Carla Bruni-Sarkozy has confirmed her status as First Lady of French fashion with a guest editing stint at Madame Figaro magazine, which asked designers including Karl Lagerfeld and Jean Paul Gaultier.
at home
vendredi 26 mars 2010
mercredi 24 mars 2010
A/W 2010 Fashion Week Invitations
Jean Paul Gaultier's womenswear invitation
Hinting at the show's wintry theme, Chanel's invitation
Butter-soft leather for Hermés womenswear
A velvet-coated notebook for Louis Vuitton womenswear
A toy-inspired offering from Maison Martin Margiela Homme
David Shrigley illustrations for Pringle of Scotland menswear
Prada menswear
Brushed brass with the signature check for Burberry Prorsum's shows
Hinting at the show's wintry theme, Chanel's invitation
Butter-soft leather for Hermés womenswear
A velvet-coated notebook for Louis Vuitton womenswear
A toy-inspired offering from Maison Martin Margiela Homme
David Shrigley illustrations for Pringle of Scotland menswear
Prada menswear
Brushed brass with the signature check for Burberry Prorsum's shows
Source: Wallpaper.com
lundi 22 mars 2010
mercredi 17 mars 2010
3Ls - Loving Les Lalanne by Peter Marino
Major exhibition dedicated to Claude and François-Xavier Lalanne, uncategorizable sculptors that always exhibited their works together with the common idea of sometimes giving sculpture a function. The first retrospective in a Parisian museum since 1977. Their work will be shown in mutiple categories, from monumental sculpture to daily objects. Mise en scene by Peter Marino of more than 150 works, invites visitors to discover the universe of Lalanne in the nave of the Musée des Arts Décoratifs. (Starting from the 18th of March 2010 - 4th of July 2010)
mardi 16 mars 2010
Spotted -> Anna Dello Russo at the Giambattista Valli F/W10 défilé
lundi 15 mars 2010
M for Tatoo
mercredi 10 mars 2010
Alexander McQueen F/W2010 presentation
McQueen had turned away from the world of the Internet, which he had so powerfully harnessed in his last show. "He wanted to get back to the handcraft he loved, and the things that are being lost in the making of fashion," Sarah Burton - his right hand - said. "He was looking at the art of the Dark Ages, but finding light and beauty in it. He was coming in every day, draping and cutting pieces on the stand." The 16 outfits shown had been 80 percent finished at the time of his death.
Source: Style.com
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