Showing posts with label VALENTINO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label VALENTINO. Show all posts

Thursday, October 17, 2013

5 LUXURY COSTUMES FROM LUISAVIAROMA


   Ok, so maybe they're not costumes, but there ARE people out there that live lavishly enough to drop a pretty large penny on a designer piece for my favorite holiday of the year, Halloween. When I worked at Bloomingdale's some women spent $500 on a orange and black Theory dress to wear to some Halloween party, and even though I could never imagine spending that much, some people do need something to wear to that Vogue Paris costume party, right?






Friday, October 11, 2013

8 COATS TO CONSIDER FOR FALL AND WINTER: MENS



        So what is a mens jacket without a HOOD! Personally, I love the option of hiding into a warm (hopefully lined) hood, which ups the comfort factor and gives me the impression that I never left my warm bed, even in the soon to come North Pole weather conditions. Marc by Marc Jacobs has probably the two best styles, the leather bomber jacket being my personal favorite, and Burberry's duffle coat has that nifty little patch that I believe covers your mouth for even more anti-cold combat. All from Mr. Porter shop shop shop! Don't forget to vote for me in their Gloabl Style Competition!

















Monday, September 2, 2013

5 WHITE PIECES FOR AFTER LABOR DAY

 HAPPY LABOR DAY!
       My stores closed, but all of my friends that work in contemporary/mass market retail are ringing and selling as we speak. I've heard from many American women about this very stupid rule about how you can't wear white after labor day. Never have I heard of a rule that stops someone from wearing a color during a certain period of time. On top of that, with this rule, what holiday makes it permissible to wear white again? Anyway, since I absolutely ABHOR this rule, in my rebellious fashion, I've curated 5 pieces (all white) that you can wear after labor day. If you feel guilty, you can wear one piece each month for the next 5 months till it gets a 'lil warmer.


Saturday, October 8, 2011

what if.....

you had your IDEAL designer to replace John Galliano at Dior? I don't have anyone in particular, but here's a WILD GOOSE CHASE GUESS of what could POTENTIALLY HYPOTHETICALLY happen if some of these designers take the spot.

Alessandra Facchinetti got fired from her most lucrative job as being head designer of Valentino, with rumors of Valentino himself being un-approving of her designs. I specifically remeber when she was designing for the house, and I thought it was great. I liked the modernized, experimental takes on Valentino staples. However, what could she do for Dior? Maybe a light "fairy-airy" Dior with hyper experimental shapes? Dior staples are pretty traditional, so i'm assuming if she did a twist it would have to be something super dramatic or extravagant. Might look like this....
Olivier Theyskens was at Nina Ricci for a while, and while I didn't even catch up on Nina Ricci until his last collection, it really opened my eyes to his talent. Dior could mean he texturize EVERYTHING, something I noticed with each of his Nina Ricci collections. Since he had that whole "princess" thing going on over there, and Dior is a little more mature, his pieces could end up looking like this...
and just for good measure....


Nicolas Ghesquière is doing a good job at Balenciaga. Actually.... a REALLY REALLY good job. He is one of my personal favorite designers, and each season he completely redefines "modern" and "futuristic" in a new form of dressing. HOWEVER.... WHAT 
IFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF
just by a WHIM L.V.M.H. was just like what the hell lets try it! It would be interesting to see how he tones down that futuristic craziness into something wearable without losing its touch, and if he does it well, could it potentially look like this?


SPECULATE AWAY!


(all images via style.com)

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

old and GRANNY | fly and FLASHY.

 NOVEMBER SECOND, TWO THOUSAND AND TEN.

old and  GRANNY.

Look 37 from Valentino S/S 2011


fly and  FLASHY.


Look 19 from Prada S/S 2011



Buy it....NOW.


[IMAGES VIA STYLE.COM]

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

trend: who wears SHORT SHORTS.

For some weird reason, are booty shorts finally getting the respect they deserve on ready-to-wear runways?

Louis Vuitton S/S 2011
Hermes S/S 2011
Chanel S/S 2011
Valentino S/S 2011
Balenciaga S/S 2011

Dior S/S 2011

Elie Saab S/S 2011




[images via style.com]

Friday, July 23, 2010

cheap couture.





