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Evolution of the Royal Wedding Dress
These Historic Gowns Weren't Just Fashion Statements
Royal Wedding Dress as Symbol
Until Friday morning, probably the biggest mystery surrounding the latest British royal wedding was who designed Kate Middleton's wedding dress.

But when the future Queen Elizabeth II (pictured) walked down the aisle in London's Westminster Abbey in 1947, her wedding dress was more than a fashion statement: It represented the hopes of a nation, according to royal wedding gown curator Joanna Marschner.

With food and clothing still being rationed in postwar Britain, royal dressmaker Norman Hartnell sought to convey a message of national renewal, instead of focusing on opulent materials. He did this in part by embroidering the gown with garlands of spring flowers.

"It is a dress with a message for that particular moment in time," said Marschner, of Historic Royal Palaces, an independent charity that acts as caretaker for five British royal buildings.

"I think you can say that about all the royal wedding dresses—they have become amazing documents that can say a lot about the year when they were worn."
Thoroughly Modern Middleton?
Only time will tell what Kate Middleton's wedding dress—pictured during her Friday wedding to Prince William—really says about its time and place. But, despite its modern design, the dress clearly sounds themes of some historic British royal wedding gowns.

Like her new mother-in-law's 1947 wedding dress, Middleton's blooms with flora, including embroidered roses, thistles, daffodils, and shamrocks—which might be seen as signs of spring for Britain's stagnant economy. Some U.K. leaders, including Prime Minister David Cameron, who's called the wedding "unadulterated good news," have voiced hopes that the nuptials will provide an extended influx of tourist dollars, according to the Reuters news service.

And like Queen Victoria's 1840 gown, Middleton's does its bit to boost British industry. The handmade lace hails from the Royal School of Needlework at Hampton Court Palace, for example. And the new Duchess of Cambridge chose a British fashion house, Alexander McQueen, to design the dress—in part because of the brand's "craftsmanship and its respect for traditional workmanship and the technical construction of clothing," according to a statement on the official wedding website.
Springtime for Britain and Royalty?
The royal wedding dress of the future Queen Elizabeth II, worn during her marriage to Philip Mountbatten in 1947, is an important document of postwar Britain, according to royal wedding dress curator Marschner.

With the country still suffering from the human and economic costs of World War II, "the idea behind the dress is all important, because it's a dress for promise for the future, for better times to come," she said.

With that in mind, royal wedding dress designer Hartnell took as his inspiration the Botticelli painting "Allegory of Spring"—despite the wedding's November date.
Once More Into the Bleach
Worn for her wedding to the future King George V in 1893, Princess Mary of Teck's royal wedding dress belongs to a collection of royal wedding gowns kept at Kensington Palace in London.

During the 19th century British royal brides switched from opulent wedding dresses made with gold and silver textiles—almost advertisements of Britain's wealth and power—to simpler, more common white bridal outfits.

Pale or white wedding dresses had long been worn by wealthier commoners, royal wedding dress curator Marschner explained.

"The lower down the social system you were, the darker color you would wear, because it was harder to keep—or employ someone else to keep—your dress clean," she said.

The white-wedding trend among royals was started by King George's grandmother, Queen Victoria, whose decision to adopt the example of her subjects "marked a watershed in royal bridal fashion," Marschner said.
Royal Wedding as Public Pageant
Queen Victoria's newlywed daughter, Princess Beatrice, poses for a wedding snapshot with Prince Henry of Battenberg in 1885.

In earlier centuries royal weddings were largely private, governmental matters arranged among the Europe's royal families. But in the 19th century, the growth of print media and photography helped fuel public interest in the royal wedding dresses.

Reports of Queen Victoria's wedding in 1840 "went to all the colonial regions of the British Empire. Within … a month it was in the all the U.S. newspapers," commented Paula Richter, a curator at the Peabody Essex Museum in Massachusetts.

"She married as the age of photography was beginning—there are quite a number of royal portraits done of the ceremony or of her wearing her garments … many people had a visual sense of that wedding," Richter said.
Nice Century for a White Wedding
When Queen Victoria tied the knot with Prince Albert in 1840, as shown in a period illustration, her choice of dress showed she approached her wedding day very differently to previous royal brides.

"All her advisers were suggesting red velvet robes and ermine and all the grand things of that earlier tradition," royal wedding dress curator Marschner said.

But Victoria, who wanted her marriage to be a personal event, not a political one, rejected royal protocol and opted instead for a simple—by royal standards of the era—ivory satin dress.

"It was the kind of dress well-brought-up girls up and down the country would wear," Marschner said.

"It may not be the first white wedding dress, but it is the first royal example," she added. "It made royal wedding fashions achievable for the general public."

Richter, of the Peabody Essex Museum, added the Queen Victoria's wedding "was as influential as Princess Diana's wedding in the early 1980s," in part due to Victoria's more accessible take on the royal wedding.
Made in Britain
Queen Victoria "saw it as her business to promote things British," and her wedding dress (sleeve pictured) was a perfect opportunity, royal wedding dress curator Marschner said.

Exploiting the worldwide media attention her wedding received, Victoria had the dress made from silk woven in East London and decorated with lace produced in southwestern England.

