Tag Archives: Savile Row

Lotus is Getting a Lifeline, But New Esprit Is On Ice

By Justin Berkowitz

1977 Lotus Esprit (Euro-spec)

After spending decades trying to do too much with too little, Lotus now is just spending very little. Former CEO Dany Bahar’s plan for a five-to-six-model Lotus range was never completely serious—it was more meant to showcase Lotus’s expertise-for-hire—but development had progressed quite far on a new Esprit. Work on that sports car has, apparently, come to an end.

Speaking recently with a major Malaysian newspaper, an executive at Lotus’s new corporate parent DRB-Hicom said that that plans for future models had been canceled. In the short term, Lotus would be rolling out variants of it existing two-and-a-half-car lineup. What a shot to the gut.

It isn’t that the Evora, Elise, or Exige are boring cars—they’re among the most entertaining on the road, at any price. We’re fine with Lotus cramming supercharged engines into the trio. We’ve even made peace with the confusion inherent in the Exige roadster, since the Exige was supposedly a coupe version of the roadster called the Elise. A Lotus isn’t really supposed to be competitive with a Porsche any more than Savile Row challenges Neiman Marcus, but all three Lotus models are aging rapidly. Two aren’t even available as road cars in the U.S. anymore. Fresh metal is needed to keep the brand name strong and credible here, in what should be Lotus’s largest market after the U.K.

The cuts really shouldn’t be interpreted as penny pinching by DRB-Hicom, which is a large, well-funded corporation that has extensive experience in car manufacturing. DRB has poured more than $100 million into Lotus, in large part to pay down the immense debt racked up during the wide-eyed Bahar era. (Swizz Beatz cameos don’t come cheap, you know.)

So, why the cuts? Tan Sri Mohd Khamil Jamil, the DRB managing director who gave the interview, suggested that Lotus’s financial situation has been “cleaned up” and that the company is finally ready to move forward. In other words, the Lotus balance sheets were covered in red ink—although the engineering division, we’re told, was just about profitable—and that needed sorting before any new product could be considered.

This is sensible business, and of all companies, Lotus needs a big dose of that. But we are—as all gearheads should be—left wondering about the fate of the Esprit. There’s a strong case that a $100,000-plus sports car was the wrong product for Lotus, a brand that will never be able to match the panache and established image offered by Ze Germans. Even still, Lotus was into advanced development and testing on what was supposed to be its range-topping sports car, and shelving it means the investment probably will never be recovered.


Zac Posen's Golden Gown For Magnum Ice Cream

Georgia May Jagger and Cara Delevingne Become Roomies, and Zac Posen Launches a New Line

By Robert Khederian


    These stories and more here, in our daily news roundup.

  • Harper’s Bazaar]
  • Racked]
  • Talk about model roommates: Cara Delevingne and Georgia May Jagger are reportedly moving to North London together. [Telegraph]
  • The CFDA has teamed up with , a roundup of Instagram pics snapped and shared by industry insiders, on the CFDA‘s website. [Fashionologie Inbox]
  • The Westminster City Council has refused Abercrombie & Fitch’s proposal to open a children’s store on Savile Row. [Vogue UK]
  • The President of WWD]
  • Anna Piaggi’s wardrobe will be featured in a public exhibition at Milan’s Fabbrica del Vapore later this month. [Vogue UK]
  • The Wall Street Journal]
    …read more
    Source: FULL ARTICLE at fashionologie

Rachel Zoe's Dazzling New Gig, Taschen's New Westwood Tome, and Karlie Kloss's Latest Romp

By Robert Khederian

All the bits fit to print here, in our daily news roundup.

  • i-D Magazine‘s Terry Jones curated the latest Taschen release, Vivienne Westwood, which reflects on the designer’s influence on British fashion over the last 30 years. [Fashionologie Inbox]
  • Today marks Carolina Herrera‘s 74th birthday. [InStyle]
  • ShoeDazzle has named Rachel Zoe its chief stylist. [WWD]
  • Meanwhile, Savile Row tailor Gieves & Hawkes has tapped former Brioni artistic director Jason Basmajian to be its new creative director. [Vogue UK]
  • Terry Richardson’s latest campaign for Equinox was shot at the Stahl House in the Hollywood Hills. [Elle]
  • Rugby Ralph Lauren, which is set to shutter by February, is offering 40 percent off all merchandise both in stores and online. [The Shophound]
  • JCPenney CEO Ron Johnson says he isn’t making ecommerce a priority. “You’ve got to focus on where they are shopping today, and that is the physical store.” [Racked]
  • This is what the debranded products offered by Selfridges’ No Noise campaign look like. [Refinery29]
  • Karlie Kloss may have spent last season beating up men on the beach, but you’d never know that from her ethereal commercial for Juicy Couture‘s new scent, Couture La La. [Fashion Copious]

Source: FULL ARTICLE at fashionologie