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Former Reds striker John Aldridge believes the Egyptian frontman is doing his cause few favours by going to ground “too easily”

Mohamed Salah has earned an unfavourable comparison to former Liverpool star Luis Suarez, with John Aldridge conceding that the Egyptian is earning a reputation for going to ground “too easily”.

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Players of the Egyptian forward’s ilk have argued for years that the speed in which they operate leaves them open to tumbles under the faintest of touches.

There is, however, a fine line between slight contact and simulation.

Salah is considered to be balancing on that tightrope , with recent outings having seen him fall under the spotlight when winning penalties and taking tumbles in other areas of the field.

Former Liverpool striker Aldridge fears the Reds’ 19-goal top scorer is attracting unwelcome attention, much like current Barcelona frontman Suarez did during his time at Anfield.

“Salah went down too easily against Crystal Palace [when looking for a penalty on Saturday]. And now he has a problem,” Aldridge told the Liverpool Echo .

“But did Mamadou Sakho catch his calf? 100 per cent. He caught his calf with his shin, and Salah went down. That’s what players do this day and age.

“Now Salah has to be careful. Everybody is on to him. This has happened in the past with players – think Luis Suarez – who look for a touch and then go down.

“Salah got touched. Did it warrant a penalty? Some referees would have given it. There was contact but, yes, Salah went down too easily.”

Aldridge added on whether the publicity which now surrounds Salah could end up having a negative impact on Liverpool: “If it’s a clear foul on Salah, then I’m sure referees will give a penalty in the future.

“But the way Mo plays means he is always going to invite contact, he is often going to have two or three players around him in the box.

“It’s hard for defenders in that instance not to make contact with him. It’s very, very difficult for him not to get touched.”

While attracting some unwelcome headlines this season, Salah continues to make plenty of positive ones.

The current holder of the Premier League Golden Boot is back at the front of that race for 2018-19, with a deadly double against Palace last time out taking him to 50 goals in the English top-flight from just 72 outings for Liverpool and Chelsea.

Pep Guardiola will take a clutch of youth-team players to the Pirelli Stadium for the Blues’ Carabao Cup semi-final against Burton on Wednesday

Ian Carlo Poveda, Felix Nmecha, Taylor Richards and Iker Pozo are set to be included in the Manchester City squad for Wednesday’s Carabao Cup semi-final second leg against Burton, Goal has learned.

City will take a 9-0 aggregate lead to the Pirelli Stadium and, with a place in the final all but assured, Pep Guardiola is planning to include around six or seven youth-team players in a bid to give his first-team stars some rest.

Eric Garcia, 18, who has impressed in two appearances in the competition already, is also set to be involved, while Philippe Sandler, 21, and Luke Bolton, 19 could also travel. 

City had hoped to call up more youth-team players but their plans were disrupted by the scheduling of the Checkatrade Trophy quarter-finals, with the club’s Under-21s slated to play Sunderland on Tuesday night.

SIX MAN CITY YOUNGSTERS TIPPED FOR BRIGHT FUTURES

Guardiola has decided to send a relatively strong U21 team to Sunderland, but has plucked some of the most highly-rated talents in the youth ranks for the Carabao Cup semi.

Poveda was at Barcelona before joining City three years ago and plays in a wide position; Nmecha has represented England and Germany at youth level; Richards is a right-sided attacking midfielder who counts Paul Pogba as a mentor, and Pozo has caught the eye playing in a deep-lying midfield role. All four are 18.

Phil Foden, who has long been part of Guardiola’s first-team set-up, is widely expected to start on Wednesday, while Aro Muric, 20, has played in all previous rounds in the competition.

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The rest of the squad will be made up of senior first-team members, with Riyad Mahrez in contention to feature after missing out on the match-day squad for Sunday’s Premier League win at Huddersfield.

The Paraguayan playmaker’s move to Newcastle not only marks a new standard for MLS players, it also shows a league gaining respect

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Major League Soccer did not make Miguel Almiron. He was already worth an eight-figure transfer fee when he arrived as one of the cornerstones of Atlanta United’s standard-setting arrival in 2017.

What the league was able to do for the Paraguayan playmaker, though, is take his already-soaring stock and keep it heading in a direction that eventually saw Almiron break transfer records on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean.

Almiron’s imminent $27 million transfer to Newcastle United will shatter the record for a transfer fee paid for an MLS player, a record Alphonso Davies held for just two months after his $22 million move to Bayern Munich. Almiron’s move completes a two-year run that saw him dominate the league with his speedy runs, impeccable passing and ability to generate his own chances when he wasn’t setting up his teammates.

He plays the game with an infectious energy that, coupled with his trademark smile, made him a player Atlanta United fans fell in love with, and a player they had to know wouldn’t be around for long.