"Victoria on her wedding day was shouting loud about things that Britain was really good at," Marschner said.

Currently undergoing conservation work, Queen Victoria's wedding dress will go on display in 2012 in London's Kensington Palace—the potential future home of Prince William and Kate Middleton after their Friday wedding.
Last in a Royal Line
Shot through with silver thread, the wedding dress worn in 1816 by Princess Charlotte—only child of the future King George IV—is the last in a centuries-old line of royal wedding gowns made of precious materials.

"It's the last of the great big, expensive, showy dresses that survived in its entirety," said Marschner, the royal wedding dress curator.

Sadly, Princess Charlotte died in childbirth the year following her marriage to Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg.
Power Couple
While Prince William and Kate Middleton—who met about ten years ago in college—have had plenty of time to get to know each other before their wedding, Queen Mary I of England and Prince Philip of Spain (pictured) married two days after they'd met in 1554.

From medieval times to the 19th century, royal marriages were political unions, not fairy tale romances, and royal brides dressed accordingly, said royal wedding dress curator Marschner.

"They wore dresses made of precious gold and silver textiles to represent the status and the dignity of their nation," she said.

"Wearing something that was really precious, really striking, was important," Marschner added. "They were playing their part in the great game of international politics."

Infamous Oscar Fashions
Infamous Oscar Fashions
The Academy Awards' red carpet is all about style and sophistication, but in addition to delivering its fair share of glamorous gowns and daring new trends, the arrivals line is notorious for its fashion faux pas. Take a look back at the big-screen stars whose Oscar looks turned into big-time bombs.
 1988: Nearly 20 years before Cher took Sin City by storm, the diva donned this showgirl-inspired Bob Mackie mess of a dress at the 60th Academy Awards.
 2001: Many style mavens consider Bjork’s swan-adorned disaster -- courtesy of Macedonian designer Marjan Pejoski -- to be the biggest fashion faux pas in Oscars history. Do you agree?
 1993: Surprisingly, Whoopi Goldberg was asked to host the 1994 Academy Awards after petrifying everyone the previous year in a purple and neon-green silk jacket and embroidered jumpsuit.
 1999: Canadian chanteuse Celine Dion made a titanic mistake by sporting an ill-fitting backwards John Galliano for Christian Dior suit and matching fedora to the 71st annual fete.
 2001: While the color of the dress Kate Hudson wore to the 73rd Academy Awards was lovely, the overall design was downright dowdy. And don't get us started on that catastrophic coif of hers!
 1989: Demi Moore topped the worst-dressed list at the 61st Academy Awards when she dared to wear a self-designed gaudy gold skirt, bustier, and biker shorts to the all-star soiree.
 2002: Gwyneth Paltrow's alarming look -- which she debuted at the 74th Academy Awards -- featured a childish coif, a shabby skirt, and an unsightly, unsupportive, sheer Alexander McQueen top.
 1992: Not only did Best Actress nominee Geena Davis ("Thelma & Louise") lose to Jodie Foster at the 64th Academy Awards, she also easily lost the red carpet rumble thanks to her mullet-like monstrosity.
 2004: Diane Keaton took her love of menswear a tad too far in ’04 in this Ralph Lauren Collection suit, which she paired with a pinstripe vest, polka dot tie, bowler, and boutonniere.
 2002: Country cutie Faith Hill looked far from tasty in the tacky, snow cone-colored creation she unveiled in 2002 at the 74th Academy Awards.
 2000: She may have taken home an Oscar on March 26, 2000, for her powerful role in "Girl, Interrupted," but that night Angelina Jolie didn't take home any awards for her gothic, Elvira-esque Versace ensemble.
2004: Uma Thurman looked more prepared to serve up some smoked turkey legs at a Renaissance faire than to walk the red carpet at the 76th Academy Awards in her frumpy, lace-and-satin Christian LaCroix frock.
 1991: Before Nicole Kidman became a fashionable red carpet favorite, the Aussie actress -- who attended the 63rd Academy Awards with her then-husband Tom Cruise -- was known to overindulge in atrocious trends such as velvet mini dresses and gigantic sequined belts.
 2002: Eight years ago, "A Beautiful Mind" star and Best Supporting Actress winner Jennifer Connelly looked anything but beautiful in a beige Balenciaga bomb and ragged peach scarf.
 1990: Kim Basinger has never been a style standout, but she certainly stood out (in a bad way!) at the 62nd annual ceremony in a self-designed, Disney-like debacle and layers of troubled tresses.
 2000: "Top Model" hostess with the mostest Tyra Banks wasn't runway or red carpet-ready at the 72nd spectacle in a chintzy-looking Vera Wang prom bomb.
 1995: Sharon Stone resembled an unfortunate Hershey's Kiss at the 67th Oscars in an unfashionable, foil-like Valentino frock.
 1999: A few years before she asked Carolina Herrera to become her go-to dress designer, Renee Zellweger donned this doily-enhanced eyesore to the 71st Academy Awards.
 2007: The color of the custom-made Oscar de la Renta dress Jennifer Hudson wore to the '07 soiree was spot on, but the metallic bolero Vogue Contributing Editor Andre Leon Talley demanded she don was disastrous.
2005: Cane? Check. Cast? Check. A desperate-for-attention Melanie Griffith embarrassing herself at the 77th Academy Awards in a shoulder-baring Versace dress? Check!
Read More: Yahoo

