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Recessionista Giving the Finger

Two-finger rings are back like everything else from the 1980’s. There’s something so wonderfully badass about the style. I love these rings for the look as well as the protective factor, like you will want to kick someone’s butt to the curb.

The gold tone is oddly elegant, too. I also like the price: you can’t beat $15! As always — the lovely gold tone can be worn with your wild new leather or denim for Fall. To add a soft touch, wear a lovely dainty chiffon tank or blouse to mix the hard with the soft. I even like mixing gold with silver, especially this Fall season.

PRODUCT DETAILS
Ring sizes are 6/7, 7/8.
$15.00
Rhodium plated metal

Purchase information: Buy it here.

Bravo Greenlights New Reality Show ‘Decades’ With L.A.’s Favorite Retailers Cameron Silver and Chri

The series will highlight the glamourous comings and shoppings in the world of Hollywood haute couture vintage clothing. 4:39 PM PDT 4/5/2012 by Merle Ginsberg

The Eat Sheet Hot New Restaurant — UMAMIcatessen

THR’s pick of the week for industry dining is a decidedly non-kosher nouveau-deli in downtown L.A.’s gentrifying Historic Core neighborhood.

The Quick Pitch: Adam Fleischman of cult-hit gourmet burger chain Umami debuted a new flagship operation at the southern end of downtown L.A.’s gentrifying Broadway corridor, right next to the Orpheum Theatre. The expanded concept includes a serious mixology bar created by Harvard & Stone’s Adrian Biggs,Wholesale Miss Sixty jeans, an extensive charcuterie menu from Chris Cosentino of San Francisco’s Incanto and modernized riffs on deli classics like matzo ball soup and lox-laden bagels conjured by Micah Wexler of Mezze.

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Rodnik Rocks

Apparently, we’re not the only ones feeling punk. British designer Philip Colbert of The Rodnik Band is launching a capsule collection for OVS, Italy’s answer to H&M, at its chain of 400 stores this Friday. And in his signature style, he’s written a song and produced a video for it that went live on YouTube this week. “God Dress the Queen,wholesale NFL Jerseys!” is based on the Clash’s “London Calling.” Joe Strummer might not have approved of Colbert’s “London clothing” riff, but we’re betting he would’ve gotten a laugh out of his fish-and-chips T-shirt.

—Nicole Phelps

Angelina Jolie Gets Racy In Sheer Black Lace At Producer’s Guild Awards (Poll)

Accepting the Stanley Kramer Award for her directorial debut,Wholesale The North Face, “In the Land of Blood and Honey,” Jolie hopes her film ” helps people not forget the past.” 10:42 AM PST 1/23/2012 by Elizabeth Snead

Young London Calling Simone Rocha

London is a hotbed of young talent in fashion, and the city is known for supporting the young, the wild, and the penniless like few other fashion capitals. Just in time for London fashion week, Style.com checked in with three of the city’s most exciting emerging designers. First up: Simone Rocha.

“It’s a whole other gaggle of fish!” says Irish-born designer Simone Rocha, 24, of her first solo runway show,wholesale Abercrombie shorts, set to take place on September 18. After graduating from Central Saint Martins in 2010, Rocha was spotted by Lulu Kennedy and, for the past two seasons, has shown her strong yet ethereal womenswear collection under the umbrella of Kennedy’s nonprofit fashion initiative, Fashion East. “I’m nervous and excited—I feel like it’s a really good time to be flying solo,” she adds about the leap. But while Rocha may be a new face, she’s no stranger to the fashion business. Thanks to her father, designer John Rocha, Simone has been around the runway since before she can remember.

For her Spring collection, Rocha builds on last season’s inspiration, the work of artist Louise Bourgeois. “I looked at her lace works and hanging garments and tried to trap them into the clothes,” she says. That spawned sheer rubber skirts, the waistbands of which are inlaid with delicate lace, as well as a range of geometric rubber handbags that are infused with a sense of nostalgia via attached vintage lace gloves. The neutral, airy collection’s feminine notes, like the frills of a shapely white lace skirt and occasional pops of pink, are balanced by the strength of a black blazer with sheer arms, as well as unexpected cutouts, a series of sharp silk crepe and stretch cotton shirts, and elevated brogues. “I’m trying to contrast modern tailoring and classic shapes with femininity,” she says. The same holds true of her upcoming Topshop capsule collection, which hits stores in New York and London on September 15.
—Katharine K. Zarrella

Photos: Lucy Carr-Ellison