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.

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