Dress Code for the Royal Wedding

 A morning ceremony

Invitations for the royal wedding were mailed out last week, and loads more details about the impending nuptials are coming in, such as who will be attending the big event and what guests will be wearing! While rumors are swirling that wedding outfitter Bruce Oldfield will be designing Kate Middleton's gown, we now know for sure what attendees must wear to the Westminster Abbey wedding, as the dress code was printed on the invitations: "uniform, morning coat or lounge suit." Sounds stuffy and conventional, but this formal attire can actually be quite fun and even colorful. Check out some examples of each, plus info on the spectacular hats Middleton has requested!

 Queen Elizabeth II in "morning dress"
Typical "morning dress" is clothing that fits somewhere between ultra-formal and business wear. It is traditionally worn until 6 p.m., and for women, it usually includes a hat and, often, gloves. Mini-dresses are forbidden in this dress code and if pants are worn they must be accompanied by a coat. The Queen is well-known for this look—especially her bright coats and matching hats—as exhibited here. Her hands are covered and her blouse matches the flower atop her head. Nice attention to detail!
Middleton's take on morning dress
Kate Middleton wore this a blue printed coat and hat to a wedding in 2009.
Colorful morning dress
Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall (previously Parker Bowles) wears a traditional dress and coat with matching hat and gloves
Michelle Obama's morning dress
The first lady wore a lemongrass Isabel Toledo coat over a matching shift dress with green gloves to the inaugural events in 2009.
Morning coats
These are, by definition, single-breasted coats where the front is cut away, leaving “tails” in the back. They were originally designed to make it easier for the wearer to ride a horse.
Prince William wearing his morning coat to a wedding
What a handsome dude. We love Kate Middleton's outfit here as well, but it may be too casual for the occasion.

Morning coat and hat

Prince Charles has upped the ante on his formal attire with the addition of a top hat.


 Lounge suit
These suits typically consist of striped or checked pants, a waistcoat, and a formal shirt and tie. Oh, why hello, good sir!
The princes in lounge suits
Here Prince Harry (second from right) and his friends wear their lounge suits at a London wedding.
Uniforms
Prince Andrew is Commander in the Royal Navy and wore a naval uniform at his wedding to Sarah Ferguson. He will be attending Kate and Wills' wedding—and most likely wearing a uniform—but his ex-wife Fergie did not receive an invitation.

Hats!

Awesome milliner Philip Treacy has been enlisted by Middleton to make custom hats for some of the guests, and possibly her veil. This is one of his creations on the bride-to-be.
Read More: Yahoo

Rihanna looked great at the Grammys (in a Jean Paul Gaultier gown), but she looked even better at Tuesday night's Brit Awards in a Christian Dior Haute Couture creation, which featured a floral bodice and voluminous skirt. A fab head of red and Louboutin "Pigalle" heels completed her extraordinary ensemble.

Later that evening, RiRi rocked the crowd at London's O2 arena with a medley of her hits, including "S&M," "What's My Name?," and "Only Girl (In the World)", while wearing a scarlet micro-mini and matching cape. Read More: Yahoo

The 24-year-old actress Lindsay Lohan arrived at the court on February, 9 wearing a tight white mini-dress with oversized sunglasses and black patent leather pumps to her arraignment for a felony account of big theft. Though she was pleaded not guilty, the troubled actress might be guilty of yet more trendy crime i.e. her outfit. It seems that she wore all white for her court appearance in Los Angeles to indicate her innocence for jewelry theft charges. What do you think was it really hot or completely improper?

All eyes were stuck on the outfit she preferred to wear just after Lohan came out of her black SUV. Now the Lindsay Lohan’s infamous white dress designed by Kimberly Ovitz is selling out like a hot cake at every online store that carry Ovitz's designs with the price tag of $575 so people might surprise if Lohan was paid to wear and advertise the dress.
Just for 15 minutes Judge Keith Schwartz was in the courtroom before he revoked Lindsay’s probation for a grand theft charges that she stole a $2500 diamond necklace from a Venice Beach, California jewelry store on January 22. The bail of Lindsay was set at $40,000 and her next hearing is set for February 23.

Judge Schwartz strictly warned Lindsay saying, “You’re no different than anyone else, so please don’t push your luck, because I’m telling you, things will be different,” further added, “Do you understand what I’m telling you? Lindsay replied, “Yes, your Honor”.



Eatable Cloths

by Shazy | 7:33 AM in , , , |

Artist Sang Yonzhu (Sung Yeonju) developed a series of edible clothing appropriately named Wearable Foods. As a material for the extravagant costumes used in unprocessed foods, except for fried eggs. Art-merge fashion and food Sung wants to attract the viewer's attention to the issue of product quality. In the dynamic rhythm of life all too often do not pay attention to the fact that they are buying artificially created products and wear clothes made of non-natural materials.







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