Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Calvin-A saga of a Successful Trendsetter!

You know readers...? Really nothing is free in this world. Everything has got its own price. To get something you need to spend something on it.All these fashion designers have given fashion industry the most valuable time of their life!They have zoomed high with lot of dreams in their eyes!And struggled to realize those dreams.When they realized those dreams they became trend setters!If you stick to your goal you will become trend setter!


As time passed by Calvin’s life also saw ups and downs. His first wife Jayne divorced him in 1974 after ten years of marriage. Marci is their only child.  Then he got married to his fashion assistant Kelly Rector in 1986. Calvin is known for his ‘casual yet chic’ look. He created designs especially for active women. Calvin was nicknamed as ‘Calvin Clean.’ Calvin is born with business acumen also. He altered his image along with the time incorporating all the latest things in his fashion designs. In 1996 Calvin Klein became one of the 25 most powerful men in America.

Klein won the prestigious Coty Award three times in a row (1973-1975), becoming the youngest designer to ever have that honor. In 1982, 1983, and 1986 he also captured the Council of Fashion Designers of America Award. In addition to his professional achievements, he built a financially strong company with the continued advice and help of partner Barry Schwartz who guided the company through tough financial times in the late 1980s. His worldwide empire was rivaled by few designers.


Klein was unquestionably a stylish survivor as he approached the twenty-first century as a top fashion designer, still appealing to his clean-minded, career-oriented customers. But he also reached a growing group of hip teens and twenty-some things with his increasingly street-chic w omen's fashions of tuxedo denim jackets, crinkled poet blouses, velvet priestly evening vestments, and Edwardian mens'   jackets worn with cuffed jeans.
Calvin fought against the time to achieve in his life.

by Geeta Rao

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Calvin Klein-A Name Ruling Fashion And Style!

Soon Calvin’s creations became household name in the world of fashion and style. Klein expanded into men and women, CK sportswear for men and women, and CK jeans. Along with this, he also took interest in coats, accessories, intimate apparel, hosiery, swimwear, eye wear, furs, socks, and fragrances, Of all these denim jeans and fragrances built a huge fan following. In 1997,Calvin Klein’s jeans reached half a million dollars.

Calvin Klein wholly depended on advertisement, as he believed that was the only tool to success. Somehow he was in news always, whether it was right or for wrong causes. Hollywood biggies heartily agreed to advertise his creations.


Calvin got the name who would love to be in the controversy always. His ads featured were also quite provocative for the teenagers. Calvin canceled these ads when he became household name. Obsession, Eternity, and Escape, were well known fragrances of Calvin Klein. They saw huge success internationally. In the meantime he had to answer the biggies like The President of USA!


Calvin’s fashion philosophy differs from others as he goes for extreme simplicity. He uses neutral colors for his creations. Time magazine named Klein one of the twenty-five most influential Americans in 1996.


Calvin Klein won the most prestigious award for three times. He was the youngest recipient of that award. In 1982, 1983, and 1986 he also captured the Council of Fashion Designers of America Award. In addition Klein built a financially strong company with the continued advice and help of partner Barry Schwartz, who guided the company through tough financial times in the late 1980s. Few designers have rivaled his worldwide empire.

Author-Geeta Rao

Monday, December 13, 2010

Calvein Klein's creations- A revolution in fashion and style!

Readers this time I have brought Calvin Klein’s creations for you. The fashion world is mad about Calvin Klein’s creations. But let’s have a look on the struggle he had to have. ‘Rome was not built in a day!’ There were unperturbed dreams, undying quest which made him carve a niche on the international platform! Who doesn’t wish to have a  Calvin Klein’s creations?

Calvin Klein, America’s top fashion designer reached the pinnacle by designing very simple and uncomplicated sportswear. He is always in the news in the fashion and style world. Born on November 19, 1942, in the Bronx, New York, Calvin was a second child of Flo and Leo Stern. Calvin was highly influenced by his grandmother who was a seamstress. His mother nourished his taste of art and fashion. Calvin spent his childhood comfortably in New York.

Calvin was hell bent upon attending school where his aptitude is heralded. He attended a school which carved students careers in fashion and style industry. Calvin was designing fashion clothes while his friends were playing on the ground. Then he joined Fashion Institute of Technology, graduating in 1962.His killing instinct was so strong he sacrificed most of his youthful time

Calvin and his closest friend Barry started a coat business in the late 60’s. They both got their maiden order by accident! A person wanting to buy coat entered the wrong floor and then took a look over Calvin Klein shop. She liked it so much and gave order for $ 50 thousand! This was exorbitant amount for Calvin and hid friend Barry at that time! Then Calvin never looked back. Started chasing his dreams shielded by luck. Fortune favors the brave this came true in Calvin’s life. He went for new innovation and new ventures which were welcomed by the fashion and style world. More in the next post…


Cheers
Author- Geeta Rao.

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Bruce- The King Of Fashion and Style World!

Readers,
I stumbled upon this interview and felt like sharing with you people. On the back ground you can visualize personality of Bruce,the fashion designer.His fashion designs are matchless and just adorable through out the world!Just go through this interview to understand this fashion designer deeply!


