Tarun Tahiliani at India Couture Week 2019
Our Blue and Light Pink Embroidered Lehenga includes a net top with santoon inner, net bottom with santoon inner, and a net dupatta. Embroidery is present on this style using zari, stone, thread, and hand work. Like all of our pieces, this piece is made in India and checked by hand to ensure high quality.
Teal Green tulle Lehenga embroidered with custom cut acrylic pieces, gold metal embellishments and appliques of rich fabric. Paired with a teal green embroidered bralette and delicate tulle pre-draped dupatta with tassle gold metal embellishments. No of Pcs - 3 Product Code: PAW22FL05
Editor's Note Abstract Bird & Tile Dual Print Hand Micro Pleated Sari Dress Fabric: Cotton Silk Color: Blue Care: Dry Clean Only About the Designer Saaksha & Kinni is our vision, our expression and our ode to tradition. All the while keeping on mind our tradition and roots in India – Our bold prints, metal, and stone embroidery techniques and our love of Indian fabrics like chanderi. Our aim is to take our luxe-boho garments to the greater audience, all the while representing India and staying true to our heritage yet keeping in mind the needs of the modern global woman.
Editor's Note Featuring a purple lehenga set adorns an embroidered forest setting using glass cut crystals, gold metal embellishments, and appliqués of rich organzas and tissue. This is paired with our rose bralette embroidered in shades of multi-colour glass cut beads, with a shoulder attached delicate tulle dupatta trail embroidered in gold metal embellishments. Color: Purple Fabric: Silk, tissue organza, tulle Sleeve type: Sleeveless Neckline: Plunge Embroidery details: glass cut crystals, gold metal embellishments Component: Lehenga, bralette and dupatta Occasion: Wedding Care: Dry clean only Disclaimer: Color of the actual product may vary from the image About the Designer Papa Don’t Preach By Shubhika For Girls Who Effortlessly Display A Fierce Urban Sense Of Style, And Are Constantly Experimenting And Redefining Their Fashion Boundaries.
@fashiondailymag inspo #brigitteseguracurator
Editor's Note Featuring a purple lehenga set adorns an embroidered forest setting using glass cut crystals, gold metal embellishments, and appliqués of rich organzas and tissue. This is paired with our rose bralette embroidered in shades of multi-colour glass cut beads, with a shoulder attached delicate tulle dupatta trail embroidered in gold metal embellishments. Color: Purple Fabric: Silk, tissue organza, tulle Sleeve type: Sleeveless Neckline: Plunge Embroidery details: glass cut crystals, gold metal embellishments Component: Lehenga, bralette and dupatta Occasion: Wedding Care: Dry clean only Disclaimer: Color of the actual product may vary from the image About the Designer Papa Don’t Preach By Shubhika For Girls Who Effortlessly Display A Fierce Urban Sense Of Style, And Are Constantly Experimenting And Redefining Their Fashion Boundaries.
baapi-makwa: “Ojibwekwe” - 1901
CFAs can be requested for orders of 5m/5 yards or over. No claims for faulty fabrics or wallpapers can be made after the fabrics or wallpapers have been cut or hung. All of our fabrics have passed the Cigarette FR test but will either need to be used in combination with a suitable FR interliner or backcoating to meet the relevant FR standards. Copyright in all designs owned by Soane Limited. All rights reserved no reproduction permitted.
Editor's Note Featuring a teal & pink bridal lehenga set embroidered with royal carriage motifs in precious crystals, gold tassels, glass-cut beads, and 3d floral motifs. a special touch of custom initials is hand-embroidered into the design, surrounded in floral and geometric patterns. It is paired with a baby pink and teal half sleeved embroidered blouse with delicate tassels and a signature papa dont preach bangle back. This look is completed with an embroidered tissue organza side dupatta and a delicate tulle head dupatta, heavy in floral and gold custom-cut embellishments. a special touch of custom initials hand-embroidered into the design, surrounded in floral and geometric patterns. baby pink glass beading takes the form of a flower on the blouse that ends with delicate tassels. The look is complete with two dupattas, heavy in floral and gold custom-cut embellishments Color: Teal, pink Fabric: Tissue organza and tulle Sleeve type: Half Neckline: Sweetheart Embroidery details: Crystals, gold tassels, glass-cut beads, and 3d floral motifs Component: Lehenga, blouse and two dupattas Occasion: Wedding Care: Dry clean only Disclaimer: Color of the actual product may vary from the image About the Designer Papa Don’t Preach By Shubhika For Girls Who Effortlessly Display A Fierce Urban Sense Of Style, And Are Constantly Experimenting And Redefining Their Fashion Boundaries.
