Fashion Week.
“The card will be $10 and will let you get 10% off at all participating stores. We are still in the midst of getting participants,” Davis says.
The cards will go on sale the week prior to fashion week.
Between the help from sponsors and the efforts of Davis, Marin and the rest of the Fashion Week team, Kraeplin expects the event to bring attention not only to the fashion talent here at SMU and in the larger Dallas community but also to Meadows year-old Fashion Media minor.
“The whole week promises to bring a level of excitement and energy to campus, with all the events and activities Grace and the rest of her team have worked so hard to organize. I also hope Fashion Week shines a spotlight on our new Fashion Media program and the level of dedication and initiative our students are capable of,“ says Kraeplin.
For more information on this upcoming week of fashion and fun, visit the Fashion Week website, www.smufashionweek.com, the Facebook page, www.facebook.com/smufashionweek, or follow them on Twitter @SMUFashionWeek.
RSVP to the Launch Party here.
RSVP to the Panels and Fashion Show here.
Fashion internships: Paying the price
By Grace Davis
gdavis@smu.edu
When I graduate in May, I won’t be receiving a degree in journalism, communications, or even marketing. My diploma will say Bachelor of Arts in Chemistry.
You’re probably dumbfounded as to why I am writing this article and will be shocked to hear that in June I plan to move to New York City to work in the fashion industry. During junior year (a little late in my college career), I decided to put my pre-med plans on hold to pursue a more “fashionable” career.
And what was the first thing I did? Track down an internship.
I hadn’t taken one fashion class or even worked a retail job before, but I knew that to break into the fashion biz, I had to get an internship.
“The most important thing is to intern, intern, intern,” says Elizabeth White, SMU alum ’11, and current freelance fashion assistant at People StyleWatch.
“They didn’t ask me where I went to school or my GPA, just where I had interned,” White said about interviewing for fashion-related jobs in NYC. White interned at Seventeen and PaperCity during college.
While White admits her current job has more responsibilities, stress and hours, she says her internships gave her a better idea of the fast-paced environment of fashion magazines.
In fact on the afternoon of my decision, I emailed the closest friend I knew in the fashion industry to see if any of her contacts in Dallas were in need of an intern. Luckily, one was. My first day on the job as a styling intern involved walking behind my boss and her client, holding the client’s Diet Coke and making sure the client’s dog didn’t get into any of the pictures.
But I didn’t care at all. I loved every minute of it. I was in. I didn’t change my major to journalism or something more chic, but instead focused my energy on getting relative work experience.
That being said, an intern in the fashion industry is basically synonymous with the four-letter (or in this case, 5) word for a female dog. Fetch this. Walk there. Eat later (on one internship I didn’t eat lunch till 3 p.m.). Zero pay (don’t even ask). The list goes on.
But despite all the truth behind “The Devil Wears Prada“antics, those internships, especially at an “A-list” magazine like Vogue, are the most coveted positions in the world.
Outside Assistance
The fashion industry is “one of the most popular industries,” says Eric Normingtom, executive director of college programs for Dream Careers, a job/internship placement agency .
He says he has seen college students gain exponential interest in fashion internships over last five years and considers it a top five industry for Dream Careers.
The Dream Careers program though, “does provide much more than an internship,” says Normingtom. The program, which costs around $9,000 for an internship in New York, provides housing, meals, transportation, resume and interview coaching, guaranteed internship placement, seminars and weekend excursions.
Dream Careers sets up the interviews with the student’s preferred choice of job until the student has one secured. Since 2000, the program has placed more than 10,000 students.The internships are unpaid, but students receive academic credit — a phrase fashion-focused students should get used to, as credit is generally what they receive in lieu of a paycheck.
EUSA, a non-profit internship placement company, works with university study abroad programs, such as SMU-in-London, to secure student internships around the globe.
It is a “customized process” where “nine times out of 10 it is a great fit,” says Tony Wilbur, EUSA university relations manager.
Once a student is accepted into the program, the student’s academic interest, background, work history, hobbies and special skills all contribute to the placement. The student chooses three areas of interest and EUSA advocates to international companies on the student’s behalf. Interviews are set up once a student is in the country, and students choose accept whichever position they prefer.
Past interns have worked in visual merchandizing, web site administration, social media, production, sewing and public relations.