LO: Many of the smaller companies showed their fall '99 collections after Europe, but you showed yours according to the new schedule, before Europe. Why is that?
Nicole: Everyone's going to eventually have to change to the schedule, so why not change now instead of later? Because there would have always been a time when there was a crunch, we just decided to do it right away. And it's also like people were coming in for those shows, and I don't know how many people came in for the second group of shows that just happened.
LO: I'm curious, why don't you walk out on the runway at the end of your shows?
Daphne: No particular reason. It's not meant to pose any statement. You know, if it was just our friends it would be one thing, but we're not really the type of people that go out in public and, you know, a "Look at me! Look at me!" kind of thing. It's just kind of nerve-wracking. And anyway, if you're not really some sort of exhibitionist, for people to actually go out on a stage with everyone staring at you, it's very strange.
LO: What was the inspiration for fall '99?
Daphne: Everybody asks us that question about inspiration. The way Nicole and I work, it's never really like that. It's not like, "Oh, my inspiration this time was the Renaissance, you know, during the Dark Ages." It's never really about that. Nicole: Fall '99 ended up being a little tough because the seasons changed. The fashion calendar changed a lot, so we had a lot less time. But I think we're just -- we're really trying to focus on the construction of our clothes right now. We don't have themes. But it's pretty much like an evolution of design ideas that we've been working on from seasons past. That one was more construction, I think.
Daphne: Of course, you try to stick to a real cohesive thing during a collection, but really we've kind of dabbled. In every collection we've kind of dabbled in a little bit of everything, whether it's the embroidery or things that are really tactile, like yarns. And we're actually really strong in knitwear. It's not any one particular thing. And we always try to throw in something that has more of a personal feel to it. Sometimes it's not just about a pair of pants, you know, there always might be a little bit of humor in something. If you split the legs open there's air holes on the bottom. We try to take time to make it a little bit more personal. But in terms of inspirations, I guess it's about everything.
LO: How would you describe your customer?
Daphne: Hopefully she's hip. I like to think that our customer could be -- in terms of age at least -- I'd like to think that it can pretty much follow in a really wide range of people. And even in style. I think there should be things that every type of woman should want, that can appreciate. And it varies. I mean, if there is one point of view that I find for some reason stands out in my mind, it's "female." It's funny because we had spoken to a department store once and they said, "Well, because with your name, no one's going to know that you're two females." And I said to her, "Well, if you actually look at our clothing, you would never not know that these are females that designed this."
LO: Do you have any famous customers?
Daphne: From what I understand, in London they've sold things to PJ Harvey.
LO: What do you offer the customer that other designers don't?
Nicole: I think it's our design. The type of design that we do is -- it's not mainstream, but I think it's very easily every-day wearable clothing. We try to make things a little bit more personal to the wearer. There's a lot of small details there that I think are special.
LO: What is your price range?
Daphne: We sell denim that we try to sell with our main collection as well. And it's a really good support for us. So, our least expensive items can run from $150 for a pair of jeans to $500 for a pair of the wool, lined pants, to a leather jacket that runs about $1,300. And that's all retail prices. Tops can range anywhere from, I 'd say, $300 to about $700. For someone who can't go shopping like that every day it's an awesome thing to think of spending $700 on a shirt. I mean, I can justify it because I know how much it took -- how much it cost to make it, and also how much labor went into it.
LO: Did your exposure in "Vogue" a few months ago help your business?
Daphne: Actually, it's been helpful with stores because, you know, your average store probably looks at "Vogue", in America at least. So, it's been pretty good in that way.
Nicole: We were very surprised about that, actually. It was really nice, I think. We've been getting a lot of support from them, from the people there, so it was nice.
LO: So, where did the two of you meet?
Daphne: We met at Parson's, and we used to live across the hall from each other and we became friends that way and we just stayed friends.
LO: Why did you start Bruce?
Nicole: When I was in college I kind of always knew I wanted to do my own thing. And when I got out of school -- you know, there's really not many places to work. So, I took jobs. I mean, the first job I ever took was horrendous. I actually worked at J. Crew and it was like one of the worst experiences I've ever had in a job before. I got out of school and I realized that the opportunities I was interested in weren't there. So, I kind of took jobs that would help me more with what I wanted to do eventually. I ended up taking a job later on at Isaac, which is a secondary line, in the fabric department, in order to help me with this business. And Daphne worked in production for, I think it was Donna Karan mens.
Daphne: It was your typical 9:00 to 5:00 job. Actually, in the design business it's never really 9:00 to 5:00, it's usually 9:00 to 11:00 or 9:00 to 10:00. So, you know, just getting really weary about the kind of jobs that were out there. We were always talking about it and just being friends for so long, we just shared a lot in common in terms of, like, aesthetically looking at clothes. So, one day we just kind of decided.
LO: When was that?
Daphne: About four years ago. This is our fourth season doing shows, but we've actually been doing this for about five. Six, actually. And the first two seasons were trial for us. It was more about getting our feet wet and making sure that we kind of knew what we were doing before we started investing a lot of money in shows and things like that.
LO: How were you funded?
Daphne: Both of us had financial help. I don't think anybody -- unless you're independently wealthy -- I don't think anyone would be able to support this kind of business on a continual basis.
LO: So, you've had help from your parents? Nicole: They help us out quite a bit.
LO: How many employees do you have?
Daphne: None. We do everything ourselves. We don't sew the garments, of course, but we contract people, contract help as we need it. But in terms of organizing and running the entire business, from show to production to everything, to press. Nicole and I pretty much do everything ourselves. And we've never had any full-time employee. They've always been sort of freelance contractors.
LO: Do you plan on hiring anyone?
Nicole: That's our goal. Our goal is to be able to hire several people, you know, to have a staff, and maybe even an assistant, so that when we will be able to focus on the creative end a lot more.
LO: What's the worst thing about being in fashion?
Daphne: I guess the obvious things. The workload. The business. I'd say everything is the worse thing except for the actual creating. Everything else is just horrible. It's such a funny thing because it is a business, and with every business there is PR, there's financial knowledge that you have to deal with.
Nicole: I really like to design, but since we've been doing this, the things that we really love to do, you just never get to do them. It ends up being like the smallest part of your day. Out of each season you might spend like two weeks -- not even -- like probably a week designing.
LO: What do you like about working in fashion? Nicole: [Speechless] I don't know why I can't answer that question. Right now I can't think of anything.
Daphne: I like the idea of sculpting things three-dimensional. And the idea of working on a form and looking at something from all around. And also the power of what clothing can have. I shouldn't really say "power," because it doesn't necessarily have power, but the fact that it can actually represent or express something so powerfully. And depending on how good it makes a person feel, to what it symbolizes. It could be a uniform, or -- it's so representational of so many things and it changes so often. And it could be an incredibly superficial thing. It just has so many different meanings. It's just nice, also, to see people express themselves individually through it.
LO: What are your plans for the future?
Nicole: I think a lot of people get sidetracked on doing a lower priced line in order to support their more expensive line. But the thing is for us we think we need to build up creatively, and also the business side. We need to build up one line. And then when we're really happy with that and that's stable, then we'd like to go into a lower priced line. We'd love to do menswear, accessories, lingerie. We have a lot of plans.
LO: Do you see yourself designing when you're 70?
Daphne: Maybe. Maybe not. Never say never. I wouldn't mind it. If the situation is still good, I definitely would like to continue doing it, but I have so many of my own personal goals. The future is sort of like a question mark. It would be nice to be able to do lots of other things besides just this. I like cooking. I would love to have a restaurant some day. I know for me, anyway, when I first started this and every day was sort of a struggle for us, these interests that you have are the things that kind of keep you going also.


Source: About.Com

Friday, September 24, 2010

Bruce-The Brightest Star Of Fashion And Style World.

