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Search resuls for: "Laurel Pantin"


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TODAY’S smartwatches and fitness trackers can be powerful tools. Many can monitor your heart rate, give you detailed information about workouts, even trick you into getting into bed earlier. Unfortunately, most look terrible. Laurel Pantin, Los Angeles-based writer of style newsletter Earl Earl, started wearing a diminutive Fitbit Inspire 3 ($100) in the middle of 2020, soon after giving birth to her second child—and fell in love with its ability to track her activity and sleep. “It’s become a thing I rely on, but it’s just so hideous,” she said.
Persons: TODAY’S, Laurel Pantin, Earl Earl, , “ It’s Locations: Los Angeles
The Company Making Luxury Stretch Pants Feel Indispensable
  + stars: | 2023-05-06 | by ( Rory Satran | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +1 min
The women’s work-pants hall of fame has its first postpandemic inductee: High Sport’s “Kick” cropped knit pants. The independent New York and Los Angeles brand was launched in 2021, but its luxurious, smoothing, stretchy trousers already have a zealous following. For the fashionable and well-resourced women who whisper brand names to each other in line for desk salads, or at school pickups from Pasadena’s Polytechnic to Manhattan’s Spence, these cult pants are apparently worth their $860 price tag. They’re favorites of fashion-obsessive types like Laurel Pantin and Leandra Medine Cohen, who extol their virtues in their respective newsletters. (High Sport says it very rarely gifts influencers.)
THE LOUD CROWD Guests in blinding-bright outfits at Copenhagen fashion week in 2021. Photo: Getty ImagesIN SEPTEMBER of 2009, Laurel Pantin, then 24, was late to a show during New York fashion week. “I’d been out the night before at the Alexander Wang party,” said Ms. Pantin, now a 37-year-old consultant and stylist in Los Angeles. When his site posted Ms. Pantin’s photo, she was flooded with messages from friends and acquaintances—many of whom had no connection to fashion at all. Ms. Pantin compared the effect of being photographed on the street to “being the heroine in a movie, except it’s your real life,” she said.
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