Kate Moss is teaming up with her adorable daughter to design a range of girl’s clothing while Wilmer Valderrama is getting his designer hat on to help an important charity organisation. Read on to find out what the star’s are planning for these new projects.
Kate Moss is teaming up with her nine-year-old daughter to create a girls’ clothing range. The supermodel and little Lila Grace are working with British high street store Debenhams on a range of “funky tweenage” designs, due for release in summer 2012. A source told the Daily Mirror newspaper: “Lila has always loved trying on Kate’s clothes and make-up, and is already really into fashion. It was mainly all her idea and Kate obviously agreed to help out as much as possible, using her contacts to land the duo a deal. Lila is adamant the range will be very traditional and English rose-esque in feel. Lila doesn’t want to produce chavvy clothes. The collaboration was actually inspired by Kate’s mates, Jemima French and Sadie Frost’s new FrostFrench ‘Iris and Edie’ capsule range of sleepwear after their daughters got involved. Kate and Lila Grace will get cracking on designs over the festive period, mulling over ideas at Kate’s Cotswolds’ pad.” Kate – who wed husband Jamie Hince in July – recently revealed Lila is quite “prudish” and will often tell her mother off when she doesn’t take off her make-up. She said: “I always take my make-up off, because otherwise my daughter will come in and say, ‘Mummy, tut-tut’. She doesn’t like it. She likes the fresh-faced, natural mummy, when I’ve got my hair in a bun and no make-up on. Lila is quite prudish – she’ll only wear a little bit of lip gloss or something. But she is into nail art. I think Lila is beautiful – she’s so innocent and has that fresh face. She’s gorgeous, but obviously she is my daughter.”
Former ‘That ’70s Show’ star Wilmer Valderrama is on the board of advisors at This Shirt Helps, a new clothing brand that aims to give back in the style of TOMS Shoes. He said: “It’s one of those really feel-good brands that I think could really, really help. The common goal is to create a somewhat global-helping approach to business.” Proceeds from every T-shirt sold at ThisShirtHelps.com go towards the buyer’s choice of charitable act: to the ASPCA save a single animal; to provide clean water for one year via Waves 4 Water; allowing Plant with Purpose to plant three trees; or funding one month of school via Pencils of Promise. Speaking of the T-shirts, Wilmer told People: “We made it very simple because we don’t like wearing crazy brands and wearing big names across our chests or anything like that. Eventually the shirt will have a nice, really effortless, simple branding that you’ll recognise among the people who have helped. So if you don’t know what that symbol means, then you haven’t necessarily been a part of it. If you really want to help, if it’s really within your heart to help, you don’t need to be telling the world you did.”