All right Mr. DeMille, I'm ready for my close-up

25 March 2012

Dressing Well is the Best Revenge! Mad Men Returns


Close the laptop, shut off the cell phone, cancel all plans...After seventeen months (who is counting!) Tonight the 5th season of arguably the best series on television, Mad Men, begins. We don't know too much about the new season that almost never happened as Matthew Weiner and Co. don't let secrets leak.  Will Don get married?  Will Betty stay married?  One thing we do know is that the series will conclude after seven seasons so Sterling,Cooper,Draper Pryce will be in business for two more years-or will they?  The other thing we have to know for sure is that every episode will be done with style and fabulous clothes.  With such intricate and painstaking attention to every detail in its design Mad Men is bound to continue to reflect the extraordinary changes of the mid 1960s and the transition into the 1970s.


The series is graced with pitch perfect writing that carefully and slowly reveals its characters, characters that individually and collectively portray and explore the  historic period of societal change that was the 1960s. These are characters you care about, love to hate and are fascinated by. Mad Men keeps you wanting more which is why this wait has been so long.


The show is exquisitely crafted with sets that stage the decade, an era which truly is the center of Mad Men, down to the smallest detail.  The story line captures the shift in lifestyle and culture this country would undergo in those years. The performances pull you into that world of smoke filled rooms and Mad Men is flawless in its representation of the most fascinating time in the twentieth century, a time of revolutionary societal change. Watching Mad Men,however, you stop and wonder how much has really changed!


Mad Men is a reason to sit and watch TV at a time when there is not much reason to do so, especially with Downton Abbey now through-this is appointment viewing! I love to re-watch Mad Men to look at , yes Jon Hamm, but also the clothes, the styling, the jewelry... The fashion and the "look" of Mad Men is meticulously selected to not only help define the characters but also reflect the changes that they go through and that the country was experiencing. The fashions within the series tell so much of the story, especially about women and their role---and it is a powerful one.


The wardrobes are to envy and sitting in my flip flops and jeans I wonder how my Mother did it everyday ...and I want everything in Betty Draper's closet!



Betty's closet is filled with the clothes, shoes, bags and jewelry that work forever-the timeless elegance  of Dior, Hermes, Bonnie Cashen, Givenchy...


Betty was married to (at the moment divorced from)  the mysterious, enigmatic, habitually unfaithful and totally delicious Ad Man Don Draper. Their life was a portrait of what the magazine's sold in the late 50s and early 60s, one of suburban bliss...which rarely was....


Betty Draper's style is perfectly coiffed and adorned.


Madmen costume designer Janie Bryant describes Betty's look as "... quite simple but so gorgeous. And you know, you still see women like this. That beautiful classic style from the period that they've carried on for their entire lives..."


Bryant defines Betty's wardrobe to reveal the character her role as wife and mother and her reality "...its about having that image and maintaining that sense of perfection, so it's sort of how everyone sees her from the outside and not so much what's on the inside."




Beautifully portrayed by January Jones, Betty Draper carries a cool serene exterior that hides to perfection the fragility that lies under the cashmere and pearls.



She is part Donna Reed


 Part Jackie Kennedy



and a little Marilyn...


Of course to go with all the wonderful clothes, bags, shoes and jewelry...Betty also usually has The Best accessory...Jon Hamm!





Annie Leibovitz for Vanity Fair

Welcome back Mad Men-cannot wait to see what you are wearing in 1966!

17 March 2012

Short Stories-Minimalist Posters of Classic Kidlit


Once Upon a Time...


I adore children's literature and have collected picture books as long as I can remember.  My shelves are filled with classics and stories that feature wonderful illustrations that  pull you into the story and get you to fall in love with each character.


So of course when I saw these minimalist posters for Classic Kids Lit on Brain Pickings I had to share---short and sweet and...yes, you get the point!   A fun Twist on classic story telling....


Even if you had never read any of these stories you would be sure to be intrigued by these visuals by designer Christian Jackson



Does everyone live happily ever after in the minimalist version--of course, but quicker :)!  The End!








 

Source: Brain Pickings

10 March 2012

On the Right Trak-Marc Jacobs for LV takes a Romantic Ride at Paris Fashion Week


I have one  big wish-to sit front row at Paris Fashion week.  This year I watched, with my bunny slippers on, all the shows from NYFW through to Paris.

Oscar de la Renta
I loved Valentino, Chanel, Balmain, Dior, McQueen, Oscar de la Renta, Nina Ricci, Burberry, Marchesa...luxurious fabrics,bejeweled pattens and elegant drama at every turn... but stop the train---Marc Jacobs brought the Grand Finale to the Autumn/Winter 2012-13 Fashion Weeks.


 I adore Runway-maybe because I adore fashion and theatre and nowhere do the two meet as on the runway.  Most shows are often a parade of new looks but this week Marc Jacobs pulled into the station and left the others in a cloud of locomotive steam.

 Two grand steel doors opened revealing a full-scale, hand made, replica of an Orient Express style locomotive train  dressed in navy blue with the name Louis Vuitton shining in gold lettering.


The train arrived onto the temporary LV station at Cour Carrée du Louvre which was edged in iron and adorned with a massive train clock, a-la Hugo, that glowed throughout the show as the locomotive blasted steam to set the mood.


 As the train made its stop on the runway the models one by one descended the carriage. Each was  greeted by a porter who carried their LV luggage and bags. As they circled the tracks  music evocative of the pace of a train taking you along on a magical journey set the pace- enchanting, romantic and memorable--all that a runway should be.


“I thought, ‘No girl will carry a bag this season,’” said Jacobs. “It will be carried for her.” -Marc Jacobs

This week's amazing RTW Fall 2012 runway/station show at Paris Fashion Week  by Marc Jacobs for Louis Vuitton was elegant theatre- romantic, dramatic and unforgettable! Through a cloud of steam emerged exquisitely dressed first class passengers/models wearing towering hats with feathers, three quarter coats with ankle length skirts and pants, Mary Jane- esque pumps, luxe fabrics and patterns reflecting the classic LV checks embellished and bejeweled with crystals and oversized ornate buttons. The clothes were nostalgic - Mary Poppins meets Downton Abbey and even The Mad Hatter all aboard The Venice Simplon Orient Express. Reminiscent of an era when traveling clothes were essential to any well dressed woman's wardrobe, a time when train travel was elegant and all about luxury...

...and how do you travel without bags??-the show was as much about the bags as the clothes...


For me this show from start to finish was simply about the romance of travel, a bygone age- luxurious,sometimes mysterious,elegant,dramatic and alluring. An era often captured on film and in literature and now by Mr, Jacobs on the runway.

Watch the Show-a Great Ride!




The show made me think of some of my favorite romantic, fun and fashionable train images and posters-enjoy!



Audrey Hepburn, Funny Face



Grace Kelly greeted by Alfred Hitchcock

Vintage Vuitton advert

 Catherine Deneuve, Louis Vuitton advert

Vogue Fashion Layout with Sean Combs



Downton Abbey


Some Like it Hot

 Funny Girl

 Miss Potter

Brief Encounter

North by Northwest


 Paul Day statue St Pancras Station, London