April 27, 2011

STEVEN MEISEL for Vogue Italia - June 2000


This editorial is another great collaboration between Steven Meisel and Vogue Italia.
It may be from June 2000 but it is timeless.
But let's forget about the bikinis that are featured - the star of this shoot is the house.
Isn't it the most breathtaking and opulent house you have ever seen?
- Marie



















 
VOGUE ITALIA - JUNE 2000
Photographer: Steven Meisel
Model: Malgosia Bela

April 26, 2011

MY DAD & MY FASHION BLOG

When I started blogging a year ago, I didn’t expect my father to become one of my readers. I still can’t believe how supportive and caring he has been about my blog.   He even sent me an email yesterday to congratulate me on my blog's 1st anniversary! I didn't tell him - he saw it on my blog. How sweet was that?!

My dad doesn’t read my blog because he likes fashion. He doesn’t like it.  Most of his everyday clothes are stuff he has had for ages.  When my sister and I buy him something new, it goes in the “special clothes” pile. It’s usually a sweater or a shirt - very casual -but he will wear it only on special occasions such as Christmas or for a birthday dinner. I always tease him about that.  I tell him: "Are the clothes in the special closet because you want to be sure they go out of style before wearing them every day?" 
On the other hand, he has a very wide variety of outdoor clothes. He walks 5 miles every day– even if it’s raining buckets or is -5 F. His motto is: “You need the proper clothes if you want to love the outdoors – especially in our country!” His outdoor clothes are high tech and he has something for every temperature – light rain, heavy rain, cold, colder, North Pole cold, hot, windy, humid with mosquitoes, etc. – and don’t get me started on hiking boots! In clothes, he sees usefulness instead of beauty.

 
My sister and my dad bond over their mutual love of science and outdoors – she is studying ecology and he is a semi-retired electrical engineering teacher. They hike together when she visits – they did a 10.5 miles hike which took 6 hours last summer. I would have died after 0.5 mile! They always try to convince me to go with them but I want to respect their special bond – and there is also the fact that I would not last more than 30 minutes on a hike! They always have great stories to tell me when they come back.

Soon, it will be time for me to start taking outfits pictures again. Right now, the grass is still grey and there are a few patches of dirty snow left here and there. There are also a lot of dead leaves from last fall. It would be a very depressing background for a picture. So I wait. I usually go at my dad’s to take my pictures because his neighbours are less curious than mine and because he helps me a lot with the camera. He was so patient with me last year, following all my directions – I can get very bossy. But he seems to like it because he self-proclaimed himself the official photographer of my blog - even if he took just a few.

Our relationship hasn’t always been as good as it is now. We had our awkward phase - like so many daughters and fathers go through during the teenage years. There was also the fact that when my mother was living with us, I think he felt that my sister and I were more comfortable with her. Now that she is gone, he has really stepped up and is so supportive of my sister and me.

You may wonder what the conversation is like around our kitchen table. For as long as I can remember, we had very animated conversations  My sister talks about her insects, her lab rats – literally –  and her herbarium. I talk about my blog, my wonderful readers and about my dream of writing for a living. My father listens to us carefully, asks questions, gives advices and loves us for who we are.
- Marie

April 25, 2011

STELLA MCCARTNEY - RESORT 2011





Isn't this botanical floral print exquisite?
What about the lace shorts, the A-line dresses, the tulip-shaped skirts?
I'm in love!
- Marie








If you feel like splurging, I included the link to the best items.

April 23, 2011

My First Post for IFB




It was a huge honor to have my article published by IFB (Independent Fashion Bloggers), a website that I so highly respect!

April 22, 2011

NAIL POLISH - History & Spring Trends


                Calgel color gradation tips                                         OPI Matte Nail Lacquer in Russian Navy

The fashion of decorating the fingernails and toenails with color began in ancient societies, mainly among those of the upper classes. Carefully tended and adorned nails showed that one belonged to a leisure class that did not have to do manual labor.
Chou Dynasty of 600 B.C., Chinese royalty used gold and silver to enhance their nails. A fifteenth-century Ming manuscript cites red and black as the colors chosen by royalty for centuries previous.  The Chinese used a colored lacquer, made from a combination of Arabic gum, egg whites, gelatin and bee wax. They also used a mixture consisting of mashed rose, orchid and impatiens petals combined with alum. This mixture, when applied to nails for a few hours or overnight, left a color ranging from pink to red.