Another fashion and style guru, Bruce Oldfield was born on July 14, 1950. A British designer by birth is known for his high style and fashion apparels. Hollywood stars, celebrities, royalty and the wealthiest of the world look for his advice for their occasions to dress up. Almost all Hollywood celebrities depend entirely on him. Jerry Hall, Joan Collins, Queen Noor of Jordan and Queen Rania of Jordan and list never ends. He gave a new direction fashion and stylesHis childhood may not be very comfortable as he spent childhood in children's charity, Barnardo's. But his determination made him stand apart in celebrity fashion and style.
He graduated from St. Martin's School of Art in London in 1973 with minimum score. That year he staged his first one-man show for Henri Bendel, later returning to London to show his first collection. Bruce started his own label of ready to wear stuff and sold them to American and British stores. He began making clothes by order of celebrities. By this time he had international clientele.He was honored by OBE for his contribution in fashion and style industry. His famous biography came to lime light in 2004 named ‘Rootless.’ A long list of awards and honors trailed him. His fashion dresses have set the floor on fire.Today also he is the hot favorite of bridal and ready-to-wear, and also he redesigned the uniform of McDonald in 2008! Hail an icon of fashion world



Thursday, September 23, 2010

Bliss Blass A Pioneer In Fashion and Style Ideas

The determination that Bill Blass had, was corner stone for his expansion of his expire. Bills started his career in fashion world in 1946. He bought the company Maurice Rentner Ltd., which he had joined in 1959, and renamed it Bill Blass Limited. Then his expansion had no boundary. Next three decades he ruled the fashion industry in swim wear, furs, luggage, perfume and chocolate. His company grew by leaps and bounds by 1998, claiming $700 million a year
Usually fashion designers designs will be too high to wear in daily life. But Bliss’s designs were wearable. Bliss hit the dart, understood the necessity and needs of working class of America, and gave it what it wanted. In a time when other designers were designing clothes which were known more for being a work of art, Blass was designing clothing which even everyday women could wear day or night.   He made carved a special place for sports wears, gave them a stylish and clean look. Probably till the date Bliss understood his clients better than others.          
Blass was hired by Ford Company to give the exclusive look. Then consequently he was associated with Emilio Pucci, Hubert de Givenchy, and Cartier. Each year as the fashion changes the colors, fashion style and fashion designs were updated.  A truly unique feature of this model, and the 1980 through 1983 Mark series Blass models, was a "carriage roof" giving a convertible top look to the cars. After 1983, the Blass edition became just a unique color option with rear quarter window model designations and a few features that were options on the standard model.
He died of throat cancer. Just 6 days after completing his memoir. Blass was a perfect connoisseur of century in fashion and style.


Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Bill Blass- A Bliss For Fashion And Style Industry!

Another American in fashion designing was Bill Blass, born on June 22, 1922; he ruled the fashion world up to June 12 2002.Bill was known for his extra ordinary tailoring talent and combination of texture of fabrics and patterns. Bill received plenty of awards in the fashion industry. In 1999, Bill also received Life Achievement Award.
Began his fashion designer career in 1946, joining joining Maurice Rentner Ltd.Bill was highly creative and produced expensive but the most beautiful fashion apparels. Bill’s fashion apparels stand apart in the crowd because of his innovative combination of patterns and textures. Bill produced his own label and bought the company and renamed it as Bill Blass Ltd.
Somehow his early life was not that happy and pleasant. His father worked as a salesman of hardware committed suicide when bliss was five years old. Bliss’s mother died in 1952. Bliss had one sister.
Bliss once admitted that all his school books were filled with Hollywood stars and their fashion clothes. Unknowingly he was dragged into fashion and style world. At the age of fifteen, Bliss started sewing, and selling evening gowns. He saved money and then joined fashion design course at Manhattan. Bill was cut out for the fashion and style industry, so he excelled and won Design for Living award. Bliss was so fashion conscious; he spent his salary on clothing, shoes, and elegant meals.
Bliss joined army in 1942, he met so many artists, writers and sound engineers. We can say he that  learnt the hard truth of life here.
Cheers readers see you in the next post....bye take care I love you all.

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Betsey-Betted and Ruled Over Fashion!

Betsey was graduated from Syracuse University in 1964.Betsey got a plum position as a guest editor at Mademoiselle, a fashion and life style magazine. In this short stint she impressed everyone, and got a permanent position in the art department. Immediately Betsy was sent to London when Beatle fashion, bell bottom and belly baring knit tops were on pinnacle. There she visited the hub of fashion named Carnaby Street. After returning from London she started designing on those lines what she had witnessed in London. Her fashion ideas, fashion and styles, and celebrity fashion and style created whirl pool in the fashion industry.
She started designing for all branded companies of America. In the 1970s Johnson designed slip dresses, drop-waist ballerina dresses, double knit A-line minis, and "nutsy artsy" embroidered sweaters for the Alley Cat clothing line, then for her own New York shop, Betsey Bunky Nini. Her fashion ideas became the craze among the youngsters. They gave the look of celebrity fashion styles.
1990 was an era of Betsey; she ruled the roof of fashion industry, expanding her empire. She captured the youngsters mostly because her clothing had ‘young look’ in them. Polly Mellen of Allure magazine said: "Her clothes are fun, female, flirty, slightly aggressive and teasing. Her fashion shows are always witty, fun and slightly shoddy. But in the showroom, the clothes are real and the prices right." Betsey told plainly that only her passion for clothing made her come in this limelight otherwise she did not have any brilliant fashion ideas. She just made things with heart and burning passion.Betsey may be floating like this but she ships out every month at least dozens of designs. Johnson was her own fitting model, as he used to wear designs in daily life also.She started with the British Invasion of America style, hopped on the early 1980s punk bandwagon with safety pins and ripped T-shirts, and kept current with the 1990s rave, grunge, medieval, and deconstructionist fashion movements, all of which began on the streets and in music clubs haunted by disenfranchised youth.She simply says: "I've stopped aging in my work 25 years ago."Perhaps it is just that sense of wonder, openness, and a bizarre sense of humor that keeps this over-50 designer in touch with the youthful trends of today.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Betsey’s World of Fashion and Style!

Betsey was graduated from Syracuse University in 1964.Betsey got a plum position as a guest editor at Mademoiselle, a fashion and life style magazine. In this short stint she impressed everyone, and got a permanent position in the art department. Immediately Betsy was sent to London when Beatle fashion, bell bottom and belly baring knit tops were on pinnacle. There she visited the hub of fashion named Carnaby Street. After returning from London she started designing on those lines what she had witnessed in London. Her fashion ideas, fashion and styles, and celebrity fashion and style created whirl pool in the fashion industry.
She started designing for all branded companies of America. In the 1970s Johnson designed slip dresses, drop-waist ballerina dresses, double knit A-line minis, and "nutsy artsy" embroidered sweaters for the Alley Cat clothing line, then for her own New York shop, Betsey Bunky Nini. Her fashion ideas became the craze among the youngsters. They gave the look of celebrity fashion styles.
1990 was an era of Betsey; she ruled the roof of fashion industry, expanding her empire. She captured the youngsters mostly because her clothing had ‘young look’ in them. Polly Mellen of Allure magazine said: "Her clothes are fun, female, flirty, slightly aggressive and teasing. Her fashion shows are always witty, fun and slightly shoddy. But in the showroom, the clothes are real and the prices right." Betsey told plainly that only her passion for clothing made her come in this limelight otherwise she did not have any brilliant fashion ideas. She just made things with heart and burning passion. Betsey may be floating like this but she ships out every month at least dozens of designs. Johnson was her own fitting model, as he used to wear designs in daily life also.She started with the British Invasion of America style, hopped on the early 1980s punk bandwagon with safety pins and ripped T-shirts, and kept current with the 1990s rave, grunge, medieval, and deconstructionist fashion movements, all of which began on the streets and in music clubs haunted by disenfranchised youth. She simply says: "I've stopped aging in my work 25 years ago."Perhaps it is just that sense of wonder, openness, and a bizarre sense of humor that keeps this over-50 designer in touch with the youthful trends of today.


