“Workin’ It! RuPaul’s Guide to Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Style” — What A Drag!
If this is how RuPaul works it, then it’s time for her to hang up her sequined dresses and her voluminous blond wigs.
If this is how RuPaul works it, then it’s time for her to hang up her sequined dresses and her voluminous blond wigs.
Many have tried to capture the intrinsic olfactory beauty of the rose blossom, but few have been as successful as Stella McCartney, who struck gold with her STELLA Eau de Parfum.
In a sea of conformity and bottom line-driven designs, you can always count on Alexandre Herchcovitch to restore a sense of adventurousness and unbridled creativity to the runway.
Going into the backstage area for the Tracy Reese Fall 2010 show, which was held on Monday, February 15th at New York City’s Bryant Park, I knew to expect ultra feminine makeup and hair looks — but, since that’s quite a broad spectrum, I was curious to see exactly how that girlish charm would be manifested.
When I left the Carlos Miele Fall 2010 show at Bryant Park, I felt so grateful to be a woman, to have those soft curves and that innate feminine grace and sensuality, all of Miele manages to celebrate in his garments.
Dark eyes and nude lips have been ruling the runway for Fall 2010, though there have been various iterations of this combination.
For Fall 2010, it seems like many designers are toying with traditional gender definitions via their apparel, with feminine garments styled in a more masculine, tougher, stronger manner.
It’s the theatricality of fashion shows, the performance art element woven into each presentation, that always lures me in, enticing me to look closer — it’s what makes my eyes twinkle with excitement, and what stamps a show into my memory bank (or, in the case, of those more lackluster shows, allows them to ebb away into oblivion hours after the finale walk).
My absolute favorite makeup and hair look thus far were conceived for the Vena Cava Fall/Winter 2010 show held yesterday afternoon at Milk Studios in New York City.
In the aftermath of the catastrophic earthquake in Haiti, many fashion and jewelry designers have offered to donate a portion of the proceeds from the sale of their creations to relief efforts in Haiti.