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Video: Victoria’s Secret lingerie and sexy fashions show coming to UK

April 16, 2014 by  
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International lingerie chain Victoria's Secret is opening its doors in the the Republic of Ireland

International lingerie chain Victoria’s Secret will be taking its fashion extravaganza to the UK catwalk

Global lingerie chain Victoria’s Secret is to stage its first UK fashion extravaganza in London.

Dozens of international supermodels will take to the catwalk at the Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show at Earls Court in December, the US brand announced today.

The event, which will be broadcast to 192 countries, has only ever once before ventured outside America when it transferred to Cannes during the film festival in 2000.

The show was first held at the Plaza Hotel in New York in 1995 since when it has attracted most of the biggest names in modelling including Naomi Campbell, Helena Christensen, Tyra Banks, Heidi Klum, Karen Mulder, Gisele Bundchen  and Rosie Huntington-Whiteley.

Dublin Airport got a little slice of heaven last year when Victoria’s Secret opened their first store in the Republic of Ireland.

The beauty and accessories store opened in Terminal 2 – and more stores might follow in the city centre.

A spokesperson for the airport said that the shop opened without any fuss although some commuters were upset that none of the brand’s iconic ‘Angels’ was present.

“It was in line with what they wanted, it was a very soft opening,” the spokesperson said. The store will be retailing some of the brand’s most sought-after beauty and cosmetic products.

Products are also directed towards the jet-setting clientele, with accessories such as a branded passport holder.

There have been rumours circulating that the launch of the brand in the airport is a strong indication that the lingerie giants are now considering opening a store in Dublin city centre, but this has yet to be confirmed.

“I couldn’t comment on that at this stage, I don’t know. Watch this space,” the spokesperson said.

The interior of the shop is a design similar to the US stores, with black-cherry wall fixtures, as well as videos broadcasting images of the brand’s beautiful Angels.

A statement from the company said that the Dublin branch “gives new meaning to the words ‘sexy, sophisticated and forever young’”.

The news came only months after Irish woman Margaret McDonald landed one of the top jobs in the world’s most famous lingerie brand.

Known as the world’s sexiest store, shoppers will find fragrances like the FiFi Award-winning Victoria’s Secret Bombshell to smell like their favourite Angel.

The billion-dollar business is now being run by Ms McDonald, who started her career as a trainee buyer in Penneys.

Ms McDonald moved with her husband Mark Kelly and their two young daughters to Columbus, Ohio, to take up the running of the company.

The savvy businesswoman gained career steam working first while a student at Saks Fifth Avenue and Brown Thomas in Dublin.

From there she moved on to be the European vice-president of Banana Republic, vice-president at Gap Inc and the head of buying at Marks and Spencer.

The company had been exclusively home-based in its retailing until it launched in the UK last year.

With Ms McDonald at the lead, the company is recording sky-high profits and worldwide recognition.

NEW YORK, NY - FEBRUARY 11:  Fashion designer Jenny Packham poses backstage at Jenny Packham - Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week Fall 2014 at Industria Studios on February 11, 2014 in New York City.  (Photo by Vivien Killilea/Getty Images)

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Women sue lingerie companies over fat-reducing garments

April 16, 2014 by  
Filed under Latest Lingerie News

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Two Massachusetts women who purchased undergarments infused with capsules of caffeine and vitamins are suing the lingerie companies that manufactured them, alleging the products failed to live up to claims that they would melt away fat.

Annique Bellot and Tara Stefani filed a proposed class-action lawsuit in US District Court in Boston this week against Maidenform Brands LLC and Wacoal America Inc., joining other women who have recently brought cases against the companies for allegedly misrepresenting the garments’ powers.

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The Massachusetts suit states that the slimming shapewear, constructed with microcapsules containing caffeine, Vitamin E, fatty acids, and other ingredients that are absorbed by the skin, is marketed as a way to “permanently change women’s body shape and skin tone.” The products cost 50 to 60 percent more than identical garments that don’t contain the microcapsules, according to the suit.

The two undergarments named in the complaint, $38 Flexees Instant Slimmer shapewear by Maidenform, and Wacoal’s $60 iPant, are both made with a fabric called Novarel Slim produced by the Spanish company Nurel. Wacoal claimed the “anti-cellulite” iPant, referred to as “hope on a hanger,” would “reshape your lower body in 28 days with lasting results,” according to the suit, if worn eight hours a day, seven days a week, and would continue to work even after 100 washes.

“It’s very unfortunate that there are companies out there that are preying on people’s insecurities with claims that may not be supportable by science,” said Newton lawyer Mathew Pawa, who is representing the plaintiffs.

Nurel’s website says that its nylon microfiber “incorporates active principles helping to control cellulite appearance during the garment use” and that after 28 days of use women reported a slimming effect and a reduction in cellulite. Plaintiffs Bellot and Stefani purchased their undergarments during the last week of March, according to the suit. Nurel was not named as defendant in the suit.

Pawa’s co-counsel on the case, Tim Howard, a Tallahassee lawyer and a professor at Cambridge Graduate University in Cambridge, filed a similar suit against Maidenform and Wacoal in Florida in December.

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Telling women you can lose weight “by putting coffee and whatever else you put in the fabric of underwear” is “absurd and extraordinarily crass,” Howard said. There are likely tens of thousands of women who have purchased this type of shapewear, he said.

Two women filed a nearly identical lawsuit in November in federal court in New York, which has since been transferred to New Jersey.

Nutrient-infused textiles are a $600 million annual business, according to the Massachusetts lawsuit. The plaintiffs are seeking refunds and punitive damages, as well as an injunction that would keep the companies from selling the slimming apparel.

Susan Malinowski, vice president of marketing at Wacoal America, based in Lyndhurst, N.J., declined to comment on the pending litigation. “Wacoal as a company and a brand is well known for creating and delivering quality products to women,” she said. “We have a very passionate following of women who wear our brand, so it’s an important part of our reputation.”

A spokesman for Maidenform, which was recently bought by Hanesbrands of Winston-Salem, N.C., said in a statement that the company “has recently learned that the manufacturer of the fabric used in certain shapewear products marketed by Maidenform may be unable to provide the level of substantiation for advertising claims that Maidenform expects.” There is nothing wrong with the products, the statement said, but unsatisfied consumers are entitled to a refund.

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