Left: Valentino Haute Couture Fall 2009 Right: Topshop Sequined Front Vest


Left: Givenchy Haute Couture Spring  2010 Right: Urban Outfitters Art Deco Sequin Tank
(you want to look at the circular detailing on the pattern)


Left: Herve Leger Fall 2010 Right: Forever 21 Beaded Silver Dress

Friday, July 9, 2010

COUTURE COUTURE! Part 1

VALENTINO.
Uhhhh, this looks like a collection more from Alessandra than these two fools. Also, wtf is up with the birdcage? Was that supposed to be the "shock" factor in the collection? It's pretty clothes and you can telll its couture, but it simply isn't up to the magical classy standards that Valentino set up himself. From most people, they called this collection "Couture for Kids" and I agree. The low heels and the very plain colors don't add not one touch of excitement to the clothing, and instead add a sense of drab and aging to young women. Even their S/S Couture collection was better than this.
ELIE SAAB.

Great collection. The clothes are dramatic and luxurious, and each piece definitely provides a WOW factor. I kinda don't like the whole "Solids vs. Prints" mash up going on, but overall its a nice collection.


[images via the fashionspot]

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

....

COUTURECOUTURECOUTURE 
dont disappoint me.
hopefully chanel wont repeat those tragic suits with shorts called neon but really pastel.
and dior wont become a costume instead of courute house.
and im actually really interested in Valentino. maybe their cheap slutty couture show during s/s had a  indirect effect on me.

Monday, April 19, 2010

v magazine capturing couture week.




Top to Bottom: Chanel, Jean Paul Gautier, Valentino, Armani (all couture). My favorite shot is the Valentino one, shows the true diversity in the collection.
Images via VMAGAZINE

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

valentino HC s/s 2010.

   At first I FUCKING HATED the  Valentino S/S 2010 collection. It was cheap, trashy, and the number one thing Haute Couture shold never be.....TRENDY. But after looking at the Couture supplement that came with the March 2010 issue of Vogue Italia, the way they photographed it opened it to me in a whole new light.
I mean, it can come off slightly trashy being the overtly mature attitude Valentino created the house upon, but in terms of modern youth, they actually seemed to hit it just right. The only thing I suggest is that unless they are gonna continue these new staples into the house, they better continue to heavily reference the archives, or else Valentino will be Valentino no more.

[images via Style.com]

its 4am.

and this is my life.

Period.

Monday, March 15, 2010

generation now.

        After Alexander McQueen died, Franchenetti fired from Valentino, Oliver leaving Nina Ricci....and many other actions, it makes you wonder, what exactly is wrong with certian aspects of the industry? I think its a shame that some people don't recognize that its the younger designers that get it right. It's nice to buy a Chanel bag from Karl Lagerfeld, or admire a tacky Balmain dress by Decarin, but its caught my attention that its actually the older, more mature designers that get it wrong every once in a while, whether it be in terms of originality, taste, or working under a house. Karl obviously made a doo-doo with the F/W 2010 collection, sending Chubaka after Chubaka down the runway. Decarin tries to do "youth", but delivers overly-embellished, skimpy clothes every February and September. Valentino even created his own definition of beauty, and fought for it to be appreciated and it worked; however Valentino himself isn't at the house anymore now is he. It seems that the generation of designers born between the mid 70-s, late 80's have this spark. They seem to have a better understanding of design, and yes DESIGN. Not just fashion and clothing and fabric.

        I experience this myself every day, seeing some of my fashion design friends sketch and create garments. It seems that most of them, refer to a cut, a time period in fashion, or a particular style. It helps but hinders. When your not a aspiring fashion designer, or are into another aspect of design and look in from the outside, it changes your way of thinking. All other aspects of design focus more on the world, and how you think and interpret it. Everything has a deeper meaning to it, and when explored, you tend to think beyond what's commercial, couture, and avant garde, and create a whole new category for your mind as your own resource. McQueen worked with tailors, and costume designers before he went onto create what he's done.The Mulleavy sister have degrees in Art History and Literature, and when combined, create the works of art they make today. I think that our generation in general have a more liberal and open mind when it comes to art in general, which allows the designers to think deeper in terms of concept. Older designers still seem to stick to the traditional aspect of things while trying to interpret what's new and fresh, which come off as a complete fail. Because truthfully, what fairly young woman would want youth delivered by a older person? It's similar to the relationship with my mother. It's not cool when she says "dude" specifically because she's older and to me, will never truly know the meaning of "dude" or how to interpret it. The same goes for designers. Its all fun and it sells but everyone that takes interest in fashion searches for pieces that go deep in explanation and visually reshape the human body. The designers below seem to think beyond 20's and 60's and "mod" and "punk" and "chic" and bias-cut and empire-waist and deliver design, whether its wearable or not. And even if they miss on some collections, when its a hit, its beyond anything ever seen.

