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Showing posts with label Carolina Herrera. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carolina Herrera. Show all posts

checking it out- once & again

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not to flog the dead horse-which is an absolutely horrible expression & what exactly does it mean, anyway?

Perhaps its first usage is found in 17th century slang- "His land 'twas sold to pay his debts; All went that way, for a dead horse, as one would say "- meaning something is owed before it is earned. From the halls of Parliament in 1867 British politician and orator, John Bright- in referring to the Reform Bill of 1867, said trying to persuade them would be like trying to 'flog a dead horse to make it pull a load.' And finally from The Globe in 1872-quoted someone  saying -to have "rehearsed that [...] lively operation known as flogging a dead horse." (The Oxford English Dictionary)


 Carolina Herrera 1970


but-
I would be remiss if I didn't catch up my checks and share this recent photograph from the social columns in New York of the beautiful Carolina Herrera at a charity event in the city.  Wearing one of her own designs- of course- and it's made from the check I was so carried away with at the Met Gala a few weeks ago. Not to mention the absolute confident chic of not shying away from repeating that oh so memorable check! Of course this is the Lady that manages to pull off  the elegant sweep of a ball gown & fitted shirt-impeccably tailored, both.






images above from Vogue.com



the designer at home 




Checks can do wonders for a room- take a look at this Lars Bolanger room. The check draws  you right in, along with some equally bold accenting elements: the swirling Renaissance columns, the hide rug -all anchor an airy French sofa & chairs.





One of my great and gracious readers sent  this Michael Smith  House Beautiful image to me after I had waxed so about checks. What a gorgeous room and again, we find many strong elements of note.  A seemingly formal room, perhaps brought down to earth a bit by the check curtains- but certainly their presences pleases and wakes up what might otherwise be a too formal room. Noted pieces in the room are the striking Chinese ancestral portraits and an exuberant French gilt settee. Another special touch -the meandering Indiennes print used on a number of pieces throughout the room.


Michael Smith (from House Beautiful)


This room-profuse with the scent of summer-it has to be the pale lovingly washed check slipcovers cooling off a sofa and a pair of wing chairs. This picture has been in my design files so long it doesn't carry room credits-sorry. I especially, need I mention, love the checks, but also that the designer or design savvy owner has selected the check to make up the slipcovers &then simply- let It be. No fussing or too much pressing on slipcovers, the cords and checks waver a bit off course-the skirts sag and rise a little, but  what's the point of slipcovers without the actual ease and devil my care attitude they bring to mind. Slipcovers are not for the You-of the rigid mind.
Stay away from slipcovers if you have any idea of imposing perfection on your rooms.
You will be sadly disappointed in this casual & easy elegance.





The John Stefanidis room with formally designed window dressing - a swag & jabot over full flowing curtains- helps create a less serious air to an otherwise formal interior. Imagine-if you will- the same design in a red silk damask, maybe edged in pretty passementerie- Pretty yes, but not as inviting.  A check manages to maintain its dignity in any setting-think of Jane Austen when you think checks- always trust it and it will never disappoint you. You know it will always lighten up the atmosphere & no matter how many times you see it or employ it- 
it will always come up to the mark.




A parting shot-
Suzanne Rheinstein seems to have captured the check to its imperfect perfection. Placed pleasantly on a pretty settee- curving gently around the sides-bending ever so slightly off course-in all its charm. Fiddle on those who disavow a check -for its never quite lining up on curves- or for that matter, the naysayers who remind you -
Oh No- Never a check on a tufted chair!
It works-
It always works & still manages to inspire.

 

I can't promise that check won't make an encore. I'd be very surprised if they didn't inspire us both again & again.


 CAROLINA HERRERA here


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my checkered past


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The first check of memory-at age 4 years- was a little tiny voile gingham made for me by my great MaMa. She was a wonderful seamstress and of course I loved a check even then.
Certainly not my first, In Fact- I never met a check I did not like...
Another check -a small yellow one sewn for a colonial dance in the first grade also comes to mind-as does the dance partner-still not happy at that pairing.






