Green is the theme this spring! I want these three from the online shop Apolis Activism. Since Apolis is huge on philanthropy work, it'll make it easier for me to spend the green on these green goodies! blah blah blah...just an excuse for me to shop! No, but seriously, check out their stuff guys. The company keeps it simple, casual and relaxed.
Since Fashion Week is starting soon, I revisited some shots I took last year during the event and found these. Just warming up for what's to come in the next week. Tomorrow I'll post snippets of full ensembles from last years extravaganza!! The city's energy is shifting. I love that feeling, the days leading up to fashion week...magic!
Lately, I've been into bones, skulls, things with a sense of dark, but also aesthetically beautiful. These creations fit right into my cabinet of curiosities, and mystery. Theft of Light collection offered by Black Sheep and Prodigal Sons. I think I want one for myself. Hmmmm.. Fashion week is right around the corner!! I'll need something to wear.
Check out Refinery 29's post on Francesca DiMattio . Refinery recently visited Francesca in her NYC apartment, and brought along their camera. The post is full of photographs of the eclectic collections the artist has acquired over the years. It also captures her style sensibility. I always love a combo of fashion and interior decor...brilliant
The Binding of Isaac is a four-cornered shawl of German flannel, dyed twice with the blood of a ram and left to cure for ten months. The hand-sewn binding is resurrected golden military dead-stock satin, and has twined and knotted tzitzit [tassels] attached to its four corners with 613 tight knots. At Sruli Recht
I'm just loving Alexander Berardi's Spring/Summmer 09 line. This Upper Eastside boys style blends fashion history with forward elements of modernism to create a fresh new look for today's woman.
Check out Sarah X's, Public Personae this week...There's a certain someone you may recognize on today's post. Now that Sarah has finished her 30 day fashion challenge, she is off and running with a new idea! "What I'm Into Right Now" highlights the current favorites of Sarah's style conscious friends.
"I imagined when I started Public Personae that it wouldn’t just be about my own persona but would also often open up to discover what other style conscious friends and acquaintances might see as cool" - Sarah X
Click Public Personae below to get the details on "What I'm Into Right Now".
Inspired by the Ancient Egyptian pyramids, Carly Margolis of All for the Mountain hand-carves wax into her desired shape and then cast's them in bronze, silver or gold. The result are these great dangling pieces of geometric wonders. Order your very own on line.
It's finally here! Topman. The British clothing store opened it's first shop in the U.S. yesterday in New York's SOHO. unfortunately, I'm stuck in my apartment all day and can't check out the reasonably priced Brit duds due to a horrible cold!! As soon as I'm feeling better, I'm off to Broadway and Broome for some summer clothes! Be sure to check out the site. You can order on line!
Ask people today, when you think of New York, and it's fashion, glamour, and style who comes to mind? Many people would say Valentina! Yesterday, while at the Museum of the City of New York viewing the fashion icons gowns, I noticed all of the detailed draping that was involved with many of her designs, and thought that most of the dresses looked very current, and so now. While Valentina lied about everything, from where she was from, to her age and background, she did stay true to the one thing that mattered most to her... high end couture. Valentina designed for some of the most fashionable from the 1930's to the 1950's. Often times the designer and former dancer would show up on the red carpets dressed to perfection, devastating actresses because she would out do them in their fashion and style. I love that!!
Valentina Sanina Schlee (1899-1989) – known professionally simply as Valentina — was a fashion pioneer, clothing such luminaries as Greta Garbo, Katharine Hepburn, Katharine Cornell, and Mrs. Randolph Hearst and helping to invent American couture in the process. Hers was the quintessential New York success story: she arrived in the city as a young immigrant and reinvented herself as the epitome of style and glamour, becoming a fixture in the fashion pages and a major celebrity in her own right.
The Valentina Exhibition runs through May 17 at the Museum of the City of New York. The Museum is a little run down, but the exhibit makes up for whats lacking.