You guys, take advantage of this amazing opportunity. I would kill to be in this class, but I'll be eating ragu and tiramisu in Bologna next semester, woe is me. Anyway, TAKE THIS CLASS. PLAY WITH OLD CLOTHING. IT'S AWESOME.
Monday, 30 November 2009
NEW! Costume Curating Class!
You guys, take advantage of this amazing opportunity. I would kill to be in this class, but I'll be eating ragu and tiramisu in Bologna next semester, woe is me. Anyway, TAKE THIS CLASS. PLAY WITH OLD CLOTHING. IT'S AWESOME.
Keep It Fresh, Keep It Classy: What Lies Beneath
It’s cold outside, which means it’s time to layer up (obviously). So, you throw on your sweaters and jackets and gloves and whatnot. But, what are you wearing underneath all that? What’s the first layer of clothing? Probably a t-shirt on most days, I would imagine. That’s not the full answer, though. What KIND of t-shirt? Many people think the t-shirt they wear to the gym is the same t-shirt they can wear out is the same t-shirt they can wear under a sweater. Tsk tsk. The undershirt is SPECIFICALLY created for the third example. It is UNDERshirt, after all. Undershirts are usually simple: one solid color, usually white. Keep in mind: simple is, 99% of the time, classy. You don’t need slogans on your t-shirts, especially if they’re going under all those layers. The fit is mighty important as well. Normal t-shirts will make you look bulkier, whereas undershirts will fit snug and keep you warm. I have TONS of undershirts. These days, I literally wear one every single day. It’s easy, classy, and sensible, and those three rarely go together.
Tuesday, 24 November 2009
Reel to Real #5: Ann-Margaret in "Bye Bye Birdie"
1963's "Bye Bye Birdie" might have been my favorite childhood movie, and in no small part because of Ann-Margaret's vivacious performance. I wanted to be just like her, and considering her killer wardrobe, who could blame me? Her looks bridges 1950s and 60s fashion, consisting of pastels, full high-waisted skirts, and ruffles. And of course, her gorgeous red hair. nerd boyfriend

Nerd boyfriend is my new favorite fashion blog.
Not only does it feature great photos of famous nerds whom I wish were my boyfriends, but it also details the clothes they are wearing, and where a non-nerdy boyfriend could find them.
Monday, 23 November 2009
Keep It Fresh, Keep It Classy: Get Dressy
There is a certain misconception that pervades our fashion oriented thoughts. This is a misconception that, if believed, can seriously limit one’s ability to truly look great. Quite simply, people like to divide their clothes into formal and casual, for the most part. Bad! Bad, bad, bad! You’re severely limiting your dress options when you do this, and you invariably become somewhat predictable in your clothes. So, I’m going to address one specific instance that can be easily repaired. 99% of you kids wear jeans ALL THE TIME. Yes, you may be in class, at the Deec, or just with your buddies, and these are all casual environment. However, there are other options besides jeans that won’t make you look like you’re going to a ball. Get a nice pair of wool pants. They’re super-multi-purpose. I wear mine with a coat and tie, and I wear them with my hoodie, too. Khakis are another great alternative to jeans, and, I would argue, the MOST usable pants out there. Here’s a side benefit, besides looking good, that might come in handy during the spring and summer. A pair of light wool or khaki pants is going to be more airy than your stuffy jeans. And don’t tell me you never sweat in the summer with those things on. Let me just go on the record as saying, “I love jeans.” However, you have to change it up a bit to truly appreciate them. Having contrasting levels of formality between your top and bottom is an easy way to go from predictable to snazzy.
Friday, 20 November 2009
Tim Gunn's Bad Romance/ Alexander McQueen SS 2010
That last sentence could just as easily describe Alexander McQueen's Spring Summer 2010 show. I did not have the time to review it in October, but as more and more fashion forward celebs wear pieces from the collection, it would be a shame not to.
Most of the reviews focused on the show itself, and not the clothes, which is a shame. The show was supposed to be broadcast live on the Internet, but when Lady Gaga Twittered that her new single Bad Romance was premiering at the show, the site crashed. The fancy camera cranes that dominated the stage were for naught. Nevertheless, the clothes are interesting in and of themselves. McQueen titled the collection Plato's Atlantis--the idea being that, as global warming continues and the Earth is covered with more water, humans will devolve into aquatic features. Hence the morphing feet. The show had all of McQueen's usual elements--creative tailoring, beautiful colors, new silhouettes--and stayed on trend. As with many shows from this past season, there were big shoulders and tiny waists, digitized prints (McQueen created fractals from images of animals), transparency, and, of course, lots and lots of sparkle.
