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Category: Toms shoes

Toms Shoes X Movember: Some panache with that 'stache? [Updated]

 

Movember Mens Toms

This post has been corrected. See the note at the bottom for details.

Toms Shoes' support of the monthlong, worldwide charity mustache-grow known as Movember is back for another season with two styles of 'stache-embroidered footwear for men and women. That means in addition to providing a pair of shoes to a child in need, purchase of a pair will also help fund prostate cancer research and awareness.

This season, in addition to a new gray waxed twill version of its classic alpergata silhouette with a handlebar mustache design embroidered in white near the heel and a hound's-tooth check lining ($58), the company has added a second style -- a two-toned gray and black waxed twill version of its "bota" (or "boot") silhouette ($98), which also sports a hound's-tooth check lining.

The limited-edition shoes are expected to be available at select retailers and online in early November -- just in time for the Movember growing season, which starts Nov. 1.

[For the record, 12:14 p.m. Oct. 19: An earlier version of this post gave the wrong availability date for the limited-edition shoes. They will be available for purchase sometime in early November, not as of Oct. 15.]

RELATED:

Book review: 'Start Something That Matters'

Plans for Movember's charity mustache-grow goes from fuzzy to focused

Movember Foundation promotes mustache-growing for cancer awareness

 -- Adam Tschorn

Photo: For its second year supporting the charity mustache-growing event known as Movember, Toms Shoes has added a new style -- a limited-edition version of its "bota" silhouette in two-toned waxed twill with a mustache embroidered at the heel ($98) which is currently available at select retailers and online at www.toms.com. Credit: Toms Shoes

Book by Toms Shoes' founder tries to 'start something'

Toms Shoes Founder Blake Mycoskie
If you're a fan of the Toms Shoes brand, you might want to check out my review of "Start Something That Matters," a new book by the footwear company's founder Blake Mycoskie, which appears in today's Los Angeles Times.

Although the main thrust of the book is to lay out Mycoskie's guidelines for starting a business with a meaningful -- i.e. charitable -- component (or grafting such a component onto an already existing business), the book -- which is a very fast-reading 189 pages -- is worth reading even if that's not on your immediate to-do list, since it not only lays out how the early history of the company, but also answers Toms-related questions big (what inspired him, what some of the early, costly mistakes were) and small (like where the name "Toms Shoes" came from).

"Start Something That Matters," by Blake Mycoskie ($22, Spiegel & Grau, 2011)

RELATED:

They're flipping for alpargatas

Toms shoes' Blake Mycoskie on his next steps

Toms Shoes' model is sell a pair, give a pair away

-- Adam Tschorn

Photo: Toms Shoes founder Blake Mycoskie, far right, with employees Meaghan Delmonico and Ron Elizondo at the company's Santa Monica headquarters in 2009. Credit: Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times

Toms' next chapter: Sunglasses

Blake 

This post has been updated since its original publication.

Hand-painted, colorful striped sunglasses. That's the second chapter of Toms Shoes' one-for-one business.

"With every pair purchased, Toms will give someone sight," said Toms founder Blake Mycoskie.

Meaning that for every pair of sunglasses purchased, sight-saving medical treatment, prescription glasses or surgery will be donated to a person in need. The sunglasses are landing in stores today for $135 to $145 and come in three shapes and 22 color combinations. The 101s are a classic Wayfarer-like style, while the 201s are oversized, round Jackie O glasses, and the 301s are aviators with wood accents. Toms sunglasses are recognizable by the three painted stripes on the sides, which represent the one-for-one giving concept.

The scene at the California Heritage Museum in Santa Monica on Tuesday morning was part rock concert, part political rally. Mycoskie made the announcement on stage in front of the Victorian-style museum building, with food trucks nearby and radio stations broadcasting live. About 150 people gathered on the grass to hear about the SoCal company's next step, many of them wearing Toms' signature colorful canvas shoes.

"From this day forward, Toms will no longer just be a shoe company, it will be a one-for-one company," Mycoskie said, before unveiling a video made in Nepal, with local people talking about the need to address visual impairment, in particular cataracts and blindness.

The medical treatment and surgery will be administered by a Toms partner, the Seva Foundation, which has helped give eye care to more than 3 million people in Asia, Africa, and other parts of the world. A leading global initiative to reduce blindness and visual impairment for the past 30 years, Northern California-based Seva also works with academic institutions in developing countries to train eye care specialists.