Betsey was graduated from Syracuse University in 1964.Betsey got a plum position as a guest editor at Mademoiselle, a fashion and life style magazine. In this short stint she impressed everyone, and got a permanent position in the art department. Immediately Betsy was sent to London when Beatle fashion, bell bottom and belly baring knit tops were on pinnacle. There she visited the hub of fashion named Carnaby Street. After returning from London she started designing on those lines what she had witnessed in London. Her fashion ideas, fashion and styles, and celebrity fashion and style created whirl pool in the fashion industry.
She started designing for all branded companies of America. In the 1970s Johnson designed slip dresses, drop-waist ballerina dresses, double knit A-line minis, and "nutsy artsy" embroidered sweaters for the Alley Cat clothing line, then for her own New York shop, Betsey Bunky Nini. Her fashion ideas became the craze among the youngsters. They gave the look of celebrity fashion styles.
1990 was an era of Betsey; she ruled the roof of fashion industry, expanding her empire. She captured the youngsters mostly because her clothing had ‘young look’ in them. Polly Mellen of Allure magazine said: "Her clothes are fun, female, flirty, slightly aggressive and teasing. Her fashion shows are always witty, fun and slightly shoddy. But in the showroom, the clothes are real and the prices right." Betsey told plainly that only her passion for clothing made her come in this limelight otherwise she did not have any brilliant fashion ideas. She just made things with heart and burning passion. Betsey may be floating like this but she ships out every month at least dozens of designs. Johnson was her own fitting model, as he used to wear designs in daily life also.She started with the British Invasion of America style, hopped on the early 1980s punk bandwagon with safety pins and ripped T-shirts, and kept current with the 1990s rave, grunge, medieval, and deconstructionist fashion movements, all of which began on the streets and in music clubs haunted by disenfranchised youth. She simply says: "I've stopped aging in my work 25 years ago."Perhaps it is just that sense of wonder, openness, and a bizarre sense of humor that keeps this over-50 designer in touch with the youthful trends of today.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Betsey Johnson - A Bold Soul With Determination!

Betsey Johnson was a gutsy lady. Born in 1942 in Connecticut, She lived a passion led profession! Betsey was inspired from her dance classes where she attended as a little girl. She was an awful admirer of dance and costume. The deadly combination boosted her burning passion.  She started getting the attention   once she got a position as designer for Paraphernalia, a hip and sexy boutique with other young designers.She set latest fashion trends.Betsey was a fashion designer,class apart.
In 1968 she married John Cale, who wore her designs on the stage and in daily life also. They divorced in 1971.Betsey opened the Betsey Bunki Nini boutique in 1969 and immediately got offered a job by Alvin Duskin in San Francisco. The two jobs kept her over busy and globetrotting.   Betsey had a fancy over silk, her most of the clothes are silk in texture. Betsey was a designer with full ear to ear grin and a force of energy in the fashion world.Her fashion and styles have carved a niche in fashion industry.
She stole the stage with swinging style in 1960’s. It was a turbulent time when conservationists believed that her style and fashion was meant for only street-inspired chic and had the influence of British rock n roll on American youth culture.Betsey is known for trendy fashion and styles.
During this decade, Johnson helped launch the American fashion revolution with her space age silvery sci-fi dresses, see-through plastic shifts with discreet stick-on cover-ups, a "noise dress" with metal grommets at the hem that went clink-clank when the wearer moved, elephant bell-bottoms, and 14-inch metal micro-miniskirts. In those years her designs were worn by style setters such as actresses Julie Christie and Brigitte Bardot, model Twiggy, and first lady Jackie Kennedy. Over the ensuing decades Johnson continued to be an energetic leader in fashion design. As Susie Billingsley of Vogue magazine wrote: "She got on the street fashion wagon before anyone. She's always been way ahead of what's hip."

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Noelle Adam-Carved a Niche In Fashion Industry



Spring is finally here - Noëlle Adam has launched her Spring/Summer 2010 collection; focusing on limited edition styles of Maxi dresses, Party & Shirt dresses alongside her unique handmade statement necklaces.Her fashion dresses are of celebrity style.

The signature range of Classic Maxi Dresses, offer a unique ease of fitting and flattering fluid lines in cotton poplin and cotton jersey; whilst the range of Party Dresses in silks, satins, gold lace and faux fur offer a touch of luxurious glamour.Adam'sclothing have got latest fashion styles.

The Halter Maxi Dress adds to the transitional collection, taking you from day into eveningwear. The fabulous Halter Black Gold, is "the" summer party essential this season, and can be bought online alongside Noëlle´s recommended statement necklaces for a complete styling concept. This year Noëlle will also have a full variety of marvellous Shirt Dresses in floral prints and a unique Lace ´ Bead Necklace series.Fashion accessories are also equally loving

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

ACNE-The Pioneer In Fashion Industry


ACNE


Italian born fashion designer Elsa Schiaparelli loved to shock and surprise, but perhaps it was in the blood. Her great-Uncle, the astronomer Giovanni Schiaparelli, shocked the world in 1877 by announcing he had discovered `canals' on Mars.

Born in Rome in 1890, the young Elsa grew up dancing to her own drummer, and ignoring convention. Her interest in exploring the unusual in fashion surfaced early and caused quite a stir. As a young woman, attending a ball in Paris, she created a dress by winding a strip of fabric around her body. Had it not unraveled, she might have started her first popular trend.

Her early marriage at 18 to theosophist William de Wendt de Kerlor came to a shocking end with the birth of a daughter her husband abandoned her, and Elsa found herself alone in Paris with a child to support. This was shocking enough to polite society in the 1920s, but Elsa didn't sit around feeling sorry for herself. She designed a black knitted sweater with a bow tie embellishment, and was soon selling them as fast as her troupe of Armenian knitters could produce them.

Her next shock was for the world of sport, when she opened her first salon in 1927. Called Stupidir de Sport she gave the tennis world a stunning serve with her divided skirt, worn in 1931 by tennis star Lili de Alvarez. As if that didn't shock the conservative ranks of women's' tennis enough, she later introduced shorts to Wimbledon.

