Fash Mob »

  • Light and Dark – a shoot by Eilish McCormick, styled by Linda Conway

    March 1, 2012 @ 3:00 pm | by Rosemary Mac Cabe

    I spotted this amazing shoot on The Weekly Edit, featuring a fair whack of Irish talent and some very seasonal-appropriate light’n'dark mash-ups. Take winter’s dark florals and spring’s pastels and blend them into a gorgeous, eclectic cocktail. Yum!

    For full credits and details, check over on The Weekly Edit – and after the jump / leap / break for the rest of the shots. Oh – and – if you are an Irish photographer / stylist / hair stylist / make-up artist with something you want to show off, please, send ‘em over!

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  • The Dubliner does Valentine’s Day

    February 10, 2012 @ 12:30 pm | by Rosemary Mac Cabe

    Ah, The Dubliner – doing Valentine’s Day in a fashion rivalled only by the style of the Sindo. Classy! I think Rozanna Purcell is stunning, but this cover leaves me cold (not to mention, with a sense of serious 1990s déja vu …)

  • Alesha Dixon is Avon’s new empowerment ambassador

    November 15, 2011 @ 8:30 am | by Rosemary Mac Cabe

    As part of her new role, Alesha Dixon will act as spokesperson for Avon’s makeup and domestic violence cause . . . hmmm. An odd pairing, although I have heard really empowering (if you’ll excuse overuse of an overused words) speeches and interviews with previous ambassadors, so I am willing to suspend disbelief.

    To date, which is impressive, Avon has raised €35,000 for its domestic violence charity partners including Women’s Aid.

    And, if nothing else, this announcement gives me an excuse to do this. Happy Tuesday!

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    When this song was released, I worked in a clothes shop in the Stephen’s Green centre and we had it on repeat for the entire summer. Great memories of baggy jeans and belly tops . . . shudder.

  • Colour me Autumn

    October 5, 2011 @ 10:39 am | by Rosemary Mac Cabe

    I don’t know if you read the Saturday magazine with The Irish Times (you should!), but you may have spotted, a couple of weeks back, a shoot I styled – photographed by Peter Fingleton, with hair and make-up by Emma Farrell and modelled by the gorgeous Sintija at 1st Option Models. In case you missed it . . .

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  • Working hard at LFW

    September 16, 2011 @ 12:12 pm | by Rosemary Mac Cabe

    The crew from Stylist magazine brought along a helper but he couldn’t take the heat…

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  • Debs delight – The Irish Times, August 27th, 2011

    August 31, 2011 @ 12:30 pm | by Rosemary Mac Cabe

    So apologies for the misleading posting this week – Monday started off so well with the Whooga boot competition that’s still open, and have you entered the Rihanna Reb’l Fleur competition? Both open until Friday. Then things fell a little off the radar, but they’ll pick up again tomorrow, I promise!

    In the meantime, check out the shoot I styled for The Irish Times, published this Saturday gone in the magazine. The photographs were shot by the very talented Ailbhe O’Donnell, with hair by Michelle O’Halloran and make-up by Emma Farrell. The model is the gorgeous Aisling F from Assets. Let me know what you think!

    The debs season is upon us, and mothers and daughters are having a fine (or perhaps a tortuous) time selecting that dress. ROSEMARY MACCABE takes a glamorous view of dressing up, and puts together an assortment of pieces for a swish 1920s look

    THERE’S A STORY that goes around about a bride who wrote on her wedding invitations “no Coast dresses”, knowing there was a strong chance that many of her guests would turn up in the popular high-street brand, a brand that was also responsible for dressing her bridesmaids. It may be the stuff of urban legend, but it’s no joke – the words “black tie”, whether pertaining to weddings, debs, or just the odd fancy “do”, often strike fear into the heart of even the most creative and adventurous dressers.

    The trick to standing out at an event that has a strict dress code is thinking both within and outside the box. For black tie, move away from strapless satin dresses and take inspiration from bygone eras for truly original and eye-catching formal wear.

    For this shoot, we looked to the 1920s – but rather than source vintage clothing, which can sometimes look more fancy dress than just plain fancy, we looked to the high-street and Irish designers for a quirky and individual take on vintage-inspired clothing.

    Tim Ryan’s fringed cardigan was paired with pleated trousers from Topshop and an embellished cropped top from Asos. A drop-waisted, sequined Rachel Gilbert dress, a shade too short for polite society, was layered over a sheer maxi skirt for a touch of risque glamour.