By completing a two-year stint in MLS that went as close to perfect as anyone could have hoped, Almiron became the poster child for the league’s shift away from signing mostly aging superstars and instead targeting high-priced young talent. Sure, MLS still signs big names at the tail end of their careers, like Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Wayne Rooney, but Almiron’s time in MLS, and his lucrative departure, are a blueprint more and more MLS teams will start to follow after seeing how well it worked for Atlanta United.

The long-term success of that change in philosophy was always going to depend on the ability to take those young talents and keep their development heading in the right direction.

Developing young talent in MLS would not only show prospective buyers that players who do well in North America can go on to do well in tougher leagues, but also convince future international prospects that the league is the perfect springboard for a move to Europe.

There was a time when high-priced youngsters wouldn’t consider MLS, but those days appear to be over and Almiron’s transfer will ensure perceptions of the league will continue to change.

It’s one thing for MLS teams to be willing to invest millions into young talent, but it would have been much tougher to attract those high-level prospects if Almiron’s career had stagnated, or if his winter move to Newcastle had fallen apart.  ​

Now with Almiron gone, the focus will turn to Ezequiel Barco, another high-priced teenager at Atlanta United who struggled through his first season in the league. Both Barco and $20 million signing Gonzalo ‘Pity’ Martinez will look to fill the void left by Almiron, while also trying to continue the Atlanta United trend of high-priced South Americans proving themselves worth the investment.

That change hasn’t come without its own set of issues, namely more instances of foreign teams trying to pry away top MLS talent at a bargain price. In January alone, rumors have swirled around FC Barcelona’s interest in Carlos Vela and Club America’s pursuit of New York Red Bulls star Kaku. As good as it is to have more interest in MLS players, the league also can’t afford to be pushed around and have foreign clubs prying away the best players in MLS for anything below market value.

That’s another reason why the Almiron transfer is so significant. Atlanta United president Darren Eales raised plenty of eyebrows when he stated that he believed Almrion was worth $30 million. That figure sounded wildly ambitious and unrealistic at the time, but Atlanta United fought to secure the price it felt was justified, even as the club faced the pressure that came with knowing it had to sell Almiron or risk a messy roster situation with four designated players, one more than the league maximum of three.

Almiron’s transfer, coupled with the Davies move to Bayern Munich and Zack Steffen’s $10 million transfer to Manchester City, has shown just how much has changed for MLS. Eight-figure transfers were once unheard of for MLS players, with Jozy Altidore’s 2007 transfer to Villarreal the notable exception. This winter alone has generated three and could yield a fourth if Club America decides to make a serious push for Kaku after having an initial offer rejected by the Red Bulls.

Almiron is far from the only young player to see his game sharpened, and stock bolstered, by his time in MLS. Venezuelan midfielder Yangel Herrera spent two seasons with New York City FC on loan from Manchester City and has now joined La Liga side Huesca, while Tyler Adams has hit the ground running with RB Leipzig after two seasons as a starter for the Red Bulls.

The success in Europe of players like Almrion, Herrera, Adams and Davies will determine if prices for top young MLS talent continue to rise, with Almiron sure to face the most scrutiny. His days in MLS may be behind him, but Almiron will continue to be a standard bearer for MLS even after he trades in the red and black of Atlanta United for the black and white stripes of Newcastle United.

The Blues winger thinks the Argentine will provide more attacking firepower and suggested he could have a similar impact to Diego Costa

Eden Hazard has expressed his delight at Chelsea’s decision to sign Gonzalo Higuain and has backed the Argentine to score plenty of goals for the club.

The Blues completed the loan signing of the Argentine after agreeing to take over AC Milan’s temporary deal for the Juventus forward, with Higuain joining until the end of the season but with the option to buy.

The 31-year-old wasn’t registered in time to play against Tottenham on Thursday, with Maurizio Sarri’s side having recorded a 4-2 penalty shootout win to advance to the Carabao Cup final.

Higuain is, however, available to face Sheffield Wednesday in the FA Cup on Sunday and Hazard believes that, with Alvaro Morata leaving to join Atletico Madrid and Oliver Giroud having struggled to consistently find the net, the Argentina international is a useful addition.

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“For me as a winger, I like to play with top, top players,” he told reporters at Stamford Bridge. “With Chelsea I had the chance to play with one of the best, Diego Costa, for three years, and I think Higuain is one of the best.

“I also like to play when Olivier [Giroud] is playing, when Alvaro [Morata] was playing. My position is more winger than No.9, so I just try to have fun with the striker and the other winger. When the striker is there it’s good for me.

“For my position, yes. We all know I like to play the give-and-go with my striker, so if the striker just goes deep I’m going to be in trouble! Giroud understands this and that’s why I like to play with him, and I think Higuain is going to do the same.