Amy Melser, a senior at Brandeis University, interned at the British fashion magazine Hair, arranged by EUSA, during a semester abroad in London.
“I was doing real work and heavily contributing to the magazine,” Melser says of her time at Hair.
She was published several times, something unheard of as an intern in America, including a full-page article, a co-byline and a street-style spread in which she shot the photos.
Melser’s advice to students going abroad: “Not to get discouraged if they get placed in a smaller publication because they might get overlap with other larger publications, especially if they are in the same building.”
Melser worked in the same building as Marie Claire UK and worked with the publication on several occasions.
But what if students can’t pay to go across the pond for a byline? Or pay a company to “head-hunt” them down on a job?
Contacts, Contacts, Contacts
I soon realized that to land that dream internship, I needed to pack my bags and head to America’s fashion capital, New York City. And that I did.
“Finding and getting my internships was 100 percent-contact based,” SMU senior Ryley Tice says. Tice has interned at Dossier Journal, Frock NYC, La Force + Stevens and Teen Vogue.
Like Tice, I used email to directly contact assistants at magazines and designer labels about internships.
Two of the most popular sites students use are FreeFashionInternships.com and Ed2010. These websites post available fashion and journalism internships. The post includes the title, qualifications, and contact information for the internships.
To my surprise, the company actually wanted me and wanted my services! After my first day on the job, I knew why. The fashion industry would not survive without interns.
Exhibit A: I once had an argument with a courier about how much I was paid, which basically came down to $1 per hour. We were doing the same job. I was saving the company money.
Although you may not be getting paid a decent amount or working regular hours, you are right there in the thick of the fashion world. You are there. You are learning and getting first-hand experience that could help you get the job you dream about one day.
Post-Graduation
“I could never put a financial amount on the experience I have gained and the contacts I have made through my internships,” says Tice. Tice attended New York Fashion Week twice on behalf of Dossier.
“I have learned more in my internships than I could ever learn in a classroom and have met some very prominent people.” Another huge benefit is these are the editors, assistants and execs you may one day work alongside.
I have to admit, I still have no job secured.
However, that isn’t taking my Prada sunglassed-eyes off my goal of one day having my own desk inside the offices of some of fashion’s iconic reads.
The fashion industry, “organizes itself [so] that you start on the ground floor and work your way up,” says Normington.
He adds that on average, 70 percent of recent grad hires are from the company’s pool of interns.
“If you cannot secure a full time position in the industry, do not look down at an internship as a lesser alternative. In fact it might be your best bet to secure a full time position in that industry”
So to have interned “here” or “there” may get you into the golden gates of fashion divinity, or at least we all hope it will.
Trust me, I’m holding on to that belief post-graduation.
SMU Offers Degree in Fashion Media
By Meg Jones
SMU is one of the only universities in the country offering a degree devoted exclusively to fashion in the media. You can major in fashion merchandising or design at many schools, but fashion and media remain below the radar at the majority of U.S. colleges.
SMU’s Fashion Media minor, introduced in Fall 2011, is designed for students who wish to incorporate an interest in fashion into their major coursework.
The minor provides a basic understanding of the role of media professionals in the fashion industry.
The Fashion Media minor was created at the urging of Dean Jose Bowen of the Meadows School of the Arts, who believes that the program leverages a truly interdisciplinary approach that Meadows has been trying to cultivate.
“No one is going to hire you only because you know a lot about fashion. They will hire you because you write well or take great pictures and know a lot about fashion,” Dr. Bowen says.
In the minor’s capstone courses, students who already have a solid foundation of skills are taught how to utilize their craft in relation to the fashion industry, with an emphasis on key concepts such as aesthetic and editorial decision-making.
“We’re providing perspective and skills that will arm students with skills and understanding to thrive in fashion-media positions,” says Nina Flournoy, a former editor for Women’s Wear Daily and W in New York, who teaches the Fashion Public Relations capstone course.
When developing the curriculum for the Fashion Media minor, a team of Meadows faculty members pulled courses from Photography, Art History and Theatre as well as the communications disciplines such as Journalism, Communication Studies and Advertising.
The Fashion Media minor requires 19 credit hours including the completion of a theory course, a visual media skills course, a written media skills course, a capstone course and an internship.
Capstone Courses
Three capstone courses – Fashion Journalism, Fashion Public Relations and Fashion Photography — were created specifically for the minor.