But if that wasn't enough, Elsa turned her attention to high fashion and designed clothes in a new hot pink, which she naturally called `shocking' pink

Her love of color became a signature, and she called on surrealist artist Salvador Dali to design new fabrics and even hats imagine wearing a giant shoe on your head, or even a lamb chop as a team, Elsa and Dali brought fun to high fashion.

But Elsa's less outrageous designs became classics of fashion. She was the first to create a dramatic outline for women's bodies using shoulder pads, the first to give zippered clothes a more elegant finish by dyeing the zippers the same colour as the fabric, and the first to use animal print fabrics. Her style and panache may have been shocking, but it was also irresistible. Like shorts for tennis players, her `outrageous' ideas were warmly embraced by women.

Her wide range of interests and love of design soon saw her branching out into jewelry. She loved to experiment with new materials, and by the 30s, she had become one of the fashion world's great icons. She introduced cute buttons,

with shapes as diverse as bunnies and bullets, and the Egyptian Look, with huge sleeves that owed more to the Orient than Egypt. But Elsa didn't care and neither did her public her eclectic designs delighted her clients, who were drawn from among the very famous and wealthy of the time. They included movie stars like Marlene Dietrich and Mae West, and socialites like Wallis Simpson, the Duchess of Windsor.

One of her most amazing creations was the famous `lobster dress' of Salvador Dali. It looked like an elegant white organize evening gown except for the vibrant red lobster that Dali painted down the front of the skirt.

She continued to shock and delight with a dress that looked as if it had been repeatedly ripped far in

elegant white organize evening gown except for the vibrant red lobster that Dali painted down the front of the skirt.

She continued to shock and delight with a dress that looked as if it had been repeatedly ripped far in advance of today's `distressed' styles a back-to-front suit and coat printed with profiles by artist Jean Cocteau.

When she decided to create perfumes in the 30s, it was almost inevitable that she would create one called Shocking it became her most famous perfume, and her signature.

So legendary is this fragrance that Schiaparelli France recently recreated it in the original shapely bottle modeled on Mae West.

But the inescapable intervention of World War II proved more shocking than anything Elsa could have devised she was forced to close down her salon for the duration, and when it reopened in 1945, it seemed that the fire and passion had gone, swallowed the horror of six years of war. By the 50s, she was no longer designing clothes, but she took the time to write her autobiography My Shocking Life.

Elsa Schiaparelli died in 1973, and true to her great spirit, she was buried in her favorite outfit, a shocking pink Chinese robe. She was 83, and still fashion's grand dame. But her salon languished for a few years until it was reopened to keep her designs and perfumes available to the legions of women that had grown to love them.

Monday, August 16, 2010

Balenciaga-Today!

Balenciaga today

Balanciaga is always in the fashion news.Surely Balenciaga created latest fashion trends as they call Balenciaga as a legendary in fashion industry. The idea of fashion in Balenciaga fetched very high price later. He changed the direction of fashion styles in ladies fashion. He proved himself as an un destroyable fashion designer!Let me tell you about the the current scenario.


Balenciaga is in the midst of fashion world   In 1986, Jacques Bogart S.A. acquired the rights to Balenciaga, and opened a new ready-to-wear line, Le Dix. The first collection was designed by Michel Goma in October 1987, who remained at the house for the next five years to mixed reviews. He was replaced in 1992 with Dutch designer Josephus Thimister who began the restoration of Balenciaga to an elite, high-fashion status. During Thimister's term, a young Nicolas Ghesquière would join as a license designer, and eventually promoted to head designer in 1997.
Balenciaga is now owned by the Gucci Group (part of PPR), and its womenswear and menswear is headed by Nicolas Ghesquière. Ghesquière, like Balenciaga, is a self-taught designer, and apprenticed to Jean-Paul Gaultier and Agnes B. The hip, fresh interpretation of Balenciaga classics, such as the semifitted jacket and the sack dress, caught the attention of the media as well as such celebrities as Madonna and Sinéad O'Connor.
There was some conflict within the house of Balenciaga on Nicolas Ghesquiere's designs. The Gucci group said that if Balenciaga didn't become profitable within the year 2007, they would replace him. Ghesquière's F/W 2005 line showed that the house was not only profitable, but also attracted a number of celebrity customers including editor-in-chief at Vogue, Anna Wintour.
The house of Balenciaga designed the dresses worn by Jennifer Connelly and Nicole Kidman to the 2006 Academy Awards, as well as the wedding gown Kidman wore for her recent marriage to Keith Urban. Kylie Minogue also wore a Balenciaga dress for her "Slow" and "Red Blooded Woman" music videos and for her concert tour.
Today the brand is most famous for its line of motorcycle-inspired handbags, especially the famous "Lariat." Balenciaga has four exclusive boutiques in the United States. One Balenciaga store is located on 22nd St in New York, NY. A second store is located in Los Angeles, CA on Melrose Avenue. Recently, a third store opened at the famous shopping center South Coast Plaza, in Costa Mesa, CA. This store is 1,200 square feet (110 m2) and includes coffin-like inset displays. The New York and Los Angeles boutiques carry both men's and women's ready-to-wear, while the South Coast Plaza boutique carries only women's clothing. The most recent store, located in Las Vegas inside Caesers Palace, carries only accessories.
Balenciaga's Fall/Winter 2007 show has wowed Teen Voque editor-in-chief Amy Astley so much that an entire recent spread in the magazine, titled "Global Studies" and shot in Beijing, was influenced by it. The line included skinny jodhpurs, tight, fitted blazers, beaded embellished scarves and other multicultural mixes.
Balenciaga is also very well known for creating avant-garde structural pieces, straddling the edge of fashion and forecasting the future of women's ready-to-wear fashion.

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Balenciaga's Designs-A Torch Bearer In Fashion Industry

 Balanciaga's idea of fashion was very novel and revolutionary as well.A legendary of latest fashion trends. Ladies fashion and fashion styles of Balanciaga have set their own standards in fashion apparels.Readers let us have a glimpse of Balanciaga life and idea of fashion.

Customers risked their safety to travel to Europe during World War II to see Balenciaga's clothing. During this period, he was noted for his "square coat," with sleeves cut in a single piece with the yoke, and for his designs with black (or black and brown) lace over bright pink fabric.
However, it was not until the post-war years that the full scale of the inventiveness of this highly original designer became evident. His lines became more linear and sleek, diverging from the hourglass shape popularized by Christian Dior's New Look. The fluidity of his silhouettes enabled him to manipulate the relationship between his clothing and women's bodies. In 1951, he totally transformed the silhouette, broadening the shoulders and removing the waist.