"Most every place that sells Toms can or will sell eyewear," said Mycoskie, adding that he plans to roll out two new eyewear collections each year, and envisions doing collaborations with artists and/or fashion designers on future styles.

Continue reading »

Toms shoe guru Blake Mycoskie on his next steps

Blake2

Toms Shoes founder Blake Mycoskie is one of my favorite Angelenos, if you can call him one, since he spends so much of his time traveling on shoe drops in South America and Africa, and giving speeches about his One For One business model (buy a pair of shoes, and a pair is donated to someone in need).

I caught up with him over tea at his Santa Monica office recently, and even though I had to use my Blackberry, I wanted to take a picture of his wonderfully wacky outfit (below). He's wearing a nubby Edun cardigan and pants he picked up at a market in Nepal, and carrying his journal, purchased at the San Telmo market in Buenos Aires. He's also wearing Toms, of course, from the latest collection inspired by the journals and images left by activist Dan Eldon, the young photographer who was killed in 1993 covering the war in Somalia. (The shoes have a fingerprint-print, which Mycoskie took from Eldon's passport.)Blake

It's appropriate that Mycoskie looks a little like a guru, because he's asking us to follow him on Tuesday, April 5, in spending a day without shoes to raise awareness for those who do not have a choice. He's expecting 1 million people to participate worldwide in the One Day Without Shoes event, include corporate partners AOL and Microsoft. It would be an astonishing response, especially considering the brand isn't 5 years old yet.

Not that Mycoskie is anywhere close to completing his goal of stamping out foot diseases worldwide. To that end, on June 7, he's announcing a new product that will guide the next phase of growth for his business.

But he's keeping that product shrouded in mystery, or hidden in a box as it were, which he presented to an audience for the first time last month, while giving the keynote speech at the South by Southwest conference in Austin, Texas.  

I tried to play the 20 questions game with him. Is it bigger than a bread box? Will it sell at the same stores as Toms shoes? Is it a product in the fashion space? But he wouldn't budge. He says his staff doesn't even know what it is. He asked retailers to purchase the product sight unseen. "If they open the box and don't think [the product] is a fit for them, they can send it back to us," he said. "And I do believe it can be sold in 50% of our stores, and that it will open up new doors, and new places. Our first big retail account was actually a furniture store," he pointed out.

The plan for June 7 is to distribute 200 of the mystery boxes to different influencers around the world, and to have them open the boxes simulataneously. (Which could be exciting, considering the folks Mycoskie keeps company with -- Bill Clinton, Cameron Diaz, Morgan Spurlock, etc.) Until then, we'll just have to keep guessing.

W-Neon Green Crochet-S[1] From a fashion perspective, it's incredible how many people are wearing Toms, which are now almost as popular as flip-flops. In June, the summer collection will land in stores, with a very cool-looking crochet style. And for fall, Toms has collaborated with the Row on a collection of shoes designed by Mary Kate and Ashley Olsen.

"The great thing about their line is that they make unbelievable basics, which sell incredibly well at some of the same stores we sell," Mycoskie said. "So to take their amazing cashmeres and Italian wools and put them on a classic Toms style, it seemed like it made sense. And they feel like butter on your feet."

The core fall Toms collection, however, has a more lofty inspiration: great mentors and teachers. "I saw 'Waiting for "Superman,"' and I started thinking with that film and some of the things the Gates Foundation is doing, that education could be the next climate change," Mycoskie said. "Not that we don't have a long way to go on climate change still, but I believe education will be the next chatter of pop culture."

So he asked Toms employees to team up with their favorite teachers and model fall shoes for a photo shoot. Mycoskie's favorite teacher is pictured in the lookbook: Jim Woodruff, his theology teacher from senior year of high school. The shoe designs play off the education theme, with an academic-looking herringbone, and a print that reads "dare to teach."

Mycoskie is putting the finishing touches on his first book, titled “Start Something That Matters," out Sept. 6. "It's the No. 1 question I get asked: 'I have an idea, how do I get it started?' And I think I have some ideas to help people with that," he said.