The Fashion Journalism capstone course is designed for students to develop a better understanding of the symbiotic relationship between the fashion industry and the media that cover it.
Students receive intensive training on the basics of providing fashion and style content for a variety of outlets, including SMUFashionMedia.com, a website created for the course.
“I have the opportunity to practice real-world fashion journalism every day. I’m not just studying, I’m doing and creating,” says junior Shelby Foster, the style editor of The Daily Campus and a Fashion Media minor.
Journalists obtain first-hand exposure to Dallas’ fashion media industry and are provided with invaluable networking opportunities.
Professor Camille Kraeplin, the Fashion Media program director, teaches the Fashion Journalism class alongside adjunct professor Kristie Ramirez, the style editor of Texas Monthly and editor-at-large for F/D Luxe, and invites guest lecturers — such as fashion blogger Amber Venz, V.O.D. boutique owner Jackie Bolin and Tracy Anchor Hayes, former editor of F/D Luxe — to speak to the class.
“Getting to interact with such influential and driven people is not only inspiring, but provides us with more contacts for internships or jobs,” Foster says. “I definitely think that having a Fashion Media minor on my resume will help in my future job search.”
The Fashion Public Relations capstone course provides students with an understanding of professional public relations practices that relate to the fashion industry.
In their work with fashion designers, retailers and manufacturers, PR practitioners are involved in almost every aspect of fashion, from forecasting trends and working on designer collections, to launching new lines and helping clients grow their brand, according to Flournoy.
Students research and write various PR documents, including pitches, press releases, fact sheets, backgrounders, bios and blogs focusing on fashion-related topics. The class emphasizes Web-based PR strategies, including social media campaigns and online pressrooms
The Fashion Photography course covers trends happening in fashion photography. Students produce a look book, studio portraits, a fashion story and a concepted shoot, pulling together a team of models, hair and makeup artists, and a stylist.
“Fashion photography is all about creating a fantasy world,” says Misty Keasler, who teaches the Fashion Photography course.
Throughout the semester, fashion photography students interface with professionals who are breaking ground in fashion, with visits from the art director of Stetson, stylist Julie Broden, and professional retoucher Todd MacIntyre, as well as a studio visit with photographer Stewart Cohen.
Internship Requirement
In conjunction with the capstone course, students are required to complete an internship or directed study.
These internships are a hands-on way for students to gain real-world work experience in the fashion industry.
“Fashion Media minors are urged to complete an internship in their area of interest—from working in public relations with a major design house or a retailer to interning with a New York-based fashion magazine or an established fashion blog,” Kraeplin says.
Fashion on the Hilltop
The Fashion Media program is not the only fashion development to hit the Hilltop this school year.
The introduction of the Fashion Media minor coincides with the first annual SMU Fashion Week, which will take place the week of March 26.
SMU Fashion Week is a weeklong event on campus that will bring three different panels of fashion-industry professionals, in fields from journalism and blogging to business, to photography and styling.
The concept of SMU Fashion Week was cultivated by senior Fashion Media minor and fashion blogger Grace Davis.
The Fashion Media program and SMU Fashion Week have many of the same goals—to educate SMU students on how to get involved in the fashion industry through areas that most interest them.
“SMU Fashion Week is just another venue for students to play an active role in their education and have fun doing it,” says Davis.
SMU Alumni in the Fashion Industry
Several SMU alumni, such as Blake Mycoskie, the founder of TOMS shoes, and designer muse Nadja Swarovski, are succeeding in the fashion industry today.
Sarah Bray, a recent graduate and a pioneer of fashion in the SMU journalism department, landed her dream job as the social media coordinator for Neiman Marcus through the fundamentals she learned in her journalism classes.
Although the Fashion Media program had not yet been established, Sarah was the fashion editor at The Daily Campus for three years, started the fashion blog SMUStyle.com and built a solid portfolio of internships working at PaperCity, Vogue and The New York Times.
“I think [the Fashion Media minor] is great…. SMU’s student body was just begging for this,” Bray says. “There are so many fashionable girls on campus and now there are actually classes that are centered around [fashion] and it’s an awesome opportunity for [students].”
The Future of the Fashion Media Program
As of now, there are nearly 40 declared Fashion Media minors, but the program is continuing to grow and expand.
