Archive | 2012

Terry de Havilland, iconic shoes, copies and the comeback

16 Sep

Terry de Havilland shoes are flamboyant, attention-grabbing, ‘look-at-me’ shoes with some very British wit. His idiosyncratic (please look up the meaning of this word and you will understand it’s perfect to describe what I mean) use of colour, materials and decoration combined with that distinctly Seventies take on exaggeration. His father was a shoemaker too and made shoes for the Windmill girls during the war, that’s why ‘platforms and ankle straps are in my psyche’, Terry explained.

Terry de Havilland cut his first pair of shoes in 1957, for the family business, designed his first pair in 1960 and in 1964 his career kicked off  when he became a hit with the buyers and his designs were featured in fashion magazine Queen. In 1969 he designed his coloured snakeskin three-tiered wedges which made him the favorite shoe designer by many stars like Bianca Jagger and Bette Midler.

In 1972 ‘Cobblers to the world’, Terry de Havilland first store, was opened and the Margaux wedge was born. Everyone rich and famous found their way to the store and in 1980 De Havilland was making over 800 pairs of shoes a day for worldwide sales…He also set up a new label called Kamikazi, which was designed especially for Punks and Goths.

But then Terry’s work and name fell into obscurity.

Here is where the documentary ‘Trouble at the top ‘starts, which tells the story of Terry’s comeback and Miu-Miu having copied his designs for the s/s 2003 collection. You can find at it further ahead in this post. Don’t miss it!!!!!

Terry de Havilland also designed for some well-known movie characters, like Tim Curry in the Rocky Horror Show, Angelina Jolie’s boots for Tomb Raider and footwear for the BAFTA-award winning film The Velvet Goldmine. Some fashion designers asked De Havilland to design for their runway shows, like Zandra Rhodes in the past and lately Paco Rabanne and Anna Sui.

In 2006 Terry was nominated as the Accessory Designer of the Year at the British Fashion Awards and in June 2010 he was awarded with the Draper’s Lifetime Achievement Award. Terry is also a professor at the University of Arts in London.

Last year Selfridges celebrated 50 years of his artistry with a month-long exhibition in its Shoe Galleries and presented four exclusive anniversary models: the Dragon (silk-screen printed, red and gold wedge), Leyla (emerald lace mule), Dagger (leather ankle boot with silver dagger heel) and Lola (gold wedge, worn by Alison Goldfrapp on her album cover…see bottom of this page).

Today Terry de Havilland shoes are as loved and appreciated as back in the 70ties. Kate Moss, a good friend and customer of de Havilland, got a special pair of Margaux’s designed  for her honeymoon and Kylie Minogue, Sienna Miller and Dita Von Teese are often spotted on a pair of De Havillands. They follow in the footsteps of Twiggy, David Bowie, Bianca Jagger, Rudolf Nureyev (python knee boots) and Jackie Onassis (black leather thigh boots lined in red satin with risqué drawstrings).

http://www.tdhcouture.com/

Watch the BBC documentary ‘Trouble at the Top’ which is cut into 4 short episodes of about 10 minutes each…..

part 1

part 2

part 3

part 4

Karlheinz Weinberger

9 Sep

During one of my visits to New York, I found this amazing book of a photographer I never heard of: Karlheinz Weinberger. At that time I worked together with a stylist to produce a series of fashion-stories for a magazine called BLVD. One of the stories we made was based on the photographs of Karlheinz Weinberger.
In 1938, Swiss-born Karlheinz Weinberger (1921-2006) encounters a young rocker on the streets of Zürich, who posed for a shot. It was then that this photographer for gay magazines worked his way into the culture of swiss gangs. Weinberger who was most of the time without work, finally found a job at Siemens working in the inventory department and spent most of his free time and off-houres working passionately, almost obsessively at his photographs.
The adolescents, under American influence, were playing tough guys on big bikes, displaying the name of their bands, rolling around on the ground and kissing in the woods. They would wear horseshoe symbols, helmets of the Wehrmacht as a sign of their rejection of authority. They replaced the zippers of their jeans with chains. screws or belt buckles with Elvis’ head. Weinberger got fascinated by this phenomenon and started photographing them during their daily life in a very raw but personal way. Sometimes bringing them one by one to his studio, an industrial warehouse in which he worked for a large part of his life.
The kids were called ‘Halbstarke’ which literally means ‘half strong’ and Weinberger captured them in a rightly sexy, shocking and iconic way. It’s during the last 10 years collectors, fashion and film directors have become interested in the photographs of Weinberger, while they remain almost unknown to the grand public.
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KARLHEINZ WEINBERGER’S WORK IN HIS STUDIO

weinberger

_karlheinz-weinberger

Karlheinz weinberger

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KARLHEINZ WEINBERGER’S WORK ON LOCATION