“He’s a fantastic striker, when you see his career he scored a lot of goals everywhere – Madrid, Napoli, Juventus. He always scored goals and he’s going to do the same here. This season we are playing good, but sometimes we just miss one guy to score one goal.

“We had a couple of games where we played well but didn’t score, and at the end we finished with zero goals [despite] creating chances. I think in games sometimes we have a lot of chances. Like today, if we have a striker who can score three goals, the game finishes 5-1.

“At the moment it’s not the case but Higuain can do that. He’s a top striker who can score everywhere. I think when Olivier is playing he tries to do his best for the team. He’s more like a team player than just a striker. Diego was sometimes not this kind of player where you play a one-two but in the box he was amazing.

“He’d just score one goal and in the end if you won, you have three points. That’s what we need. I think Higuain is this kind of player. He can link with the wingers and midfield but he can also be the proper striker.”

Sarri had claimed prior to Chelsea’s win over Spurs that his players were “extremely difficult to motivate”, although Hazard, who faced particular criticism from his manager, insists he’s just focusing on playing well for the club.

“In the dressing room, most of the players have won almost everything,” he added. “We are big players and we know when we are not playing well and when we are playing good. In the end, we just need to look in the same way and try to win games. That’s it.

“My reaction is to be on the pitch and try to do my best. Managers talked about me in the past, this manager talked about me, the next manager is going to talk about me, so my target is just to play football. I don’t care what people think.

“I just want to do my best and today [against Tottenham] I did. I understand when the team is not playing well, the manager has to criticise the players. I don’t like to say ‘I’m the best player’, but it’s always this kind of player who can put the team [in a position to] win the game [who get criticised].

“I just try to do my best. I’m not focused on what the manager says. I don’t care about that to be fair. If the manager has to say something he will say it. We are big men so we can talk together, no problem at all. I look to the future and I will do my best again.

“We didn’t talk about that [Sarri’s public comments after Arsenal]. I don’t have a problem with it at all. The manager thinks what they want to think. For me, the best response is to be on the pitch and to win games. I did it.”

Spurs failed to reach the EFL Cup final after surrendering a first-leg lead against Chelsea on Thursday

Mauricio Pochettino suggested that Tottenham’s departure from White Hart Lane has been a contributing factor to their continued wait for a trophy.

Spurs were knocked out of the EFL Cup at the semi-final stage by Chelsea on Thursday after surrendering a 1-0 first-leg lead.

That first leg was played at Wembley with the club still without a move-in date for their new stadium on the site of their old ground in N17.

And Pochettino said that “doubts” about the club’s future have created an atmosphere that has been counter productive to securing an elusive first trophy since 2008.

“We are always close to the last step [to trophies] but to achieve it is the most difficult thing,” Pochettino told the Guardian  before Sunday’s FA Cup tie at Crystal Palace.

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“At the moment the team needed the last push, what happened? We build and build but then White Hart Lane – gone.

“We moved to Wembley and there were all the doubts about how we are going to behave. There was the example of West Ham in their first season [at the London Stadium], and many things in this process that stopped the evolution of the team about to win.

“Remember, we were unbeaten in the Premier League at White Hart Lane in our last season there. Nobody said what it meant to move to Wembley to create another project and not only this, we were going to play only one season at Wembley and now it’s nearly two seasons and no one says nothing.”

Spurs initially struggled to recreate their fortress-like home form at Wembley after moving, and failing to pick off teams from lower down the Premier League.

It took until their fourth league game of the season – against Bournemouth – to register a first win.

Some of those jitters have been eradicated this season, but the team have lost their last two Wembley fixtures in the league, against Wolverhampton Wanderers in December and more recently against Manchester United.

“When Arsenal moved [to Emirates Stadium], people talked about massive problems,” said Pochettino. “They are still paying, but Tottenham, with no history of winning…

“Our glory, I watch the [pre-match] video about the glory, it’s with Nicholson.

“It’s black and white. I watch it nearly every week and to create again that feeling, you need time.”

 

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4th Oct 2019

To anyone in the know, Victoria’s Secret model Georgia Fowler is one of New Zealand’s most successful model exports. Based in New York – though she is rarely at home, instead traveling the globe for work – Fowler has walked the runways of Chanel, Elie Saab, Off White and Balmain, solidifying herself as one of the most in-demand models working in the industry today.  

Ahead of her special guest appearance at the Stella Artois Caulfield Cup Carnival on Saturday October 19, Fowler (who recently returned to Australia from Paris Fashion Week) chatted to Vogue about what she’s most looking forward to this racing season, the importance of keeping comfort in mind even when dressing for the occasion, and why social media is king for aspiring models. 

You are headed to Australia for the 2019 Stella Artois Caulfield Cup Carnival. What are you most looking forward to about the day?

“Aside from being back in Australia, and seeing some of the highest quality horse racing, I’m excited to see what fashion is on show and how this year’s theme of New York City (my current hometown) is brought to the track.”

