Monday, August 15, 2011

A Different Beat!


Happy Independence Day to India!

Independence Day was celebrated today. When I saw people in the streets going to the Celebration programme, it sort of reminded me about my own childhood when my mother always took me and my sister to the Celebration programme in the field in my hometown at Lunglei. Now I realise how much my mother loves me and how indebted I am to her for her unconditional love. Likewise, It reminds me that I should give anything I can  to my mother India too. It is no longer 1947 now, no time to live in the past. Let VIOLENCE be forgotten and LET LOVE LEAD THE WAY!!

I cannot teach you violence, as I do not myself believe in it. I can only teach you not to bow your heads before any one even at the cost of your life. - Mahatma Gandhi.

BLOSSOMING PEACH!

I knew a girl when she was little, and I knew her like she was made to be sweet. But this sweetness is not something that one must under/over-estimate. When I heard her sing, I knew that it came from her heart, yeah, she really could sing, believe it or not!!. But time passes and I lost connections with her. Facebook retains that lost section and fills up the gap and so I saw her, becoming a woman, a woman with feelings, hopes and dreams and troubles, maybe. This girl blew my mind away with her sense of clothes and her perception of the concept of fashion. She is presently pursuing her educational degree in physiotherapy in Bangalore.
This girl in this picture is the one expressed above. The style is simply CHIC!!!!

JUMPSUIT by Franca Sozzani !!!


We all love Jumpsuit, I love Jumpsuit, I wore it at Mimi Renthlei's Wedding
 and I looked quite alright too. My Jumpsuit was made by Muanpuii Chinzah and I adored every bit of it. In fact, my column at LUNGLEN Magazine, Aizawl, Mizoram, for this month will feature "J for Jumpsuit" in which I put some of my thoughts on the trend. And now, Franca Sozzani has written such a beautiful portrayal of the history and germination of this wonderful Fashion Trend. 

1919, the first jumpsuit. Invented by the Florentine Thayat (that model is now part of the collection of Palazzo Pitti), it was launched as a subversive and liberating garment during the Futuristic period. Its T shape was cut from one piece of cotton or African canvas. Thayat considered it a universal item of clothing, a creative, do-it-yourself and anti-bourgeois solution: seven buttons, a belt, a straight cut, a few seams.
1935

1923. A similar creation, but Russian and constructivist, by Rodchenko and his wife Stepanova: the name was Varst, the jumpsuit was – again – the revolutionary garment of the new man.
1950

Even Elsa Schiaparelli designed a bunker suit, a hooded light-blue jumpsuit, braided decorations on cuffs, ankles and waist-line, and a cross-body water bottle.

The futuristic connotation is clear, when the jumpsuit is the costume of sci-fi fiction. For example, Star Trek turned the shiny bi-color jumpsuit into a cult piece.

The basic model was still the one worn by parachutists, skiers and aviators, but it progressively moved from the world of sports to closets. In 1943 The Little Prince was published: Saint Exupery, an aviator, drew the protagonist standing on his planet, wearing a jumpsuit and watching the horizons of life.
Photo by Ugo Mulas, 1966

Later came the bomber pilot Emilio Pucci, marquis and designer, who patented the fabric Emilioform, silk shantung and helanca, a combination of elastic fibers which ensured the success of the first total look, even in jumpsuit version. This happened in 1960. At Pitti the garment which can be considered a high society version of the jumpsuit was shown: the palazzo pyjama by Irene Galitzine, a princess designer who dressed Sofia Loren and Liz Taylor, Paola of Liège and Jackie Kennedy.
Photo by Helmut Newton, 1966
Photo by Giampaolo Barbieri 1969
Photo by Bugat, 1969

Talking of the world of rock, many jumpsuits were sported on stage by men who anticipated the contemporary feminine version of this garment: theirs were skin-tight and a bit kitsch, while ours are loose, with a more couture impact, or sportswear-inspired, made of different fabrics, thus following the evolution of taste.

Memorable, on stage, the flared and over-decorated jumpsuits, embroidered in gold and completed by a short mantle, seen on an exhilarating Elvis Presley.