  
  
karlheinz weinberger
Karlheinz weinberger
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In 2000, Weinberger’s exhibition catalog Karlheinz Weinberger: Photos 1954-1995  was published and has become a hard-to-find collectors item.

I’m selling my original exhibition cataloge Karlheinz Weinger: Photos 1954-1995. The cover is a bit damaged on the left top corner, but the inside and all pictures are in a used-very good condition.

It had an immediate influence on Steven Meisel (Versace jeans campaign) and Martin Margiela (huge tough looking belts).
On February 8, 2011, Rizzoli published posthumous a second book of the work of Karlheinz Weinberger Rebel Youth, the foreword written by film director John Waters.
Book cover
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Pictures inspired by the work of Weinberger for BLVD magazine.
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In the november issue 2009 of Blackbook, a fashion story is published inspired on the work of Karlheinz Weinberger, called The Dirty Dozen.

Nudie Cohn, the Rhinestone Cowboy.

2 Sep

Born in a middle-class Jewish family in highly anti-semitic Russia of 1902, little Nutya Kotlyrenko was shipped off to America at the age of eleven. At Ellis Island he took the Americanized surname his brother and cousins had already adopted, Cohn, and unable to write or spell his first name, he left Ellis Island with a botched version of it: Nudie.

‘I guess that the man never knew what a favor he did me by giving me that name,” Nudie wrote later in his life, “but it’s been a trademark for years. People are always impressed by an unusual name, and Nudie has suited me just fine.”

Nudie grew up poor in New York City’s garment district, apprenticing under tailors and dressmakers while dreaming of a career in music and movies. After years of traveling the United States working odd jobs, he wound up back in New York city making g-strings and burlesque costumes for strippers in Times Square at a shop called ‘Nudies for the Ladies’.

After a number of business ventures and financial hardships, the Russian immigrant who dreamed of being a singin’ cowboy moved out to San Fernando Valley along with his wife Bobbie, operating a small tailoring business out of their garage. Unable to afford a decent sewing machine or fabric to work on his own designs, Nudie decided in 1947 that country vocalist Tex Williams would be his springboard into burgeoning field of cowboy costuming.

The couple soon found celebrity by selling wildly embroidered, rhinestone-studded duds to cowboy stars, country singers and … Elvis Presley. (A $10,000 gold lamé number made the cover of Rolling Stone and netted a profit of $ 9,950.)

Not knowing of the story is true, its been said Bobbie inspired her husband for the logo the company used on its labels for more than 20 years; One evening in the early 1940’s, Bobbie emerged from the boudoir wearing nothing but a cowboy hat, boots and a holster and coyly asked her husband,”When are you going to make the rest of the outfit?’ The result was what became known as the ‘naked cowgirl’ label. After Nudie converted to Christianity around 1963, the cowgirl was clothed…, making the old-label garments collector’s items.

Nudie and Bobbie produced clothes for many famous celebrities, which are now museum pieces. Mr. Cohn died in 1984, Bobbie passed away in 2006. it is unclear which one of the couple came up with the Nudie motto: “It is better to be looked over than overlooked.”….

 

Other designs of Nudie’s rodeo tailors

Nudie’s rodeo tailor’s influence on fashion:

The Nudie style still inspires fashion designers like Tommy Hilfiger, Ralph Lauren, Tom Ford, Miuccia Prada and for his first Balmain collection SS 2012, Olivier Rousteing looked to Nudie Cohn’s rhinestone-covered suits….

Miu  Miu collection SS/2011

Balmain  collection SS/2012

Fashion photographer Craig McDean filmed Amber Valetta in a humble salute to Nudie’s Rodeo Tailors.

http://showstudio.com/project/made_in_hollywood/filmCraig Mcdean

In 2011, Belgian fashion museum  MoMu presented  Dreamsuits. Designs by Nudie Cohn, the Rodeo Tailor – featuring the collection of Bobbejaan Schoepen’ in the MoMu Gallery, an exhibition of fascinating outfits, accessories and ephemera by the legendary Nudie Cohn.

