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Showing posts with label the Royals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the Royals. Show all posts

McQueen's moves at the Met

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 McQueen at the board


"It's Only A Game"
Spring Summer Collection from 2005




the Queen's Panniers in Motion


Featured at the Exhibit, a McQueen dress and obi-style sash of lilac and silver brocade; jacket of lilac silk faille embroidered with silk thread; top of nude synthetic net embroidered with silk thread.(Met description)




McQueen's QUEEN on the board






 

 Photography by Sølve Sundsbø, the Met here





Panniers ca 1750
made of British tan linen and baleen
from the Met's Costume Institute





The  Pannier (French~wicker basket) supported the fashionable voluminous skirts of the early 18th century.  Originally launched in Spain & then on  to England & France , the undergarment was quickly embraced by all of fashionable Europe. The Pannier extended the width of the gown leaving the front and back flat. This arrangement allowed for a perfect canvas, showing off intricate brocades & embroidered silks. The original structure of the pannier was formed of stiffened petticoats &  rows of whalebone running around the skirting. The style escalated to its breadth by 1728 and sailed through most of the 18th century.





 the Met's robe a la francaise

In its most formal configuration, the robe à la française presented a particularly wide and flattened profile accomplished by enlarged panniers. Constructed of supple bent wands of willow or whalebone and covered in linen, panniers took on broader or narrower silhouettes. The most remarkable held out the skirts like sandwich boards, barely wider than the body in side view, but as expansive as possible in front or rear view.








the Met's Queen Diana Vreeland
As special consultant to the Costume Institute, from 1976 to 1989, Mrs. Vreeland  prepares a silk and silver wedding dress worn by Catherine the Great. The 1976 Exhibition -"The Glory of Russian Costume"-was one of  the shows Vreeland mounted  while  working with the Met. Her curatorial skills set the bar high for her successors. Curator Andrew Bolton and Curator in Charge continue the tradition of show stopping exhibits for the Institute- with the "Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty" being its latest.



photo from LIFE,  December 2, 1976.






the other McQueen from  It's Only A Game
Spring Summer 2005







the Pieces at Play
past & present









Vreeland's Empress Catherine II, at  left, panniers below
Empress Catherine II before the mirror
 by Vigilius Erichsen, 1779

Queen Marie Antoinette, at right, panniers below
by Mme. Vigee  Lebrun






The King at play- Louis xvi,  
(paniers playing at far right)






& the Grandmaster





Alexander McQueen saw things no one else saw-or could make out.
Of this Collection he said: " the idea of the chess game meant that we looked at six different types of women, women on opposing sides. We had the Americans facing the Japanese and the redheads facing the tanned Latinos.” Another Magazine, Spring/Summer 2005


&  the result?
 a master's Gambit.






all McQueen images from the Met Costume Institute, style.com


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one last look


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the bride got it right- tradition along with a sleeve.
reminiscent of the gowns of the 1950's- the dress maketh not  the bride.
a traditional dress does not make for a traditional wife.








simplicity can be stunning.
less than  - makes it more than.


& a beautiful woman never wants less for a beloved sister-





 Pippa Middleton









as much can be said of a bouquet- the yard by yard sort should be an anathema.
size is not everything-in everything.









Tradition-
& a sleeve.











  details count.













guests-though never meant to out shine the bride-must do their part to make things beautiful.






at l. Cecil Beaton & Francis Doble (Lady Lindsey Hogg)  at the wedding of Lord Herbert Equerry & Lady Mary Hope Circa 1936
at r. Norman Parkinson Wedding outfits b Victor Stiebel from the top of a taxi in Eaton Terrace, Belgravia, London, 1938.





at l. Princess Michael of Kent ,at r. Sophie Winkelman, Lady Frederick Windsor,





  Lady Helen Taylor & Timothy Taylor






at l. Charlene Whitstock, at r. Princess Marie-Chantal of Greece





the flowers-inspired by nature,
trees do nicely.
scale is everything.





Constance Spry & Cecil Beaton






Westminster Abbey held twenty foot trees reaching toward the vault of the Abbey




one can only Hope a return to elegance & tradition-
at least during the wedding is trending.





TRH Prince William, Duke of Cambridge & Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge, leave The Abbey as husband and wife.


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23


royal
born 5 May 1988, Tottenham
Adele Laurie Blue Adkins

























the guardian here

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it's not always about the dress



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Mabel van Oranje on her wedding day, April 24, 2004, in a Viktor and Rolf   
duchessse satin gown created for her by the Dutch the designers-with a 3 metre train and 248 bows.




with all the speculation about wedding dresses of late, Kate-Catherine- soon to be, wife of William, what is the title to be- anyway?  " Her actual title upon marriage is as yet unconfirmed as it depends on whether or not Prince William is offered, and accepts, a royal dukedom. The duchies of Sussex and Cambridge are available but the whisper is that William does not wish for either. Technically this would make Kate the rather ungainly 'Princess William of Wales’, which also sounds hopelessly old-fashioned. "(from the telegraph online)

so- at this point-it's-
no word on the title,
no word on the dress.

what's all this about  a dress- the dress?
Well you may ask, 
Unfortunately, this can make or break a girl. especially if the girl is  Catherine- and Queen in waiting.
I wish her well on the dress.

what about life AFTER the Dress? here I wish her more so.
After style comes the substance. This Catherine would be Queen will be just shy of 30 years old and should be very able to make something of substance. Her age will help tremendously. No better example- than the charitable Diana when she was not vacillating between her love hate relationship with the press or her Prince.  Looking to Mabel might be a very good idea. Mabel though less in line for the Dutch throne-actually not in line since her marriage (here), is a longtime advocate of human rights. She married her Prince when she was in her 30's-already known for her advocacy and charity work.




Mabel's avant garde wedding gown was created by the Dutch designers Viktor and Rolf -appropriately so -as Mabel is actually a Princess and married to Prince Friso of Oranje-Nassau and daughter in law to Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands. She is fairly beautiful but with quirky Meg Ryan features and along with all that, she has heavy credentials as an international human rights activist.

A first draft of her gown created by Viktor and Rolf was nixed by Mabel and the pair of designers were easily persuaded to rethink the design-something less conservative. According to the gentlewoman story about HRH, Mabel says "she was not the sort of little girl to dream about her future wedding dress, neither was she going to miss the opportunity to create a wow." (that's style and substance) I think she hit the mark.




Never one to shy away from making an entrance or setting her own style as an Original, Mabel van Oranje always shows up to official family photographs, royal appearances with a gorgeous smile &  almost always wearing Viktor and Rolf.

her most controversial Viktor and Rolf to date-







was worn to last spring's wedding of Swedish Crown Princess  Victoria. Said to be the design duo's
21st century take on the traditional evening dress, it definitely expressed the idea of Mabel's dual role as CEO and Royal. Described as Glamorous, Daring, , Shameless and Inappropriate, the design was  much discussed-with one Dutch commentator saying- 'Not a dress is always wrong' but  'How dare she upstage the bride.' Of her critics- as you might guess, Princess Mabel paid little heed, acknowledging there are many more important things to worry about. It's obvious- her work and the world.






Perfectly timed for the British Royal wedding, Princess Mabel is featured in issue no. 3 of the gentlewoman. the story is written by Paul Flynn and the photographs of Mabel are by Inez va Lamsweerde & Vinoodh Matadin.













Now Mabel serves as CEO of the ELDERS, working alongside Desmond Tutu, Nelson Mandela, Kofi Annan & Aung San Suu Kyi to collectively lend their influence to support peace and address the human suffering.












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