Sunday, January 31, 2010
Miss France 2009 - After JP Gaultier Défilé
Je préfère Chloé Mortaud en mannequin pour JP Gaultier qu'en Miss France pour
Mme de Fontenay. Pas vous ?
(merci Naylaah !)
Saturday, January 30, 2010
Rouge
Friday, January 29, 2010
Tina - Rue de Turenne - Paris
I a am Stylist
I wear a vintage Jacket with artic Wolf from Canada
Black leggings and boots from DINSKO (Sweden)
My top is designed and made by me
My bag is from BURBERRY
Fashion is expressing myself and feeling creativ.
My look is vintage, black and classic at the same time.
I love politness and generosity of people.
I don't like people who are too superficial.
If I had 1 000 € I would go to CHANEL Boutik and go crazy !
Thursday, January 28, 2010
Irina - Rue St-Martin - Paris
I wish to be a model. I am looking for an Agency.
I wear a coat by H&M
All my outfit by ZARA
except my bag by H&M and my shoes by ANDRE.
Perfume: "Elle" by YSL
For me Fashion is Style
My look is simple
I love Music and I hate Strawberry Yogurts.
If I had 1 000 €, I would buy those striped blue and white
CHANEL Shoes.
My message to the world: Live Fashion more !
Igor - Avenue Montaigne - Paris
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
Making Questions in Present Perfect.
Suppose you hear the following the statements in the present tense. Ask the person "How long?"
1. My brother is in college.
2. Barack Obama is the president of the United States.
3. Maria has a driver's license.
4. I study English.
5. My parents live in San Francisco.
6. They know the teacher.
7. There are satellites in space.
8. My sister lives in an apartment on Guerrero Street.
9. I work at A.B.C. Company.
10. My brother is interested in computer science.
11. She knows how to dance the minuet.
Conversation Practice: Grammartalk Seven, Page One, Present Perfect Tense
Jennifer ESL - Present Perfect, Lesson 6a
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
Make Your Own Zig Zag Rug
Many thanks to Suzannah at Adventures in Dressmaking for sharing her zig zag rug tutorial.
Coralie - les Beaux Arts - Paris
Fashion & Trend
Li Edelkoort is one of the worlds most famous trend researchers and owns a company called Trend Union. Edelkoort stresses that “the gist of her job is strategy and brand positioning” and believes that “Fashion is driven now much more by the way we want to live”.
Haysun Hahn is a trend forecaster who has consulted with a diverse list of companies worldwide, including Gap, Escada, Adidas, Samsung, and L’Oreal. Hahn success can be attributed to her diverse international background; she says, “She does not see the world in “segmented orders.” Hahn believes she can predict how tastes will shift as much as five years in advance. She now works for Promostyl below.
Sebastian de Diesbach is classified as an industrial trend prognosticator, and heads the company Promostyl. Diesbach believes that his clients don’t need him to design a specific product but rather give new ideas about new markets. Diesbach believes that fashion forges the way for other consumer products by saying “Garments will always be in the avant-garde of the trends because they are easier to make.
Kevin Knaus is the creative director of Material World, a textile and trade show, which debuted in Miami in 2000. Material World has been described as “not a conventional trade show”. Most notably, at Material World, audiovisual presentations explain the exhibit so that designers can “experience the fabric."
The best known fabric show is Premiere Vision which takes place in Paris.
Corrina Sellinger is a stylist of unique and antique items that can be found in many different interesting places such as flea markets. With fashion stylists from the top magazines, she “goes out to find lost pieces of treasure. Notably, treasures that inspired Fendi’s “baguette” bag and resulted in ultimate of sales of approximately $200 million.
Ruben Toledo is a fine artist, sculptor, illustrator and jack of all fashionable trades. He has designed mannequins, store windows, award statuettes, scarves, fabrics, dishes and carpets. He has painted murals, portraits, album covers and barns. Toledo is most known for the mannequins he created for the Pucci Company. Toledo has said that ‘the thinking that fashion must change every six months is itself so old-fashioned.”
The museum is the place that can makea fashion trend into history. Harold Koda is a renowned fashion scholar and the head of the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Costume Institute. He interned for former Vogue editor and early Costume Institute director Diana Vreeland. Vreeland taught Koda how to make shows that would be “expressive and compelling to the public." He is most recently known for the "Model as Muse" show.
Bridget Foley is the executive editor and Dennis Freedman is the creative director of trade publication WWD and consumer magazine W. W and WWD are large publications with tremendous reach. Both editors are passionate about fashion, stating, “ There are so many levels on which fashion can be enjoyed and deliberated, debated and dissected.
Juliette - Rue Cambon - Paris
Fashion as Language
The author: Dr Malcolm Barnard
Senior lecturer in the History and Theory of Art and Design at the University of Derby. His other publications include Art, Design and visual culture: An introduction (1998) and Approaches to Understanding Visual Culture(2001) and Fashion Theory: A Reader. New York: Routledge, 2008. Lecturer in Visual Culture who studied philosophy and some of the philosophical bits of sociology at the University of York; then studied the work of Derrida and other French philosophers for a Ph.D. at the University of Warwick. Malcolm Barnard is looking at fashion as a way of communicating, to do that he looks into social structures and review previous author’s theories.
Above Cecil Beaton's photo of Queen Elizabeth at her coronation 1953 & Twiggy 1967 (they are the same age!). Dress is a comment on time, looking to the value of the old or new in that a Queen wears an old fashioned gown of tradition while a yuppie may wear new fashion to imply youth, forward thinking and new money.
The main inferences in this article are to do with the use of etymology and how fashion and clothes are perceived with the uncertainty and prejudices in women, men and artist and designers. The decoding and understanding of words and their origin is useful for understanding that they have slightly different meaning in different contexts.
The key concepts we need to understand with this article are by knowing the origins it helps us to understand why they work as they do or why their meaning might change. To clarify the different meaning of word and applying that to the complexity of studying fashion.
The language of Jean Charles de Castlebajac
If we take this line of reasoning seriously, the implications are that we understand the language and arguments that are to follow in the rest of the book and be aware of the words use and the fact that many of the words mentioned above can be used both as nouns and verbs. If we fail to take this line of reasoning seriously the implications are that the decoding of words is unnecessary and that hold on to old beliefs and assumptions about fashion and clothing. The text investigates the meaning of fashion and clothes, trying to sort out a system and communicate it by writing. This is an analytical approach that tries to reason from different theory on the matter of understanding fashion clothing and meaning.
The main inferences in this article are to explain the problems when trying to find meaning in clothes and fashion and the use of Semiology to account two types of meaning, signifier/denotation (more factual) and signified/connotation (more ideological) and then how these can be differenced by syntagmatic and paradigmatic differences (difference between things that may come after one another and the difference between things that may replace one another).
The key concepts we need to understand with this article is that the meanings are constructed from signifiers already existing, over which the individual has no control. Using clothes to communicate meaning is difficult from a global point of view where the signs may be understood differently due to individual and or cultural differences.
If we take this line of reasoning seriously, the implications are that people who really try to make a statement by dressing a certain way might be surprised or disappointed that the statement will not be as obvious to the spectators, when communicating with clothes one should consider varied interpretations.
The main points of view presented in this article are that the meaning of clothes can be divided into different levels of meaning, denotation and connotation . He also suggests that clothes are in a play with ideologies which are related to hegemonies, or the existing power structure.