Part of the book is about challenging people -- to volunteer at a homeless shelter, start a nonprofit or start a giving program at their for-profit business, he explained. "It's not only an entrepreneurial book, it’s personal."

The book also makes a case for simplicity -- simplicity in design, message and in how you live. "People are addicted to stuff," said Mycoskie, who lives on a houseboat to keep his stuff in check. "They think they can't live without it. But intellectually, they also understand how not having a lot of stuff to keep, and take care of, lets you lead a more free life."

Except that Mycoskie sells shoes, and he doesn't want you to just buy one pair. "That is a dilemma," he admitted. "But everything has its flaws."

At least Toms don’t take up a lot of room.

-- Booth Moore

Photos, from top: Blake Mycoskie, right, rallying the crowd in Venice at the 2010 One Day Without Shoes event. And green crochet Toms from the summer collection. From Toms shoes.

Toms Shoes wants you to go shoeless — for a good cause

You know it has to be for an important cause for a shoe company to request that you go barefoot.

Charitable footwear company Toms Shoes, which donates a pair of shoes to a child in need with every shoe purchase, is asking  the world to go without shoes on one day -- April 5 -- to raise awareness of the impact a pair of shoes can have on a child's life.

The One Day Without Shoes event launched last year, and more than 250,000 took off their kicks for the cause, with 1,600 related events taking place around the globe.

Why are shoes so important? Without them, you're at risk of picking up unsavory things through your feet, said Toms’ founder and chief shoe giver, Blake Mycoskie, who added, "Wearing shoes and [practicing] basic hygiene can prevent both infection and disease due to unsafe roads and contaminated soil."

For more information on the cause and events near you, visit OneDayWithoutShoes.com.

-- Emili Vesilind

Video: Toms Shoes' video for 2011's One Day Without Shoes campaign. Credit: Toms Shoes

Your morning fashion and beauty report: Lindsay Lohan necklace to go on auction block, Emma Watson designs go on sale, Maria Sharapova goes online

Alindsay
-- The $2,500 gold necklace Lindsay Lohan is accused of stealing is destined for the auction block after the case concludes. Jeweler Kamofie & Co. pledges that proceeds will go to charity. [New York Post] 

-- Tennis star and fashion fixture Maria Sharapova relaunched her popular website Mariasharapova.com on Thursday. Sharapova, who has fashion partnerships with Cole Haan, Nike and Tag Heuer, is active in social media too, with 3.9 million Facebook fans (more than tennis champs Venus and Serena Williams, Ana Ivanovic and Caroline Wozniacki combined). On the website, fans can not only see pictures of Sharapova, but if she's wearing, say, a pair of Cole Haan shoes, they can click and buy. [WWD]

-- Emma Watson, who is taking a break from her studies at Brown to promote the last Harry Potter film and to work on other movie projects, is also still pursuing her fashion interests. She teamed with Alberta Ferretti to create a capsule collection of romantic, summer pieces made from organic cotton, muslin and hemp. Pieces will be sold online only at Albertaferetti.com starting in late March. Part of the proceeds from the Pure Threads collaboration will be donated to the fair trade fashion label People Tree, for whom Watson designed three collections previously. [Telegraph]

-- TOMS -- which gives away one pair of shoes for every pair purchased -- now offers shoes for weddings. No, not the delicate pumps or glamourous stilettos one would normally think of with a wedding gown, just the usual TOMS flat canvas style, but in pastels, whites and metallics for the women and tux-friendly black or white for men. [Mondette]

-- Our favorite Old Spice guy, Isaiah Mustafa, has a new ad out. In this one, the hunky spokesman is dressed in board shorts, plays a guitar and frolics with some cute puppies. What more could a woman want? [BellaSugar] 

-- Los Angeles designer Allen Schwartz is adding two new contemporary lines. [WWD] (subscription required)

-- Shipley & Halmos will add shoes and formal wear to its menswear offerings for fall. [WWD] (subscription required) 

--Susan Denley

Photo: Lindsay Lohan, who is accused of stealing a necklace that will go to auction. Credit: Alex Gallardo / Associated Press

Weekend Shopping: Joe's Jeans and Tom's Shoes sample sales; gr.dano and Hermes trunk shows

JoesJeans

A few notable happenings for a more stylish weekend...

