Best of Beach
With
the UK summer seemingly shorter than your average holiday abroad, there is no
time for bikini faux pas and beach conundrums. You want to look good from the
first moment your SPF 30 envelops your skin.
On a recent trip to a Barcelona beach, I realised I had been going about it all wrong. My first faux pas was bringing a giant towel to lie on, which I'd unashamedly borrowed from the hotel. Towels are made of heavy cotton, whose nature it is to absorb, but also generate warmth. So much so that anyone accustomed to warmer climates lies on a pareo or what I call coloured beach sheet. They are much more comfortable in 30 degree weather and don't cause unpleasant hot flashes. Plus they look good wrapped as a sarong when you are ordering Sangria on a shaded terrace.
My second faux pas were my Burberry check swimming trunks. These, according to industry friends, should have been left at home. Unless you are part of the six-pack brigade and enjoy a natural bronzage, a longer short is preferable. Dolce & Gabbana have a great selection for men, including white strip tennis shorts from GBP 69, available at Selfridges.
Women, of course, can be much bolder and have a wider range of choices when it comes to beachwear. If less is best, try Sonia Rykiel's pink and black stripe bikini. It's tiny, sexy, and will go great with those leg warmers for evening (Rykiel, from a selection, 020 7493 5255). For sophistication try Alberta Ferretti and Burberry. Ferretti colours are a melange of plum, orange and gold (swimwear from GBP 105, at Liberty) while Burberry has opted for a softer palette in marine blue and white stripes (GBP 95, at Selfridges). For ultra chic, try Missoni Mare, if the stores haven't sold out already. Their bathing suits and bikini's will be the rigueur from the Cote d'Azur to South Beach (for stockists, please call 020 7352 2400).
Whilst spending in excess of 100 pounds on a bikini may seem rather frivolous,
lest not forget that with typical pale-white British skintone we are going to
be spotted by even the remotest of deep-sea divers. Taking that in regard, you
might as well stand out in style.
<Don-Alvin Adegeest>
June 10, 2003
Fishy tops and bikinis
It
sounds a little bit dirty and smelly but it's true. Clothes made of salmon skins
are about to leap onto the catwalk. Claudia Escobar and lawyer partner Gregory
Morgan have developed a way of tanning the skins of salmons so that they retain
their strength but lose their pungent smell (thank god). The processed skins
are dyed and have been made into garments including bikinis, hot pants and shoes.
"I have spent four years researching and developing the project with the help of specialist laboratories and tanners in Uruguay and Chile. The difficult part was removing the fishy smell. Once we made that breakthrough, we could make virtually anything we wanted," said Escobar. Miss Escobar first became fascinated with salmon skins when, as a child, she went fishing in wooden boats with her father off the southern coasts of Chile.
February 19, 2003