Daftar Blog Saya

Senin, 20 Agustus 2012

Its a P H O T O S H O O T




Above are a few sneek peak photos of my shoot with SMITHOGRAPHY yesterday in Fort Lauderdale, FL.

Styled by me.

Sabtu, 18 Agustus 2012

Designer Spotlight: United Nude







Geisha Hi

United Nude's Geisha is geared for accomplished and creative women who are not afraid to express their strength. With a lightweight platform wedge joined by bold leather and elastic straps, this Japanese inspired design topped of with color blocking, creates a joyful work of art. Geisha is definitely the height of self determination.
Heel Height: 140mm/5.5"
Actual Heel Height: 85mm/3.4"
Platform Height: 55mm/2.2"
  • Black elastic + vegetan leather
  • ABS moulded wedge
  • Nappa calf sock
  • Elasticated leather slingback

Selasa, 14 Agustus 2012

Fashion Icon: Diana Vreeland



Fashion is a world perennially bursting at the seams with colourful characters, from Andre Leon Talley to Anna Piaggi to Marc Jacobs. To be remembered as the one person who outshone everyone else in terms of personality and pizazz is no mean feat – and probably the main reason why those in the know talk about the late Vogue editor Diana Vreeland in such admiring tones. 




An industry legend, Vreeland was dubbed the ‘High Priestess of fashion’ by her contemporaries and played up to this status with copious grandiose statements, ‘The bikini is the most important thing since the atomic bomb’ and ‘Pink is the navy blue of India’ among the most memorable.
But she had the credentials to back up this sense of theatricality, said the photographer Richard Avedon ‘She was and remains the only genius fashion editor’. Vreeland was born on 29th July 1903, one-hundred-and-nine years and one day ago, in New York, though she altered this location to Paris or St. Petersburg depending on her mood. 



The daughter of wealthy socialite parents, she married a handsome banker and had some kids before kick-starting her career at the grand old age of thirty-four, when her sense of style impressed Harper’s Bazaar editor Carmel Snow so much she gave her a column, in which Vreeland encouraged readers to indulge in fun and frivolous activities such as washing one’s baby’s hair in Champagne (‘like the French’).


Vreeland modelling her signature costume jewellery, and in her 'garden in Hell' apartment

It’s huge success led to her becoming more involved with the magazine, and during her time there she ‘discovered’ Lauren Bacall, began advising the newly crowned First Lady, Jackie Kennedy on her wardrobe, inspired a charismatic fashion editor character in the hit film Funny Face, and had her apartment decorated to look like a ‘garden in Hell’.
In 1962 Vreeland was made Editor-in-Chief of Vogue US, and became legendary for her hugely creative but jaw-droppingly expensive shoots Рone with Norman Parkinson was shot in Tahiti using an Arab stallion and 200lbs of gold and silver Dynel. During her time at the Cond̩ Nast bible she also patronised David Bailey, and made Edie Sedgewick into a style icon.


Diana Vreeland in the Sixties with Andy Warhol

After being unceremoniously dumped by Vogue, the fashion world rallied around her, and she was installed in a post as consultant of the Costume Institute at New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art, where a life-size portrait of her is on display, and where she paved the way for the gallery’s iconic fashion exhibits, which have included Alexander McQueen’s Savage Beauty and Prada and Schiaparelli, Imagined Conversations most recently.




Like all icons Vreeland had a look all her own - but in contrast to today’s glossy, chic fashion editors, she embraced excess, never coming across a gaudy pattern or swatch of leopard print she didn’t like. Not classically beautiful, she instead made herself exotic, with dramatic make-up and lacquered, talon-like red nails at all times. She would wear all-black, imposing ensembles and drape herself in layers of unusual costume jewellery, to ensure she was the most striking looking person in the room.

Vreeland loved to exaggerate, by her own admission she liked to add fictitious layers of glamour to life to make if more interesting. But when she said ‘I know what they're going to wear before they wear it, what they're going to eat before they eat it. I know where they're going before it's even there!’ it was true. And she’s one of the only people in history who could.

Via Far Fetch

Fall Season Thinking.


Rick Owens


 
 
Pearl top from Rick Owens featuring a funnel neck, pleated front and rear, single long sleeve and single cap sleeve.$873.60
 
 


 
 
Grey wool blend sleeveless 'Marella' dress from Rick Owens featuring a high cowling neckline, a open V back with side pleating and a twisting effect, and high split rear vent.
$940.80
 

Anyone in the mood for an IMPULSE buy?



Special Edition - Black Net Yarn Batwing Top With Ribbon Embellishment
$33 + shipping
 

ZARA A/W '12 Collection








Watch List






Sabtu, 11 Agustus 2012

Intro: BIRD in Brooklyn, NY





Bird is one of Brooklyn’s first fashion destinations and also the very first LEED-certified retail store in New York City. It was recently voted Best Women’s Boutique in New York City by New York Magazine and Top Visionary Boutique in the United States by Lucky Magazine.


The original Bird store in Park Slope opened in 1999. The second location in Cobble Hill opened in 2006. The third and largest location, designed by Norwegian architect Ole Sondresen, opened in Williamsburg in 2009. Bird maintained strict sustainability and green-building standards throughout construction and was consequently awarded the coveted LEED-CI Gold certification from the U.S. Green Building Council. 






