Red Carpet Rockstars — Check Out Our Picks For Best-Dressed At The 2015 Oscars!
Last night’s Academy Awards were a mixed bag.
Last night’s Academy Awards were a mixed bag.
When designing the Rodarte Fall 2015 collection, Kate and Laura Mulleavy kept referencing migrating birds, winged creatures leaving cold Northern cities in favor of warmer more pastoral surroundings.
On Monday, I stopped by Telemundo’s “Acceso Total” show to chat about one of the most playful fashion trends for Spring 2015: fringe!
Think of Gossip Girl’s Jenny Humphrey in Season 3, when she rose to Queen Bee status at Constance, then began attempting to erase all traces of her “humble” Brooklyn past and reinvent herself as a snooty Upper East Sider (note: that loft was about 18 times the size of a “humble” apartment in any outer New York City borough!), leading to a seemingly endless stint of brat-like behavior: dating drug dealer Damian and actually helping him sell product, attempting to sabotage Nate and Serena’s relationship by weaving tales of infidelity, and basically plunging down a path to self-destruction.
Monday may have been the coldest day of the year, but I tried my hardest to bring some heat to Telemundo 47’s “Acceso Total,” where I discussed one of the prevalent fashion trends for the upcoming Spring 2015 season: fringe!
Gothic looks have been dominating the runways for Fall 2015, with Thomas Browne staging a faux funeral in lieu of a traditional catwalk show, Alexander Wang sending out a veritable Army of Darkness donned in pieces influences by heavy metal icons, and Nicholas K showcasing an eerie but fascinating collection inspired by 1920s horror films.
Muted makeup looks have dominated the Fall 2015 runway shows during New York Fashion Week, with models strutting down catwalks with nude or completely bare lips, color-free lids adorned by only a touch of graphic eyeliner, and sheer nude or baby pink nails.
Add Patti Smith’s 1976 hit “Gloria” to your IHeartRadio playlist and try to imagine the punk rock and graffiti art scenes in 1970s New York City or, for that matter, the Andy Warhol-led Pop Art explosion in the lat ’60s.
Both the Maybelline makeup and Kenra Professional hairstyling teams described the beauty look for the SUNO Fall 2015 show as having tribal overtones, but there was a subtlety in their execution that emphasized a mood, a state of mind, rather than underlining a sociocultural group or overtly referencing a specific population or geographic locale.
Since gray and violet hues abounded in the Wes Gordon Fall 2015 collection, nail artist Rita Remark, working on behalf of essie, created a nail look for the designer’s show that incorporated these tones (yes, matchy-matchy is still in for Fall 2015).