Your schedule takes you all over the world, often on short notice. How far in advance did you begin planning your race day outfit, and did you work with a stylist on it?

“Luckily enough, this is one event I have been able to plan into my calendar with significant notice, so I will have time to do a fitting with my stylist Jess Pecoraro. I’ve worked with her for years on most of my major events in Australia, and she always seems to find the perfect mix of international and homegrown designers.”

Which designers do you look to for race day inspiration?

“I am still unsure of my look, but I always try to choose an outfit that is classic enough that I will never look back and regret it, but while still following current trends and [being] daring enough to make an impact. I am loving Dion Lee, Toni Maticevski and Ellery as they have a classic aesthetic whilst still pushing boundaries.”

What are your top tips on dressing for the Stella Artois Caulfield Cup Carnival?

“I think whilst dressing for the races is very different from our everyday dressing, you should aim to still feel like yourself and [feel] comfortable in your outfit choice. Stick to the trends or themes that are most you, or keep the dress simple and add the drama with accessories instead.”

What do you make sure to pack with you in your handbag for a day at the races?

“I will always keep a top up of lipstick, and perhaps some powder if it’s going to be a hot day. I will always make sure to have full battery [on my phone] before the day begins. And of course, some betting money.”

Are there any racing trends you’d like to see finally put to rest?

“I’m not a fan of tiaras as headpieces, or looks that seem costume-like.”

Are there any particular Australian or New Zealand designers you love to wear when back home and abroad?

“Australian and Kiwi designers are some of my favourite even on a global scale. I love how fashion forward yet effortless the designs are, which means pieces can be taken from day to night. Some of my favourites are Dion Lee, Ellery, Christopher Esber and Paris Georgia.”

Spring racing is steeped in tradition and rules of etiquette when it comes to getting dressed. Do you abide by these or do you think racing season should give way to being playful with fashion?

“I think the dress code of the races adds to the sense of occasion and history, therefore I enjoy adhering to the rules and hope racegoers will continue to dress up for the event. I think the dress code can still be upheld whilst adding in more modern fashion trends.”

What trends do you think we’ll see at the Stella Artois Caulfield Cup?

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“I am expecting to see a hint of ’80s nostalgia, metallics, interesting shapes and textures. I personally love interesting cuts and shapes, so am excited for my fitting and seeing what options we have.”

Off the racecourse, how would you define your personal style?

“I like to think my style is easy going, classic and adaptable. I’m not big on trends and though I love a few standout pieces a season, I tend to buy fashion that can be worn many ways (thus easy to travel with) and can stand the test of time.”

You have a following of 993,000 on Instagram. How important is social media for working models and do you like to use it to interact with your fans?

“Social media is a huge part of a model’s job. Even if not posting for the brand that you are modeling for directly, your reach is a demonstration to the client of how well you can market and therefore how successful of a model you may be at marketing their brand. I love that I’m able to showcase any work or viewpoints I’m passionate about and interact with fans, though I definitely have my days.

I find it is a challenge to find the appropriate balance between being completely transparent with your fan base and being able to keep an element of privacy, or just being able to live without sharing every detail or thinking about a social presence.”

Given so many young women look up to you, how would you advise aspiring models looking to break into the industry?

“Most importantly I think you need to have grit in this industry. Success is not overnight for most and if it is, it can be very fleeting. The best careers I know come from relationship building, never giving up and always being a joy to work with on set so you continue to get rebooked. I think being a pretty face is less and less important, and these days it’s about showing personality and work ethic.”

 

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4th Oct 2019

After a whirlwind couple of weeks of romantic interludes that included a bowling date, a mini vacation in upstate New York, and even attending a family member’s funeral together, model Gigi Hadid and Bachelorette US alumni, Tyler Cameron, have reportedly called it quits.

Us Weekly reports a source “close to the situation” confirmed the split to the publication, sharing that Cameron is now single again. “Tyler is single. He and Gigi Hadid are no longer together.”

The publication further notes that rumours the new couple were no longer dating started a few days ago, after Cameron appeared on Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen. During the appearance on the show, Cameron, 26, flashed his abs and also, according to Us Weekly, dropped the news that he “may be single”.

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Cameron and Hadid, 24, were first linked in early August after the model and season 15 Bachelorette US runner-up were spotted “hanging out” in New York together. The duo were then seen together on numerous occasions, including, as noted above, at a family funeral, with Cameron reportedly accompanying Hadid to the Netherlands to attend her maternal grandmother’s funeral.

One of Cameron’s fellow Bachelorette castmates, Dylan Barbour, even confirmed to one US entertainment outlet that Cameron was super happy in his relationship with Hadid. “He’s [a]… real happy guy. I don’t care whether [she’s] a supermodel or not. As long as Tyler’s happy, I’m happy,” Barbour reportedly told Entertainment Tonight.

