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Showing posts with label Designed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Designed. Show all posts

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Designed:Morton Myles


 Today, we would like to highlight American designer Morton Myles.  Morton Myles started his business in 1961.  Instant success came when Jacqueline Kennedy wore the robin's egg dress on the the cover of Look magazine in February 1961. During Myles career he also designed special collections at Saks Fifth Avenue.  He maintained offices on 7th Avenue in New York until his retirement in 1995.


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Sunday, October 14, 2012

Viewed:Donald Brooks circa 1972

Donald Brooks dress (c.1972) at the Metropolitan Museum of Art


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Thursday, February 9, 2012

Designed: Pretty Sweet

We are working hard in the back pulling looks out of our archives for Spring 2012. As you know, we love to merchandise our floor at the store. One of the trends that I love for this season is the feminine looks that I've labeled "Pretty Sweet". Here are some of the pictures from our digital inspiration board.



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Saturday, January 28, 2012

Viewed: Adele Simpson Vintage Dress

Adele Simpson; 1955

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Saturday, January 21, 2012

Designed: Vintage Dress - Geoffrey Beene

Geoffrey Beene; 1968

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Saturday, January 14, 2012

Designed: Vintage Dress - Elizabeth Hawes

Elizabeth Hawes; 1937

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Saturday, January 7, 2012

Viewed: Vintage Dress - Guy Laroche

Guy Laroche; 1967

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Saturday, December 31, 2011

Viewed: Black Fashion Museum

Many times your passion is enough to fuel your dream...

Lois Alexander Lane - courtesy of Of Another Fashion
Lois Alexander Lane, founded, curated and kept on life support for almost 30 years the Black Fashion Museum. The modest monument to African American creativity first opened its doors in 1979 in an unremarkable Harlem brownstone. In 1994, it relocated to Washington. And among its most resonant artifacts are garments created by slaves, by famed dressmakers Ann Lowe and Rosa Parks, contemporary designers Stephen Burrows and Geoffrey Holder and countless anonymous seamstresses. Black history -- American history -- stitched out of cotton and lace. (Washington Post)

Ms. Alexander Lane, who founded both the Harlem Institute of Fashion (c.1966) and the Black Fashion Museum (c.1979) made major contributions to the legacy of African-Americans in the fashion and design fields.  She also published a book entitled Blacks in the History of Fashion in 1982.  Until the time of her of her death, she exposed more than 25,000 visitors to Black design with a cultural context.
Black Fashion Museum.  Courtesy of Harlem Bespoke
Harlem Institute of Fashion.  Courtesy of Harlem Bespoke
Now the collection has found a new home.  Previously housed in a two-story row house on Vermont Avenue in Washington, D.C., the Black Fashion Museum Collection comprises more than 700 garments, 300 accessories, and 60 boxes of archival material collected by Alexander-Lane throughout her life. In 2007, Alexander-Lane's daughter, Joyce Bailey, donated the Black Fashion Museum's entire holdings to the National Museum of African American History and Culture. The research collection—one of the largest and rarest of its kind—includes a dress sewn by Rosa Parks shortly before her famous arrest in Montgomery, Ala.; a beige-patterned skirt worn by an enslaved child in Leesburg, Va.; the original Tin Man costume designed by Geoffrey Holder for the 1975 Broadway musical, The Wiz and a replica of the inaugural gown created for Mary Todd Lincoln in 1865 by Elizabeth Keckley, a former slave. (NMAAHC)

Below are some of the highlights from the extensive collection:
Rosa Parks Dress.  Gift of the Black Fashion Museum founded by Lois K. Alexander-Lane
Though Rosa Parks is best known for her role as a civil-rights activist, the Alabama native also worked as a talented seamstress at the Montgomery Fair Department Store. She was on her way home from work on December 1, 1955, when she was arrested for refusing to give up her seat on the bus to a white passenger. That very day, she had been sewing the dress above.
Ann Lowe Debutante Ball Gown.  Gift of the Black Fashion Museum founded by Lois K. Alexander-Lane
Created in 1958, this debutante gown was just one of more than 2,000 one-of-a-kind wedding and coming-out dresses created by pioneering African American designer Ann Lowe in the 1950s and 60s. Born in Alabama in 1898 as the grandchild of a former slave, Lowe earned the moniker "Dean of American Designers" for her delicate handwork and signature flowers, and counted among her patrons Jacqueline Bouvier, who commissioned Lowe to make the gown she wore when she married John F. Kennedy.
Glinda the Good Witch of the South Costume from "The Wiz".  Gift of the Black Fashion Museum founded by Lois K. Alexander-Lane.  Image Courtesy Don Hurlbert, Smithsonian Institution
Designed by director and choreographer Geoffrey Holder, this costume was worn by two-time Grammy winner Dee Dee Bridgewater in her role as Glinda the Good Witch of the South in the original 1975 Broadway production of The Wiz. The musical, which won seven Tony awards, re-imagines L. Frank Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz from an African American viewpoint.

