Showing posts with label Rodarte. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rodarte. Show all posts

Monday, February 21, 2011


Karlie Kloss in Rodarte's Fall 2011 show.
Shot backstage by my fave Aussie magazine, Oyster.

Monday, July 19, 2010

Inspiration From Dark Places: Rodarte and MAC























The genius Mulleavy sisters have paired up with MAC Cosmetics to spackle their aesthetic on eyes and lips September 15th. The collection was inspired by a road trip the sisters took across Texas. The pair sparked controversy by naming a shade "Juarez", a crime-ridden Mexican city where rape is very common. Rodarte has responded with an apology send to industry insiders and with a donation from the products to those in need in Juarez. Now let's get to the makeup! I'm praying for silver, beige, dark lips, and lots of texture, a signature of the Mulleavys. Let's hope there's a bit more to the collection than the official image (above). Below is a chart from Fall 2009:

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

SNOW BALL FIGHT

RODARTE 
ADVISES YOU TO WEAR:
-Arts & Crafts style pieces
-Winter whites & florals
-Witch-like, dainty lace up heels
-Layered yarn-like skirts
-Laces mixed with knits and sheers
-Lightweight layers to add beauty
-Knitted tights as your warmest piece

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Paris Loves Barbie




You are met with an eerie silence upon walking into the French Vogue offices. Carine Roitfeld and her staff huddle in the center of the hallway. The girls speak in hushed whispers. Do you dare inch closer? You do. The chicest women in the world are playing with…dolls?
Well, of course. The trend is picking up steam in the most unusual of places. From a Barbie runway show during New York fashion week to the Rodarte sisters’ more arty characters at French boutique Colette, your childhood is back and more fabulous than you remember.
Dolls were once as the sole communicator of fashion. English royalty received figurines from Parisian designers as early as the 14th century. Fashion was able to span the distance between countries with these figurines. These dolls, sometimes even life size, were a kinesthetic catalogue from which royals could choose dresses for themselves. King Henry IV of France secured his future bride, Marie de Medici, by sending over examples of his countries’ fashions.
These dolls, then called Pandoras, filtered down to the masses and became more plaything than high fashion prototype. Mattel launched the Barbie in 1959 and she became a childhood landmark for generations ever since.
Today dolls are merging art, fashion, and exclusivity once again, and Paris ties into each play date.
http://www.thefashionpolice.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/rodarte-doll1.jpgKate and Laura Mulleavy of Rodarte designed four spooky playthings to celebrate their tenth collection, Fall/Winter 09. Four characters were created and packaged inside velvet lined coffin boxes. Their macabre look and individual stories (printed on the cover of each coffin) illustrate the haunted influences that contributed to the collection.
The dolls were created especially for the sisters’ art exhibit at Paris’ Colette boutique. A separate collection of yarn dolls wearing runway looks were also for sale. Kate and Laura chose pieces from artists like Miranda July and Sonic Youth’s Kim Gordon to be admired and hawked in the limited edition exhibit/store.
Barbie celebrated her 50th birthday last February will a runway extravaganza during New York Fashion Week. The CFDA coaxed 50 designers to design looks for a runway show. Michael Kors, Bob Mackie, Calvin Klein, and Rachel Roy created perky looks for the plastic icon. Christian Louboutin chose Pantone’s Barbie Pink for the peep-toe shoes that accompanied each look.







Barbie looks from Rag and Bone, Badgley Mischka, and Juicy Couture, Stylefinds.
Louboutin and Mattel partnered up again this month, creating a media frenzy among both fashion freaks and fourth graders. The Parisian will play godfather to the doll this year, designing three Barbies. The collectable figurines come with multiple Louboutin heels and are packaged in the designer’s shoebox.
Barbie will be available for purchase at both BarbieCollector.com and Net-a-porter.com in order to reach both audiences.
Perhaps these markets are not entirely unrelated. Fashion is modeled on ideal bodies, and dolls are shaped similarly. Both involve glamorous fantasy with a resulting questionable influence on female self-esteem.  Whether plastic or real, perfect looking people will always have tongues wagging and blood boiling. Louboutin set off a firestorm with the announcement that he would make Barbie’s ankles even more slender and increase the curvature of her foot. It seems we have gotten used to all of Barbie’s other unnatural, ahem, attributes. An ankle is where the line is drawn! Regarding the controversy, Louboutin told WWD, it’s just proof that Barbie has real serious fans.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Well...

"The idea that someone could "be scarred and still beautiful" was the collection's leitmotif" -Laird Borrelli-Persson

Rodarte has done it again. I love these girls so much. Their designs are a serious breath of fresh air. Yes, the collection has familiar silhouettes and details like TIGHT mini dresses, single arm straps, and thoughtful, intriciate arm work. And YES, it is in new color and textile combinations that look fantastic. In fact, some of the intricate black details look a bit like the lattice work done in Marc's collection.

"We ruined everything." In other words, they aged, painted, burned, shredded, sandpapered, and otherwise destroyed all of the materials—including grungy scraps of plaid, plastic cheesecloth, wool cobweb, crystals, macramé, leather, and more—until they bore only traces of what they had been originally." -Designer Laura Mulleavy & Laird Borrelli-Persson

Who would have expected a solid tan/punchy lemon yellow/soft baby blue plaid mix? Then quickly adding a red tie dye draped combo? And all set with a background of a rainbow gradient of soft dry ice? I'm always down for models appearing from out of nowhere, in a fantasy world. Oh and the tribal arm art is very successful in pumping up the edge in the collection, and puts yet another fresh spin on this design house. I am dying.

Beauty: A dark lip for spring! Hm, I would like it if the trend held longer than the fall. I think the deep brown smokey eye was perfectly suiting for the collection, as it gave enough effect from far away, but didn't pull attention from the deep maroon lip.

Fresh, earthy colors and a raggy, poor girl skirt.

 
 
Pattern mix extraordinares. Looks like inspirations came from 
woodgrain, Saris, and a plaid with a shocking, silky neon yellow accent.
 
Dramatic, deadly, beautiful!
 
I would like this dress right now, please.
 
  
 


She is a tribal warrior.

 
 



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