So, what went wrong with these two lovebirds? All signs pointed towards loved-up, but now all signs are pointing to “just friends”. Without any comment from either party at this stage, we can only speculate. But, Hadid’s hectic modelling schedule—including recently jetting over to Paris for Paris Fashion Week—and all the travel that comes with it, certainly couldn’t have helped. So many commitments in the diary, so little time to “hang out”.

Everything you need to know about feminist sex

October 4, 2019 | News | No Comments

The way we think about sex is changing, thanks to a new feminist agenda. “Sex should be a place of fun and enjoyment,” says author and illustrator Flo Perry, who’s just published . “For me, feminist sex is about having the sex you want to be having, rather than the sex you you should be having – and getting maximum pleasure.” 

This October marks two years since the rise of the #MeToo movement, which led to women around the world sharing deeply personal stories of sexual assault and harassment. Meanwhile, , the ’s viral short story published in December 2017, opened up conversations about consent and the grey areas that can exist when it comes to dating. 

“We’re starting to really explore the various ways in which inequality and power imbalances follow us into the bedroom,” Allison Moon, queer sex educator and author of tells . “Culture teaches women not to speak up clearly; and men to pursue in the absence of a firm ‘no’.” 

“There are a lot more conversations [to be had] about consent and the complexities around consent,” adds Vithika Yadav, founder of sex and relationships website . “It’s not only about [educating] girls and women, but also boys and men.” 

Like the western sexual revolution in the 1960s, these discussions have brought ideas of feminist sex back into focus. “Feminism is designed to respond to an inequality in society,” Moon says. “[This includes] equal access to the joy and pleasure of sex. Everybody’s voice matters.” 

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Addressing the orgasm gap 
According to the Kinsey Institute, heterosexual women are the least likely to orgasm during sex — only climaxing 63 per cent of the time, compared to 85 per cent for straight and gay men, and 75 per cent for lesbian women.  

“We all need to advocate for our own pleasure,” says Moon. “One of the things the sexual revolution has done for women is teaching us to speak up for what we want in bed; none of our partners are mind readers.” 

Broadening our definition of sex, which in the heterosexual world is often used to just refer to penetrative sex, also helps. “When we are limited by this very narrow idea of what counts as sex, we are losing so much access to pleasure,” she adds. 

It is essential that women feel empowered about their choices in the bedroom. “Women [should feel] empowered to take decisions regarding their own bodies, [and] be assertive around what they like and what they don’t like,” says Yadav. Clear communication between all parties involved is key when it comes to consent. “We talk a lot about ‘no means no’, but I think we also need to empower women to say ‘yes’,” Yadav adds. 

Navigating societal expectations 
“[Feminist sex] is about having a sex life that is free of expectations,” Perry says, citing porn, media and our upbringing as influencing and shaping these views. “When we [have sex] with preconceived notions about how somebody else’s body is supposed to work, we’ve [already] lost track of where the joy really comes from,” Moon adds. She notes that these preconceptions can differ when it comes to gay and lesbian sex. “A lot of us don’t know how to have queer sex before we do it for the first time; we haven’t grown up in a world saturated by media that shows us what it looks like, which [can be] a great benefit.” 

What’s perceived to be the feminist ideal can also conflict with personal sexual desires. The regular opener of podcast proves that case in point with the now infamous line, “I’m a feminist, but…”. Perry agrees: “Some people don’t want an equal power dynamic [while having sex]; that’s ok.” Body hair is another area where people feel forced to grapple with their feminist principles. “Obviously people should do whatever they like to their body hair; it’s their choice,” Perry continues. “It’s difficult to know if you’re doing it because society tells you to or because you actually want to do it, [but] there’s no point beating yourself up about it.”  

Self-exploration and pornography
Communicating effectively is one thing, but knowing what you want is another. “I think that women across the board can masturbate more and figure out what we like,” Moon says. “And then learn how to articulate that.”

And what of pornography? “The most feminist way to enjoy porn is by paying for it; tube sites regularly pirate professional scenes, offering no compensation to the performers or production companies,” she explains. “Do a little research into the performers and studios you like to see if the porn is made in an ethical way. Do the performers feel free to say yes or no to any acts? Do they feel safe and respected on set? Do they get paid fairly for their labour?” 

The role of men 
Men should also think about sex from a feminist perspective. “I hope people, regardless of gender, examine the times in which they have not been impeccable when it comes to [their] sexual ethics,” says Moon. “Learning how to ask really good questions, and listening to the answer you receive, is key.”  

“Feminist sex is essentially good sex,” concludes Yadav, “and it’s meant for everyone.” 

