Showing posts with label fashion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fashion. Show all posts

Tuesday, 14 January 2014

Let there be light...


As much as I might try, after spending 6 years in the Northern Hemisphere I still can't shake my South Pacific instincts for light and heat. 

While we're all cosied up in twinkly pubs, sloshing back more than our fair share of mulled wine and roast dinners there is no denying that as it continues to get colder and darker, our dreams for the addictive kiss of vitamin D don't let us rest.

For now, resting ones eyes on hot, colour-drenched photography will have to do. Shot for L’Officiel Singapore, May 2013 by Chuando & Fray, this enhanced dream-scape is exactly the sort of escapist imagery required to let you imagine the suns sizzle. We're transported to a contemporary, trippy-hippie dreamland where the cinematic quality of the imagery enables tales of  peace & love to unfold.









Thursday, 13 June 2013

Dear Diary... Queen of Style


Contemporary gallerist and designer Muriel Grateau's pieces are as effortlessly chic as her personal style. Her minimalist tableware in vibrant colours are designed to complement and not compete with their surroundings - enabling interior decoration to become a simple pleasure. Just as the noir-clad gallerist can be paired with any artwork, these pared-back pieces could work with complex and varied setttings.

Muriel Grateau's style is as chic, smart and intelligent as her gallery and design concepts. The display in her gallery, which was newly refurbished in September last year, is a purist approach to minimalism: Grateau deletes absolutely everything that is not the focal point.

The new space has avant-garde materials to match: white mineral resin, powdered paint, white lacquered steel plate and LED lighting.

The pieces are innovative also. Working with a small French artisanal porcelain producer, the style queen herself has created a new porcelain technique. The plates are tinted with colour while they're being made, rather than being painted on after, which is entirely different to traditional porcelain decoration.

She also designs sculptural Art Deco jewellery, that when worn articulates the body like little pieces of living architecture. Very CC we thought!
















Muriel Grateau gold enamelled brooch in glittered black & white stripes and set with diamonds.



Muriel Grateau rock crystal bangle with black sapphires and matching  rock crystal ring encircled with black diamonds.

Friday, 5 April 2013

Dear Diary... Weird & Wonderful


Click here to see The Curiosity Cabinet's selection of London's weird & wonderful shops for Art Wednesday... 


Pelicans & Parrots: 40 Stoke Newington Road, Dalston, London N16 7XJ

Wednesday, 13 February 2013

Dear Diary... Welcome to my WORLD

The Curiosity Cabinet's daily dose of inspiration for the aesthetically inclined...  


The Curiosity Cabinet is currently researching its favourite weird and wonderful shops in London. One of our all-time  favourite curiosity shops is actually worlds away in the South Pacific – New Zealand’s WORLD concept store.

Chock full of designer candles, boutique fragrances and antiques, this store provides a delicious buying experience. Accosted by fragrance as you walk in, you are compelled to breath deep and live their philosophy. WORLD is a New Zealand fashion label so cool they call themselves a ‘factory of ideas and experiments’. With such punchy, tongue-in-cheek collection titles as: ‘I need someone really bad. Are you really bad?’; ‘Wasted days. Wasted nights’ and ‘Housework makes you ugly', you can imagine how super-cool the stores are. Each store is designed and styled individually to fit the space from their small central Wellington boutique to the newly built Britomart store in Auckland.

Welcome to a WORLD I would like to live in.



 


 


 


 

The WORLD beauty boutique sells a range of seductive scents including Fracas by Robert Piguet, Tokyo Milk Dark - Arsenic No.17 by Margot Elena and a luxurious collection of candles from Masion Cire Trudon, the French candlemakers for Versailles Royal Court since 1643.

The antiques are all supplied by Auckland based European Antiques & Furnishings Ltd who sell through WORLD and their showroom in a beautifully restored villa in Grey Lynn, Auckland, New Zealand.



Thursday, 10 January 2013

Curiosity Shop #12

The Magpie Boutique *pop-up shop*

Last month, The Curiosity Cabinet collaborated with Helen Elizabeth Accessories to create the very first Magpie Boutique pop-up shop. An East London flat was transformed into a 1920s inspired boudoir boutique, showcasing the Rope-Collier collection of jewellery by fashion designer Helen Elizabeth Spencer. The lucky punters who attended also had first dibs at her limited-edition pieces which were strands of raspberry rope and shiny gold chain. The cosy, domestic setting was transformed into an exotic treasure chest for one night only - think feathers, lace, dimmed lights and chaise longues with a contemporary twist in keeping with Helen’s modern collection.

