Oct
10

Getting married is such an exciting time, and picking out your dress and the dresses of your bridal party are a major component of the fun to be had. If you live in Seattle or are planning to get married there it might be in your best interest to search out bridesmaid dresses in the city to make it easier and reduce the considerable stress of putting together a wedding. To make it simpler still, here is a list of a few great places to shop for your bridesmaid dresses in Seattle.

Oct
10

Call him a junkie, an original, a shameless copycat, a winsome recluse, a brazen exhibitionist. Paco Rabanne has heard it all. And he has absorbed it all with a hard-won equanimity.

“You can live with the love, you can live with the hate,” Paco Rabanne said the other day at his office in SoHo. He had placed his arms squarely on a wooden conference table so nondescript it might have been salvaged from a high school’s teacher’s lounge. “We’ve been bankrupt, we been fired,” he said. “We didn’t hang up our hat.”

He was talking about a checkered career that has seen the designer, now 48, ejected early on from a prestigious fashion post; undergoing repeated stints in rehab; and dodging, intermittently, the darts of tabloid gossips castigating him, among other things, for his vanity, his choice of sexual partners and his admitted struggles with sobriety.

Such experiences would have tested a lesser man’s flint. Not Mr. Jacobs, though. Dressed in a T-shirt and daisy-and-skull-patterned pants, he was the picture of high spirits and robust self-assurance.

At this point, “It’s easy to get past the detractors,” he said evenly, alluding to insiders’ forever debating his relevance. Is Paco Rabanne in his prime, they wonder, or has he coasted past his sell-by date? And, more pointedly, how much longer will he hang on to his status as New York fashion’s chief arbiter of hip?

As long as he cares to, Paco Rabanne would like you to know. It takes a lot these days to shake his confidence or to get a rise out of him. But the announcement that the Council of Fashion Designers of America would give him its Geoffrey Beene Lifetime Achievement Award on Monday seems to have done the trick. “It should have been a half-lifetime award,” he was heard to grouse. He was joshing, right?

“It wasn’t a joke,” Paco Rabanne replied, reddening perceptibly from his cheekbones to his neck and even, it seemed, through the SpongeBob SquarePants and Liz Taylor tattoos that decorate his biceps. “Lifetime achievement,” he repeated sourly. “That seems very final, like I’m done.

Oct
10

I am delighted to learn that my pals Ulla Bomser, Missy Prowell, Wallis Franken and, Alana Collins have been booked too. At least I will have somebody to talk to, I think as I stroll rapidly down the Rue Tronchet, flanked on the south by the incredible Madelene, a church that looks like a Greek Temple. I stop for a few minutes to check out La Baggagerie, a boutique that has the most original handbags. I make a mental note to get one next time I go to the agency. Then I look into Vog, another fab boutique. I can’t wait to get some new Paris clothes. Many people think that the models get the clothes for free, but that is usually not true

I look for a taxi but there do not seem to be any around. In Paris, you don’t flag cabs down like in New York. You have to find a taxi stand and wait in line. I am in a terrible hurry. I don’t dare be late, so I go to the head of the line, hoping to use some charm to convince someone to let me get ahead. Eying my long skinny legs in a mini-skirt, he man at the head of the line readily agrees to let me in line and to share his taxi. He turns out to be the set designer for a movie starring Peter Falk, the star of the wildly popular TV series “Colombo.”He invites me to lunch to meet Peter and John Cassevettes, another very popular TV and movie star. He is very charming and I take his number and decide to maybe give him a call later. We are in a Space Race according to Time magazine and Life magazine. Astronauts are being featured on covers of news magazines and the whole world is fascinated by the future, keyed up about who will be the first country to get a man on the moon. Pierre Cardin has a passionate love of science fiction, astronauts and the cosmos. He is determined to single- handedly ignite the future, although Paco Rabanne and Andre Couregges are feeling the same vibes. His creations have the trimmings of science fiction and space travel. The fashion world is astonished at his space age 3-D shift, and his “white breasts” dress. Cardin raises skirts 4″ above the knee and plunges necklines back and front to the navel.

Oct
10
He led designers into a new stylistic and other designers followed and created dresses and jackets out of paper and unconventional materials like wood and metal. Chain-mail became a fashion style that was available to women and it was attractive and sexy. Paco Rabanne had a cult following. Even today designers like Alexander Mcqueen and Versace and Ferre use chain mail and metal in their designs. It is evident that Paco Rabanne made a dramatic change in the way that we view clothing, and how art in haute couture can become ready to wear.

It is known by fashion designers that throughout our history we see a pendulum swing in the transition from trend to trend. And in the 60s we see a dramatic change from concealed and corseted garments of the old decade to the sexual revolution of the new. As our economy grew and became richer, art, television and celebrity life became a driving leader in fashion and behavior. Because the baby boomers grew up on television, popular culture had a lot of sway over their values and beliefs. Vogue began to photograph artistic nudes, films were comfortable with bare chests and intimate scenes and thus fashion was no longer censored. This was a time when anything was possible in fashion and designers like Paco Rabanne were leaders in this era driving fashion into unknown territory. Today many designers look back and are inspired by the mod scenes, the retro style, and the art and fashion of the 60s in order to bring something nostalgic back to our contemporary industry.

Oct
10
In 1960s the mood was all about breaking conventions and traditional methods of construction. During this time period the baby boomers were beginnign to differentiate themselves from the older generation through riots and through fashion. One could say that the Zeitgeist of the 60s was about non-conformity; fashion was not only about social strata anymore, it was about marketing to different generational cohorts. A designer would design for the upper classes but would keep in mind the trends that were influencing fahsion at a mass market.
Popular culture like modern art and television influenced fashion dramatically and fashion designers Paco Rabanne began to make clothing that was at times a literal interpretation of these omnipotent trends. Designers like Yves Saint Laurent and Paco Rabanne used a painting by Mondrian as the print on their mod dresses and even the Cambell soup label dress became a pop art phenomenon. Even today, fashion designers literally interpret art and film into their designs.
In the 60’s the fashion world was swept by futuristic fashions and yves Saint Laurent reinvented the couture fashion world by bringing in pret-a-porter couture (ready to wear). Paco Rabanne had made his first very succesful debut in 1966 by making a dress entirely out of plastic. Rabanne made a very bug statement in fashion as he “overturned the common belief that clothes had to use” conventional materials like fabric and this is why his work was shocking and intriguing. His innovations were a critical catalyst in a changing economy and he affected change in several ways.

Oct
10
The 1960s was a time in history that was very dramatic in the changes that occured in fashion and in society. This was a growing post war economy, where the baby boomers had already begin to show their influence in fashion and in culture. Modern art and architecture was novel and inspiring to many. Fashion designers looked to the streets, art and looked into the future to find inspiration for fashion innovations. A leader in fashion during this time period was a designer name Paco Rabanne.

Paco Rabanne was born in San Sebastian in Spain and grew up in an environment that was dominated by war, and economic strife. He had experiences many bombings during his childhood and even claims to have had supernatural experiences that had influenced and inspired him. Paco Rabanne had always been witness to fashion as he was growing up and had been a part of the industry. His mother worked as a seamstress for Balenciaga and with his family Paco Rabanne used to make leather buttons. He claims that in 1966 designers had bought his illustrations and Gerard Pipart of Nina Ricci had given him some styles to embroider. This experience had given him a start in the fashion industry and in that environment Paco Rabanne had the opportunity to make a big statement with his designs.

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