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Emma Chamberlain Reveals Her Top Tips for "Quarantine Fashion" - Hollywood Reporter

Emma Chamberlain Reveals Her Top Tips for "Quarantine Fashion" - Hollywood Reporter


Emma Chamberlain Reveals Her Top Tips for "Quarantine Fashion" - Hollywood Reporter

Posted: 02 Apr 2020 08:30 AM PDT

The YouTube content creator explains how she's dressing for Zoom meetings with tie-dye sweat sets and fuzzy jackets: "It's a little bit more normal to be un-ready."

Emma Chamberlain has long embraced the trend of wearing loungewear, way before everyone else has seemingly started to become familiar with the phrase "business casual" while working from home.

"I've always been somebody who loves to be comfortable," says Chamberlain, an 18-year-old YouTube creator known for her hoodies and cool sense of style, adding that she recalls wearing pajama pants to the mall with friends when she was a kid.

The content creator knew how to dress for the camera long before Zoom video meetings were in, considering her job is filming videos of herself at home to share with her nearly 18 million combined YouTube and Instagram followers.

Chamberlain tells The Hollywood Reporter that the best way to nail work-from-home streetwear, or what she calls "quarantine fashion," is pairing sweatpants or a fuzzy jacket with a nice T-shirt or hoodie. "The key with being comfy is matching," she says. "As long as the clothes aren't form-fitting on my body, I'm wearing it."

Chamberlain has been relying on light blue and light pink tie-dye sweatsuits, as well as her staple gray sweats, while self-isolating with a friend for two weeks. "I have seven different shades of gray sweatpants with a vintage T-shirt and call it a day — maybe a tank top, if I'm feeling a little bit crazy," she adds. 

For Zoom meetings, Chamberlain suggests a vintage sweater: "They're more interesting and it's nice to brighten up the Zoom with a nice, bright sweater." But be sure to check for stains when going on camera with a colleague, she says: "The one thing I've noticed is that deodorant marks on black tops show up a little bit extra on the Zoom camera. ... It is a real problem."

She encourages people to use the time at home to shop in their closet and DIY some old pieces to turn them into something new by cropping them or tying them. "It's so much more useful to use this time to do something creative, and so if you can, gear your energy toward evolving your fashion sense," says Chamberlain, who recently attended Louis Vuitton's Paris Fashion Week show on March 3 (since then, the coronavirus outbreak has caused upcoming resort shows, men's shows and haute couture events to be canceled).

In this new environment, makeup is optional, Chamberlain says. "Makeup just makes my acne worse and I feel like it can make me feel a little bit dirty after, too, because my skin won't feel clean until I scrub it a lot. That might be a mental thing. ... Because we're all at home and it's a little bit more normal to be un-ready, I think it's a great time to let your skin breathe," she says, adding of her acrylic nails: "My nails are starting to grow out to a point that's dangerous, and I'm not looking forward to the day that they start falling off." 

Chamberlain did, however, wear makeup for one video she shot over Zoom, as well as on a few other occasions. And if she's filming a YouTube video or taking an Instagram photo, she might put in "a little more effort" by donning comfortable jeans. 

"Sometimes I think it actually feels good to get ready when you haven't in a while because I know I can start being like, 'Wow, I am lazy and I don't really look that good right now' or 'My skin is breaking out.' So getting ready just for no reason can sometimes be reassuring," she adds. "[But] there's no need to do a crazy eyeshadow look if that's not what feels right to you." 

'Tiger King' fashion: Outfits inspired by Joe Exotic and Carole Baskin - New York Post

Posted: 02 Apr 2020 01:19 PM PDT

You've binged the show. You've seen the memes. Now it's time to bring a little "Tiger King" fashion into your work-from-home, coronavirus-lockdown life.

Who better than Joe Exotic — with his Lisa Frank-leopard shirts, tight white pants, inexplicable EMT bomber jacket and that runaway eyebrow ring — to guide us through our sartorial time of need?

Or Carole Baskin? A queen of catleisure kaftans and holier-than-thou flower crowns may be the style icon we deserve right now.

And if you're not secretly coveting one of Doc Antle's harem "uniforms" (stolen straight from the "ThunderCats" wardrobe trailer), I don't think we can be friends.

Carole Baskin (left) and Barbara "Bala" Fisher from Netflix's Tiger King.
Carole Baskin (left) and Barbara "Bala" Fisher.Netflix

Even Jared Leto is letting his inner Tiger King run free, while fans are freaking out over Miley Cyrus and Joe Exotic sporting the same 'do.

