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The Eccentric Side of Glam

Simon Doonan's latest book, "Eccentric Glamour: Creating an Insanely More Fabulous You," teaches women how to take their own paths. It doesn't matter which path that is, the Barneys New York creative director insists, so long as it doesn't conform to tabloid standards. To be more specific, don't dress like a "Stepford blow-up doll."

"My problem isn't that women look like strippers," Doonan said while seated in the second floor of Barneys at the Palazzo recently. "My problem is that all women are looking the same." And the sameness happens to fall under what he refers to as "porno chic."

According to Doonan, insecurities amplify the redundancy. Phone calls to girlfriends that begin with "What are you wearing?" and celebrity magazines that end with pages of "What Was She Thinking?" push women to dress in chorus with each other. Consequently, individuality becomes an endangered species and the Lindsay Lohans and Carmen Electras of the world emerge as the over applauded norm.

Thankfully, a few black sheep dare to dress against the grain. Several make a cameo in Doonan's book. All of them would sooner join a nudist colony than don anything a stylist put together for them. "Style is about personal expression," he said. It's not about encouraging all women "to go out and get their big handbag, their Starbucks cup and their long Carrie Underwood hair."

Rather, "Eccentric Glamour" dares women to do just the opposite of what the experts deem "all the rage." If a magazine refers to it as a must-have, a true glamorous eccentric would have nothing to do with it.

Dita von Teese, Tilda Swinton, Iman, Lucy Liu and the late Isabella Blow all garner shout outs in Doonan's book. According to Doonan, they all "say no to ho and yes to eccentric glamour."

Contact fashion reporter Xazmin Garza at xgarza@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0477.

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