In 1955, he designed the tunic dress, which later developed into the chemise dress of 1958. Other contributions in the postwar era included the spherical balloon jacket (1953), the high-waisted baby doll dress (1957), the cocoon coat (1957), the balloon skirt (1957), and the sack dress (1957). In 1959, his work culminated in the Empire line, with high-waisted dresses and coats cut like kimonos. His manipulation of the waist, in particular, contributed to "what is considered to be his most important contribution to the world of fashion: a new silhouette for women."

In the 1960s, Balenciaga was an innovator in his use of fabrics: he tended toward heavy fabrics, intricate embroidery, and bold materials. His trademarks included "collars that stood away from the collarbone to give a swanlike appearance" and shortened "bracelet" sleeve His often spare, sculptural creations—including funnel-shape gowns of stiff duchess satin worn to acclaim by clients such as Pauline de Rothschild, Bunny Mellon, Marella Agnelli, Gloria Guinness and Mona von Bismarck—were considered masterworks of haute couture in the 1950s and 1960s.

In 1960 he designed the wedding dress for Queen Fabiola of Belgium made of ivory duchess satin trimmed with white mink at the collar and the hips. Jackie Kennedy famously upset John F. Kennedy for buying Balenciaga's expensive creations while he was President because he feared that the American public might think the purchases too lavish. Her haute couture bills were eventually discreetly paid by her father-in-law, Joseph Kennedy.

Sunday, August 1, 2010

Balenciaga-The Most Balanced Designer!


Balenciaga

Readers how about knowing the past designers? So i am thinking of bringing a few to you people.These act really an inspiration to all those budding fashion designers.The determination of these was unruffled! That is how they could reach this height!Let's have a look on Balenciaga.He brought a revolution in fashion industry,fashion styles. His fashion apparels were applauded across the world. He started the idea of fashion for the high society.

Spanish dress designer who created elegant ball gowns and other classic designs.
Balenciaga began seriously studying dressmaking at the age of 10, when the death of his father, a sea captain, made it necessary for his mother to support the family by sewing. His first trip to Paris at 15 inspired him to become a couturier, and by age 20 he had his own dressmaking establishment at the fashionable summer resort of San Sebastián in Spain.
In the next 15 years Balenciaga became the leading couturier of Spain. In 1937, when the Spanish Civil War disrupted his business, he moved to Paris. For the next 30 years his collections featured sumptuously elegant dresses and suits. Balenciaga helped popularize the trend toward capes and flowing clothes without waistlines in the late 1950s and the use of plastic for rainwear in the mid-1960s. In 1968 the house of Balenciaga closed, and he retired.

Cristóbal Balenciaga opened his first boutique with in San Sebastián, Spain, in 1914, which expanded to include branches in Madrid and Barcelona. The Spanish royal family and the aristocracy wore his designs, but when the Spanish Civil War forced him to close his stores, Balenciaga moved to Paris.
Balenciaga opened his Paris couture house on Avenue George V in August 1937, and his first runway show featured designs heavily influenced by the Spanish Renaissance. Balenciaga's success in Paris was nearly immediate. Within two years, the French press lauded him as a revolutionary, and his designs were highly sought-after. Carmel Snow, the editor of Harper's Bazaar was an early champion of his designs.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Badgley Mischka-Fashion Feast


In July 1991 Vogue 's Dodie Kazanjian looked to six designers (including Bill Blass, Donna Karan, and Michael Kors) for the perfect "little black dress," and found it at Badgley Mischka. Her fashion designs gained name and fame.Her idea of fashion is out of the world.
Frances Lear, writing in Lear's (September 1991), also chose a Badgley Mischka wool jersey as the magazine's "Relevant Dress," calling it "reminiscent of other seminal dresses, yet perfectly contemporary…as comfortable as your own skin." Such is the unerring sense of ease and balance in Badgley Mischka designs—they create something expertly vital without superfluidity or trendiness.Fashion apparelsare just attractive. Fashion catwalks are held.
Lilly Daché, the great stylemaker of the 1950s once said, "real fashion begins with simplicity," and Badgley and Mischka employ this manda te, creating clothing that is not only beautifully made but beautiful to wear. By the end of the 20th century the designing duo dominated the eveningwear market, and had begun to make their mark on the bridalwear. Introduced in 1996, their gowns won raves from critics, stores, and brides-to-be.
In addition to eveningwear and bridal gowns, Badgley Mischka wanted to carve a niche in hip streetwear as well. While critics and celebrities crammed the runway for their opulently beaded gowns, many had little interest for the designers' more casual creations. Yet by 2000 their "tough chic" separates in colorful leather with chunky belts and bikerish cool garnered notice. Women's Wear Daily (20 September 2000) enthused, "Mark Badgley and James Mischka have lightened their touch considerably…. Hemlines rose, shapes got sportier and…though the overall effect was more buoyant, their signature sophistication remained. And it was nowhere more apparent than in the white leather-wrapped miniskirt worn with a gold knit t-shirt…and the flirty gold-accented halter dress—all of which fit to perfection."
Another milestone for the designers was opening their first store, in Beverly Hills, in fall 2000. The stylish Rodeo Drive boutique featured all of their signature creations, including their new footwear collection, launched the year before. The designers had plans for additional stores in New York and Florida, and had been negotiating a licensing agreement for a signature fragrance as well. And as if several starlets wearing their wares for the Academy Awards wasn't enough, Badgley and Mischka were awarded the Marymount Designer of the Year award from Marymount University in May 2001.

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Oriens-The Birth Story Of Oriens


Hummmm……….There is a fashion news !Readers once you get used to this Oriens then you don’t look for any other perfume! The classy the aromatic and above all very feminine! It speaks the language of sensitivity. Oriens is considered as an ethnographic objects as it a blend of opulence and lightness as it belongs to the latest trends.Oriens offers fruity and floral blend, it is hard to miss. The perfume is highly elegant and meant for the class.Oriens feels surprisingly pleasant to wear. The perfume manages to create a mantle of security and semi-warmth cut through by a cool green anisic nuance running in the dark velvet material of the perfume which smells more and more of Hades-dark pomegranate with time. It is well known in fashion industry.
. The name Oriens makes sense also in this context as Venice was such a meeting point of cultures between Europe and the Orient.

Oriens smells to my nose like a black diamond more than a watermelon tourmaline. It is abstractly rendered as an oriental-chypre, a hybrid yet classic genre in perfumery which attempts to combine both the warmth and depth of the satisfying and a bit fleeting in the end. It succeeds well at hinting at and even making you live oriental opulence and the dark-lit charm of a chypre scent burning softly in a byzantine church like a lamp oil casting shadows on the wall. It is secretly comforting without being too obvious a gourmand or regressive fragrance. Bernard Ellena seems to excell at indirect, oblique perfumery references that are hard to place. But I also have to accept the fact that Oriens is not meant to be with me for the days ahead.Oriens starts like a classic perfume with a will to live and then vaporizes like it knows in its bones it can only pretend to be a fad and does not want to outstay its welcome.Oriens in this regard is an interesting social object or perhaps better said - ethnographic object - as it brings out the existence of contradictions instead of squashing them into a non-perfume, playing with opposite ideals - opulence and lightness - and resolving them in the end as a perfume of its time.