Alexander McQueen ( created a truly Haute Couture house) - 40
Oliver (changed Nina Ricci) - 33
Alexander Wang - 25
Kate and Laura Mulleavy - 26 and 24
Alessandra Facchinetti ( made Valentino youthful )- 38
Jason Wu - 28
Pedro Lourenco ( showing his collection at Paris Fashion Week)- 19
Nicolas Ghesquiere (modernized Balenciaga) - 39

     Hopefully, sooner than later, "generation now" can get the respect it deserves.....

Sunday, January 31, 2010

couture trend. preparing for battle.

   Not sure if Couture trends exist, but I definetly noticed a armour trend in most of the shows. Shiny, structured pieces is what were looking for.

Armani Prive


Chanel Haute Couture
Jean Paul Gautier


Valentino

Color pallets were also very dry, powdery pastels.


Givenchy


Christian Dior
Elie Saab


Valentino

[images via Style.com]

Monday, January 25, 2010

my couture wish list.

So, heres my wish list for the upcoming S/S 2010 Haute Couture shows in Paris. Usually, my wish list never gets fulfilled, but you never know...

CHANEL
- No "all white" or " typical Chanel" tricks this time
- NO MORE TWEED!
- A nice understandable inspiration done in a unexpected way (S/S 2008 for example)
- NO MORE PREDICTABLE REFERENCES! (i.e. Marie Antoinette, farms, etc.)

DIOR
- NO MORE REDONE DIOR SHAPES! ( i.e. bar jackets done for 3 seasons in different colors)
- More wild prints! ( not just leopard!)
- More FUR!
- MORE CRAZY MAKEUP!

ARMANI PRIVE
- NEW JACKETS! ( no more typical Armani day suits)
- Less literal interpretation ( S/S 2009 Haute Couture show was too literal)
- More pants and frilly skirts, less pencil skirts!

JEAN PAUL GAUTIER
-NO MORE LITERALLLLLL!!!! ENOUGH SAID!
-More  Haute Couture from The September Issue! ( Fall 2007 HC which featured kings/emperors of different nations/countries)
-More mixed collections and broaden the inspiration!

VALENTINO
-Alessandra Frachenetti. Thats all I have to say (LOL)


ELIE SAAB
- More creativity.

AND FOR THE REST OF THE DESIGNERS
-STEP IT UP!!!!!!!!!

Monday, January 18, 2010

from mens fashion week to there is MOTHERFUCKING COLOR in the HAUS

  So, it is day 2? Or day 3 of Mens F/W 2010 fashion week and the 1st show I stumbled upon was Dolce & Gabbana. I don't really know what to think of it, because color is ESSENTIAL for me to even look at a collection. The collection had no color, a ton of knits, very little jeans ( which was very interesting because it seems to be a staple of theirs) and a gloomy inspiration, the foreign film BARRIA. Dissecting the outfits, there were some pieces that were saving graces.


 The jeans on the left are VERY different, I like them A LOT. However, its one of those pieces that only go with this collection, very hard to mix with anything else. The jacket on the left is nice too.

I HATE vests. Especially the way people wear them now, but the way the vest is styled here is an exception. The outfit on the right goes nicely with the T-shirt. On the other hand, yesterday was the Golden Globes, and aside from the Dolce & Gabbana doom and gloom, stars decided to wear very colorful and bright couture and RTW gowns.

YAY FOR CHRISTIAN SIRIANO! Is this his first time getting his piece on the red carpet? Either way its really beautiful,  defintley caught my eye. Also, I love the shape of the Zac Posen dress on the right.


The oversized ruffles on the Valentino piece on the right actually work without looking too messy, and the Bottega Ventta dress  looks great on Sandra Bullock. Seems like the red carpet will have to provide color, while the runways provide moodiness.

[images via Style.com and GQ.com]


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