Joe Fresh

What does that $14 shirt really cost?

From the archives: Bangladesh disaster raises tough questions about cheap clothes

What students are talking about today (October 26th edition)

Red Bull, Frankenstorm, Pippa, STEM & Toronto Fashion

Backstage with Joe Mimran

The Joe Fresh designer–and Canadian fashion mogul–on what inspired his 2013 Spring collection

Stilettos in the schoolyard

Stilettos in the schoolyard

Fabulous moms get a frosty reception on the first day of school

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First, Joe Fresh takes Manhattan

Pilot store in NYC to open this fall

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Joe’s Fresh Take

How Loblaws became the new king of Canadian fashion

Because the night

At a film festival, amid the stars and the hype and lurid glare of over-sponsored glamour, you live in hope that you’ll stumble across something thrilling, inspiring and wildly original that comes right out of the blue. Last night I saw exactly that. It wasn’t a film. And it wasn’t even officially part of the Toronto International Film Festival. It was a party celebrating a Patti Smith documentary that, due to a mysterious lapse in taste, had been excluded from the festival. Generally I find there’s not enough time to attend parties during TIFF. And whenever I do, I always seem to be at the wrong party, then get anxious reading breathless reports in the newspaper about about all the fabulousness I missed at the star-studded In Style soireé. But last night I got lucky. Joe Fresh, the Loblaws designer, was hosting the party at the Gardiner Museum with a tie-in to a non-TIFF screening of Patti Smith: Dream of Life. I went because I heard that Patti Smith was going be there, but had no idea she would perform. And no matter how many close encounters of the celebrity kind I missed at TIFF, I now feel I can safely claim that I lucked into the best party of the festival.