Monday, July 12, 2010

Badgley Mischka-Brand Created By Passion!


* Established: New York, in 1988, by Mark Badgley and James Mischka. Badgley born in East Saint Louis, Illinois, 12 January 1961; raised in Oregon; studied business, University of Southern California, to 1982; graduated from Parsons School of Design, New York, 1985. Mischka born in Burlington, Wisconsin, 23 December 1960; studied management and art history, Rice University, Houston, Texas, to 1982; graduated from Parsons School of Design, 1985. Before forming own company, Badgley designed for Jackie Rogers and Donna Karan, New York, 1985-88; Mischka designed for Willi Smith, New York, 1985-88.
* Company History: Acquired by Escada USA, 1992; introduced bridalwear, 1996; launched footwear line, 1999; opened first store, Beverly Hills, 2000.
* Awards: Mouton Cadet Young Designer award, 1989; Dallas International Apparel Mart Rising Star award, 1992; Marymount Designer[s] of the Year, 2001.
* Company Address: 525 Seventh Avenue, New York, NY 10018, U.S.A.

Designers Mark Badgley and James Mischka have said of their clothing, "one zip and you're glamorous." Their clothing radiates youthful confidence; fanciful but realistic, their designs recall the elegance of an age when one dressed for evening. The two young designers, who introduced their first collection in 1988 under the label Badgley Mischka in New York, have made glamour attainable by demystifying and simplifying it.

Uptown diners and downtown executives alike find something appropriate and pleasing in Badgley Mischka designs. Evening suits and dresses are refined and uncontrived—form-fitting wool jersey, cotton brocade, faille, embroidered lace, silk, and baby bouclé are used to create suits with long fitted jackets and pencil-thin or swingy full short skirts. One versatile wool jersey dress, perfect for career dressing, looks like two pieces, with a rib knit turtleneck and either a permanently pleated or straight wrap skirt, in gray or pale yellow.

The combination of fine crisp and softly draping fabrics (bouclé and silk, velvet trimmed wool, organza and silk chiffon) adds dimension and drama. Fitted, empire, or lowered, waistlines are superbly shaped. Expertly mixed cocktail dresses—with evocative cocktail names such as the Tom Collins, the Delmonico, the Bacardi— are off-the-shoulder, décolleté, bowed, lacy, or beaded and above the knee. All are subtly provocative, feminine, and flirtatious. Their bridal gowns cause women to swoon, such as the V-backed ivory lace and silk-crêpe dress, or the off-white silk brocade coatdress, with front wrap and jeweled buttons. Badgley Mischka bridal dresses are for the grown-up sweet tooth, confections allowing the beauty of the wearer to shine through the frills.

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Feminine Fragrance-Van Cleef & Arpels.


Oriens is the latest feminine fragrance launch this spring 2010 by Van Cleef and Arpels who stress that they were the first jewelry house to associate their name with a perfume named First, introduced in 1976. The brand is also readying for a masculine release later this year. Oriens comes after a more youth-directed composition, Féérie (2008) while borrowing from similar codes, i.e., fruity-floral notes. Like for Féérie and pushed to a greater degree, the bottle of Oriens takes center stage and offers the vision of what you could call a "statement bottle." It is hefty, its cabochon is huge and expertly colored by designer Joël Desgrippes to imitate a watermelon tourmaline

While there are no doubt marketing reasons for the introduction of a perfume which pays homage to the Orient as Asia and the Middle East are revealing themselves to be emerging dynamic markets, I prefer to concentrate for the purpose of this review on the manner in which the idea - and as it turns out - the purported tastes of the Orient, have been interpreted into a perfume composition with a global reach.

The tension one feels readily in the composition is the one existing between the oriental motif which has its tradition and expectations in Western perfumery and the tastes of the potential wearers from the global arena. It might sound pretentious to attempt to discern a planetary trend developing across all markets, but I am ready to bite the bullet by saying that if there is a universal one, that would be the greater seriousness accorded the creation of lightly textured perfumes. Since perfumery, like its companion fashion is both commerce and art, it ensues inevitably that there are both money and aesthetic interests developing around that future of perfumery. It is as if the prescience that world demography is going to explode is bringing new realities in, like the collective need to tune down our scents so as not to stifle the atmosphere and deplete both the good-will of planet earth inhabitants and the soundness of the atmospheric layers. Despite strongholds of potent perfumery, we have seen more and more a perfumery that becomes ever more polite and self-effacing.

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Anna Sui-Another Name In Fashion Industry



International Fashion Designer Anna Sui's involvement in fashion began at an early age, with a devotion to dressing her dolls and her neighbor's toy soldiers for her own personal version of the Academy Awards. Sui eventually extended her fashion interest to include designing her own clothes and clipping fashion magazine pages to serve as inspirations. To this very day, she continues to refer to these "genius files".
After graduating from high school in Detroit, Michigan, Sui moved to New York City to attend Parsons School of Design. While at Parsons, Sui found a collaborator and close friend in Steven Meisel, today one of the world's top fashion photographers. Her early days as a stylist for Meisel's shoots included editorial for the Italian fashion magazine LEI.
After leaving Parsons, Sui worked at a variety of junior sportswear companies.
In 1980, Sui presented six original pieces at the Boutique Show and immediately received an order from Macy's, who featured one of her designs in a New York Times advertisement. That same year, Anna Sui launched her own business that operated out of her apartment throughout the 1980'sIn 1991, Anna Sui premiered her first runway show, featuring her signature "head-to-toe" look and prompting the New York Times to proclaim it a "pastiche of hip and haute styles." In that same year, Sui moved her business and showroom to its current location in the Garment District.

