web 2.0

Monday, December 21, 2009

ebay seller application

ebay smapp

Canvasee is a compound word of 'canvas' and 'see'. Users can design/draw on a canvas what they are in mind, and the word 'see' means search the items of what they designed or colored.

Canvasee established around its proprietary business concept of image designer for search engine markets to create a visual search experience. Canvasee, a visual search engine first of its kind, provides complete solution for fashion goods. Canvasee is the only company to focus on visual searching of eBay fashion goods. Canvasee also places continuous focus on other categories of eBay goods and the customer experience.

Canvasee for Sellers

Canvasee is a sales promotion tool enables ebay seller to increase their sales. If sellers link their goods to this application, many application distributors and sellers promote it through web and you can get affiliate commission from eBay.

Let I explain the application step by step

seller applicationHome page:

This is the page where navigation for the application are mentioned.


Link Goods

Seller can select “link goods” from the drop drown menu of goods Management to link their goods to Canvasee application.

They can select their listings from “select a goods to sell or to advertise” category, by selecting the goods from the listing it will be displayed on the “selected goods” of second category, here seller can select the silhouette and color the products to match closely to his items. The coordination made by seller can be saved in canvasee application by clicking connect and save button. Similarly he can connect all of his goods to our canvasee application to reach the potential customers.


Linked Goods

The linked goods can be viewed by choosing “linked goods” from Goods management or else by choosing view my connected list from “link goods” page.


Seller can view all his connected products here. He can get his bidding status, the connected item list and the product list. He can delete the items which is not needed.


These connected items can be viewed at canvasee.com site when the customer created outfit by applying color and patterns to the avatar.


This helps the seller to promote his goods.



Seller can earn more money through affiliate.

Seller can use our application has a widget in their own site or any social Networking site like

Facebook, Myspace etc and market to their friends. The earnings generated will be shared has 50% to them, by this they can earn more and their products are reached to their customers.



Using create your own application page they can provide the information like seller id , ebay affiliate campaign id where they have to created from ebay partner Network if they are not created yet, name of the application (their store name) and the logo of their site if needed and by clicking generate your application, the code for the application is created, this code he can use in their site or in Social Networking site for the promotion.

This application helps the seller to promote their goods and helps them to earn more through affiliate application.

selling manager application

Canvasee.com

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Mens Fragrence


To celebrate the opening of their new Upper East Side boutique (opening December 16), Creed is debuting a men's scent called Windsor. This season seems to be ripe with noteworthy fragrances for guys, which is quite a rarity. Shiseido dropped their first men's scent, called Zen (bergamot, Japanese pear, and patchouli), while Costume National Homme is a scrumptious blend of zesty citrus and rich spices.

Here are five reasons why we love men's scents this winter:

1. They don't have that generic, overtly "manly" scent.
2. There's a quality fragrance for every budget this season.
3. Simple, elegant packaging: There's no hypermasculine sports or car references.
4. Not counting Creed, it's not too often makeup and clothing brands deliver
a noteworthy cologne.
5. You can swipe them from your boyfriend or husband and wear them yourself.

Costume National Homme, $80 to $110 at Barneys New York, 660 Madison Ave.,
at 61st St. (212-826-8900); Creed Windsor, $405 at 794 Madison Ave., at 67th
St. (212-439-7777); Shiseido Zen, $55 at Macy's (151 W. 34th St., at Broadway
(212-695-4400).

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

subscribe canvasee application and earn money from ebay


You can create our application from the create application tab from seller app using your affiliate id. The generated url can be used in any free website provider like google sites, buyitsellit.com or any social networking site like facebook, myspace or in your own website. The clicks generated through you will be tracked and the revenue of 50% is shared to you. the more you generate the more you will get paid not only this, if you are ebay seller you can promote your woman’s garment through our application my subscribing our application for free.

our few seller subscribers are :
http://fashionstore.mybisi.com/
http://createoutfit.mybisi.com/

Link:www.canvasee.com

Check Out Rodarte’s $45 Black Lace Halter Dress for Target Read more: Check Out Rodarte’s $45 Black Lace Halter Dress for Target


Clear images of Rodarte's Target collection are trickling out in December magazines. Teen Vogue includes shots of the black lace halter dress and nude lace dress, which will cost a very reasonable $45 and $40, respectively. These pieces look so much better without the deliberately mismatched, personal-style-blogger-esque, trying-too-hard styling.