SALES

Joe’s Jeans annual sample sale Friday through Sunday: The premium denim staple is hosting its Big Annual Sample Sale at company headquarters in Commerce, Calif. Expect discounts up to 90% off on denim jeans, shorts, tees, shirts, jackets and leggings.

2340 S. Eastern Ave., Commerce. 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. Friday (VIP/presale); 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday; 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. Sunday.

Toms Shoes warehouse sample sale Saturday: Charitable shoe company Toms hosts a warehouse sale featuring recent styles and prototypes that never made it to production.

AMS Fullfillment, 29120 Commerce Center Drive, Valencia. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

EVENTS

Hermes trunk show Friday: Check out rare, limited-edition Hermes time pieces at Pacific Palisades boutique Elyse Walker, including the Medor (there are only two in the country), the Harnias pocket watch, the Dressage and Cherche Midi wrist watches.

15306 Antioch St., Pacific Palisades. (310) 230-888. 12 p.m. to 5 p.m.

gr.dano trunk show Friday: Venice Beach-based design, home wares and fashion boutique A+R hosts a trunk show for San Francisco-based collection gr.dano.

1121 Abbot Kinney Blvd., Venice. 310-392-9128. 3 p.m. to 8 p.m.

Matthew Campbell Laurenza appearance Friday: Jeweler Matthew Campbell Laurenza of the M.C.L. by Matthew Campbell Laurenza collection greets his fans and shows off his latest collection at Neiman Marcus in Beverly Hills.

9700 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills, Designer Jewelry. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. 

Weleda's "Honestly Natural, Truly Beautiful” tour Friday through Sunday: Natural beauty products company Weleda is touring the country, trying to educate people about gnarly cosmetics ingredients (and there are many). Stop by Weleda’s biodiesel truck at one of two locations in Los Angeles to take a natural beauty ingredient quiz, learn about Weleda's natural products and receive a mini-spa treatment courtesy of the company.

Friday at Hollywood & Highland (6801 Hollywood Blvd.) from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Saturday and Sunday at the Third Street Promenade in Santa Monica from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

"Desperate Housewifes" costume designer Cate Adair: Saturday  Adair will give bracelet-making and style tips for Chamilia, which makes elegant beads for jewelry, with 10% of sales from the event going to benefit Be the Match, a national registry that matches patients who need bone marrow with donors.

Saturday at Bungalow Bay, 6457 E. Pacific Coast Highway, Long Beach. 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., with Adair in attendance until 2 p.m.   

www.chamilia.com/celebratestyle/event-detail/

 

--Emili Vesilind

Photo: A current-season look from Joe's Jeans. Credit: Joe's Jeans.

 

 

 

Bearded & Tschorn: Plans for Movember's charity mustache grow goes from fuzzy to focused

FuzzyInk_4Tees
It's Oct. 1 -- which means Movember sprouts anew in less than a month. The annual charity event, which takes place each November, is designed to raise awareness and funds in the fight against cancers affecting men.

When all the lips were fuzzed and all the donations tallied, 28,000 U.S. 'stache-thletes helped raise $3.2 million last year, an amount split between the Prostate Cancer Foundation and the Lance Armstrong Foundation. While that sounds impressive, note that on the international stage that put the U.S. squarely in fourth place -- behind Canada.

Continue reading »

Your morning fashion and beauty report: Who was best dressed at the Teen Choice Awards? Is Jimmy Choo up for sale? And Toms shoes nears a milestone.


  Choo
When is Savile Row not Savile Row? The stuffy home of expensive bespoke suits is in a dither over that very question, thanks in part to Matthew Farnes, a former star fabric cutter there who has opened his own business miles away, calls himself a Savile Row tailor and makes custom suits that start at $3,180. Oh, and he blogs. It's opened a whole debate over what "bespoke" means, led to the formation of a Savile Row Bespoke association and to an effort to set standards for specially labeled suits, kind of like Swiss watches. [Wall Street Journal]

Toms shoes, founded in 2006 with a mission to donate one pair of shoes to impoverished children for every pair sold, is on track to donate its 1-millionth pair next month. [WWD] (Subscription required.)