Helen’s jewellery has a strong architectural, edge featuring chains and metal components which are softened by the textural, natural rope that holds the pieces together. They are very tactile by nature, in rich colours of black, raspberry, sea-green and blue. They are striking, modern pieces from chunky necklaces and bracelets to slinky belts which update any outfit from day to night. Both classic and contemporary, they have a certain je ne sais quoi which alludes to bondage. It must be that striking contrast of black and gold with their detachable chains and clasps…The Magpie Boutique certainly is a collaboration to keep you on your toes!




















Look out for the next Magpie Boutique coming this year!

Thursday, 13 December 2012

Dear Diary... The Eccentrics


The Curiosity Cabinet's daily dose of inspiration for the aesthetically inclined...  

By following their own aesthetic instincts, the women below have chartered the most individual, creative and inspiring course for fashion from the 1970s until today. Eccentric, theatrical, unique and a law unto themselves, they have inspired and directed style by not following the crowd. They are artists of fashion. 

"Exaggeration is my only reality.
Diana Vreeland



Diana Vreeland: the infamous and eccentric fashion editor in her New York all-red apartment which she wanted "to look like a garden, but a garden in hell."



The legendary and often feared Harpers Bazaar and Vogue editor and later Curator of Fashion at the Metropolitan Museum of Art helped change the domain of fashion from that belonging to 'society ladies' to that which existed within the sphere of culture, art and creativity.


Iris Apfel for MAC

For Iris Apfel the worlds of art and fashion have always collided. From an Art History student who won the Vogue writing prize to a textile designer and business woman that reproduced antique fabrics for interiors, Iris Apfel became recognised as a New York style icon much later in life. 



Impossibly hip: At 90 Iris Apfel graces the cover of Dazed & Confused for November 2012


Challenging Italy's classic, chic style Anna Piaggi's column for Italian Vogue was a precursor to the blog - conversational, personal and witty.



Karl Lagerfeld's muse and Vogue Italia's creative consultant, Piaggi was a style icon who championed the theatrical in her dressing. 


Isabella Blow: the ultimate of the British eccentrics, Isabella Blow will forever be remembered for discovering Alexander McQueen and always bedecked in a Philip Treacy hat.


Isabella Blow in her signature style, a Philip Treacy hat



Peggy Guggenheim: the New York art collector and gallerist accessorised with lap dogs and exaggerated, winged glasses. She even incorporated art in her dress by wearing Alexander Calder earrings to the opening of her first gallery Art of This Century.



Peggy Guggenheim in her Venice Palazzo which later became an art gallery.


"Style is everything. It helps you get up in the morning. It helps you get down the stairs. It's a way of life. Without it, you're nobody."

Diana Vreeland





Saturday, 1 December 2012

Curiosity Shop #11

 Moths to a Flame

In his blue gardens men and girls came and went like moths among the whisperings and the champagne and the stars.”  
  
F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby




Evoking old world glamour, decadent garden parties and beautiful creatures shimmering like moths at dusk, F. Scott Fitzgerald really knew how to pen the style of an era the whose popularity has never waned. Through the swish of their damask, the softness of their velvet and the sparkle of their beaded gowns, the style of the Jazz Age is deliciously imagined in the description of his characters in The Great Gatsby. His novels call to mind the fashions of the Art Deco era - motor cars, the Charleston, the Manhattan, flappers and the geometric precision of Art Deco design - capturing the very spirit of the era. In this hedonistic post-war period it felt, especially in America, as if anything were possible.
 
If Gatsby’s words were to be illustrated, the Art Deco fashion illustrations of this epoch would be fitting.  More than just a sketch for clothing, they transport you to the dazzling Jazz Age where fashionable women take centre stage. These detailed drawings of the latest fashions are contextualized in gardens and interiors where the likes of Jay Gatsby himself might be found. The decadent and flamboyant atmosphere of this time is magically construed by the use of symbolic elements in the picture landscape. By including interior objects, tassled lamps, statues, splendid gardens, intricate bird cages, exotic birds, handsome men to dance with and women lounging nonchalantly on chaise longues, to name a few, they become portraits of an age as well as illustrations for the famous fashion designers such as Poiret.
 
The colours and composition draw your attention to the central focus – women’s dress. Turbans, long strings of sparkling beads, fabulous patterns, and backless couture are intricately drawn within a flat, two dimensional space. Outlined in black and peppered with Eastern images, the taste for Asia is present in the imagery as well implied by the outlines and the two dimensional style reminiscent of 19th century Japanese woodblock prints.
 
 Two of the most skilled illustrators of the era, Georges Lepape and George Barbier, produced the beautiful creations below. 

Let these Parisian artists seduce you into the 1920s and decade preceding with champagne, garden parties and twinkling stars...

So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.





















Illustration by Georges Lepape, circa 1910, of a Paul Poiret design











Illustration for Nijinsky’s Scheherazade, by Georges Lepape, 1910



Fashion plate from Journal des Dames et des Modes (1912-1914). No. 46