Look, we've been through a lot. With a lot worse set to come. Let's just go ahead and embrace some Big Cat Energy. Right meow.

Sequin of events

Much like Joe Exotic, we've got cat-scratch fever for ombre sequins. A perfect option for filming your own revenge-plot music video at home.

Amen sequin top at Farfetch
Farfetch

Amen cropped sequin top, $243 at Farfetch

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Stay pawsitive

Hey, all you cool cats and kittens — live your best Carole Baskin life in a billowy Persian leopard look.

Camilla Ziba Ziba robe
Camilla

"Ziba Ziba" kimono, $699 at Camilla

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Fringe element

Get armed and dangerous with an Oklahoma-chic tasseled topper.

Zara fringe denim jacket
Zara

Fringe denim jacket, $70 at Zara

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Kitten with a whip

What to wear for your next Zoom date and/or exotic-animal park job interview? A meow-velous mini dress, naturally.

The Attico mini dress from Farfetch
Farfetch

The Attico mini dress, $729 at Farfetch

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Battle royal

If you're not sporting a flower crown while you rule over your pack of housecats, you can't sit with us.

Icing flower crown
Icing

Flower crown, $13 at Icing

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Office cougar

Show your work-from-home style stripes in a bow-bedecked bodysuit.

ATU Body Couture bodysuit at Farfetch
Farfetch

ATU Body Couture animal print bodysuit, $439 at Farfetch

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Boot-scoot boogie

Forget those boring #stayhome slippers, it's time to kick up trouble with boots that scream "I could still be a country star!"

Jeffrey Campbell "Looney-2" boots
Jeffrey Campbell

"Looney-2" boots, $220 at Jeffrey Campbell

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Throw shade

The perfect accessory for a bleach-blonde mullet and a conspiracy theory? Four words: wrap-around mirrored shades.

Oakley "Radar EV Path" sunglasses
Macy's

Oakley "Radar EV Path" sunglasses, $150 at Macy's

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Buckle up

Roar into your next work conference call with crystal-encrusted fangs.

Gucci belt at Saks
Saks

Gucci "Animalier" belt, $650 at Saks

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Stay fierce

Whether you're Netflix-and-chilling or hosting a catsquerade ball in your kitchen, this is the purr-fect tee.

Lisa Frank "Forrest" t-shirt
Lisa Frank

"Forrest" t-shirt, $25 at Lisa Frank

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Queen of the jungle

Throw your enemies to the lions! Or, um, just lead the fashion pack with a 14-k yellow-gold, diamond-studded pendant.

Retrouvai loin pendant at Five Story
Five Story

Retrouvai lion medallion necklace, $2,590 at Five Story

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Eye of the storm

In the profound words of Twitter's @abygrrl189: "I don't know how you guys are doing, but I am barely hanging in there. Like Joe Exotics eyebrow ring."

Rebel Bod "Animal Lover" eyebrow earring
Rebel Bod

"Animal Lover" eyebrow ring, $13 at Rebel Bod

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Here's How 'Making the Cut' Differs from 'Project Runway' and 'Next in Fashion' - Decider

Posted: 02 Apr 2020 08:31 AM PDT

You can't have a reality competition show without contestants, but each one of these shows goes about picking contestants in seemingly different ways.

Project Runway (above): The original design reality show remains committed to giving designers their big break. These contestants have not necessarily dressed major celebrities or shown at major events like New York Fashion Week, and they're usually not already hot names on Instagram. The lineup is predominantly, but not exclusively, American. You also get to see more interpersonal relationships between the designers, as the show follows them back to their penthouse where they're all housed together.

Next In Fashion: These designers have reached a level of notoriety within their field but, as is clearly spelled out in the premiere, none of them are household names yet. Most of them have worked with celebrities and have either worked with iconic brands (like FUBU) or have their own brand (like Marco Marco). The lineup is international, with 1/3 hailing from America and the rest coming from South Korea, Italy, England, and Mexico among many other countries. The show takes place almost entirely in the one studio setting, so you don't get glimpses of outside drama between the designers.

Making the Cut: As for Making the Cut's lineup, these designers all have established brands. That's because Making the Cut is focused on the big picture and helping the designers take what they're already doing and expand it to a global audience. These designers have shown at major events and worked with celebrities and even done collaborations, like Ji Won Choi's work with Adidas.  The designers are also more international, with just under half hailing from outside the United States. The designers get to hang out and see the city together, but the show is mostly focused on the work they do.

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