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Posts Tagged ‘fashion at the park’

Nordstrom Beauty Trend Show tent

Nordstrom Beauty Trend Show tent

Wouldn't you like this to be your makeup kit?

The Nordstrom Beauty Trend Show was the event that first attracted me to NorthPark Center’s Fashion at the Park. The promise of “the season’s newest fashions, makeup, skincare and fragrances” was irresistible to a cosmetics lover such as I. So I bought my ticket (just $15) and was thrilled when it came in the mail with a hand-written note.

Saturday morning began with a free buffet of pastries, bagels, alcoholic drinks (maybe I’m a square, but 9 a.m. is a bit early for cocktails), coffee and water. Attendees also registered for bountiful gift baskets, which were awarded later in the show by handsome male models (?) in OU and UT T-shirts (a reference to the football game later in the day).

The show itself, however, was something of a disappointment. It basically turned out to be sales pitches for products in between short fashion show segments. And the sales pitches were mediocre; it seemed that most of the cosmetics/product reps were speaking extemporaneously, a technique which came off as simply unprepared and uninteresting.

MAC promotes its Gold Fever collection.

MAC promotes its Gold Fever collection.

The fashion show segments were intended to show the featured makeup looks (winter berries, smoky eyes, metallics) with related garments. The clothing was not couture, but the show’s stylists created looks with a surprising amount of flair and creativity. Prevalent trends were ombre, feathers, hats, patterned hose, mixing textures (such as tweed and leather), plaid and ankle boots.

Smoky eye look by Chanel Beaute

Smoky eye look by Chanel Beauty

Of all the shows I have attended at Fashion at the Park, I did expect this one—a product-focused event—to offer a goody bag. This could’ve been done easily and, one would think, cheaply with Nordstrom shopping bags and samples from the brands. But instead the organizers chose to offer a cheap-looking pleather tote with a stamped “woven” texture as a giveaway. I didn’t attend the show solely to get something free, but Nordstrom missed an opportunity to put product samples directly in the hands of customers who had already demonstrated an interest in cosmetics by simply being at the trend show; samples would have been tangible reminders of the promoted products and would have likely fostered future sales.

Some free samples were mentioned in product presentations, so I assume that Nordstrom’s intention was to draw attendees to individual counters following the show and offer samples and an additional sales pitch at the counters. While this might have worked if the audience had been 25 people, it didn’t really work with an audience of a few hundred. Nordstrom’s cosmetics area post-show was a crowded din.

The edge of the melee at Nordstrom post-show.

The edge of the melee at Nordstrom post-show.

People were claiming their free pleather bags, or getting makeovers at the counters and in the aisle, or just milling around. Remembering which counters were offering free samples or demonstrations was a struggle (it should’ve been printed in the program as a checklist), much less wading through the throng to the counter and then finding an employee to wait on you. I left after a few minutes without claiming my free tote or any free samples.

View some of the fashion looks in the slideshow below.

In summary…

What Nordstrom did well:

  • Presented a variety of fashion looks that are on trend for this season.
  • Offered free makeovers following the show.
  • Offered a $15 coupon on any day-of-show purchases to offset the ticket price.
  • Offered generous baskets for a mid-show drawing.

What I think Nordstrom could improve on next season:

  • If possible, move to an indoor location again. Attendees would be more comfortable, and projections on the video screens—which are vital to seeing the makeup looks if you’re in the back row—would be visible, unlike this season.
  • Presenters should be well-rehearsed.
  • A goody bag of samples would reinforce the presentations and convert into sales.
  • Any counters offering free samples or services should be clearly noted in the program, possibly in a checklist form, to encourage show attendees to visit the counters.
  • Temporarily expand the makeover/cosmetics area even further; the crush of people following the show was offputting to anyone who actually wanted to shop the cosmetics area.

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Photo by Yelena Yemchuck/DNA Models

Ali Michael. (Photo by Yelena Yemchuck/Courtesy of DNA Models)

I wrote this piece originally for the Dallas Observer blog Unfair Park, but since it was not published there, I am posting it here. —Michelle

Ah, this takes me back. As I search for my seat once again in NorthPark Center’s Fashion at the Park tent, the emo sounds of Dashboard Confessional’s “Screaming Infidelities” pour out of the speakers. In 2001, when this song debuted, I had just graduated from college, moved to Dallas and had a bright future ahead of me as a shill for the tanning industry. As I look around at the kids in the tent—lots of teens and tweens are here to ogle/support the young finalists of the Fashion!Dallas/Kim Dawson Model Search—I realize that most of them were probably in elementary school when this song was big. I also wonder how many of them snagged a glass of Champagne from the Moet & Chandon trays circulating through the Sunday afternoon crowd.

Perhaps as a function of the lower average age in the tent and the time of day, jeans are out in full force. Still, some attendees are dressed to the teeth. Since I welcome any opportunity to forgo heels, I gotta respect the Sunday-afternoon stiletto wearers. I raise my Champagne flute to you, ladies; you have stronger ankles and a higher pain threshold than I do.

Among the teen onlookers in the crowd is a face familiar to both Dallas and the fashion world: 2006 F!D/KD Model Search winner Ali Michael, who has since walked runways for Chanel, Dior, Yohji Yamamoto, Lanvin and more. Yet, aside from the bold eyebrows, the willowy frame and the leather Prada hobo slung over her shoulder, this gum-popping 18-year-old looks just like a regular teen. Her presence is apparently a pleasant surprise to model search organizers Tracy Hayes and Lisa Dawson, who introduce her as they introduce the 10 finalists. The male models seem to get the most applause and cheers from the audience when the finalists walk the runway (and someone screams “Sexy boy!” when Michael Fjordbak struts).

Dawson goes on to explain the role that technology played in the readers’ choice vote: This year, text-message votes (which were unlimited) outnumbered mail and online votes, and the final vote count far surpassed previous years’. 2007’s readers’ choice winner won with 8,000 votes; this year’s winner had more than 80,000. A friend of finalist Fjordbak confesses to text-voting for him 40 times in one day. And the convenience of text-messaging isn’t the only technology that drove votes: A few of the finalists—including Kyle Ellison, Diaby Mo Jr. and Alex Long—set up “vote for me” Facebook groups with hundreds of members to remind fans to keep the text votes rolling in.

In the end, it’s no real surprise when Mo is announced as the readers’ choice winner and Ellison is selected as the winner of the grand prize of $1,000 in NorthPark Gold (a mall shopping spree, basically), a Toni & Guy national ad campaign and a modeling contract. But Dawson assures the crowd that all of the finalists are talented. In fact, she told Unfair Park that the Kim Dawson agency might even sign them all. All in all, F!D/KD Model Search’s first year with a live audience is a huge success in Dawson’s eyes. “I am amazed at what it’s become,” she says. “How are we going to top this?”

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Sorry I’ve been so conspicuously silent in the past few days. I’ve been covering Dallas’ “fashion week,” called Fashion at the Park, for the Dallas Observer‘s blog Unfair Park. While most of the collections shown are Fall 2008 (rather than the Spring/Summer 2009 collections seen at New York, London, Paris and Milan fashion weeks), Fashion at the Park still puts on quite a show.

While I have seen many of the collections online, it’s still exciting to see them in person. And of course, there’s free Champagne.

Cruise over to Unfair Park to read my posts about the Roberto Cavalli show, the CFDA/Vogue Fashion Fund show (got to meet the Marchesa designers, woo-hoo!)…and more to come.

Also, see my coverage on this blog of the Fashion!Dallas/Kim Dawson Model Search.

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