Porsche Sues Crocs


Porsche, which makes a Cayman car, has noticed Crocs makes a Cayman model as well. They filed suit in Germany against the shoemaker for trademark infringement, because what if people are confusing Cayman Crocs for the Porsche Cayman? So now Crocs, which plans to "vigorously defend" its Cayman label, has to find a legal team in Germany to take care of this mess.

Thursday, November 5, 2009

create outfit and buy the products



user can create their own outfits and they can buy the products from the list it displays from bottom. Products like fancy dress and silverboux are updated.

link: create outfits, fashion trends, fashion clothes

Drew Barrymore’s Purple Power


Drew Barrymore wore a purple strapless dress with a needlelike pin at the Everybody's Fine screening last night in Hollywood.

120 Bridesmaid Dresses You’ll Want to Wear Again


Last weekend, we witnessed a man propose to his then-girlfriend, now-fiancé on the Queensboro Bridge. And that's when we realized that romance comes in many different ways, just like weddings. And bridesmaid dresses. Why let your happily engaged friend convince you to buy a brown tea-length dress you will never wear again? Or something baby-blue with sashes? There are other options out there! That's why we searched the stores of New York to find 120 of the loveliest options for bridesmaid dresses — which can double as outfits to other parties — for our latest Shop-A-Matic. Our selection is just one part of the latest New York Weddings issue, which also includes the top 130 wedding dresses and 100 wedding accessories. Check out our top five picks for bridesmaid dresses below. And even if you're not in a wedding, you're sure to find a party dress worth wearing. Because, in the end, we will never divorce our love for shopping.

Read more: 120 Bridesmaid Dresses You’ll Want to Wear Again -- The Cut http://nymag.com/daily/fashion/2009/11/120_bridesmaid_dresses_youll_w.html?mid=fashion-alert--20091105#ixzz0W2Y15NUu

Tag: create outfits

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Kristen Stewart Is Tired of People Comparing Her to Angelina Jolie


Robert Pattinson tells Vanity Fair that he and Kristen Stewart were never an offscreen item, and Stewart confirms, "It's so retarded. We're characters in this comic book." She also vents about the woes of being a celebrity, and is sick of people comparing her to Angelina Jolie. Talk about problems. Meanwhile, director Catherine Hardwicke swears there's a "nervous attraction" between Stewart and Pattinson. Not that she'd say that to hype an upcoming sequel or anything. Lindsay Lohan's getting over Samantha Ronson like any other starlet would: by making out with Gerard Butler. The duo locked lips on the dance floor at the Sol Kerzner Mazagan Beach Resort launch in Morocco, then left together in the wee hours of the morning. Kate Hudson clarifies that her new ring has nothing to do with an engagement to A-Rod, but she is having a tough time going off booze for an upcoming movie role. And Jude Law has yet to meet his month-old daughter, but he did manage to hook up with a "hot blonde" at the Box on Saturday night.

Rihanna describes the media chaos surrounding her Chris Brown scandal by saying she "went to bed as Rihanna and woke up as Britney Spears." She also partied with Ne-Yo in a tiger costume "with a tail so long a security guard had to hold it up" at M2's Halloween bash, avoiding Mariah Carey, who held court with Nick Cannon in the club's VIP area. Shania Twain and Billy Joel celebrated their divorces backstage at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Concert Thursday night. A characteristically "wobbly" Mischa Barton avoided her ex, Brandon Davis, at a party on Mercer Street. After breaking up with Jimmy Kimmel, Sarah Silverman is back on the market and notes that a guy's sense of humor is important to her, explaining, "I wish it wasn't, because it really narrows down the playing field, and it usually narrows it down to fucked-up freaks. But I don't even know how to talk to someone who isn't funny." And after Kelly Rutherford filed a restraining order against her soon-to-be ex-husband, he threatened to write a tell-all about their marriage.

