Ron Weasley For Band Of Outsiders

The summer of Harry Potter—and with it, the eight-film epic—is coming to a close. It’s farewell to sorcery, but hello to modeling for Rupert Grint (a.k.a. Ron Weasley) and Tom Felton (Draco Malfoy), two of the franchise’s stars. Band of Outsiders’ Scott Sternberg selected the duo for his Fall BOO lookbook, which he shoots personally every season—on vintage Polaroid film no less. (Previous stars have included James Marsden, Dave Franco,wholesale Bape cheap, Donald Glover, and Andrew Garfield; Harry himself, Daniel Radcliffe, hasn’t taken a turn, but he is a longtime fan of the label.)

“I love those films and the characters so much,” Sternberg told Style.com. “They’re full of imagination and endless ideas. With the last film coming out this summer, it felt like a cool opportunity to capture this moment in these two actors’ lives, and give them a chance to poke a little fun at the whole thing too.”
—Matthew Schneier

Photos: Scott Sternberg / Courtesy of Band of Outsiders

Go Figure Are we related

Sales of wide-screen TVs have risen, so has male life expectancy. Is there a connection? In his regular column, Michael Blastland asks why we feel the need to join the dots.

One hot summer, hard to recall in this week’s chill, Go Figure invited readers to fill in the details of a story about changes in ice cream sales and shark attacks.

When one goes up, so does the other.

This is true. There really are more shark attacks when ice creams sales rise. The question was why?

We didn’t want serious explanations, we wanted facetious ones. And boy did we get them.

In stats terms, this is an easy example of mixing up causation and correlation. Two numbers - for ice cream sales and shark attacks - rise and fall together and we ask if one causes the other. The real reason they’re in synch is… well, you work it out.
Did uncertainty over the outcome of the UK general election cause the stock market to fall?
I call this the dimputations game, as in dim-imputations. One for all the family at Christmas? You have to be that kind of family. Here’s another to try after the turkey.

The fatter turkeys get, the more people go to church. Why?

I’m making these up, by the way, though this one is probably true - as sales of wide-screen TVs have risen at Christmas, so has male life expectancy.

The connection? All hanging on for the next series of Strictly, obviously.

You tell us.

There’s an almost-serious point to all this. Namely, how stories about real-world facts can be compelling - even when nonsense. Because they work as stories, they work on our imagination in a similar way to the just-about truth of not being able to out-swim a shark one-handed.

This isn’t a dig at fiction. I wouldn’t be so unwise as to suggest that art is a poor imitation of life, just that stories about fact in the media and elsewhere often resemble bad storytelling or bad art in the way that they offer us little more than vague ideas suggestively stuck together.
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Once we have a story in mind, it’s easy to find evidence and impute connections to confirm it”
End Quote The shark and the ice cream
For a sober real-world example, take the period just after the indecisive UK general election when, as readers will recall, everyone felt uncertain about who would form the next government and what policies they would follow. Would it be an alliance of Nick and Dave or Gordon and Nick or - unlikely this one - Gordon and Dave?

Once we had convinced ourselves that the story was uncertainty, the media set out to find evidence to confirm that story. Among this evidence was a fall in the UK stock market. There’s uncertainty for you, we said, putting two and two together - markets are nervous following the uncertain outcome of the election.

Except that just about the whole world saw stock market falls that day. Frankfurt, Paris, New York, Moscow, Johannesburg…

All worried about UK uncertainty? One of the few exceptions was Sri Lanka,wholesale NBA, where the Colombo All Share Index rose, proof I guess that the Sri Lankans took a more benign view about whether Nick and Dave would get it together.

Mind you, there was something going on with Greece at that time.

UK political uncertainty and the UK stock market fall were correlated, though possibly not causally connected. But once we have a story in mind, it’s easy to find evidence and impute connections to confirm it.

This is not lying or playing with statistics. It’s simply the human instinct to seek links and fill in the details of a plausible story to make it whole and coherent. It is almost involuntary.

Which is why you know exactly what explains the typical rise in heating bills, just after peak consumption of mince pies.

Prabal Gurung Addicted To Love

The runway music for Prabal Gurung’s Fall ‘11 collection: “Addicted to Love”—as interpreted by Florence + the Machine. It was a deliberate choice. For his Fall offering, Gurung channeled one of amour’s great addicts, the lovelorn Miss Havisham from Dickens’ Great Expectations. “It’s a book that I was given when I was probably 6 or 7 years old,” the designer explains. “At that time I was kind of unclear about who she was—she’s a crazy old lady, that’s what I thought. As I got older and kept going back to it, [I found that] there’s something extremely, extremely sad, but all of us can somehow relate to her. There’s something beautifully melancholic and romantic about giving everything up for love, giving so much.” The result: a catwalk full of runway girls imagined as young, still hopeful but already fraying Havishams.

The character lives again—just in time for the collection to hit stores—in the new branding images Gurung created for the first time with photographer Daniel Jackson, model Julia Saner, and his longtime stylist, Tiina Laakkonen. The images, debuting exclusively on Style.com, are not quite a campaign and will run online-only,wholesale Juicy Couture t-shirts, but the designer doesn’t rule out print ad spots at some time in the future. “For a new company like mine, the media budget is very limited,” he explained. “The resources that are online for free—Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr—it’s extremely crucial that we use those tools. These images [will] get picked up in China, picked up in random places traditional media would never reach.”
—Matthew Schneier

Photos: Daniel Jackson / Courtesy of Prabal Gurung

Natural Evolution

As sisters and design partners, Phoebe and Annette Stephens of Anndra Neen enjoy an especially symbiotic relationship based on their shared history growing up in Mexico City among an artistic family, a background which informed their decision to launch the brand in 2009. Since the beginning, the duo has focused on shapes “inspired by the imperfect geometry of nature” and a handcrafted aesthetic. The results are dramatic yet approachable pieces forged from mixed metals, with solid cuff bracelets encrusted with abstract renderings of sea creatures and cascading breastplates etched with wave formations.

During their latest presentation at Milk Studios, Phoebe explained this season’s evolution. “We’re still using a lot of texture, but we also have cleaner silhouettes with the geometric breastplates and the quilted clutch.” The pieces, displayed on sculpted formations evoking driftwood, achieved a careful balance of natural authenticity and a bold statement, much like how Annette describes the women of their rapidly expanding fan base. “She’s fashion-forward and has a strong personality,Discount Mlb Jerseys, but is also open-minded. She truly dares to wear.”
—Nina Stotler

Photo: Courtesy of Anndra Neen

Dansette