Showing posts with label Trends SS13. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trends SS13. Show all posts

Monday, 10 June 2013

Week 20: Giverny (Monet's Garden)

Giverny Monet's Garden

Well it turned out to be “Dressing up in Normandy”, rather than “Dressing up in Paris” this week, but we were only 50 miles out of the capital so I’m sure you’ll forgive me. Also we stayed nicely thematic, moving from an indoor garden to an outdoor one – which was just as well, since the weather was nigh on perfect this weekend. I’d also like to take this opportunity to say that I will to endeavour to stop telling you the weather every week (unless there’s a freak hailstorm again), as I suspect it’s getting a little dull. If this is your main source for the Ile de France’s forecast, I will do you the kindness of re-directing you here, in the hope that you will still come back for my fashion pizzazz and sagacity.

Giverny Monet's Garden pastel iridescent

Giverny Monet's Garden pastel iridescent

SO, this week we headed to the beautiful town of Giverny, nestled in the Normandy countryside, and best-known for housing one of the most famous artists of the last couple of centuries. Claude Monet noticed this charming little town whilst staring out of a train window and promptly decided he had to move there. This he duly did and lived there happily from 1883 until his death in 1926 and he is buried in the cemetery there, alongside several family members.

Giverny Monet's Garden pastel iridescent

Giverny Monet's Garden pastel iridescent OCLC ring orange flowers

Giverny Monet's Garden pastel iridescent floral shawl
Drawn by both the beautiful landscape and the Monet’s presence, several American Impressionists (including Willard Metcalf, Louis Ritter, and Theodore Earl Butler – who later married Monet’s stepdaughter) came to Giverny in the late 19th century and formed a productive little art colony until the beginning of the First World War. Nowadays there is a new wave of artists in Giverny, with a range of workshops and art classes for tourists and locals.

Giverny Monet's Garden pastel iridescent floral shawl

Giverny Monet's Garden pastel iridescent nude pumps

Giverny Monet's Garden pastel iridescent lilac dress

As the years went by, Monet developed a passion for botany, constantly searching for rare plants and exchanging them with his good friends Clemenceau and Caillebotte. He often said that most of his money went straight into his garden and many of his best paintings were of it. It has been said that Monet created his 
works twice – first he created his garden and then he painted it.

Giverny Monet's Garden pastel iridescent lilac dress lily pond

Giverny Monet's Garden pastel iridescent lilac dress l

Giverny Monet's Garden pastel iridescent lilac dress lily pond

The garden at Giverny has two parts; Clos Normand and the Japanese water garden. Clos Normand was originally a walled orchard of about a hectare inside, which Monet opened up and filled with flowers. He didn’t like gardens to be too organised or cultivated, so he would just pick flowers which matched in colour and then let them grow freely. In 1893 he bought a neighbouring piece of land and turned it into a water garden, inspired by the Japanese prints he collected, and complete with lily pond. Although the current version of the famous green bridge is a reproduction, the wisteria growing over it were planted by Monet himself.

Giverny Monet's Garden pastel iridescent lilac dress bridge

Giverny Monet's Garden pastel iridescent lilac dress bridge

Giverny Monet's Garden pastel iridescent lilac dress bridge

Monet’s son left the house and gardens to the Académie des Beaux-Arts in 1966 and it became a public museum in 1980. Now it attracts an average of 500 000 visitors a year – and it’s well worth a visit! Leaving from St. Lazare station in Paris, it is a mere 45-minute hop, skip and jump to Vernon and from there it’s a 5-10 minute taxi or bus-ride to Monet’s house. As well as strolling round the gardens you can tour the house itself which has been restored to its former glory. There is also a Museum of Impressionism just next door.

Giverny Monet's Garden pastel iridescent lilac dress pearls

Giverny Monet's Garden pastel iridescent lilac dress pearls sunglasses and steps
Dress - H&M
Shoes - Marks&Spencer
Shawl - present
Necklaces and bracelets - Mine and JOAR's
Ring - OC Jewelery
Sunglasses - Marks&Spencer

Giverny Monet's Garden pastel iridescent lilac dress pearls

This week I wanted to reflect the calm, soothing aesthetic of Monet’s work in the outfit and aimed to do this with two of Spring-Summer’s hottest trends: florals and pastels. Iridescence also made a welcome appearance on the catwalk this season, and I took a few leaves out of Alberta Ferretti’s, Donna Karen’s, and (my personal favourite) Burberry Prorsum’s books and went for this lovely lilac number from the ever-wonderful H&M (seriously, why am I not their head of PR/the face of the brand yet?)

Giverny Monet's Garden pastel iridescent lilac dress pearls

Giverny Monet's Garden pastel iridescent lilac dress pearls flowers

I added the scarf-cum-shawl for a floral edge, and went for pearls to keep in with the simple shimmering look and, honestly, why would you go for ONE necklace when you could go for four? Added a little glamour and drama with the bold eye make-up, courtesy of Best Friend From Land of the Brave (BFFLB) 
who was this week’s photographer.

Giverny Monet's Garden lily pond

Thursday, 14 March 2013

Weekly Wardrobe 4

I, for one, was inordinately pleased to hear that stripes are in for Spring-Summer 2013. I love stripes. I think stripes are blimmin' great. They are fun, they are striking, they are slimming, and they are classic. This skirt is another new favourite from the ever-reliable, endlessly attractive Asos and I love it (even if my boss did ask me why I'd decided to wear my curtains...) Have realised, however, that footwear must be very carefully reflected upon with this skirt because, as previously stated, I am of a...petite stature and pairing this (supposedly "midi") skirt with flat shoes makes me look as if I have no legs to speak of. 




