Showing posts with label History of Fashion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label History of Fashion. Show all posts

1 May 2014

Diane Pernet*3






 
 
 
 
Diane Pernet, founder of the internationally read fashion blog ASVOF
and the benchmark fashion & film festival ASVOFF
 
 
 

7 February 2014

It's the chinese Year of the Horse

and I love horses and of course horsing around.

Here are a few equestrians from Vogue.








11 October 2013

29 September 2013

10 September 2013

Bianca Jagger with love



Bianca Jagger at Studio 54, 1978. Noone looks so good in a shirt, tie and jacket! <3

For more Bianca Jagger click here

23 August 2013

Have a Great weekend!


 and give yourself time to rest!


Here is Summer sleep from 1949, photography by Irving Penn.



23 July 2013

Pakistan Fashion Week 2009


 A dream would be to attend the Pakistan Fashion Week. Here are a few stunning photographs from one of the shows 2009.











18 July 2013

Talitha Getty





Along with the likes of Jean Shrimpton and Twiggy, Getty came to typify the fashion of the era.  She was innovative in her use of ethnic garb — caftans, Balinese wraps, and Moroccan djellabas adorned with mountains of middle-eastern costume jewelry while accessorizing with gladiator sandals (or no shoes at all) and crowns of flowers in her hair.  With her exotic ensembles and exuberant personal style, she initiated an entirely new genre of fashion titled “gypset”, (gypsy + jet-setter), forever solidifying her spot as a fashion icon.  Unfortunately, Getty’s time as a style phenom was cut drastically short, as were many iconic lives during this era.  However, with her beauty, individualism and stand-out imaginative style, she has left all of us with a forever fantasized lasting impression.

















11 July 2013

Hiro Wakabayashi leaves me wanting more

More by Hiro Wakabayashi....

Photographer Hiro Wakabayashi's work Beauty in Strength, New York  from 1964, shows the bracelet on a woman’s wrist.  Interested in portraying a new generation of women by showing strength and vivacity, the artist tied a tourniquet on the model’s hand to make her veins stand out.



 Read more here



  

4 July 2013

Advanced Style x Vogue Australia with love


One of my favourite blogs Advanced Style with Ari Seth Cohen has been featured in
Vogue Australia. 
 
Ever since I was a little girl I've looked up to the style, grace and beauty of older women and now I'm so happy to live in an age where our beauty ideals finally again include older ages. Vogue Australia has truly done something new. But I think it's just a matter of time until we get to see more ages in our fashion magazines in general. Once again we can look forward to the future.
 

30 June 2013

Yasuhiro Wakabayashi to remember










Yasuhiro Wakabayashi, professionally known as Hiro, is an American commercial photographer. He was born in Shanghai in 1930 to Japanese parents. 

Hiro's work in fashion and still life from the mid-1960s onward has inspired many and remains a lasting influence today.






28 June 2013

Heading for the beach?



 This is a little different but I guess it might have been comme il faut in some fashionable circles in the 1970s...



25 June 2013

Jean Shrimpton with love






Jean Rosemary Shrimpton (born 7 November 1942) is an English model and actress. She was an icon of Swinging London and is considered to be one of the world's first supermodels. She appeared on covers such as Vogue, Harper's Bazaar, Vanity Fair, Glamour, Elle, Ladies' Home Journal, Newsweek, and Time magazines
















Born in High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, and brought up on a farm, Shrimpton was educated at St Bernard's Convent, Slough. She enrolled at Langham Secretarial College in London when she was 17. Later it was suggested to her to attend the Lucie Clayton Charm Academy's model course abd in 1960, aged 17, she began modelling, appearing on the covers of popular magazines such as Vogue, Harper's Bazaar, and Vanity Fair. During her career, Shrimpton was widely reported to be the "world's highest paid model", the "most famous model", and the "most photographed in the world".  She was dubbed "The It Girl", "The Face", and "The Face of the '60s". Glamour named her "Model of The Year" in June 1963. She contrasted with the aristocratic-looking models of the 1950s by representing the coltish, gamine look of the youthquake movement in 1960s Swinging London, and she was reported as "the symbol of Swinging London." By breaking the popular mould of voluptuous figures with her long legs and slim figure, she was nicknamed "The Shrimp".


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