Milliner Stephen Jones throws a splendidly decadent dinner party. In the Banqueting Room at the Royal Pavilion in Brighton, fictive guests including Mick Jagger, Lady Gaga, Kate Moss and the Duchess of Sussex are represented by the bespoke hats that Jones has made for them. There’s a pink Milady straw hat with a flurry of ostrich feathers, a red velvet fedora, a black gazar-brimmed hat named Trophy Wife, and Swing, modelled on a grand chandelier. The scene is set for mischief.

The room is one of a series of tableaux that Jones has conjured for an exhibition showcasing his designs in the Regency building, constructed as a seaside pleasure palace for King George IV more than 200 years ago. Its state rooms will display nearly 200 of the most extraordinary hats that have resulted from the Saint Martin’s School of Art-trained milliner’s 40-year career. “It’s the first time the Royal Pavilion has allowed an exhibition in the rooms,” explains Jones. “So it is a bit special.

His designs have long encapsulated the dizzy pleasure of hat-wearing, finding their way all over the world, from Ascot to the Melbourne Cup. “You put a hat on to have fun,” he says. “It‘s an optimistic gesture to the world, not about how you feel, but about how you look. We ‘read’ hats, and clients always say how many compliments they receive – what has the power to do that now?”

Jones is one of the most prolific designers working across the worlds of film, celebrity, performance and runway, and has been creating hats for Dior since John Galliano’s debut in 1996 (some of his pieces are currently on display at the V&A’s retrospective Christian Dior: Designer of Dreams), as well as for Matty Bovan and Marc Jacobs. He equips royalty, pop stars and racing glitterati the world over with bespoke designs that frame faces, amplify personalities and magnify a moment with surreal wit and astonishing beauty. Take a boater seen at Derby Day at Flemington last year with a crisp black and white ribbon enveloping the crown. The top popped whimsically open, as if to let in the air in a Willy Wonka moment of irreverence.

Above: Chanel ready-to-wear spring/summer 2019.

Jones’s exhibition could not be more prescient. Hats are enjoying a resurgence as a new generation of wearers take up the habit. The lexicon of styles is expansive, from Gucci’s beribboned fedoras to Marc Jacobs’s glossy black net-veiled boaters and Valentino’s voluminous straw sunhats. At Saint Laurent’s spring/summer ‘19 show, there were Swarovski crystal-studded hats topping cocktail dresses; at Prada, outsized Alice bands; and at Jacquemus, giant, slouchy straws that rippled and rolled in the breeze. Last year’s two royal weddings also brought hats well and truly into the frame – at Princess Eugenie’s wedding to Jack Brooksbank, Cara Delevingne in her Chanel top hat and her sister Poppy in Victoria Grant’s feathered pillbox were a picture. “Society is, by nature, conservative, so steps forward are small,” observes Piers Atkinson, whose hats are adored by Hollywood. “But many of the guests took a bolder approach.”

Headgear is so wildly varied, from Mary Poppins’s nifty titfers decorated with birds and feathers to Cardi B’s coolie hat that drips with beads and jewels, to Meghan Markle’s impressive armoury of fascinators and curvilinear sinamay saucers, to Prada’s neon nylon bucket hat. However, Jones believes there’s one essential element to get right. “People want simple, graceful and elegant designs,” he explains. “Christian Dior, who started out as a milliner, did not see the hat as separate – it was part and parcel of an outfit. The hat is also about telling stories, and there’s an element of playfulness, but it is now about being more ‘real’ than sensationalist.”

But how does ‘real’ translate, when, for hat-wearing novices, millinery can be so intimidating? The good news is that a little practice and play makes all the difference. As the public’s taste for hat-wearing swells, feelings of self-consciousness will diminish in equal measure.

Above: Marc Jacobs ready-to-wear spring/summer 2019.

“Treat it like shopping for a new pair of jeans or shoes,” says Nerida Winter, who has 16 years as the Australian Turf Club’s official racing milliner under her belt. “Jump in head-first; grab some options that capture your eye, try them on. If they don’t fit or suit, keep trying or seek expert advice.”

Indeed, there are often contradictory impulses at play in this overly mediated era: an internal battle between wanting to stand out and a desire for privacy. Hats, conveniently, fulfil both. “People think sometimes that people who wear hats want to show off,” adds Philip Treacy, who has been making his striking architectural and feather designs since 1990, with patrons including the late Isabella Blow, Grace Jones and Dita von Teese. “A hat is a positive symbol; the ultimate glamour accessory. It thrills observers and makes the wearer feel a million dollars.”

Modern milliners are determined to make hats easy to wear. “Small hats are sometimes easier for people to wear and understand. You can have just as much drama as a large shape by adding veils and feathers,” says Treacy, who spends hours working on the forward ‘perch’ of a hat that gives the wearer elegant angles. Adelaide milliner Sylvy Earl creates subtly elevated headbands as part of her offering, padded, cast in silk abaca and finished with a single contrasting grosgrain ribbon.