All dressed in tartans

26 Aug

  

Elsa Schiaparelli is the one to whom the word ‘genius’ is applied most often

19 Aug

Coco Chanel once dismissed her rival as ‘that Italian artist who makes clothes.’ (To Schiaparelli, Chanel was simply ‘that milliner.’)

Elsa Schiaparelli (september 10, 1890 – november 13, 1973) was born in Rome, Italy. She studied philosophy and at the age of 22 she accepted a job as a nanny in London. Elsa led a refined life with a certain amount of luxury provided by her parents’ wealth and high social status. She believed, however, that this luxury was stifling to her art and creativity and so she removed herself from the ‘lap of luxury’ as quickly as possible. She moved first to New York City and then to Paris, combining her love of art and design to become a couturier.

She was not a trained seamstress and her interest was not merely in fashion. She was a flamboyant persona who liked interacting with artists. She designed her clothes on paper, trusting her tailors to correctly interpret them, which was not as common then as it is today.

Elsa launched a collection of knitwear in 1927, after she made her first steps into fashion earlier, with some encouragement from Paul Poiret. The first collection featured sweaters with surrealist trompe l’oeil images which were published in Vogue. Her business really took off with a pattern that gave the impression of a scarf wrapped around the wearer’s neck.

Elsa’s ‘pour le Sport’ collection expanded the following year to include bathing suits, ski-wear, and linen dresses. The divided skirt, a forerunner of shorts, shocked the tennis world when worn by Lili de Alvarez at Wimbledon in 1931. She added evening wear to the collection in 1931, and the business went from strength to strength, culminating in a move from Rue de la Paix to acquiring the renowned salon of Madeleine Chéruit at 21 Place Vendôme, nicknamed the Schiap Shop.

Elsa collaborated with famous artist Jean Cocteau and Salvador Dalí to create her most significant designs. She was the most innovative and influential dress designer of the 20th century, known for her shocking designs and Surrealist influences in her haute couture. Her inventions included the color Shocking Pink‘,  which she made famous, the innovative use of colorful zippers, gadget  accessories such as scarves of material with a newspaper print design  and the clinging and attractive bias-cut dresses.

Elsa Schiaparelli & Salvador Dali

Elsa Schiaparelli & Jean Cocteau

Perhaps Schiaparelli’s most important legacy was in bringing to fashion the playfulness and sense of ‘anything goes’ of the Dada and Surrealist movements. She loved to play with juxtapositions of colours, shapes and textures, and embraced the new technologies and materials of the time. With Charles Colcombet she experimented with acrylic, cellophane, a rayon jersey called “Jersela” and a rayon with metal threads called “Fildifer” – the first time synthetic materials were used in couture. Some of these innovations were not pursued further, like her 1934 “glass” cape made from Rhodophane, a transparent plastic related to cellophane. But there were more lasting innovations; Schiaparelli created wraparound dresses decades before Diane von Furstenberg and crumpled up rayon 50 years before Issey Miyake’s pleats and crinkles. In 1930 alone she created the first evening-dress with a jacket, and the first clothes with visible zippers. In fact fastenings were something of a speciality, from a jacket buttoned with silver tambourines to one with silk-covered carrots and cauliflowers.

Elsa Schiaparelli clothes

Elsa Schiaparelli accessories

The failure of her business meant that Schiaparelli’s name is not as well-remembered as that of her great rival Coco Chanel, because she did not adapt to the changes in fashion following World War II. Soon after the fall of Paris on 14 June 1940, Elsa sailed to New York for a lecture tour; apart from a few months in Paris in early 1941, she remained in New York City until the end of the war. On her return she found that fashion had changed, with Christian Dior’s ‘New Look’ marking a rejection of pre-war fashion. The house of Schiaparelli struggled in the austerity of the post-war period, and Elsa finally closed it down in December 1954, the same year that Coco Chanel returned to the business. Aged 64, Elsa wrote her autobiography and then lived out a comfortable retirement between her apartment in Paris and house in Tunisia. She died on 13 November 1973.

 Muccia Prada is inspired by Elsa Schiaparelli and surrealisme too.