The Teen Choice Awards show was filmed on Sunday to air on Monday, but here's a preview of what you can expect on the (not red) carpet: lots of minis and platform or cage shoes. "Twilight's" Ashley Greene was demure in a strapless blush dress with floral detail; Kim Kardashian was smokin' in a black, one-shoulder ruched dress by Zuhair Murad; Kristin Bell was fashion-forward in a layered Stella McCartney. But my favorite was "Glee's" Lea Michelle, in a green palm print by Naeem Khan with her hair in the lovely beachy waves like the ones we told you about last week. [People] [Los Angeles Times]

Jimmy Choo, the fav of the "Sex and the City" crowd, may be up for sale. [VogueUK] 

Nifty product report: To keep feet that are enclosed in pumps or platforms fresh can be a challenge. Along comes Chu Shu Silver Linings. Made of antimicrobial silver, the $16 shoe liners are thin enough to be comfortable, and they keep feet smelling good. [FabSugar]

Lady Gaga was just named one of Vanity Fair's best-dressed style icons. But the getup she wore when she arrived at the Lollapalooza festival in Chicago this past weekend got tongues wagging but didn't make the words "style" or "fashion" spring into my mind: fishnet shorts, a torn fishnet T-shirt and silver pasties. Several different words came to my mind, actually. [Daily Mail]

Baby-faced teen idol Justin Bieber, 16, has been named a spokesman for blemish product label Proactiv. Seems age-appropriate. [BellaSugar]

Brody Jenner is wearing his heart on his head, having shaved an "A" onto his scalp in honor of love Avril Lavigne. This seems a lot more practical than a tattoo, given the fleeting nature of relationships among celebs. Oh wait, he has one of those too. [People]

Marc Jacobs' business partner Robert Duffy says the brand is on the brink of doing plus-sizes. Not sure what that means: a real plus-size like 20 or an only-in-the-fashion-world plus, like size 10? [The Cut]

-- Susan Denley

Photo: A Jimmy Choo suede sandal from early this year. Credit: Jimmy Choo Beverly Hills

Your morning fashion and beauty report: Cynthia Nixon's fashion secret. Anna Sui gets booked. Claudia Schiffer bares all. And Miss USA contestants flaunt it.

Cynthianixon

The career of Anna Sui, who made the baby doll dress an American staple, will be chronicled in a book by Andrew Bolton, curator of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. A hefty 400 pages, it's due out in November. [People]

Miranda may have a flare for fashion on "Sex and the City," but in real life Cynthia Nixon gets her significant other to pick out her clothes. [StyleList]

Indoor salt rooms have been popping up with claims that the salt can soothe respiratory and skin problems. [Wall Street Journal]

Times have been tough for teen retailers, but not for the chief executive of Abercrombie & Fitch, whose annual compensation jumped to $36.3 million last year (up from $23.2 million a year earlier), more than double that of his peers at Aeropostale and American Eagle Outfitters. But he didn't get a bonus. [Wall Street Journal]

Spring's style books expect you to put in some effort. [Wall Street Journal]

Finally! Toms Shoes is offering its first really feminine women's shoe, an open-toe espadrille wedge. [Cool Hunting]

Calvin Klein's mixed message: Its new fragrance, Beauty, is supposed to aim at women over 40, but the face of the campaign is 31-year-old Diane Kruger and the editors of some magazines deemed key for the over-40 demographic weren't even invited to the launch party. Tsk, tsk. [wwd]

News we're catching up on: The German fragrance industry has honored Marc Jacobs' Lola and Tom Ford's Grey Vetiver with Duftstars Awards. [wwd, subscription required]

Trend alert: black and gold accessories that look just right. [FabSugar]

Beautiful and brave, Claudia Schiffer took the plunge: she's appearing nude and very, very, very, very pregnant on Vogue Germany's June cover. Very. [fashionologie]

Liberty of London is launching a men's line. [wwd, subscription required]

StyleList gets a peek at Payless ShoeSource's soon-to-come makeup line. [StyleList]

The Miss USA pageant has never felt quite as, well, wholesome as Miss America, and now it's making tongues wag and eyes pop with a lingerie shoot in Las Vegas. [StyleList]

This will send you running for the chemical peels and moisturizers: a new website that will "age" your photo to show what you'll look like in 20 years. [BellaSugar]

-- Susan Denley

Photo: Cynthia Nixon as Miranda. Credit: James Devaney / WireImage.com


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