At Maison Michel, the Chanel-owned millinery atelier in Paris, which is stocked by Harrolds in Australia, creative director Priscilla Royer has been rethinking the accessory for everyday. “If a hat is too stiff, then one is scared to wear it, and they can be so cumbersome,” says Royer, who has been at the helm since 2015. “Where do you put them? They need a chair or a shelf. It becomes an object rather than a fashion accessory. I started working on a supple straw with less coating. Last year, we launched Hat on the Go, a sunhat that you can roll and pack into a suitcase.”

Above: Prada ready-to-wear spring/summer 2019.

Royer has also come up with a charming array for spring in a collection entitled Sunken Cities, inspired by the sub-aquatic world. There are straws boasting silver brims, turbans and veils in sheer, luminous textures. The star piece is a silver paillette bucket hat. “The bucket is more sophisticated than the baseball,” explains Royer, “and it has an elegance that you don’t have with a cap. It’s the new cloche – it suits so many faces.” Winter, meanwhile, is also seeing increased interest in the bucket, along with casual styles like sunhats and athleticinspired headbands for everyday, coming from all walks. “Teenagers are growing up with hats as a cool accessory. I get all sorts of requests from men, from bespoke pieces through to everyday fedoras and caps.”

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The current appetite for headwear has ushered in small, independent makers and specialists. Consider The Season by Paul Stafford, who specialises in origami paper hats that ingeniously fold into flatpacks, or local designer Lorna Murray, whose pleated, ethically made creations collapse down into a simple packable cylinder. At Matchesfashion.com, which has increased its budget dedicated to hats by 35 per cent, womenswear buying director Natalie Kingham has been working with New York-based brand House of Lafayette on a line of leopard-print turbans and scrunchies, as well as picking up Eliurpi, a Barcelona-made line of cartwheel hats by Elisabet Urpí and Nacho Umpiérrez. “You can wear them behind your neck with the ribbon tied up, fashioned after the Mediterranean style,” explains Kingham. Another independent brand making waves at the retailer is French label La Prestic Ouiston, offering twill canotiers in brilliant prints by designer Laurence Mahéo, who also works on her family’s oyster farm in Brittany.

One style can garner a cult-like following. The trio behind new label Tio y Tia created a line of felt hats, based on American south-western styles, which have been cropping up on Instagram feeds ever since. Nicole Najafi, Johanna Peet and Australian-based, British-born photographer Lucy Laucht enlisted a milliner who once made hats for Georgia O’Keefe to craft their wool creations with a single leather chin cord. The instantly recognisable hats have made themselves at home from beach to city.

Above: Valentino ready-to-wear spring/summer 2019.

Milliners will often go to extremes to further the craft. “If I had to choose just one of my creations, it would be the 17th-century galleon or Sailing Ship hat,” says Philip Treacy. “It was inspired by a chapter in Olivier Bernier’s book Pleasure and Privilege, which describes a British admiral losing a battle to the French fleet. In celebration, women in Paris wore ships in their hair to go to the opera. The piece is satin, with the sails made from paradise feathers and the rigging from the feather shafts.”

According to Jones, Galliano’s Egyptian-inspired couture collection for Dior spring/summer ’04 remains a triumph, with Erin O’Connor opening the show in a towering metallic empress headdress. For Atkinson, outer space beckoned. “There was an incredible opportunity to create the first hat to go into orbit,” he explains. “A star was planning on performing in zero gravity wearing Piers Atkinson. It was very NASA in my studio for a few days: tough but lightweight materials, shiny things, flashing lights, no bits that could fall off and clog up a circuit. Unfortunately, the Fashion in the Firmament has been postponed for now, but I haven’t given up hope,” he says with a laugh.

As hat-o-philia grows the world over, many millinery fans are making pilgrimages to the world’s renowned makers. Stewart recalls an Australian couture customer taking the bus to his London studio in Ridley Road, Hackney, wearing a giant saucer-shaped straw. “There’s always a new hat, a new challenge,” he concludes. Hats off to that.

This article originally appeared in Vogue Australia’s April 2019 issue.

Above: Gucci ready-to-wear spring/summer 2019.

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When it was announced in May that Giambattista Valli would be the next H&M collaborator, it was clear he was going to do things differently. At a photocall at the amFAR Gala during the Cannes Film Festival, Valli appeared alongside his muses – including Kendall Jenner, Chris Lee, Chiara Ferragni and Ross Lynch dressed in Giambattista Valli x H&M, a limited-edition drop of which was made available in selected stores and online two days later, selling out in minutes. “I couldn’t believe so many people worldwide knew the brand,” he tells when we meet in Rome for an exclusive preview of the collection ahead of the full drop in November. “H&M wanted the enthusiasm of the first collaboration with Karl [Lagerfeld], so I wanted to revolutionise it from the beginning.”

