Tuesday, April 10, 2012

eco-chic

eco-chic

La Petite S belted dress
$930 - net-a-porter.com

Slouchy top
$258 - wbyworth.com

Asymmetrical top
$258 - wbyworth.com

TOMS espadrille shoes
$69 - toms.com

Komodo organic cotton pants
£40 - fashion-conscience.com

Patagonia hemp shorts
$59 - patagonia.com

Chinese laundry heels
£99 - fashion-conscience.com

TOMS ballerina shoes
$79 - toms.com

TOMS camel heels
$69 - toms.com

TOMS crochet shoes
$58 - toms.com

TOMS shoes
$54 - toms.com

Summer handbag
£18 - peopletree.co.uk

Love Quotes Scarves fringe scarve
$95 - calypsostbarth.com

Banana Republic bath body
$19 - bananarepublic.gap.com

Bath body
$17 - swell.com

American Apparel sun care
$16 - americanapparel.net

Burt s Bees sun care
$15 - macys.com

Pacifica body cleanser
$5 - sephora.com

Blow dryers iron
$60 - flatironexperts.com

Nail polish
$15 - spiritbeautylounge.com

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*NEW* at the DeYoung Museum: The Fashion World of Jean Paul Gaultier:

*NEW* at the DeYoung Museum: The Fashion World of Jean Paul Gaultier:
March 24, 2012 - August 19, 2012 Herbst Special Exhibition Galleries. Dubbed fashion’s enfant terrible, Jean Paul Gaultier launched his first prêt-à-porter collection in 1976 and founded his own couture house in 1997. Emerging as a designer in the 1970s, he developed his own dress codes that reflected the changing world around him. The openly gay Gaultier uses his designs to tackle gender and transgender issues through androgynous, gender-bending styles, meanwhile delving even further into some of the darker areas of the sexual revolution. Always provocative, he addresses issues of multiculturalism by bringing ethnic diversity to the Paris runway. Despite the gritty and sometimes controversial context of his collections, the clothes remain beautiful, superbly crafted with the finest dressmaking and detailing skills. This dynamic, multimedia exhibition will include 140 haute couture and prêt-à-porter designs created between the mid-1970s and 2010, along with numerous sketches, archival documents, fashion photographs, and video clips that spotlight Gaultier’s collaborations with filmmakers, choreographers, and musicians, most notably Madonna. For this presentation, Gaultier partnered with the Montreal-based theater company Ubu Compagnie de Création in the design of 30 animated mannequins who talk and sing in playful and poetic vignettes.