Characterized by a glam and psychedelic vibe, the striped jumpsuit with exaggerated cut, worn by David Bowie in the role of his androgynous alter ego Ziggy Stardust in 1972. Unforgettable the black and white check jumpsuit on Freddie Mercury and the diamond-print one on Mick Jagger. Today, the red patent jumpsuit of Britney Spears, a leopard-printed model seen on the Spice Girls, the vintage fluorescent yellow piece worn by the electro artist David Sugalski, known as The Polish Ambassador, during his live performances.
Photo by Bugat, 1972

1973

Madonna has a tuxedo-jumpsuit designed by her friends Dolce & Gabbana. As for designers, we remember a loose and white jumpsuit – super-flared pants, bodice cut as a double-breast jacket – a couture model by Valentino from 1971. Helmut Newton made it famous in a picture shot at night: the model wore it with a huge burgundy tie, cuff links and high heels, posing in the streets.
Photo by Herbert Feurer 1981

White (again) the jumpsuit designed by Cerruti, paying homage to early 20th-century aviators; the  piece with a Forties curvy silhouette by Donna Karan and the blue working class jumpsuit by Yamamoto.
1983
Photo by Herb Ritts 1990
Photo by Steven Meisel 1991
Photo by Steven Meisel 1992

Recently spotted.
Stella McCartney in total black, lace jumpsuit, bow belt and high-heel pumps. Silver sequins on Juliette Lewis. Black super-short jumpsuit on Agyness Deyn. Katie Holmes wearing one of her own creations, a loose jumpsuit in white silk with sheer black lace straps. Keira Knightley wearing a white model with a Seventies cut, echoing Saturday Night Fever. Peaches Geldof with a short and futuristic piece, plunging neckline, silver with fuchsia trims. Sophie Marceau in silver at the 2011 Cannes Film Festival, wearing a couture strapless jumpsuit with flared pants.

Rihanna dares to wear Catwoman-like, skin-tight zebra-print jumpsuits. Silver mirror effect on Amber Rose. A loose but luminescent style on Kylie Minogue. Tight as a black glove on Beyonce.

Summer 2010. Among the most famous jumpsuit, the floral-printed one by Stella McCartney, the multi-pocket one by Givenchy, the one made of plaid silk by Prada. Pixie Geldof attended the H&M flagship store opening in London and wore a short mustard jumpsuit. Erin Wasson attended a party in Los Angeles wearing the above mentioned Prada piece. Elettra Wiedemann and Helena Christensen wore loose and long jumpsuits: the first attended a Swarovski cocktail wearing an orange number, while the second was spotted at a party for Antony Todd wearing a jumpsuit with no accessories. Rihanna was snapped in Los Angeles wearing the floral, ultra-girly and frilled jumpsuit by Stella McCartney.

2011. The super couture model by Saint Laurent; silk fabrics for Alexander Wang; python-print or sunny yellow models by Paul & Joe. Purple and hooded for Diane Von Furstenberg; a plum maxi bow closes the pink jumpsuit by Marc Jacobs; horizontal stripes – a trademark – at Sonia Rykiel.


Images above: Liza (by Rebecca Moses)
Published:
08/15/2011
All the colored words are by Franca Sozzani, the Editor in chief of Vogue Italia. And the pictures are from http://www.vogue.it/

Freja Beha Erichsen for Vogue UK September 2011 Editorial by Mario Testino


Magazine: Vogue UK September 2011
Title: Master Class
Cover model: Freja Beha Erichsen
Photographer: Mario Testino
Stylist: Lucinda Chambers

Seems like Vogue UK is trying to relive the long gone tradition of becoming a nun (I deliberately put 'long gone' because I feel that the tradition of becoming a nun has not come down to us as something that is IN)... or should I put it they seem to try and make a wake-up call through Fashion and art or vice versa. That may not be their intention but, I see this editorial as something that is in connection to the Catholicism and Protestantism.










SHARE

LinkWithin

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

Pages

Popular Posts