Showing posts with label Neon Wigs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Neon Wigs. Show all posts

20100618

Fashion || Manish Arora Fall 2010





Fashion || Manish Arora Fall 2010

Manish Arora's A/W 2010 Collection did not disappoint at Paris Fashion Week and
was in fact underrated in terms of its content and the work represented.
(This was actually the first season that STYLE.com (VOGUE) acknowledged his work, shocking).
While INSPIRAT!ON loves Manish Arora, (Read Previously Posted "Waiting in Vain: Manish Arora FALL 2010??")
not enough is being said about the majestic and stimulating details of his dreamy designs.
While his work is not conventional for the"everyday women"
Plenty of design details and concepts presented would be fabulous
to incorporate in ready-to-wear produced for the masses.
The bead work is AMAZING and intricate.
Out-of-this-World silhouettes were expected and some of the custom prints,
again, channel McQueen. BUT Arora's consistency with the bright and the bold never disappoints
and the infusion of applied design work known to be popular in his homeland (India)

Other KEY details: Shisha Mirrors; Quilting, Quilted; Structural Design, Kaleidoscope Prints;
1920s Inspired Bobbed Neon Wigs.

via: VOGUEau

20100617

Fashion || Giles Pre-Fall 2010




Fashion || Giles Pre-Fall 2010

I am truly appreciative of an art gallery inspired presentation of fashions.
It gives the audience an opportunity to be involved with the designer's
imagination from an entirely different setting than the conventional runway.
Giles Deacon proved that a stroll in the mind of a designer fairs
as a much more interesting adventure in more ways than one.
Mountains of porcelain plates surrounding models that are equally porcelain in
stature provide Deacon's wonderland of 15 pieces from his FALL/WINTER 2010 collection.
Bright nylon wigs, the model's doll-like stance, and hardware as headdresses are intermixed
with the innovation of a collection that is purposely composed of major contrasting details.
These contrasts become the obvious as no isolated part of the presentation works well alone,
the entire picture/frame of Deacon's vision is what makes the collection 10-times more interesting.