After honing his skills with couturier Roberto Capucci, Valli went on to work for Fendi and then Emanuel Ungaro, before launching his eponymous brand in 2005, gaining couture status in 2011. Since then, the likes of Rihanna, Ariana Grande and Emma Stone have sent paparazzi into a frenzy in his effervescent red-carpet dresses. Now the 53-year-old is bringing a touch of that unadulterated glamour to the high street.

A very Roman holiday
Valli is such a mainstay of Paris’s show schedules you could be forgiven for forgetting he is in fact Roman. “I come from Rome, I grew up here,” he says. “The city has a very strong DNA, a kind of eccentricity, effortlessness and timeless feel. It’s part of the story of the house.” 

The H&M campaign stars Ferragni, Jenner and Lee, and was photographed Mert and Marcus in a private garden in Rome and at the Galleria Doria Pamphilj, which boasts one of the world’s most enviable art collections comprising works by Caravaggio, Raphael and Velázquez. “I wanted to show this girl who now lives in LA, Shanghai or Berlin and comes home to Rome with a group of friends, they’re staying at a palazzo and getting ready for a party,” he says of the unashamedly decadent concept behind the campaign. “I’m not a designer who dresses someone to go to work — my community is very jetset. I love this idea of people being comfortable moving from one country to another; one culture to another.” 

Hoodies embellished with rhinestone floral motifs, elaborate necklaces embroidered into the collar of marl sweatshirts, a leather bomber with a shearling collar — there’s a familiar air of a princess-gone-rogue in these contrasts between refinement and athleticism.

Clothes you wear, not clothes that wear you
With the exception of perhaps six statement party gowns — one a riot of vermillion tulle, the others a botanist’s dream (embroidered, with appliqué flowers or in pleated floral-print fabric) – the collection’s versatile separates and dresses are easily assimilated into a wardrobe. “I don’t work in fashion, I work more in style,” says Valli. “I want to give people the support they need to style clothes their own way and be comfortable; fashion can be too dictated by a ‘look’. When I design, I leave space for people to fill with their personality.”

After the limited-edition drop in May, Valli delighted in scrolling through Instagram to see how customers interpreted the clothes. “I love it when people feel in balance with themselves, it’s the most elegant thing,” he says. “I hate it when luxury houses make people feel they need to buy something, or else you aren’t cool. What I want to do in fashion is inspire people. ”

Meet the Giambattista Valli man
Valli describes his first foray into menswear as “very autobiographical”. A classic Levi’s jean jacket he wore as a child was the starting point for a denim coat with military detailing and faux sheepskin lining. Meanwhile, a portrait by an unknown Flemish artist that hangs in Valli’s Paris home was adapted into a print that features on a raincoat, scarf and duffle bag. “The menswear is for a man who goes into a woman’s wardrobe and gets dressed up — somebody who likes more androgynous clothes — normally it’s the other way around, so I thought it would be nice to do something different,” he says. “I like to remove the etiquette surrounding and , and think about creativity and freedom. I thought about who the Valli girl surrounds herself with. There is a fluidity, with the women wearing one of the men’s jackets. Everybody’s free to interpret it their own way.”

Acting as a thread of continuity with the old Dutch masters are rococo embroideries that slalom down the legs of trousers and the opening of a military tailcoat, as well as imitation pearls studded along the neckline of a black sweatshirt. “It’s funny,” he says, “pearls look so bourgeois on a little black dress. But when they’re on a man’s black sweater, they become outrageous. I always wear a string of pearls, it’s my lucky charm. I can be standing next to someone covered in tattoos and piercings, but people will look at my pearls.” Then there’s the leopard print, which until now Valli admits was “a very couture idea” to him, so he upended this notion and has used the pattern on jogging pants and T-shirts.

From haute couture to high street
Just because the clothes aren’t haute couture, Valli insists they are no less considered: “yes, the designs are in a different fabric to what I normally use and will be sold at different prices, but everything has a meaning, down to the most simple sweatshirt.” He gestures towards the model Oslo Grace who is dressed in bleached jeans, flowery socks, creepers and a marshmallow-pink hoodie. The ‘love’ motif, emblazoned on socks, a handbag and men’s T-shirts, is how Valli closes his letters, while the lip belt buckle and bag clasp are modelled on his own mouth.

“The collection is an a,b,c of what I’ve done up until now,” says the designer. “I’m couture, I’m ready-to-wear, a mix of everything. I want people to be able to wear one of my couture jackets over jeans. I like the idea of H&M in front of a Caravaggio.” This desire to create clothes that won’t dilute the DNA of a brand without beating personal style into submission is a quest for authenticity, as Valli concludes: “I don’t want Giambattista Valli x H&M to be a parody. I’m a perfectionist; I want the collection to be totally faithful and honest to the customer.”

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