Showing posts with label PFW. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PFW. Show all posts

Monday, September 29, 2014

Elie Saab Spring 2015 Paris Fashion Week

I have been so busy with the Corinna B's World Glam Italia Tour that I haven't had much time for fashion month.
But now that I'm back in America I'm busy painting faces again, and catching as much of Paris Fashion Week as possible.


Elie-Saab-Spring-2015
Elie Saab Spring 2015

Today I've been dying over Lebanese designer Elie Saab's Spring 2015 collection.
I always love red carpet favorite Elie Saab - he never disappoints, but this season I am crazy about his dresses, his colors, his draping.
He is, as always, perfection.


Elie-Saab-Spring-2015

Elie-Saab-Spring-2015

Elie-Saab-Spring-2015

Elie-Saab-Spring-2015

Elie-Saab-Spring-2015


Elie-Saab-Spring-2015

Elie-Saab-Spring-2015

Elie-Saab-Spring-2015


Elie-Saab-Spring-2015

Elie-Saab-Spring-2015

images via Fashionising.com

Monday, September 30, 2013

Makeup at Givenchy Spring 2014

Can you even handle this crazy brilliant makeup 
at Givenchy spring 2014 show
yesterday at Paris Fashion week???
Makeup at Givenchy Spring 2014 PFW

Riccardo Tisci's show was set around a circle of
piled up, wrecked cars.

The stage at Givenchy Spring 2014 PFW
Tisci took inspiration from several places.

“I’m obsessed with Madame Grès,” confessed Riccardo Tisci backstage at his show, explaining that he finds the work of that legendary sculptor turned couturier “very romantic and very dark, with this obsession of making everything so precisely—like the pleats—and then those almost-African colorations.”

Starting with the legendary draping of Madame Gres, girls in Japanese kimono inspired draping,
and African inspired prints evoked a new sexuality, not that of high heeled unattainability, but in Japanese flat slides.


Riccardo said, “so it is very risky, but to be sexy you don’t have to be in high heels with a vinyl jacket—you can be in flat shoes and still be a very sexy woman.”
Givenchy Spring 2014
What I found to be overwhelmingly brilliant, was the makeup that Pat McGrath created.
Crystals, rhinestones and glitter, in vibrant hues,
offset by a vibrant mouth, also with crystals,
completed with a black veil.

In the midst of the car-wreck madness
it was a stroke of genius. 
Disturbing, marvelous, superative genius.