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GRAILED IS A COMMUNITY MARKETPLACE FOR MEN'S CLOTHING SHOP THE BEST CATALOG AT UNBEATABLE PRICES Buy with confidence from our highly curated selection of quality menswear. Each piece comes from the closet of fellow fashion enthusiasts. Shop current collections or the best of previous seasons: You'll never find a better price. TURN YOUR CLOSET INTO CASH List your clothing quickly and easily, get paid instantly. Bought something you never wore or doesn’t fit? Whatever the reason, pass your loved pieces onto like-minded users and finally get your Grail. SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE: GRAILED, HYPE, BASICS Browse Grailed for luxury brands and designers (Saint Laurent, Rick Owens, Acne), Hype for new releases and streetwear (Supreme, Air Jordan, Yeezy Season) and Basics for mainstream brands (J.Crew, Brooks Brothers, Ralph Lauren).Openings and EventsIf you haven’t been to Dover Street Market recently, you will hardly recognize the space come Saturday, when the fashion emporium reopens for its New Beginning seasonal changeover.

In the event space, check out looks from the Comme des Garçons spring “Invisible Clothing” collection, which in Rei Kawakubo’s arch way includes enormous sculptural pieces like a tartan dress ($9,060) that are far from invisible. Get on a first-name basis with emerging designers like Sara Lanzi, Alan Crocetti and Cottweiler. And pick up one of the new Comme des Garçons message tees. A personal favorite: “Live Free With Strong Will” ($310). At 160 Lexington Avenue. Barneys is working with the British Fashion Council on a Madison Avenue window display showcasing 14 London designers. It includes an Erdem floral gown ($3,405), an Osman puff-sleeve sweatshirt ($555) and tiered tulle skirt ($440) and an Alice Archer embroidered kimono ($2,150).The stationer Dempsey & Carroll is offering a 35 percent discount on its Bespoke Collection of 100 No. 3 three-ply correspondence cards, 100 matching envelopes and one-line engraving plate ($295, originally $450) through the end of the month.

At 1049 Lexington Avenue.Hitting the RacksOn Friday, the Givenchy designer Riccardo Tisci will introduce the Rottweiler, a capsule collection that reinterprets his popular canine print in white outlines on a T-shirt ($550), sweatshirt ($790) and more.
hoodies waddinxveen openingstijdenAt 747 Madison Avenue.
aau hoodie SalesSaturdays NYC has taken markdowns of 40 percent on fall layering pieces including a cotton cashmere turtleneck ($117, originally $195) and a wool C.P.O. jacket ($159, originally $265).
agape hoodieAt 31 Crosby Street.
bomber lures hoodie Creatures of Comfort has cozy fall pieces like a chunky raglan cashwool knit ($168, originally $420) marked down as much as 60 percent.
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At 205 Mulberry Street.A Nikki Chasin floral jacquard reversible bomber ($258, originally $645) is among the finds discounted up to 60 percent at the Rising States end-of-season sale. At 168 Ludlow Street.The Fivestory Off-Site Sale will return to its SoHo location on Tuesday with discounts of up to 75 percent on playful items like an Anya Hindmarch Space Invaders shoulder bag inspired by early eight-bit graphics ($940, originally $2,350) and Nicholas Kirkwood Mary Janes with a triangular heel ($340, originally $850).
gyarados hoodieAt 150 Greene Street.
soa hoodies for sale A First Look At Misty Copeland's Under Armour Collaboration Rosie Huntington-Whiteley Is Pregnant Models Ashley Graham, Gigi Hadid, Kendall Jenner on Diverse Beauty Being the Norm An ageless Amanda Lear sat front and center at Riccardo Tisci’s Givenchy show, flanked by elfin vamp Nicole Richie and ethereal Florence Welch (and book-ended by the fabulously craggy Ronnie Wood).

La Lear wore racy sheer black over a bra, and from the opening look it was evident that Tisci had her kitschy Amazonian persona in the forefront of his mind when he put this focused show together. Make that Lear circa 1973, the year she struck a pose on the cover of Roxy Music’s For Your Pleasure. For this image she was styled and dressed by the great London designer Antony Price in a strapless black vinyl sheath, accessorized with killer heels and a panther on a leash. Chez Givenchy, the room went dark, a big cat roared, and when the illuminations returned, Tisci’s automaton girls strutted through a series of square arches that were extravagantly embowered in palmetto palms, wearing black patent heels with the tiniest tip of burnished silver or gold, or an ankle strap like a finely chased bangle. They clasped little clutch bags so diminutive that they didn’t seem capable of holding more than the sleekest cell phone. That black panther appeared in a print on a gleaming black satin organza shirt–green eyes flashing from the darkness.

Even the bowler-crowned caps had little feline ears, and molded plastic panthers basked on the side bars of the cat-women glasses. Tisci took hyper-casual elements—a sweatshirt or a short bomber for instance—and made them as chic as could be. A black chiffon bomber veiled a printed satin shirt beneath (as bright and bold as Gianni Versace’s eighties examples, with nosegays of violets nestled improbably in the panther’s jungly lairs), or even the curves of a vampy corset-seamed dress. Short bombers looked achingly cool layered over longer man-tailored coats. Tisci’s first skirts started pencil slim, then became more elaborate, developing a flirtatious back flip, until he sent out versions that exploded with a stiff ruffle of patent, satin, or even gleaming black mink at the mid thigh, possibly with a band of sheer crin continuing the line to the uniform on-the-knee length. It was strong, emphatic, and uncompromising—pity the Givenchy maven who craves a carpet-sweeping entrance-maker, or even a suit for the office unless her profession requires her to keep strictly after dark hours.