Some women avoid airplanes while pregnant, but Gisele's getting her pilot's license. Ryan Seacrest has an Army Reserve stalker who's facing up to four years in prison. Courtney Love said she moved to New York because her employees kept staging "bogus police raids" on her Malibu home. But it was actually just her drug counselor trying to stage interventions. Gordon Ramsay is going to be completely revolutionary and host a competitive cooking reality show called Master Chef. Ashley Tisdale got a parking ticket after tweeting about her lunch with Zac Efron. And Michael Lohan's been so busy telling the press about how he's going to save LiLo from her drug problem that he hasn't had time to actually do it. But she just thinks he's a "lunatic."

Bad News Bears: The Guys Who Bet Against the Bubble and Won



Most people lost money when the subprime market collapsed in late 2006, taking the economy down with it. But Wall Street Journal reporter Greg Zuckerman's new book, The Greatest Trade Ever, tells the story of the handful of hedge-funders who actually made money from the ensuing crisis by betting against a housing bubble that few, at the time, believed was real. It's a great read, not just because our semi-irregular column If We Were Friends With John Paulson is briefly mentioned, but because of the colorful cast of characters, all of whom might have been described as screwups before they executed the trade that scored them billions of dollars in profits. Reading the stories of how this ragtag bunch managed this feat, individually and, in some cases, together, you can't help but root for them, even as you remind yourself that their win was everyone else's loss. Let's take a look at the backstories of some of the eccentrics, nerds, and late bloomers who made bank as the economy burned.

John Paulson

LOCATION: New York
BACKSTORY: Back in 2006, Paulson & Company was "just another ham-and-cheese operation in a crowded space," and its founder was known mostly for the parties he had held back in the nineties at his Soho loft, which featured "good food, plentiful drink; and access to an assortment of recreational drugs for those who chose to partake." Even after Paulson grew out of his bachelor phase, he wasn't taken seriously in his field — and, as the following passage suggests, he knew it.

At times, Paulson didn't seem completely put together. When Brad Balter, a young broker, came to visit, Paulson chain-smoked cigarettes and had spots of blood on his shirt collar from a shaving mishap. Paulson's head of marketing was stretched out in agony on a nearby couch, moaning about his back.

"I didn't know what to think. It was a little surreal," Balter recalls.

At times, Paulson became discouraged. His early investment performance was good but uneven, and he continued to have few clients. He was sure of his abilities but questioned whether he could make the fund a success.

One especially glum day, Paulson asked his father, "Am I in the wrong business? Is something wrong with me? "It was hard to be rejected, it was a lonely period," Paulson recalls.

Michelle Obama Has a Giant New Waist Belt


The First Lady kicked off a mentorship initiative in the White House yesterday with some items of apparel we haven't seen on her before. They included a giant black waist belt with a laser-cut lace pattern, and a very on-trend leopard sequined cardigan (not that on-trend items are always a good thing). See the full look in the Michelle Obama Look Book.

Monday, November 2, 2009

EBay to Open Store; Robert Pattinson to Do Harper’s Bazaar Cover?


EBay is opening its first pop-up shop on November 2 at 3 West 57th Street. Items to be sold include L.A.M.B. shoes, Michael Kors and Dooney & Burke handbags, Anthropologie dresses, and cosmetics from M.A.C. So now you can shop at eBay without wondering whether everything is fake.

• Rumor has that Twilight stars Kristen Stewart and Robert Pattinson will appear on the December cover of Harper's Bazaar. They have to bait the kids somehow.

• Francesca Versace's first application to Central Saint Martins got denied. She got in the second time she applied, but her teachers gave her a really hard time to prove her lineage didn't impress them.

• Anna Jagodzinska stars in a 30-second commercial for the Jimmy Choo for H&M collection, which officially comes out on November 14.