Of course, one of the interesting things about creating clothing for the future--whether it's in a fashion show or in a movie--is that the designer tends to rely on pre-modern elements. McQueen has created incredible coats for this collection--they're almost indistinguishable from the dress--but he also uses some romantic decorations: lots of hoop skirts were used, as well as false sleeves, both common elements in Elizabethan dress. Several dresses have Watteau backs or melting skirts a la Polainase, integral elements of 18th century French fashion. Even as McQueen looks forward to the future (and we will all be wearing something like this soon--I look forward to the knock-offs at Forever 21), we all look to the past.
All images Style.com.
Oh, and because I can't get the song out of my head, and because all of the shoes and most of the costumes are from this collection, I present to you:
Tuesday, 17 November 2009
WILD STYLE
FEATURING
A fashion show through the ages: 80's, 90's and 00's
DJ Curt Kre-Z on the tables
The legendary TC Weaver as the MC
Live Art
Free Soul Food
The newest Hip Hop 101 T-shirts, designed by TC Weaver
And performances by...
Philatheis
TCP (including Cans)
Young Have & Pook with Roc A Boy
Skillz Methods (b-boys from NYC)
Chronic Cypher (Vassar's fiercest emcees Nii, Ade, and Akil ( http://www.myspace.com/stil0ne )
Barefoot Monkeys
Shataje
Big Daddy Shawn
The Axies
Zach Sorgen
The Night Owls
Hype (Vassar dance crew)
Donations are encouraged and accepted at the door, as all proceeds benefit the R.E.A.L. SKILLS HIP HOP THEATER
Monday, 16 November 2009
SWEATER LOVE

Keep It Fresh, Keep It Classy: You're Not the Michelin Man; Don't Dress Like Him
That time of the year is approaching. It’s the time when we like to bundle up, play in the snow, and, generally, throw all fashion sense out the window. Yes, winter is coming. It’s one of those seasons that’s filled with fashion opportunities, yet so many people choose to look at the cold as an excuse to look sloppy. But there is hope! Not all your rugged outerwear has to make you look like you just got off the ski slope. Personally, I say “no” to the puffy jacket. It makes you look like you’re wearing 7 times as many layers as you actually are, or it just makes you look 7 times as heavy as you actually are. I like to wear a good top coat over a sweater. Pair that with a nice scarf, gloves, and a hat (I'll talk about these at another time), and you’ll not only look great, but you’ll be toasty warm, too. When you’re looking for the right top coat, think pea coat but longer. Just because it doesn’t look thick on the outside doesn’t mean it isn’t snug and layered. Keep it fresh, keep it classy, and don’t look like a balloon.
Sunday, 15 November 2009
Photo Shoot!!!
Tuesday, 10 November 2009
Meet the CFDA Finalists
Women's Apparel: Gary Graham
Wednesday, 4 November 2009
My Boyfriend Is the President.
Monday, 2 November 2009
Whose Fault Is This?
The fashion industry makes an elite few feel better about themselves and most people feel worse about themselves. It makes them bulimic and anorexic. It’s stimulating a desire that could never be fulfilled. It’s decoration on a dreadful wedding cake at a marriage between us and the demise of the planet.
There is no doubt that the fashion industry is a very sick industry. For example, at a 92nd Street Y event about the future of the fashion industry, Issey Miyake said, "Honestly, I've actually booked girls [for a fashion show] that weren't obese, they were real girls. Like gorgeous anatomy. And one was a stripper. And you could feel the energy in the room just go down. Closed the books. Pens went down. They were angry. I could feel the anger. And I never did it again, because I thought Why bother? It takes a lot to rile women. It takes like actual breasts....Fashion advertisements are hateful. Hateful. Yeah, but they wouldn't do it unless it worked, right? It works." Even when fashion insiders try to champion different body types, the lookism and misogyny pours out. There is still an ingrained idea that there are normal-sized women, and that women just naturally hate each other.
The exercise in the Women's Studies class could have been done with any advertisement, really. Yet fashion, by its very nature, amplifies our cultural norms to an extreme, and that is why we see so many skinny or even unhealthy bodies in editorials and advertisements. Perhaps this is the reason people fear fashion, because it is pure, unadulterated culture: we look at our assumptions and anxieties squarely in the face--we can choose to ignore them, mock them, or glorify them through our clothes. But the fashion industry is hardly the only industry at fault. As Bordo's argument implies, we need to tell all cultural producers--music, publishing, advertising, film, TV, entertainment, sports, etc.--is that we are sick and tired of being told that there is only one "right" way to behave or look. If we only point our fingers at the fashion industry, we just ignore the larger problem.

