My mother wore them.
We picnicked on them.
There were aprons, tablecloths, napkins-




dress by Adrian



I've heard it said that a house will speak to you-If  you listen. Has yours talked to you lately? The house I left 5 years ago spoke in dulcet elegant tones. It wanted to speak French-but I insisted not. It knew I was right- that said- it was very Continental. A formal room of Manuel Canovas linen floral curtains on the wall, silk damasks-you get the picture.
The house I live in now spoke immediately-Besides saying Help! -it said-in a calm voice-You love checks!
Why not?
I don't count them for this story, that would mean I was on shaky ground in using more than One.
Two.
Three?







Red Checks  Blue Checks, Tan Checks-throughout the house.  Checks find their way into my design projects too. They live comfortably in any room and I especially love them looking smart & yes-even a little chic in my own bath (above) where the walls are a sort of  spiritual misty lavender and two shower curtains are made up in a large red voile check- paired with a Chanel poster. Neither has complained about the placement.

Clients rarely reject a check-unless they have a lingering hangup about kitchen towels or tab curtains from there own past. When thinking about checks - think Versatility.

My list of rooms that wear them well:
the kitchen of course- though this one is maybe too obvious-like shells at the beach cottage.
I love checks in a Nursery- large Blue checks from Greeff- with scallopy valances and canopies,
a Master Suite- large Blue Schumacher checks for the curtains, bed coverings, a headboard in a room with yellow walls,
the Guest Room- Black check curtains paired with a small red windowpane quilted checks & Black check twin headboards, finishing with a black and white Brunschwig toile paper on the walls.








A CHECKERED PAST
GREAT ROOMS- Memorable Checks






Charles de Beistegui at Groussay



Interestingly -in the 18th century, slipcovers were necessity, keeping the many fine furnishings from the inevitable weather -dust and dirt that permeated  the most  sound  houses. The Duchess of Norfolk had check covers for all of the furnishing in London's Norfolk House. She was quite firm that  the  color scheme of each room be echoed in the check.  From the inventory the Duchess noted for the ground floor Great Drawing Room the case covers were in 'blew and white check' to match the 'blew Imbost Paper.'





a 1947 Check Evening dress and stole-timeless & as beautiful today as it was 64 years ago.





Carolina Herrera Fall 2011

The ever elegant Carolina Herrera (above) a does not hesitate to use a silk check for the tailored ball gown- How much do you love this dress?



When made of silk or silk tafetta, Checks are elegant, romantic- equally unexpected- large bold checks in the Living Room & tiny ones on dog collars. Large or small -in silk- a check abandons its ordered regimented nature and swishes from skirt to curtain to pillow.






Gorgeous silk checks from Kravet, Stroheim & Romann, Cowtan & Tout and  Robert Allen.









A silk check from Carelton V (above) in my bedroom has something of the little details I love.  I used this check with a finely stitched diagonal playing over the pattern on a French chair.
Some find checks an easy fix- I could not agree more! Often easy is best.
In culling tear sheets and scrap books-I found little french chairs dotting the pages : in the late Nan Kempner's closet- a check covered French chair & check boxes peak out of the curtained closet.







in Carolyne Roehm's makeshift office in Weatherstone's carriage house-serving after a fire swept through the main house in 1999. (below)







Checks can also double as trimmings & bands to add detail to chairs & curtains.




- details count
checks used as trimmings









A 1957 day dress photographed by John French with the check pattern running on the diagonal to create a completely unique look. As with any sort of sewing- simple or complex-the matching of seams must be perfect.


NOTABLE CHECKERED PASTS
 GREAT ROOMS -Memorable Checks
 
Valentino's Living Room
check Curtains & dining chairs beyond



When ask  about his love for checks and plaids?  Valentino says- "Why not? Squares are such perfect shapes." According to IN Style 2006 - all of  Valentino's homes are stocked with checks and plaid towels, sheets, pillows, linens-as well as curtains and sofas. (above) Valentino's Appia Antica Villa- in Rome.