• Coco Rocha rides a Razor scooter around the city.

hristian Siriano’s Reality Show Will Be Like the Valentino Movie


It's hard to imagine Christian Siriano's dark side on a normal day, and especially so when he's dressed as Ariel from The Little Mermaid on Halloween. But that's the direction he's taking for his next fall line — the fabric just came in! "It’s very dark — that’s the only thing we’re going with right now," he said at the "Heroes vs. Villains" party at Rose Bar on Saturday. "It’s very gothic, kind of like a swamp, but we wanted it to be really feminine."

Siriano is also busy with his still untitled spinoff reality show for Bravo, which will follow the creation of his spring 2010 and fall 2010 lines from start to finish. “It’s very like The September Issue, very Valentino [The Last Emperor]. We want it to be as cool and as real as possible.” The September Issue director R.J. Cutler has apparently advised Siriano “just to be real." Siriano continued, "I think it’s best to be as normal as possible and, luckily, I just happen to be entertaining already.” He said the show would be "really documentary-style" and involve him talking to the camera frequently. "It’s going to be really serious, like not so campy. There are a lot of moments that are just silent and like working and like really how serious the business is, because it’s really hard, it really is.” Does he worry people don’t take him seriously? “I think they do to a point, but it’s hard, you know, there are so many designers and you really have to prove yourself, so I think it takes time.”

Maybe Greenspan’s Manty Index Is Off Because It’s 30 Years Old


Fashion people and economists got giddy when sales of men's underwear went up 4.7 percent in the first half of the year. After all, Alan Greenspan postulated 30 years ago that sales of men's underwear rise when the economy pulls out of a low point. He reasoned men only invest in new manties when they're feeling flush, since dudes figure no one sees them anyway. However, Greenspan's theory, though newly popularized, could be flawed. In modern times people do see men's underpants, thanks to low-rise pants. Billboards like David Beckham's Armani ads have made sexy, stylish underpants a glamour item. Many companies are even making statement manties. So underwear may not have been a fashion item for men three decades ago, but it is now. Everyone looking to Greenspan's theory for signs of recovery now seems to have neglected to remember how old it is. But as we've said, it's way more fun to talk about underwear statistics than just boring regular statistics.

Sunday, November 1, 2009

fashion store


Fashion store for fashion items.

link: http://fashionstore.mybisi.com/

Thursday, October 29, 2009

increase your revenue by promoting the application



Promote Canvasee application and earn 5$ a week

promote Canvasee application in facebook and other sns site and earn minimum 5$ a week. Canvasee smapp for ebay sellers has providing a option to promote our application through various social networking site or in their own site. This will helps seller or buyer can able to earn more revenue based on the traffic they generated.

link:www.canvasee.com

Tag:

Create outfit

, fashion cloth

T-Shirt by Darwin


It’s been burned, washed, stoned, dipped in acid, discarded and rediscovered, even shot. The evolution of a once-humble garment.


The T-shirt that changed my mind about T-shirts might not impress you much at first glance. But that’s because you’re not wearing it. Sure, it’s plain heather gray, and maybe you do have some treasured rag in your drawer that looks a bit similar. But trust me, you don’t have anything in there that remotely feels like it.

This shirt, if you’ll excuse me for sounding ridiculous, may be the most perfect garment I own. The fabric is thin to the point of almost being sheer, made of high-gauge long-fiber Sea Island cotton that is difficult to describe without resorting to clichés: soft as a buttered, cashmere baby’s bottom? Yes, that soft! I’ve sampled some of the comfiest shirts out there, like the popular line by James Perse. But this takes it to another level. Designed by a New York fashion company called Loden Dager, the T-shirt is loose though not baggy, with shorter-than-usual sleeves, and it hangs just below the belt line. “It is a basic tee done in the most luxurious way we currently know how,” says Loden Dager designer Paul Marlow, who added that “we will keep exploring that limit and hopefully come up with something even better.”