Top - H&M
Skirt - Asos
Boots - Hobbs
You must excuse the quality of these photos. They were shot approximately 10 minutes after a chunk of snow had fallen off the awning of a shop and onto...my face, to the great hilarity of our (normally-kindly) local Tunisian greengrocer. I was feeling understandably disgruntled. Nonetheless, I was feeling so great in my stripes that I felt I ought to share it. Now please Europe, enough snow, a little Paris in the Springtime would be great...

Monday, 11 March 2013

Week 9: Pont Neuf


View from Pont Neuf -  Dressing up in Paris

So for Semaine Numéro Neuf we headed to the Pont Neuf ! (I’d love to say I’d planned that, but it was pure serendipity). The Pont Neuf (new Bridge) is – ironically – the oldest standing bridge across the Seine. It was one of the first bridges not to be lined with houses (the King of the time didn’t want them blocking the view of his pad...the Louvre!) and also one of the first to have pavements. While in its heyday it was famously covered with street performers, vendors and charlatans, in its day it was a hotbed of crime and even had its own gallows for a while. Nowadays though, it is a far safer – though no less busy – tourist spot, affording lovely views of the Eiffel Tower and the Seine. As far as I’m concerned, however, the Pont Neuf hit its high point in 1985 when artist duo Christo and Jeanne-Claude wrapped the entire bridge in 40, 000m2 of polyamide fabric.

Wrapped up Pont Neuf Christo and Jeanne-Claude
NOT MY PHOTO
artpool.hu

Pont Neuf - Mesh SS13 -  Dressing up in Paris

Yes, you heard me, wrapped it.
Christo and Jeanne-Claude were a married couple who became famous for creating (mostly temporary) “environmental” works of art. They met in Paris in 1958 and travelled all over the world completing enormous, crazy projects like this, this, and this. But they always flew in different planes so that if one of them crashed, the other could carry on their work.

Pont Neuf - Mesh SS13 -  Dressing up in Paris
Shirt - Primark

Wrapped up Pont Neuf - Christo and Jeanne-Claude
NOT MY PHOTO - francemagazine.org

Pont Neuf - Mesh SS13 -  Dressing up in Paris - green pillbox hat
Hat - Asos

They didn’t have any particular messages behind their work – they just wanted it to be beautiful and to make people see familiar landscapes in a new way. Their wrapped Pont Neuf kept all the principal shapes of the bridge, but also emphasised the details and proportions of it. The art critic David Bourdon referred to their work as “revelation through concealment”.

View from Pont Neuf - Dressing up in Paris

Pont Neuf - Mesh SS13 -  Dressing up in Paris

Wrapped up Pont Neuf - Christo and Jeanne-Claude
NOT MY PHOTO - wiki.uoiwa

Pont Neuf - Mesh SS13 -  Dressing up in Paris

Pont Neuf - Mesh SS13 -  Dressing up in Paris

This may seem like a somewhat arbitrary and fashion-centric link, but this idea of “revelation through concealment” is also relevant to one of Spring-Summer 2013’s big trends: mesh. With mesh fabric you can create clothes which change completely the silhouette of the wearer, without hiding away their shape completely. Take – for example, this middle piece by Stella McCartney.  The cut of the jumper gives the model broad shoulders and a boxy, sporty look, but we are still very aware of how slim she really is because the slight transparency of the fabric means we can still see her arms. It’s also a very versatile material – it can be girly(Helmut Lang), or sleek (Celine), or sexily decadent (McQueen), it can offer a retro twist (Jason Wu) or a futuristic one (Tess Giberson). It’s also great for the warmer months.

Pont Neuf - Mesh SS13 -  Dressing up in Paris - Midi Skirt Asos
Skirt - Yumi at Asos

Pont Neuf - Mesh SS13 -  Dressing up in Paris - Green suede pumps
Shoes - H&M

Pont Neuf - Mesh SS13 -  Dressing up in Paris
Scarf - Present

Are you convinced? I was, and opted for this lovely floaty mesh skirt and chiffon top, trying to keep to watery colours so as to match the Seine (over-thinking? Me?) Sadly, it turns out that what is a "midi skirt" on a normal person, is really quite long on me so I channelled my inner schoolgirl and wound over the waistband a couple of times then hid the join with a belt.

Pont Neuf - Mesh SS13 -  Dressing up in Paris - Green belt Marina Retro
Belt - Marina Retro

Pont Neuf - Mesh SS13 -  Dressing up in Paris

We had a brilliant day for the shoot – the sun was out, it was warm and we had a nice wee breeze which floated the gauzy skirt around perfectly. We found ourselves a free cubby-hole along the bridge (apparently they are really called "bastions" and they were there for pedestrians to duck into if they needed to make way for a particularly bulky carriage) and got started. Then the oddest thing happened: a group of Spaniards came up to us and asked whether I would mind posing for a photo with a bag of coffee, since one of them owned a coffee brand. Apparently I looked very Parisian – which I took as a huge compliment – but I can't help but feel a little guilty that the potential French face of El Delicio coffee is actually a Brit...

Pont Neuf - Mesh SS13 -  Dressing up in Paris - El Delicio coffee                                                                                                                                    

Saturday, 2 March 2013

Weekly Wardrobe 2

This is what I wore to work on Friday - no more casual dress for me! Pencil skirts are probably one of my favourite things ever - they're flattering, they're elegant and they can be styled in about a thousand different ways. So naturally I am more than pleased to see that they are one of the key trends for Spring-Summer 2013, playing an integral part in the collections of Roland MouretBurberry ProrsumDKNYLoewe and many more! Anyway, this is me paying homage to the pencil skirt. Another Paris shoot on its way very soon!






Skirt - Modatoi
Shirt - New Look
Boots - Marks&Spencer
Necklace - New Look