Adolpho's take on the romantic check- inspired by the 1967 Swedish film Elvira Madigan
(Vogue 1968)




Nicky Haslam
something about Chairs

Nicky Haslam used a check in his own dining room at the Hunting Lodge-once owned by John Fowler. An elegant room with formal notes- more gavotte than minuet.


Nicky Haslam's Hunting Lodge Dining Room




(above pages from Nicky Haslam's website here) , I love Haslam's use of a large check on the backs of leather chairs in the Kitchen of this project (at left). The checks used over 40 years ago for evening skirts would be perfect for dining with Nicky at the Hunting Lodge. I bet Colette, Nicky's colleague , has one ready and waiting just in case-I can not imagine she doesn't. She has a decided penchant for finding the perfect fabric from their library an having something made up to show stopping effect.



an evening skirt made from yards & yards of blue and white gingham check  taffeta
(from Vogue 1968)




A curtained day bed canopy  in my upstairs hall with a simple coarse tan check of cotton trimmed in a wooden tassel trim












GREAT ROOMS- Memorable Checks






Perhaps one of the most famous room-at least the room of checks I fell in love with at age 11. In the early 1970's Gloria swathed the family's Living Room at their Southampton home- Summertime in beautiful check gingham.






Jack Robinson photographed the rooms and family for House & Garden in June 1972.







Checks are forgiving in a sense that relatively inexpensive ones can made top notch rooms-however impeccable workmanship is imperative-Seamstresses that match checks, upholsterers that do the same.
The pink checks shown here are from Pindler & Pindler and along with these two large patterns matching smaller  checks are available.


I used a tiny Cowtan & Tout windowpane on the cupboard to keep it covered and pretty- The Cowtan and Tout checks probable have the best of all the Checkered pasts- The color range is beautiful-still one of the best to the trade and the grounds are equal to the color.

How many times has Eaton Check (pictured below) come to the rescue? Each time I use it is looks new, fresh-crisp. What a check should be?
Really-I never met a check I didn't like.







it's a toss up!




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dress tartan 1948

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Carl Erickson
SCHIAPARELLI 1948
Vogue Conde Nast Archives







& there is nothing like tartan for the holidays, I can just see Carolina Herrera in this, She has great style-a long skirt and tailored shirt can not be beat in the evening.


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Elegance, again


Elegance with Dapper




Dapper with Soignee




Elegance with Soignee

 
No one is more Elegant in pictures today than- Carolina Herrera- anywhere, at any age. Here at the PLAZA HOTEL Hamish Bowles, Amy Fine Collins and Lorry Newhouse hosted a dinner kicking off the Lighthouse International's annual POSH fashion sale and honored designer Carolina Herrera and 1st Dibs Founder Michael Bruno.  (all pictures from NYSD here)

see my other post on Elegance, Ease, Glamour


Lombard Glamour circa 2010, having a dress up moment

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Reem Acra

American glamour personified

Carole Lombard


Zac Posen
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the ideal for the Glamour fashions of 2010- Glamour made a comeback in a big way on the American designer runways at Fashion week. The Glamour is there- But who can wear it ?

Carole Lombard,  no one compared.
No one could carry it off like Lombard.
I think Gable would have agreed.

Fall 2010 Fashion modelled by Carole Lombard.



Reem Acra



Reem Acra



Carolina Herrera



Bibhu Mohapatra


Bibhu Mohapatra




 L'Wren Scott



 Elie Tahari



Phillip Lim



Zac Posen


 
 Philosophy



Alberta Ferretti Philosophy



L'Wren Scott




 L'Wren Scott



 Bibhu Mohapatra



Michael Kors



.Oscar de la Renta

American Glamour
modeled by

carole lombard.org
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