    Don’t be afraid to embrace the fun and glamour of dressing up in the form of faux fur, sequins, and interesting details such as pleating and fringing. A debs’ ball – indeed any kind of ball – should be an event to relish and enjoy, not to fear. And don’t think that looking classy has to be expensive. One star item can be enough to set off an outfit, and that one piece doesn’t have to cost the earth. It will hopefully be the stuff of memories.

  • Competition: four-step facelift at Renew

    May 17, 2011 @ 4:59 pm | by Rosemary Mac Cabe

    So I’m currently away sunning myself and avoiding the Internet (with varying degrees of success) but that doesn’t mean I’m all out of give! Au contraire, you might remember the glowing review I gave Renew’s four-step facelift (basically a light peel) a few days ago. No? Scroll down, you’ll get there.

    In any case, the delightful ladies at Renew have offered the same treatment I had to one reader! So whaddya have to do?

    It seems you all hate the funny, so why not tell me, simply, why you deserve to win? (And he warned, I’m currently reading Reality Bites Back: The Troubling Truth About Reality TV* and am 100% agin the lies told to women about how much better their lives would be if they looked better. Just BEAR THAT IN MIND and good luck!)

    *It occurs to me: I’m doing holiday reading all wrong. (I also finished Kate Chopin’s The Awakening, which was beyond brilliant, and tomorrow starteth my Franzen period.) Kisses!

  • The M&S S/S 2011 catwalk show

    February 24, 2011 @ 4:48 pm | by Rosemary Mac Cabe

    Paris fashion week came to Dublin last night in the environs of City Hall on Dame Street. Cobbled streets, low lighting and the vaulted ceilings of the period building combined for the perfect location for Marks & Spencer to showcase its spring/summer looks.

    The show opened with a white suit – perfect for 2011′s 1970s trend and a style that has somehow become a trademark of the British high street retailer. From then it was plain sailing through slick tailoring and bouncy polka dots and stripes with just a few blips along the way. Navajo is one trend that this journalist will be leaving behind (gypsy skirts with suede and fur? How very Sienna circa 2001), and prom dresses with ankle socks and pumps might just have seen its day in 2010 – and even then it didn’t look that good.

    Still, where Marks & Spencer is strong, it is strong – and that’s in a heritage that somehow succeeds in embracing all age groups. There might be a slight snobbery about shopping in Marks & Spencer, above, say, shopping in Dunnes, but it has the credentials to back that up, with seriously on-trend items released regularly on to its Irish shop floors. Limited Collection has remained strong, season after season, and Per Una brings a youthful touch to clothing designed for ladies from their thirties up.

    The show was well attended by Ireland’s glitterati, from the Xposé crew to Lorraine Keane, Peter O’Brien and Brendan Courtney – and we were nourished with glasses of bubbly and canapés in the form of delicious pork crackling on ceramic spoons and, afterwards, Italian cannoli.

  • Some early morning magazine love

    February 9, 2011 @ 10:30 am | by Rosemary Mac Cabe

    Here are just a few magazine shots that have been lingering on my desktop over the past few days.

    Here’s Vogue‘s March cover, starring Rosie Huntington Whiteley. I love and hate Vogue in equal measure, and I think I’ve wittered on about that before, but there is something very odd about the two-page spread on Rosie, which borders on pornography, it’s so fawning.

    This is just gorgeous. Perfect 1970s-inspired styling in Jalouse magazine (via, I think, Fashion Copious).

    The cover of Vogue Australia, a vision of gorgeous Prada S/S 2011 designs (Jane Aldridge hates the espadrille detailing – do you?).

    And then – oh dear God Ed Westwick. That’s about it. Nothing fashiony to say about this whatsoever, just a bit of a perv.

  • Mixing the medium and the message

    May 15, 2010 @ 6:35 pm | by Rosemary Mac Cabe

    So, I’m currently abroad and facing another battle with the ashcloud – oh dear – but, having received some comments lately about the content on this blog, I just wanted to put it out there and see what people would like to see.

    I’ve had it said that, given that this blog is hosted on irishtimes.com, it shouldn’t be dealing with stores like Penneys, and fashion from Asos; for my part, I would like the blog to offer a range of fashion, from interviews (which I am working on) to showing you what’s available for purchase now, to showcasing photography mainly from Ireland but including editorials from magazines and websites all over.

    But over to you: what would you like to see on Fash Mob? What would work to make it a fashion blog you’d like to read, day in, day out? What do you look for? What would you like more of? What would you like less of?


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