日历

« 2008-12-03  
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031   

RSS订阅

  • Black Beauty

    2007-11-22 08:47:20

    The latest beauty secret from Japan involves some pretty dark science. Shu Uemura's new Phyto-Black Lift ($45 to $125), an anti-aging skin-care line, blends kombucha-fermented black tea and a black sugar complex that contains Pro-Xylane for plumping and reducing age spots. The best news: the stuff is sustainable.
  • Global Luxury Survey

    2007-11-20 13:48:42

    China

     Call it a reaction to years of austerity, but China is the world's third largest consumer of luxury goods, accounting for 12% of global sales, according to a December 2004 Goldman Sachs report. If this trend continues, China could surpass the U.S. to become, along with Japan, the world's largest purchaser of luxury items by 2015. Chinese yuppies are driving the demand, buying everything from expensive watches to imported cars. And luxury purveyors are responding: Armani plans to open 24 stores in China in 2008.

    Most often mentioned luxury brands:
    In this society of sudden economic freedom, newly rich capitalists are eager to clarify their social standing, so they turn to the obvious luxury must-haves: traditional French labels and expensive watches. That explains why Chanel, Lacoste and Dior rank in the top five brands with the highest level of recognition.

    Watch Out
    22% of affluent consumers in China own a Rolex. 66% of affluent Chinese men have bought at least one watch in the past six months and have paid an average of $2,253 per watch.

    Top Five Watch Brands:
    1. Rolex
    2. Omega
    3. Cartier
    4. Vacheron Constantin
    5. Breitling

    Conspicuous Consumption
    Chinese consumers who buy luxury goods do so to show off or to help define their identity. The Asian concept of face—or pride and dignity—is a key reason they invest in expensive brands. In a fast-growing economy, status symbols are the easiest way to demonstrate wealth and power.

    Most widely owned luxury brands:
    1. Lacoste
    2. Valentino
    3. Chanel / Bally

    Top luxury beauty brands:
    The three most popular foreign beauty brands in China are Estée Lauder, Lancôme and Guerlain. More than 50% of affluent Chinese consumers own either a Lancôme or an Estée Lauder product.

    On average, affluent Chinese consumers will spend up to $280 on a single skin-care product

    Saving face
    Skin care is almost three times as popular in China as makeup. Imported foreign products dominate the high end of the market because beauty products tend to cost less than luxury fashion items, so women are willing to splurge on them. Skin-care sales in different regions of China account for 26% to 35% of total cosmetics sales.

  • Color

    2007-11-19 16:38:18

    Color
    The biggest trend for 2007 in fashion and home design is color. And that means both intense, almost fluorescent shades like chartreuse and more down-to-earth hues like olive green and tomato red. Designers as different as David Rockwell and Donatella Versace are embracing brights, splashing them onto everything from indoor/outdoor furniture to flats. Even some old favorites, like the Jean-Louis Domecq Signal table lamp, are turning up in shocking turquoise.
Open Toolbar