Such perfection comes with what many will regard as an unconscionable price tag—$125. I can’t defend it, except to say that at least you’re not paying for a label or logo-infested status symbol. This shirt is made expressly to please the person wearing it, and nobody else. Its value is not projected outward to the world. It’s directed inward. And that ideal, it turns out, is what defines the men’s fashion–T-shirt movement these days.

In Paleolithic times, the T-shirt was a humble tool, worn beneath a shirt, to absorb perspiration. But ever since James Dean started wearing one without anything on top, it morphed into a form of personal advertising, a movable billboard. Even Dean’s plain white shirt conveyed a powerful message, which was, You can’t tell me who to be, a declaration that has never gone out of style. From the hippies in their tie-dyes to the disaffected metal kid I just saw in Washington Square Park wearing a gothic-stenciled Goatwhore T-shirt, the primary social function of a T-shirt has stayed the same. But it’s become a meager form of self-expression—people don’t pay much attention anymore. Nobody gave so much as a second glance at the Goatwhore kid. His shirt was howling into the void.

The greatest breakthrough of the last decade was when American Apparel, under the direction of its free-loving founder Dov Charney, turned the fit of a T-shirt into a message. Never mind the graphics or slogans. The message was you—your body thrust out there into the world, shrink-wrapped in every conceivable color. American Apparel remains powerful and ubiquitous in the T-shirt world, but the trends have gotten subtler and more introverted. In the same way that various art movements become hermetic and end up addressing the nature of art itself, today’s cutting-edge T-shirt is all about the T-shirt. Comfort, as in the Loden Dager shirt, is the golden principle, but it gets way more complicated than that. Because comfort isn’t simply a matter of how a shirt feels; it is also a matter of how you feel about the shirt. And designers are constantly trying to figure out how to game that relationship with science and technology. Just as denim designers have been doing for years, T-shirt makers are introducing artful imperfections in an effort to turn a commodity into something personal and familiar.

How does a new T-shirt feel instantly familiar? The patina of age is a good start. It not only softens shirts and makes them comfortable, it lends them the aura of uniqueness. This has been well understood for a long time — the sophisticated mainstream giant J.Crew has for years offered all kinds of stone-washing, garment-dying, faux-fading techniques. But designers keep coming up with ever more advanced ways to simulate the aging process and make it more nuanced, more authentic-looking. One newly popular material is called “slub knit,” a fabric made from threads that are not uniform. Held up to the light, the material looks clotted—denser chunks here, lighter chunks there, sort of like that old gym shirt of yours from college. A cooler name for the same general idea, introduced to me by a salesman at the men’s store Odin on Lafayette Street as we examined a Rag & Bone T-shirt, is “fire knit.” This style, funnily enough, is inspired by the irregular yarn that was produced before technology made smooth yarn the norm. Then there’s “burnout,” a more extreme, irregular effect achieved by taking a cotton-polyester-blend fabric and treating it with a chemical that both destroys cellulose-based threads (the cotton) and softens the polyester. Often, it leaves a shirt light, delicate, and basically see-through, which first proved popular with women and is now, improbably, becoming a hit with men. It is also possible to use burnout in particular sections of the garment, so you can make an embedded design from the difference in texture between treated and untreated sections.

$200 Jeans Are the New $300 Jeans


Before the recession, high-end denim was one of the fastest-growing markets. However, now that everyone's broke and afraid to spend money, prices have been forced down from about $300 for the best, most stylish stuff to around $200 for ultratrendy whiskered pants. Designers used to be able to charge what customers thought a garment was worth, even if it wasn't really worth said price. But the Times notes that jeans were among the first items customers realized designers were using to take advantage of them: "[I]t just felt more obvious that some kind of game was being played; the basic elements, after all, had not changed substantially in decades: five pockets, cotton, some rivets." And if you don't want to spend $200, you can get great jeans at Uniqlo for $40.