Featured women's collections include 3.1 Phillip Lim, A.P.C., Acne, Alexander Wang, Christophe Lemaire, Edith A. Miller, Giada Forte, Girl by Band of Outsiders, Gretchen Jones, Isabel Marant, Maison Martin Margiela Ligne 6, Mina Perhonen, Rachel Comey, Rag & Bone, Raquel Allegra, Suno, Thakoon, Tsumori Chisato and Zero + Maria Cornejo. 





Featured men's collections include 3.1 Phillip Lim, A.P.C., Acne, Band of Outsiders, Billy Reid, Burkman Brothers, Gitman Vintage, Our Legacy, Patrick Ervell, Rachel Comey, Rag & Bone, Robert Geller, Saturdays Surf NYC, Save Khaki, Shipley & Halmos, Steven Alan and Surface 2 Air.




Featured accessories collections include Ancient Greek Sandals, Antipast, Comme des Garcons, Common Projects, Dieppa Restrepo, Epice, Etten Eller, Faliero Sarti, Jerome Dreyfuss, Loeffler Randall, Melissa Joy Manning, Miansai, No. 6, Porter, Proenza Schouler, Repetto, Sperry and Want Les Essentials.


The Williamsburg store also features regular exhibits of photography and art. Currently on display are drawings by artist Jessica Dessner.




Bird is excited to feature a shop-in-shop for Warby Parker eyewear, an amazing philanthropic company (for each pair of glasses sold, a pair is donated) that offers vintage-inspired styles with a fashion forward twist. To make an appointment at our Grand Street store, please email bird@warbyparker.com and visit warbyparker.com for more info on styles and fit.

Customers and friends of Bird can get news of upcoming events, special sales and newly arrived collections by joining us on Facebook and following us on Twitter.

Spotlight: Milan Vukmirovic


Milan Vukmirovic has a long list of current projects. My Boon, a concept store he worked on "from scratch" opened in Seoul, South Korea, last month; his capsule collection for the French brand Chevigon is hitting stores now; and the second issue of his new magazine Fashion for Men, which, like the first, comes in at 600 pages, will be published next month. And don't forget his duties as a founder and owner of The Webster in Miami. Still, Vukmirovic, who helped launch the mother of all concept stores, Colette, in 1997 and took the reins from Jil Sander when she left her label in the early 2000s, insists he's not as busy as he was a year ago, when he was the creative director of both Trussardi and the men's magazine L'Officiel Hommes. And that's exactly the way he wants it. Style.com caught up with Vukmirovic on the phone in Miami to talk about working out, whipping up salads at Caviar Kaspia, and what else he'd like to do with all his spare time.


You've been spending a lot of time in Seoul. 
What do you think of the city?
It's an economy that's totally booming. They've spent the last ten years importing a lot of labels, and they're bringing a lot of architects and creative directors from abroad. It's a really exciting city at the moment, almost like Tokyo ten or 15 years ago. They go very fast, with electronics and everything, and people are really shopping. When you see Europe, it's nice to find a place where people are not always talking, talking about crisis. It's a more positive environment. 


How did the My Boon project come about, and what did your experiences at The Webster in Miami and Colette in Paris teach you about what you wanted to do this time around?
Colette is 15 years old now. It was my first creative concept store with Colette [Rousseaux] and Sarah [Andelman]. Many years later, I did The Webster, and it was a really special project to me, being an owner, but Laure [Heriard Dubreuil] does the buying. When they asked me to do a store for Seoul, it was interesting because it was from scratch, it was from zero, a white page. [I asked myself] what is the next new concept store? I still love fashion. I love design and objects. I love furniture. I love interiors. It's something very personal. A lot of people were always telling me, "We loved you when you were at Colette; you have a great eye." So I thought maybe I'll select items for the store, too. In Korea, people are always bringing little gifts, so I thought why not do the best gift store in the world—it really goes from watches to magazines to trainers to furniture. I left Trussardi last year after almost four years, and it was nice to travel again and see everything. The world is moving so fast and there's so many designers and new people around. It's interesting for me to see, also as a journalist, everything that's going around. So I accepted to do a concept store, but I also accepted to do a really precise selection [of products], which I hadn't done in a long time.

What was the response to the first issue of "Fashion for Men?"
The first one was amazing. In two weeks it was sold out in Paris and Milan. We sold a lot of copies in New York, too. It's a book, it's not really a magazine; it's really done for people who love men's fashion. It's for me like a bible, reference. It's the opposite of the Web, because I really believe today that more and more magazines and real info should be on the Web anyway. People are waking up in the morning, they have breakfast and they open up their computer or they look on their mobile phone. That's the reality now. If you do a magazine, it's necessary to do the opposite, to give a lot of importance to the quality of the print, to the quality of the photography. The Web is food for everyday. The concept of Fashion for Men was really something that would stay for a lot of time. Maybe if you looked at it in five years, you'd say, "Oh, that's what fashion was in 2011, in 2012." A lot of people bought it, so I felt like, OK, let's do a second issue. But it's 600 pages, it's so much work. It's almost like a diary. Everywhere I go, I'm like, let's do a story for Fashion for Men. It's a very personal work—if people like me, they'll probably like the magazine. 


If you were forced to pick just one thing to do, what would it be?
I have the feeling that, because of the Internet, the world has changed so much in a few years. Everything is going faster, people are getting bored much more. You always have to bring new ideas, new stuff. This means we have much more work, but doing many things somehow makes me feel like I'm more connected to what's going on. I'm shooting quite a lot for Details in America; it's exciting for me, it's a new challenge. For me, it's a kind of freedom, doing a lot of work.





Via STYLE