Displaying all articles tagged:

Veuve Clicquot

  1. veuve clicquot polo classic
    The Best Looks From the Veuve Clicquot Polo MatchBecause we all know the main attraction isn’t the polo.
  2. champagne kisses
    Win Tickets to the 2015 Veuve Clicquot Polo ClassicWe’re giving away five pairs!
  3. yolo for polo
    Here’s Your Chance to Win Tickets to This Year’s Veuve Clicquot Polo ClassicPlus: a splashy Tibi T-shirt.
  4. Lawsuits
    Veuve Clicquot Sues Small Winemaker Over Label That Looks Nothing Like Its OwnThe luxury Champagne giant says ain’t nobody messing with their clique, clique, clique, clique, clique.
  5. scene stealers
    See Photos From the 6th Annual Veuve Clicquot Polo ClassicYolo for Polo.
  6. Booze News
    Corks Pop at Moshulu to Celebrate 230 Years of Bubbly in the United StatesThe first shipment of bubbly to arrive in the U.S. came by way of Philadelphia.
  7. beauty marks
    Andrej Pejic Might Sign Fragrance Deal; Fujifilm Enters Skin Care Plus, Ashley Smith stars as the face of Diesel’s new fragrance, Loverdose.
  8. the ginger fox
    The Ginger Fox to Return to Governors IslandPrince Harry will be back in the city this June.
  9. party lines
    Prince Harry at the PoloIn which we go to Governors Island to ogle the Ginger Fox and Madonna and chat about horses with Matt Lauer.
  10. harry windsor and our libido of fire
    Send Us Your Sightings of Prince Harry!He may be going to a party at Bungalow 8. Or he may not!
  11. The New York Diet
    How Mireille Guiliano Doesn’t Get Fat: Breakfast at Balthazar When Mireille Guiliano first came to America as an exchange student, she gained weight for the first time in her life. Many years later, after becoming a CEO of Veuve Clicquot, she penned the buzzy No. 1 best-seller French Women Don’t Get Fat, now out in paperback. After 25 years of splitting her time between New York and Paris, Guiliano is still amazed by the large portions here, and by the New Yorker’s tendency to eat on the go. “To eat your bagel and your muffin with coffee on the subway is gross,” she says. “How can you do it with the smell and the noise and the moving? I’d rather starve.” She’s also still shocked when she sees people eating on the street or standing up. “For French people, you’re supposed to eat at the table. Besides the bed, it’s the most important piece of furniture in the house.” So what’s she been eating at the table this week?