Valentino

lemon fluff

by Lara on May 3, 2010

in fashion

Daddy Likey has a running series of posts called Don’t Show-cha Your Chocha. People all over the internet are awkwardly wearing tops as dresses and dangerously short dresses as well. It’s all hilarious and the reader submitted captions crack me up but, damned if I don’t love a short fluffy dress. This one by Valentino has knocked my socks off. It’s not strapless. There is a sheer panel at the top. I’m short enough to get away with this while my wallet isn’t large enough.

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+ & -

by Lara on February 20, 2010

in + & -,decor,fashion

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  • These shoes by Jeffrey Campbell are sold out again but will be restocked in March. They’re just plain sick and I want them – badly. Oh, and wedge heels are coming back in full force for Spring. I am stoked!

They feel a lot like these Givenchy SS2010RTW wedges, no?

  • Japanese artist Yuri Fukuda, who calls her line Emogayu, makes beautiful intricate ceramics.

  • I saw Nicole Richie on TV this week wearing this dress and I loved it. Maxi-dresses really are my favorite but I’m so short I always have to get them hemmed. Well, this dress is part of her new clothing line called Winter Kate. Nothing is available in stores just yet but according to the March issue of InStyle (where I scanned the image from), it’s made of silk and will be sold at Neiman Marcus for $260. Love the muted shade and flattering shape. Would look great on any woman.

  • Godammit, I’m Mad! is a fantastic fashion-y blog written by one pissed off woman. I heart her.
  • Neighbors who are unobtrusive, help out, appreciate and extend kindness and just generally seem to rule at life are cool.

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  • Shitty neighbors who are always miserable, passive aggressive, and totally suck at life can eff off.
  • I had a humbling blogging experience in regards to this post, about 3 hours after it went up. I had seen the shoes on a blog I follow and traced back to the original source. I was misled and in turn provided misinformation that the designer of the clothing had also designed the shoes, which are blatant rip-offs. Bloggers have to be very careful about their sources and can’t assume anything. I’ve learned my lesson.
  • The final season of LOST is driving me insane. I have a bad feeling that way too many questions are going to be left unanswered. There’s just no way they can do it.
  • Fighting off malaise, headaches, body aches and general yuck this week is dragging me dooooown.
  • Who am I to judge, right? I’m Lara and I will judge the hell out of some things, one of them being an odd little 13 y/o girl who is receiving some serious worship right now in the fashion world. Who am I to judge a child? They’re off-limits right? Well, it would seem so until they become a public spectacle. Other than my beef with the amount of credibility given, and focus placed, total absence of a parental presence, and blatant use of her for novelty’s sake, I think her fashion sense is god awful. I’m sick of it. If you can’t stand the heat… if you want to run with the big dogs… if you want to act like a grown up… you get my drift. Had the blog world been around when I was a fashion obsessed kid of her age… my god.

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an appreciation

by Lara on October 27, 2009

in art,fashion

In March, I was dying to see the documentary on the designer Valentino’s career, Valentino: The Last Emperor. Last night I finally saw it and I watched it again today with my mom. Just incredible.

The most touching moment that got me teary was when one of his seamstresses from 1964(?) came to his monumental 45th anniversary career retrospective and she and Valentino were both brough to tears. I looooved watching the women sew and construct his visions for his final critique. He was such a graceful man, treating the ladies with such reverence, giving due credit to them for their masterpieces. Without them, he would be nothing.

In the Oct 2008 issue of Vogue there was an article about the seamstresses of haute couture, explaining the process of turning a designer’s drawing and idea into a reality… what an integral part they play in high fashion. It was a fascinating read and has stuck with me over the past year (I had a hell of time digging that article up… thought it was W magazine). While my mom and aunt had explained a lot of it to me when I was a child, I really had no idea. These women’s talent, patience and expertise is unrivalled. Every tiny stitch done by hand, each bead, each sequin, each minute rolled hem on the finest silk chiffon, all of the excessive basting and complex pattern making and cutting – all by hand. Watching the documentary made my respect for haute couture all the more palpable. Growing up around two serious sewers and sewing a bit myself, an appreciation for a talent like that swells in my heart but now it’s about to burst.

Check out this video on “The Making of a Chanel Haute Couture Outfit

Recently I got into a bit of a tiff on a little goth blog about Steve Madden ripping off a pair of Alexander McQueen shoes that really tickeld the fancy of the goth scene. (Steve Madden ripping someone off? Can you believe it? McQueen is suing!) I stood firm in my belief that fashion is art and that an artist has rights to their intellectual property. Just because you can’t afford it doesn’t give you the justification to buy what is essentially stolen goods. I would rather do without and fortunately there were a few other commenters who felt the same way. The argument went on and on and well… I really don’t care because as I pointed out, it’s not about a desire to achieve a certain look that you feel unjustly entitled to have, it’s about ETHICS. Someone threw around a comment about the couture designers having enough money to afford some loss to (everyone’s new euphemism for theft) “inspired by” pieces… like that makes it okay. What a bunch of commie bullshit. Oh! It gets me so mad! Even the large companies that have stood the test of time have financial burdens, investors attempt to ruin long standing reputations for the sake of the bottom dollar (even Yohji Yamamoto recently filed for bankruptcy), and at the end of the day there’s a designer, an artist, who simply wants to see their vision realized and appreciated when they share it with the world.

I really wish anyone who has a love for fashion, is new to this whole thing of fashion blogging, or just loves a good documentary will see this film. If it doesn’t instill in you the realization that fashion is art and an appreciation for the excruciating hard work involved, then I don’t know what will. (You can watch it on your computer on Netflix.)

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