ENJOYOURMOMENT

highlikefashion:

Comme des Garçons Spring 2012 “White drama”

“White drama” was a precise summation of a show that felt like it tracked a progression through life’s dramatic way stations: birth, marriage, death, transcendence. Tradition drapes each of those moments in white and attaches distinct rituals to them, which set off some fascinating echoes in Kawakubo’s all-white collection. Some were as obvious as the duchesse satin of a wedding dress or the lace of a christening gown; others were more oblique, such as a reference to a body laid out in white flowers, or the pointy-headed robes worn by church dignitaries during Seville’s Semana Santa.

The ceremonial grandeur of the clothes and the stately way they were shown felt like yet another echo of the fifties/sixties couture influence that has insinuated itself into Spring 2012. More specifically, there was the spirit of Cristobal Balenciaga, a deeply religious man who elevated the craft of couture to the level of spiritual quest. He believed he could find salvation in the perfect sleeve. It was probably coincidence that sleeves were the signal detail of the Comme collection (they were long and wide, falling almost to the floor), just as it was probably coincidence that the show took place in a Salvation Army building. Unless, of course, you believe there is no such thing as coincidence, a conclusion that was easy to reach given the presentation’s inescapable spiritual dimension.

It was tempting to see in that a response by Kawakubo to the disasters that afflicted Japan this year, with life-and-death dramas still being played out every day. But that sounds unduly solemn for a show that, for all its grand theme, was still spiked by drollness in details such as the headgear contributed by three different artists, the Westwood hoops, and the lacy lingerie trims that introduced hints of carnality. Yes, the white boots might be worn by technicians in a nuclear reactor. But equally, they could be sixties couture a-go-go.”[style]

Speechless again

miahanamura:

Abbey Lee Kershaw by Sebastian Kim

Gorgeous

miahanamura:

Abbey Lee Kershaw by Sebastian Kim

Gorgeous

Agree x

Agree x

It ‘s awful .So damn awful~

What designers do is they take revolutions that happen maybe in science or technology or politics, and they transform them into objects that you and I can use, that you and I can feel some familiarity or at least some curiosity about, so we can be drawn in and we can start a new life and a new behavioral pattern. And this idea of designers as the interface of progress, between progress and humanity, is what I try to stay with.

—MoMA’s Paola Antonelli (via curiositycounts)

Agree x

(via poptech)

Spirit makes everything happens.

Time

Time flies,all the things would be changed.Not ready is not an excuse to avoid the truth.Our life is short,our time is short,don’t spend on the meaningless things.

highlikefashion:

“In the past few years, Isabella Blow has been eulogized and analyzed by some of the world’s most important fashion personalities, designers and journalists. A comment on the internet after one such article was: “Why is everybody writing and talking about this woman! She only wore funny hats and clothes!
To see Isabella in all her finery, two-dimensionally in a magazine or newspaper was one experience; to meet her and interact with her was to witness another dimension entirely. Isabella walked to the beat of her own drum. Her personality, her intelligence and her magic far transcended any hat or dress she could have worn.
She single-handedly and with impressive conviction, invented and defined the careers of the international fashion designer Alexander McQueen and a hat designer, me, the supermodel Stella Tennant and the model and author Sophie Dahl, amongst many others.
She nurtured and influenced the careers of many of today’s most important fashion photographers, giving many of them their first break in an industry that is difficult to crack. She supported, promoted and enhanced the careers of some of today’s most prolific contemporary artists.
Her fearlessness, in an industry that runs on fear, is legendary; she was a champion of young creative people without a voice. While she endeavoured to work within today’s world of corporate fashion cannibalism, her ultimate ethos was a passionate belief that fashion is about a pursuit of beauty, elegance, and creativity.”
- Philip Treacy’s foreword in “Isabella Blow” Above: Image of Treacy and Blow by Kevin Davies

Cannot agree more:)

highlikefashion:

“In the past few years, Isabella Blow has been eulogized and analyzed by some of the world’s most important fashion personalities, designers and journalists. A comment on the internet after one such article was: “Why is everybody writing and talking about this woman! She only wore funny hats and clothes!

To see Isabella in all her finery, two-dimensionally in a magazine or newspaper was one experience; to meet her and interact with her was to witness another dimension entirely. Isabella walked to the beat of her own drum. Her personality, her intelligence and her magic far transcended any hat or dress she could have worn.

She single-handedly and with impressive conviction, invented and defined the careers of the international fashion designer Alexander McQueen and a hat designer, me, the supermodel Stella Tennant and the model and author Sophie Dahl, amongst many others.

She nurtured and influenced the careers of many of today’s most important fashion photographers, giving many of them their first break in an industry that is difficult to crack. She supported, promoted and enhanced the careers of some of today’s most prolific contemporary artists.

Her fearlessness, in an industry that runs on fear, is legendary; she was a champion of young creative people without a voice. While she endeavoured to work within today’s world of corporate fashion cannibalism, her ultimate ethos was a passionate belief that fashion is about a pursuit of beauty, elegance, and creativity.”

- Philip Treacy’s foreword in “Isabella Blow” Above: Image of Treacy and Blow by Kevin Davies

Cannot agree more:)