Nadine Kam photos
This dress was one of several modeled by Daniella Abe during a preview trunk show of Dior's Winter 2016 ready-to-wear collection. Styles are slated to begin arriving in stores next month.
I love the romance evident in fall's designs, and Dior delivers on the handworked, vintage-y vibe of the season. The boutique at T Galleria hosted a preview of its Winter 2016 collection on Aug. 15.
On view were ready-to-wear dresses in plush velvets and soft knits, with many pieces embellished with beads and paillettes in an ornate style I associate with 1950s Chinese brocades.
Also on the floor are early 1900s and menswear-inspired shoes, fabulous eyewear that shoppers just couldn't put down, and combat boots with bling that have people stomping their way all over Paris.
Footwear also was cued by the past, with high-vamp lace-up styles and color cues from menswear. But stiletto heels are purely femme.
Carrying over from summer, a limited number of Dior X Rihanna collaboration sunglasses are available at the boutique now, at about $840.
Here's a video link with Rihanna in the sunglasses: dior.com
A bodice of velvet florals softens winter's black eveningwear.
Showing posts with label shoes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shoes. Show all posts
Wednesday, August 17, 2016
Wednesday, September 21, 2011
Closet Fetish offers Shoe Diva Deal
Attention shoe divas: Closet Fetish is moving its warehouse in L.A., and rather than move its current stash of shoe boxes, they're offering free shipping for those who order the Shoe Diva Deal of 36 boxes for $359.99. Once they are gone, shoe boxes will no longer be available at the company's website, www.closetfetish.com.
The boxes are available in Stiletto Red, Ballerina Slipper Pink and Light Blue, and only a limited amount of those colors remain, at a count of 200, 214 and 112, respectively.
Closet Fetish was started by local girl Sommer Meyer after she had amassed 250 pairs of shoes and needed a pretty storage solution. Below is how her closet looks today.
Monday, January 24, 2011
Rules meant to be broken
Nadine Kam photo
Sooo ... after the Golden Globes I made a snarky comment about Helena Bonham Carter's mismatched red and green shoes, and then, I recently had lunch at Big City Diner, where I was sitting near a Japanese tourist wearing these multi-color Converse All-Stars, and I thought that was so fun!
Whiplash!
That just goes to show you how confusing the fashion "rules" can be to the average person who might be thinking how can I not like something one day, and like it the next???
It's mostly a difference in context, a casual restaurant setting, vs. what is supposedly a glamorous venue. Some people want to make a different kind of statement or grab some attention, that's fine, but in that case, Helen didn't go far enough. The shoes in themselves were not fabulous and made no statement save for calling attention to their color difference.
I'm sure it matters not a bit to her, and chutzpah is its own kind of style.
Thursday, November 18, 2010
Chanel shoes and peek into a dream closet
Nadine Kam photos
Designs from Chanel's fall footwear collection were showcased in celebration of the brand's biggest Hawaii fan. A peek into her closet proves the point.
It was all about Chanel footwear yesterday, Nov. 17, when Tiana Torii opened her home to Chanel and about a dozen fellow afficionados for a private showcase of fall designs not carried by the boutiques here.
Joseph Cruz, national sales director for shoes, retail division, was in town from New York to help fit and match guests with shoes that best suit their personalities.
I gravitated to the pearl boot below, and Princess Dialta Alliata de Montereale humorously advised, "Never ask the price. In cases like this, you just close your eyes and give them your credit card."
I don't know if it's more a function of being a journo or economically challenged, but I always have to know every detail, and the main detail is that the boot is $1,525. Sigh. It was hard to take them off. Can you imagine these with the right outfit?!
Chanel's Joseph Cruz with a Shanghai-inspired boot with lantern embossing and a silver lantern on the heel.
Tiana, second from left, with her friends Kim Yoshino, Kristi Komeya and Tessie Schmisseur.
Oh, but heart be still! The real piece de resistance was a trek through Tiana's dream closet, with Chanel's pretty tweed suits, shoes and handbags lined up in a row. It was amazing to behold, but the impact of it all really didn't hit me until later, when I woke up in the middle of the night, started thinking about it and couldn't go back to sleep.
My first thought was of a black tank top introduced a couple years back, embellished with five pieces of applique, that I know she owns and wished I could see again.
Then I thought of how there are so many words associated with the brand, like "iconic, classic, timeless," that I can spew them out without much thought. They are a shorthand for getting an idea across. But as I looked at the pieces in Tiana's closet, I realized how any of those pieces, no matter which season or which year, could be worn with any of the other pieces, and look just as current now as a decade ago, and always be recognized as Chanel. It's the reason she said she has trouble parting with any of her Chanel pieces. They can be worn forever. She also has an eye for the most iconic pieces of any collection, making them instantly collectible.
That shows how strong the brand, its vision and aesthetics are, and it's quite a feat. I can't think of many other brands that can sustain that instant recognition over decades. Certainly in terms of accessories, there is Hermes, Dior and Louis Vuitton, but in clothing?
My introduction to couture was through Chanel, one of the first luxury brands to have arrived in Hawaii in the 1980s. I wish I had the kind of personal technology available today to capture the fantastic runway shows produced at that time, along with the initial French Festival shows that brought the haute couture to Hawaii. They are now relegated strictly to memory, but the Chanel, Dior and Sonia Rykiel shows were fantastic.
Far from being stuffy, the same ethos that led Chanel to buy and preserve the work of such Maisons d'Art as LemariƩ (feathers), Lesage (embroidery) Desrues (metalwork), Goossens (goldsmith) and Guillet (flowers), made them eager to share the handwork of its haute couture garments, and demonstrate to those who cannot fathom the expense of such garments, what separates their work from what we usually wear. They represent the highest achievement in fashion, as well as a connection to the past.
Catherine Lin tries on one of Tiana's favorites from the fall collection, a bootie dressed with a row of camellias.
Tiana's love for Chanel is also reflected in this Bearbrick figure dressed in Chanel's iconic suit, pearls, shades and camellia.
A glimpse of the dream closet, with some of Tiana's Chanel purses.
Then there's her shoe collection.
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