The Egyptians used reddish-brown stains derived from henna to color their nails as well as the tips of their fingers. The Egyptians used nail color to signify social order, with shades of red at the top. Queen Nefertiti, the wife of the king Akhenaton, colored her finger and toe nails ruby red; Cleopatra favored crimson. Women of lower rank who colored their nails were permitted only pale hues. Incas decorated their fingernails with pictures of eagles.

It is unclear how the practice of coloring nails progressed following these beginnings. Portraits from the 17th and 18th centuries include shiny nails. By the turn of the 19th century, nails were tinted with scented red oils and polished or buffed with a chamois cloth, rather than simply painted. In addition, English and US 19th century cookbooks contained directions for making nail paints. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, women still pursued a polished, rather than painted, look by massaging tinted powders and creams into their nails, then buffing them shiny. One such polishing product sold around this time was Graf’s Hyglo nail polish paste. Some women during this period painted their nails with clear, glossy varnish applied with a camel-hair brush.

When automobile paint was created around 1920, it inspired the introduction of colored nail enamels. Made much the same as automobile paint, the first liquid nail polish appeared in 1907 and was soon available in a variety of bright colors. The flashy style of the 1920s, with its love of exotic Eastern fashions, was the perfect time for the new product, and young women of the era painted their nails in bright pinks and reds, sometimes leaving the tips white for contrast.

One of the first brands of nail polish sold in the United States was Cutex Liquid Polish. Women's magazines, such as the Ladies' Home Journal and Delineator, carried advertisements to entice women to use Cutex. One Cutex ad in the Delineator of September 1929 features the celebrity dancer Irene Castle showing off painted nails.  The fashion for painted nails has not diminished. Cutex and many other brands of nail polish continue to be sold throughout the world.

Credits: Wikipedia & Fashion Encyclopedia

April 21, 2011

The Girl Next Door for Glamour Russia



Isn't she adorable with her floral dress and her cork wedge gardener boots?!
This is a perfect spring editorial.  Young, fresh, floral and simple.
I love the "girl next door" look and the greenery.
Designs by D&G, Marni and Dior among other labels.





{This has been on my must-have list since last spring/summer - I want a floral bustier!!}

  

 


GLAMOUR RUSSIA
Photographer: Matthias Vriens-McGrath
Model: Mayara Marchi
Via Fashion Gone Rogue

April 18, 2011

THE INVISIBLE CORSET

 
Do you see a difference between the Victorian beauty and Gisele Bundchen?
Unfortunately, there isn't any.  They are both wearing the tight corset of beauty standards.
I don't want to wear a corset that is too tight for me - a real or an invisible one.
But do you think it's possible to reach a middle ground?

I have been battling the last 5 pounds all my life.
It’s not dramatic, just really annoying.
Lately, I have been dealing with another issue.
My body is changing because I am getting older.

You may not notice it but I do and I don't like it.
I don't like the slippery slope that is aging.
Some days, I see a little bump in my pencil skirt.
I didn’t put on weight but my waist is thicker.
I eat fruits and vegetables.
Fish, chickpeas, chicken and low-fat yogurt.
I also like a glass of wine when I get home from work.
And I like to eat a hamburger with my sweetheart once in a while.

How do I deal with this new issue?
I don't want to look at my food and see grams of fat.
I don't want to look at my walking shoes and see burning calories.
I don't want to look in the mirror and hate my reflection.
We look back and gasp at the horrors of the corset.
Fainting, circulation and breathing problems.
What do you think women will say about us in a hundred years?
"They used to put bags of silicone inside their breasts!"

We feel so liberated and superior because we ditched the corset.
But are we?
- Marie

April 14, 2011

BEHATI PRINSLOO for Vogue Turkey


I love Behati Prinsloo.
She is one of my favorite Victoria's Secret model.
She seems so down-to-earth and easy-going.
What do you think?
- Marie









VOGUE TURKEY
Photographer: Mariano Vivanco
Model: Behati Prinsloo
Via Fashion Gone Rogue