
Rodarte S/S 2010 Comme des Garçons, S/S 2012 Elle Italia, 2008 Givenchy S/S 2009 Givenchy F/W 2009 VOGUE Italia, 2010 Harujuku dark fashion Kim Kardashian (Can you believe?) YSL, 2010
Rodarte S/S 2010 Comme des Garçons, S/S 2012 Elle Italia, 2008 Givenchy S/S 2009 Givenchy F/W 2009 VOGUE Italia, 2010 Harujuku dark fashion Kim Kardashian (Can you believe?) YSL, 2010
For the first funeral I went to, I wore apricot. I thought about black but that seemed so somber. I never really understood why a funeral, or even death for that matter, couldn't be more of a tributory celebration. So I wore an apricot Chanel suit, because she would have liked that. Black is seductive yet melancholy, but for our Western minds, the only color that really seems to associate itself with death. The final darkness rather than light. In fashion, it's chic and tough and urban but in mourning, it's sad. A blanket covering its wearer in emotional darkness with none of the veneer of dominance. It is interesting to note that colors ranging from yellow to blue to white to purple are all globally allied with different regions...
"I look back at his pictures of me and think that person knew more than I do now. It wasn't about looking desirable or pretty, [David] said he liked the inward-looking face. I put into those photographs all the things that I loved and that great yearning I had at the time to break away and be different from my family." Penelope Tree. Swinging London. David Bailey and the Dalai Lama. She was a self identified poor little rich girl and the Kate Moss prototype before there was a Kate Moss. Penelope Tree certainly had a face that was hard to forget-cheekbones that could cut glass and saucer eyes trimmed in a thicket of lashes made even longer with 60's style drawn on liquid liner and a heavy dose of...
Coming Soon...