Blue pre draped tulle saree embroidered in all gold metal embellishments, precious crystals and reflective sequins.Paired with a half sleeved tulle blouse with embroidered rose patterns in glass cut beads, gold metal tassels and signature Papa Don’t Preach bangle back. No of Pcs - 2 Product Code - PAW22S25
Just you dreaming about your wedding while taking this quiz.
En la actualidad muchos blogs de moda se han especializado en el "Street Style". Consiste en captar en imágenes los "modelitos" de las personas en la
India
You think you see different cultures when you leave your home town and drive 30 minutes to a family road
Renaissance themed clothes for my Whispering Grass Natalie. Antique Indian pure silk sari with a floral print is used as a fabric source and adorned with a golden trim and variety of beads. Thin cotton cambric is used for the chemise.
Well, dear readers I have at long last made the trip to the Metropolitan Museum of Art to view the McQueen retrospective Savage Beauty now up through July 31st. I must say, crowd control aside, it was captivating to say the very least. The rooms were set-up by themes and contrasted starkly with one another between sheer opulence and stark materials. For months we have been bombarded with the show stoppers....the McQueen avant garde creations that really pushed the envelope. I too was guilty of that in my previous posts. But it was in some of the restrained galleries that one could have a quiet moment to take in a work and see the nuanced genius of the man. You could sense that while McQueen had a penchant for fantasy and the macabre he was at the very core a craftsman (trained as a tailor) and was well versed in the history of art. Don't get me wrong, I love his darker moods, flirting with fetish and the Gothic...who doesn't like a good Poe or Fonthill Abbey reference...but I digress. In the first gallery, dedicated to McQueen's tailoring roots entitled The Romantic Mind, you are confronted by these re-invisioned Napoleonic jackets. The text provided made it crystal clear that it was his deep knowledge of construction that allowed him to later deconstruct and reinterpret forms and silhouettes. But it was in the Romantic Nationalism gallery that I was stopped dead in my tracks by this gown... This Empire infused confection was a highlight of the Fall/Winter 2008 collection entitled The Girl Who Lived In The Tree. While McQueen is quoted as saying "I don't really get inspired [by specific women]" but more by "Iconic women" his references from this period in history are evident. Madame Recamier by Francois Pascal Simon Gerard Madame Grassini in the Role of Zaire by Elizabeth Vigee-Lebrun Portrait of Madame de Stael by Anne-Louise Girodet de Roucy-Triosson The Grande Odalisque by Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres Details of the ensemble from the Fall/Winter 2008 collection It was definitely one of those moments where something modern can transport you in a flash to an age of Empires, Orientalism, conquest and romance. I could do fifty related posts on the exhibition as it is a veritable feast. While the exhibition catalogue is good it does not contain all the works in the show and cannot capture the lushness of the installation. We are sad to see McQueen go but he has left his mark with an astonishing fashion legacy.
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Сборник, в который вошли позы для фотосессии в студии и на улице. Более чем 100 примеров как правильно позировать с указанием ошибок.
So I am planning on putting together an Edwardian adventuress ensemble, the sort of outfit a lady might wear while sketching Egyptian ruins while on a Nile cruise in 1907. I already have an Edwardian corset so I am planning on making a white cotton shirtwaist, a kakhi or brown walking length skirt, and a brown belt/sash. I'll also need a new walking length petticoat but that is more boring. I will be drafting the patterns for these items myself, and I can't wait to get started this upcoming weekend! The first piece I want to make is the shirtwaist. I found the illustration below on Pinterest which should help me with drafting the pattern, but they seem pretty straightforward over all. Hopefully they will have a nice lightweight cotton at my usual fabric haunt this weekend. I may end up also needing to make a simple corset cover or camisole to wear underneath too depending on how sheer everything turns out. I really like this example with the lace or net fabric as a yoke and the standing collar. I'm pretty sure I will try and draft my own shirtwaist with a similar style line, hopefully I can find a suitable cotton lace/eyelet fabric or I'll perhaps have to make the yoke fancy with pin-tucks! Have any of you made an Edwardian shirtwaist before? If so, do you have any tips for me before I dive in?
Pow wow regalia.
From the days of petticoats and corsets to Dior's New Look in the 1950s, see how dresses have evolved over time.
This dress has two sources of inspiration: the movie The Buccaneers (set in the 1870s) and a gown painted several times by Tissot in the 1870s. And now here's my humble cotton version complete with hat (hat pattern designed by Lazy K - thank you!) Trained pinned up: Train down:
The Edwardian era was once elegantly described as, a "leisurely time when women wore picture hats and did not vote, when the rich were not ashamed to live