Fashion designers enter mobile phone market. Italians lead the bid to wrest a slice of lucrative market – and expect some of the world's top models to lead the campaign. Susie Mesure reports
DESIGNER PHONES
Julien Macdonald for Sony Ericsson
The UK designer vamped up the existing K510i with a splash of exotic floral colour from his 2007 spring/summer collection
Cath Kidston for Nokia
Two handsets decorated with Cath Kidston's vintage-inspired floral prints flew out of Carphone Warehouse stores last summer
Anna Sui, Samsung
Hot
on the heels of Von Furstenberg's design came one from US designer Anna
Sui, complete with carrying case, phone charm, screensaver and lipgloss
Diane von Furstenberg, Samsung
The
queen of wrap frocks may like another go at phone design. Her
couture-tech print was not the most popular the industry has ever seen
Jasper Morrison, Samsung
Yet
another tie-up from the Korean company, this time with UK designer
Jasper Morrison. His sleek design was simple but effective
Armani, Agyness Deyn
Giorgio
Armani showed he meant business with his phone for Samsung by getting
the year's hottest model, Agyness Deyn, to appear in his ad campaign.
We've squirted the scents, worn the watches and hankered after the handbags. Now designers want to add mobile phones to the 2008 list of fashion must-haves with a series of launches to cash in on a multimillion-pound market.
Demand for the Apple iPhone, a Christmas favourite for generous gift-givers, is proof of the growing appetite for stylish handsets. Experts predict that in the next three years non-traditional brands, including fashion designers, will grab 20 per cent of the global market, selling around 200 million handsets a year.
Dior and Swarovski will be the latest luxury giants to unveil handsets
next year, while Swiss watchmaker Tag Heuer is expected to be the first
timepiece maker to release one early next summer.
Andrew Harrison, UK chief executive of Carphone Warehouse, said his customers were increasingly buying more than one handset, with around a fifth owning two or more. "These handsets have different uses: business, going out or even special occasions. We expect this trend to continue." he added.
So far Italian fashion houses have been the quickest to cash in on this trend, with Dolce & Gabbana, Prada and Armani all teaming up with manufacturers to design phones that scream form over function.
Fashion and the mobile phone industry first collided two years ago when Motorola's bright pink V3 clamshell was a Christmas bestseller. Other hits since then have included Cath Kidston's designs for Nokia and Anna Sui's for Samsung. Analysts believe fashion and mobiles make perfect bedfellows because with a new product every three months, the handset industry is one of the few able to keep pace with the world of fashion.
Despite steep initial price tags, such phones are proving popular.
Prada has sold around 500,000 of its LG phone since its launch last
spring, while D&G's limited edition gold MotoRAZR V3i phone for
Motorola, which cost around £275, clocked up sales of $256m (£128m) in
12 months, or around 465,000 phones.
And it isn't just
the high-end fashion houses that have spotted the potential for phone
collaborations. Ted Baker, the high street retailer, the denim brand
Levi's, the Italian luggage maker Mandarina Duck and even the car
company Porsche all launched handsets in time for Christmas.
It is so interesting to see fashion designers to enter mobile phone market. Win solution for consumers.
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