Senin, 06 Agustus 2012

Spice Girls to wear Giles at Olympics Closing Ceremony?


A series of tweets from Victoria Beckham further hint that the Spice Girls will perform at the Olympics Closing Ceremony, and that British designer Giles Deacon may be dressing them.

BY BIBBY SOWRAY | 06 AUGUST 2012
Photo: PA
As you're aware, rumours are rife that pop star-turned-WAG-turned-designer Victoria Beckham will reunite with the source of her fame, the Spice Girls, to perform at the Olympics Closing Ceremony on August 12.
Beckham seems to be doing little to deny the rumours, instead fuelling them further with a series of tweets, all of which point to the Spice reunion wheels being very much in motion. Late last week she tweeted a photo of a diamanté-encrusted microphone, along with an excited "Look what I found!!!, following it up with a photograph of LOVE editor Katie Grand's pet rabbit and the caption: "Morning fitting with @gilesgilesgiles, cuddle with @kegrand bunny!! X vb"
So does this mean Giles Deacon is making the Spice Girls' costumes for the Closing Ceremony? Or is he just making VB's ( Geri might want to make her own frock again…)? We can't think what else Giles would be fitting Beckham for - more often than not she wears her own designs for any public appearances nowadays. Plus, it's already been hinted that VB will be outfitting Georgia May Jagger for her part in the event alongside the likes of Kate Moss and Naomi Campbell thanks to a Closing Ceremony-themed shoot in the September issue of British Vogue . So, Beckham will already have her designs on show meaning she can go for someone like Giles to create a crazy stage outfit for the big performance.
The Mirror 's celebrity and entertainment columnist Dean Piper also tweeted "So the Spice Girls are all together rehearsing for the Olympics RIGHT NOW in London. #itsonbitches" at 4am last Thursday morning.
So, clandestine rehearsals, Giles fittings, bedazzled microphones - frankly, if this isn't all leading to a Spice Girls reunion we're going to be very disappointed.

Jumat, 03 Agustus 2012

Victoria’s Secret already upsetting Bond Street neighbours 03-08-2012

It's not yet opened its doors but Victoria's Secret's highly anticipated New Bond Street store is already getting its designer neighbours hot and bothered.

Victoria's Secret Angels Lily Aldridge, Erin Heatherton, Adriana Lima, Candice Swanepoel and Chanel Iman. Photo: Rex
Upmarket department store Fenwick's, which is situated opposite the soon-to-open VS store, is allegedly "concerned about the potentially provocative window displays and the kind of shoppers it will attract" to the area, reports The Evening Standard .
The lingerie brand's choice to locate their flagship UK store on New Bond Street - which is home to mainly luxury labels such as Burberry and Miu Miu - is already controversial as in the US they are very much a high street brand with high street prices.
Victoria's Secret's first London store opened in Stratford's Westfield shopping centre - which lies right next to the Olympic Park - last week with no fanfare. As yet, no confirmed date has been released regarding the opening of the much bigger Bond Street store, although it is expected to coincide with the Olympics and to have some of the brands 'Angels' such as Alessandra Ambrosio , who will be in London to attend the Closing Ceremony of the Games, in attendance.

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Trending: Where did you get that hat, where did you get that hat? 03-08-2012

look the hat here http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/fashion/features/trending-where-did-you-get-that-hat-where-did-you-get-that-hat-7987971.html


Londoners got a surprise on their way to work yesterday. Overnight, 21 famous statues in the capital, including William Shakespeare, Queen Victoria, Franklin Roosevelt and Sir Winston Churchill, had been given a jazzy makeover by Britain's most talented milliners.
Up-and-coming and more established hat designers, including Philip Treacy and Stephen Jones, were up early to catch a glimpse of their creations.
Lord Nelson's bicorn, featuring the Union Jack and Olympic torch, was actually created by Lock & Co, London's oldest milliner, which made hats for the man himself more than 200 years ago. A crane hoisted it on to the top of the 52m (170ft) Nelson's Column.
The new decorations, dubbed "Hatwalk", are a collaboration between the Mayor of London, the British Fashion Council (BFC) and Grazia magazine, and form part of the celebrations of British culture taking place during the Games.
"What a way to highlight the amazing talent during such an exciting time for the UK," said Caroline Rush, chief executive of the BFC. "The project really does sum up British fashion today; innovative, fun and creative."
The statues will keep their headgear until Friday, when the hats will be auctioned to raise money for the Mayor's good causes. London's statues haven't looked as cutting edge since Churchill was given a grass mohican for the May Day demonstrations in 2000.