Best Bet: A Glassy Affair


Ruffian designers Brian Wolk and Claude Morais launched a line for Anthropologie this month named A Mise en Scene. While one part of the collaboration features clothes that fulfill every Victoriana aesthetic quota for your wardrobe, it’s the designers' introduction of glassware that extends the feminine, artistic feel to our homes. The collection offers four variations of the glasses — water, Champagne, martini, and our favorite: wine. The silver-fading ombré design on each glass is minimal and timeless, which makes this a great housewarming present for your friend's new apartment, your parent's kitchen, or for yourself. And for $18 per sipper, you can tailor the set to your needs. We'll toast to that.

$18 per glass at Anthropologie.com.

New York Named Vainest City in America; Reese Witherspoon Talks Up New Scent


SKIN
• TotalBeauty.com named New York City the vainest city in the country because New Yorkers spend $21 million on hair coloring, $32.5 million on skin care, and $5.5 million on makeup. New York also has the second-highest number of hair-restoration surgeons. Los Angeles came in fifth. [Total Beauty]

FRAGRANCE
• Reese Witherspoon is running around New York this week promoting her new fragrance, In Bloom for Avon. She says the scent captures her feelings right now, "strong and independent, and so happy, so full of life." Why do we get the feeling another celebrity (or five) has said the same thing about their new scents? [Just Jared]

PLASTIC SURGERY
• Plastic surgeons are increasingly marketing "redo" face-lifts and nose jobs to people who want to fix past botched cosmetic surgeries. [NYT]

HAIR
• Katy Perry wore her hair in poufy tight curls with bows to film an MTV commercial, a look that seems inspired by the Afro wigs spotted on the Louis Vuitton spring 2010 runway. [Beauty Counter/Style.com]

MAKEUP
• Six real women tried on trendy black lipstick and had very different reactions. One said she felt tough enough to cut in line, another said she looked too Twilight-inspired, and another said she actually loved the look. [BellaSugar]

• M.A.C. Cosmetics filmed how-to videos for Halloween that teach you how to paint your face like a zebra, comic book, skeleton, or deck of cards. [Makeup Minute/Splendicity]

NAILS
• The new Hollywood trend: fancy open-toe shoes and (gasp) no toenail polish. [Girls in the Beauty Department/Glamour]

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

models for outfits


Canvasee is a
visual search engine
for goods in an e-commerce environment (eBay.com). It gives the buyer a chance to see a fashion item of choice in different colors, patterns, and outfit coordination before having to actually purchase them. Hence, buyers have an additional edge- a tool that can assist them in making that decision, It has more than 100 outfit models where buyers can make use of the model to design their desired outfit.

These models can be used to design their desired outfit and apply color or pattern to it, by applying canvasee searches the fashion items from the ebay and display it to the customer.

link:www.canvasee.com

Society for Rational Dress’s Corinne Grassini Is Expanding Internationally



The economy being what it is, small design companies are forced to find creative ways to make ends meet. And Corinne Grassini of Society for Rational Dress did just that, by deciding to open her Los Angeles press showroom and studio as a retail store named Reserve. "To be able to have clients come in and see how they interact with their bodies in a dress or colors or their insecurities — it's been really huge for me," says Grassini. "Now I look at the store as something that gives me access to my customers so I can tailor my line." That line — named after a nineteenth-century London women's club, Rational Dress Society, that fought against the Victorian style — captures the same notion of choosing comfort over trends, as the collection features a mix of flattering prints, soft knits, and supple leather. "I like to design pieces that are comfortable, nothing too stuffy or overtly sexy." Grassini describes her clothes as art-inspired, literally: She has picked a piece of artwork and molded a collection around it every season since the line's inception in fall 2005. Fall's inspiration came from a custom print of brushstrokes by a local L.A. artist, while spring's palette was inspired by a brutal-cut chandelier in her own home. And with Harrod's in London recently placing a hearty order, Grassini's success demonstrates that creative and artistic expansion is still possible, no matter what the climate. Society for Rational Dress, a featured line on FadMashion.com, is available at Coclico, Saks Fifth Avenue, Barneys New York, Nikki Laura, and Jazz Manhattan. Click ahead to check out some of the fall and holiday offerings, as well as what you can look forward to for spring.