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Monday, December 5, 2011

Designed: Fall 2011 Runway - Fur

Wearing fur can be a touchy subject for many.  But, it is undeniable that this season the Fall runway presentations were full of real and faux fur options.  Many people that like the look of fur, but don't want to contribute to the harming of animals - can find more and more realistic faux fur options on the market or buy a  vintage fur.  Here are the choice picks:

Jil Stuart

Tracy Reese

Donna Karan New York

The Row

Michael Kors

Oscar De La Renta

Anna Sui

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Monday, November 21, 2011

Designed: Fall 2011 - Tweed Blazers

'Tis the season for wool and tweed.  This look couldn't get any better than the Jil Stuart show for Fall 2011.  I love the mix of autumnal shades.  We are definitely carrying this look in the store via our 1970's collection.  Pair with the berry shades of Bordeaux, Grape, and Wine.

1970s Ralph Lauren Blazer
Vintage Saks 5th Avenue Tweed Blazer

Jil Stuart Fall 2011

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Saturday, November 19, 2011

Designed: Fall 2011 - bustiers and head wraps

There are a couple of things that I like about the look from Mara Hoffman's Fall 2011 showcase - 1) the use of turbans and 2) bustiers making a comeback.  This look reminds me of the Borough Vintage styling for the United Way Fashion Show.

Borough Vintage @ United Way Fashion Show
We used 1950's bustiers with vintage Guatemalan embroidered skirts and finished the look with vintage silk scarves tied as a head wrap.


Mara Hoffman's show for Fall 2011 featured turban head wraps, high waist pants and black bustiers.

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Saturday, October 29, 2011

Styled: Try this at Home

VINTAGE 1980s GRAY LEATHER JACKET
1980s Gray Leather Jacket from Argentina @ BoroughVintage

SEEN ON THE FALL 2011 RUNWAY AT REED KRAKOFF


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Friday, August 26, 2011

Designed: The Return of The 70s

I'm anticipating the renewed interest in the 1970s this fall.  Not the bell bottomed, polyester shirt seventies that most people would conjure in their minds.  I'm talking about the luxe, steamlined 70s with tactile fabrics such as: cashmere, wool, and silk.  The New York Times has a great slideshow - highlighting the Fall 2011 runway hits.  I think that the Gucci show captured the sophisticated side of the 1970s best.



Source: style.com via Borough on Pinterest

Source: style.com via Borough on Pinterest


I can't help but think of this shot from the 1973 film Cleopatra Jones - when I look at this season's interpretation of the 70s.


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Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Designed: Colorblock ...Then vs. Now

Fashion is Cyclical.  What goes around, comes back around again.  What better example than the color mixing trend that was shown in the late 70's vs. the 2011 repeat.

1979

March 1979 Vogue UK

March 1979 Vogue UK

March 1979 Vogue UK
2011
Fendi Spring 2011

Gucci Spring 2011
Matthew Ames Spring 2011
Rachel Roy Spring 2011

Jil Sander Spring 2011


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Saturday, May 7, 2011

Trends: Spring 2011

Which look is your favorite?
1) DENIM
D&G

2) LACE
Dolce & Gabbana

3) SEVENTIES ERA
Fendi

4) COLORBLOCK
Jil Sander
source

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Friday, March 25, 2011

Designed: Carlos Falchi

“We’re the slow-handbag movement. We’re small, we’re local and we still make it the way we always did. That’s what you preserve.”   -The Falchis
Over the years I have gained a deep appreciation for true craftsmen.  In an age of multi-tasking and jack of all trades mentality, it is refreshing to find someone who has wholeheartedly dedicated themselves to a singular mission and material.  Carlos Falchi is one such craftsman who started working with leather and exotic skins in the 1970s and continues today in stores such as: Bergdorf' Goodman, Neiman Marcus, and Saks Fifth Avenue.

Falchi's bags often use skins such as python, alligator and ostrich and are soft and unstructured.   We currently have a few examples of his iconic Buffalo bag (originally designed in 1974 and re-issued in the 1980's) in the store:


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