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Parade fashion celebrates sexuality, individuality 03-08-2012

Forty-plus-year history of queer movement chock full of colourful and outlandish outfits

Evan Caissie eyes the racks of bright, colourful tank tops, shiny shorts and tight-fitting jeans at the American Apparel store on Granville Street. The 18-year-old part-time model takes advantage of any opportunity to shop, but today is special: he's got Vancouver Pride in mind.
"People express their true inner selves a lot [more at Pride] than they would in nor-mal life - You can expose your-self to new ideas and recreate yourself if you want to, and have a lot of fun and nobody passes judgment."
As someone who aspires to work in the fashion industry, Caissie says Pride is an opportunity to wear fantastic clothing while he expresses his views on queer culture and personal style.
"I want to [work] in commercial advertisement and ... show that people can wear pretty much anything," he says before he heads to the change room to try on a pair of shiny silver shorts.
Pride week is exemplified by the eye-catching, bedazzled (or virtually non-existent) outfits that adorn men, women and those who would prefer not to be labelled - especially during the annual parade on Sunday - all in celebration of one's individuality and sexuality.
"Pride [invites] a kind of sexual jouissance - a playfulness - a kind of open invitation to sexual energy and to not hide that or be apologetic about it but to really champion it," said University of B.C. sociology professor Becki Ross.
The outrageous Pride outfits date back to the first Pride demonstration in 1970. The event was a backlash against the 1969 police raid of Stonewall, a New York City bar frequented by the underground gay community. Consequently, Pride fashion has always been replete with political undertones.
One of the main reasons for Pride, Ross said, is to disrupt a culture dominated by hetero-sexuality. Pride participants carry placards and don T-shirts with slogans such as "a woman needs a man like a fish needs a bicycle," "silence equals death" and "how dare you presume I'm straight."
The fashion styles displayed at Pride since 1970 are meant to further this political agenda through outlandish clothing that forces people outside of their comfort zone, she added.
"Early Pride Day marches were attended by lesbian feminist activists wearing bell-bottomed jeans or cut-off jean shorts, Kodiak books and plaid shirts, with hairy armpits, no makeup - especially no lip-stick ... and cropped hair," Ross wrote in an email.
Such self-expression through fashion has a long history with the LGBTQ community, said UBC professor Amin Ghaziani, who specializes in the sociology of sexuality.
This "lesbian look" was an angry critique of what Ross called "patriarchal capitalist beauty conventions," and showcased the women's rebellion against a beauty industry that "strait-jacketed all women into conformity and subservience."
Perhaps one of the most memorable female fashion aspects of Pride that continues to this day are the "Dykes on Bikes," who ride motorcycles top-less and deck themselves out in blue jeans, tattoos and everything leather, including vests, motorcycle boots and riding gloves.
Male fashion was very diverse in the early period of Pride, Ross said, a trend that continues today.
Men in the 1970s and '80s "tended to wear tank tops, leather vests, multi-coloured handkerchiefs in the pockets of tight jeans to communicate sexual appetites and tastes," Ross added. "At the same time, other gay male members of the 'Radical Fairies' sported wings and tutus, the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence donned nuns' habits and square dancers [saddled up with] cowboy hats, boots and fancy neckties."
This year, Ross predicts Pride will see curlers dressed in kilts wielding plastic brooms; South Asian lesbians in saris; two-spirited Aboriginals wearing button blankets; Latina flamenco dancers; sex workers in glitter, stilettos and tube-tops; transgender folks wearing "Transsexual Menace" T-shirts; queer goths in head-to-toe black; queer cops, pilots and firefighters in uniform; and betrothed queer couples in bridal gear, just to name a few.
At a 1969 conference leading up to the first Pride demonstration on June 19, 1970, it was specifically mandated that "no dress ... regulations shall be made" for the event, Ghaziani said.
Although thousands of people show up each year to celebrate Pride, Gha-ziani noted there is a debate within a small segment of the queer community regarding the event's loud and outlandish displays.
The discussion, he said, revolves around "to what extent gay men and lesbians should present themselves in ways that resemble straight people or whether they should present them-selves instead in a way that is either oppositional or culturally unique."
Ghaziani argued that this debate showcases how a "post-gay era" is developing, whereby a high degree of acceptance means LGBTQ individuals feel less pressure to define themselves so centrally by their sexuality.
However, Ross rejected entirely the notion that queer culture or Pride should be subdued.
"I've always been very unhappy about ... queer people judging those who run around in almost nothing or BDSM [bondage] wear," she said. "What differentiates queer people from non-queer people is our sexuality."
"Some folks want to pursue [an] agenda that is really about equality and belonging ... and others want to break apart that argument and challenge it [and] say there's something more special, spectacular and worth fighting for in terms of sexual diversity and gender diversity," she said, noting that she's not certain how much traction the discussion has within the queer community.
For Caissie, the importance of Pride and its political undertones are very personal.
"I fight for gay rights because I want to see my parents happy and myself happy in the future," he says, noting that he hopes to one day follow in the footsteps of his soon-to-be married father and step-dad.
"Pride is a good [opportunity] to express yourself and say that it's okay to be who you are, no matter who you are."
knursall@vancouversun.com
Twitter.com/kimnursall


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