The future of the Fashion Media minor includes the option of studying abroad with SMU-in-Paris.
For more information about the Fashion Media minor, students can visit the Meadows Advising office in room 202 of Umphrey Lee.
Instagram: Must-Have App for the Fashion Industry
By Grace Davis
gdavis@smu.edu
“I need to Instagram this.” Fashion blogger Erica Domesek of P.S. I Made This gushes, while holding her iPhone to the glittering accessorized décolletage of fellow blogger and Lucky Style Collective editor John Januzzi. This exchange appears in a scene from recent satirical fashion video Sh*t OscarPRGirl Says.
Erika Bearman, or OscarPRGirl, as she is better-known, is the senior vice president of Communications at Oscar de la Renta. She frequently posts pictures of her daily happenings and “reports from inside one of the world’s most prestigious fashion houses” to her more than 23,000 followers on Instagram, Apple’s 2011 “App of the Year.” The video, in which Bearman also stars, premiered at the WWD Digital Forum Jan. 25, is viral evidence that social media have changed the way fashion professionals interact, even outside of the office.
Instagram isn’t just another seasonal fad to sashay down the social media runway. The app has become a fashionista’s must-have accessory. The free iPhone-exclusive app enhances photos through filters that transform the color, mood and border of the image. As of September 2011, more than 10 million users were posting pictures for their subscribing followers. The Instagram account can be linked to the user’s Twitter or Facebook doubling the sharing pleasure. Followers can comment and “Like” a photo by double-clicking on the picture.
“I don’t upload many pictures, I mainly follow,” says Caroline Foster, Southern Methodist University senior. “Basically everyone I follow on Twitter, so everyone in the fashion industry, I follow on Instagram,”
Foster interned for one of the fashion industry’s most social media- savvy designers in New York this past summer. She recalls that a PR executive once requested a necklace from the fashion closet purely to Instagram it. Foster downloaded the free app after she started to notice the Instagram link to “old-school”-type Polaroid photos in others’ Tweets.
In fact, according to the Instagram website, that very idea—“photo sharing reinvented”– was the founders’ creative inspiration, “I can read about what they’re doing, but to see a picture of the new shoes or new accessories from the line, that just makes it so much more real and interesting for me,” Foster says.
Merritt Beck of the blog The Style Scribe (http://www.thestylescribe.com/) says she started Instagramming, “To give my followers on Twitter a sneak peek into what I actually buy, what I wear, where I go, etc., that isn’t shown in my regular blog posts.”
Beck currently has 1,025 followers and is gaining fans by the day. Some of her frequent photos include outtakes from upcoming blog posts, recent purchases, tasty treats and her Outfit of the Day or #ootd, a new trending topic in the Twitterverse as well.
“One of the coolest parts about having an Instagram is that you can follow all the magazines and the editors,” says Shelby Foster, style editor of SMU’s The Daily Campus.
Shelby Foster cites Teen Vogue Health and Beauty Director Eva Chen, fashion brand Alice + Olivia and Assouline Publishing as some of her favorites to follow.
Because of the app, Shelby Foster has started doing posts on her blog that involve photos she has taken with Instagram, a now-common post topic among fashion bloggers.
“It’s really easy to do little snap shots and things like that and post it onto the blog. And it’s fun that everyone can comment on it via Twitter or directly on the site.”
Instagram stimulates more interest in the fashion industry. Readers feel they know more about the people and brands they look up to the most, bloggers agree.
“My audience has grown and the pictures are a way for my readers to feel connected to me at a more personal level,” Beck says.
Both Caroline Foster and Shelby Foster express their fascination with following fashion label, Alice + Olivia, notably due to its designer Stacy Bendet.
“She really has a personality. You see pictures of her daughter. It makes it more of a person than just a brand,” Shelby Foster says.
Beck, director of PR and Marketing for a emerging retail business, New for the Night, has utilized the app to entice future customers, even before the showroom opened for business. The brand already has close to 100 followers.
“Since we are preparing for launch, I’ve been using it as a ‘sneak preview’ tool to get people excited about the showroom, dresses, etc.,” Beck says.
Instagram appears to have joined the ranks of social media haute couture, and heading into a cycle of fashion weeks, the app could be a major force in proving a front-row seat at a fashion show is no longer a V.I.P. exclusive.