In 1992, Sui opened her own boutique at 113 Greene Street in the SoHo district of New York. The store reflects Sui's distinct taste: pairing flea market furniture and whimsical Dolly Head mannequins in a room with purple walls and red floors. In 1993, Sui won the prestegious CFDA Perry Ellis Award for New Fashion Talent.The first of three Anna Sui freestanding boutiques in Asia opened in May 1997 in Tokyo. The second opened in Osaka in the Fall of that same year. Another Osaka venue opened in 2000. The stores mark the continued worldwide expansion of the Anna Sui brand and lifestyle. Isetan Company Limited is the main licensee for the Japanese distribution of the women's collection and Mammina, a subsidiary of Isetan, is the distributor to department and specialty stores there.In 1997, Anna Sui Shoes premiered on her runway for Fall 1997. Manufactured by Ballin in Venice, Italy, the shoe collection is comprised of both day and evening styles, and include velvet, silk, patent leather, snake and lizard skin, shearling and suede.Anna Sui opened her Los Angeles boutique in 1999 in Sunset Plaza, in West Hollywood.In 1999, Sui launched her signature fragrance and cosmetic line. In October 1997, Anna Sui signed a fragrance licensing deal with Wella AG of Germany to develop a signature fragrance. In a three-sided arrangement, Wella shares the Anna Sui beauty business with Japanese cosmetics maker Albion, which holds the Anna Sui color cosmetics and skin care license. Under the agreement , Wella will produce and market Anna Sui fragrances while Albion introduces the Anna Sui color collection for Japan. Wella will sell the fragrances to Albion, which will distribute them inside Japan, while Albion will sell the color cosmetics to Wella for distribution outside of Japan.For Fall 2000, Sui Dreams, the second Anna Sui fragrance launched worldwide.Called a designer that "never panders" by The New York Times, Anna Sui continues to design and manufacture her signature Anna Sui Collection in her New York City headquarters. Her runway shows continue to set trends and inspire designers everywhere. Sui's signature wit and original designs draw legions of devotees to her pieces, including clients Patricia Arquette, Christina Ricci, Cher, Naomi Campbell, Sofia Coppola, Courtney Love of Hole and James Iha of Smashing Pumpkins.

Monday, June 21, 2010

Alice Roi-An Amazing Sense Of Fashion


Like many before her, Alice Roi's road to becoming a fashion designer was unconventional: She received her bachelor's degree in fine arts from New York University and after continuing her studies at Parsons School of Design, she held various posts at Elle and Fashion Group International. But soon it became apparent that fashion consulting was not satisfying Alice's creativity. Bravely armed with a strong vision, she decided to take a chance and set up her own design house. The incredible effort paid off. After only three years, the label already represents a new sense of New York style. Her clothes and accessories have appeared on the coveted covers and pages of magazines such as Bazaar, Elle, and Nylon and style bibles ID and V.Born in 1976, Alice always had a knack for style. As a young girl, she put on fashion shows for friends and family. She loved to dress her friends up, always putting together outfits that were creative and different yet flattering and appealing. Between Alice's love of painting and New York, it's as if she's used the city as her palette, mixing all of its eclectic charm and irreverence in her collections. It's these qualities that helped her line gain instant market credibility; her first collection was immediately picked up by one of the leading independent stores in New York, Kirna Zabete.
The quick commercial success, along with strong press reaction, generated unprecedented momentum for the young brand. With the beginning steps underway, including the presentation of the Spring/Summer 2001 collection during New York Fashion Week, the platform was set for Alice Roi to secure the most reputable retailers throughout the U.S., Europe and Asia. Her clothes can now be found worldwide in stores such as Henri Bendel, New York; Louis Boston; Beauty Buy, Paris; and Joyce, Hong Kong. But all the commercial success couldn't compare with the recognition she received from her peers in the fashion industry. Alice was nominated for the Council of Fashion Designers of America's prestigious Perry Ellis Award for Women swear in 2001. And she continues to receive support from the fashion community, as proven by the invitations to show her collections in Bryant Park season after season.
Alice continues to labor diligently in her midtown Manhattan studio. She is committed to driving her vision and company to new places and making the women that wear her clothes feel more confident and beautiful.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Alexander McQueen-Exraordinary TalentDied Young


Alexander MacQueen

Born in the East End and the son of a taxi driver, Alexander McQueen was the quintessential bad boy made good. He had brains and brawn, having survived over ten years as a solo designer and being brought into the Gucci Group stable, which bought a 51 per cent stake in his company 2002. In 2008, his company not only turned a profit but was also opening new stores from LA to Beirut. He was awarded the coveted Designer of the Year Award at the British Fashion Awards four times.
• Alexander McQueen was born in 1970 in the East End of London - the son of a taxi driver.
• He left school at 16 and trained on Savile Row at Gieves & Hawkes, where he reportedly once embroidered a suit for the Prince of Wales with the words "I am a c**t" (in the lining).
• In 1991 his entire degree show was bought by influential stylist Isabella Blow, whose later suicide in 2007 led to him dedicating his entire spring/summer 2008 collection to her memory.
• He earned his master's degree in fashion design from London's Central Saint Martins (formerly Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design) in 1992.
• The of LVMH president, Bernard Arnault, controversially installed McQueen as John Galliano's successor at Givenchy in 1996. McQueen told Vogue in October 1997 that his debut couture offering for the label was "crap", but he stayed with the house until March 2001 - continuing to create challenging collections, including one featuring car-robots spraying paint over white cotton dresses and double amputee model Aimee Mullins striding down the catwalk on intricately carved wooden legs - until the contract which he said was "constraining his creativity" was ended.
• McQueen won the British Fashion Awards' British Designer of the Year four times and won the Men's Wear Designer of the Year award in 2004. In 2003, he received the CFDA Award for Best International Designer and was honored with a CBE from Queen Elizabeth II for his services to the fashion industry.
• His spring/summer 2010 collection, which featured alien-inspired make-up and reptilian prints, was lauded as his best by the fashion press, with Selfridges buying director Anita Barr telling VOGUE.COM she believed it would be the department store's "best selling collection ever".
• McQueen died, aged 40, on February 11 2010, amid unconfirmed reports that he committed suicide.
Alexander McQueen delivered collections that were often described in superlatives: "I didn't plan out my life like that," he said. "When people recognise and respect what you do, that's nice, but I don't think you ever do this to be famous. Fame should be left to the film stars. We're just offering a service."

Saturday, June 12, 2010

Fashion-The way It Has Come Through.The Story Of Fashion Designers And Innovators!

Coco Chanel was born on August19,1883 in France. Her trade mark is black dress. Her designs are still very much alive today also. She herself is a fashion and style icon. She stood apart by her style, sophisticated outfits, great accessories and strands of pearls. She believed in ‘Luxury must be comfortable otherwise it is not luxury.’
Coco Chanel has been a person of glamour right from the beginning. Chanel was in the orphanage because of her mother’s death. Father was a peddler. Nuns took care of her and taught her how to sew. May be this skill became her profession afterwards. Her nickname came from another occupation entirely. During her brief career as a singer, Chanel performed in clubs in Vichy and Moulins where she was called “Coco.” Some say that the name comes from one of the songs she used to sing, and Chanel herself said that it was a “shortened version of cocotte, the French word for ‘kept woman,” according to an article in The Atlantic.
Coco sold hats on opening her first shop in Paris. Then she began making clothes. Her first taste of clothing success came from a dress she fashioned out of an old jersey on a chilly day.
In 1920,she launched her first perfume Chanel No.5.Till the date it has been unforgettable and ultimate accessory in fashion industry.