Retrodivas Fashion

Everyone needs a little glamour

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pierre cardinCelebrate sixty years of revolutionary design with ASSOULINE’s Pierre Cardin: 60 Years of Innovation. Set to receive the Board of Director’s Legend Award at the Fashion Group International on October 28, 2010, this volume pays tribute to this extraordinarily innovative and iconoclastic designer, highlighting Pierre Cardin’s contributions to the world of couture, fashion, and perfume, reflecting his spirit and energy as well as the brand’s international presence.

Check out an online preview at Assouline.com.

Available for purchase from Assouline online. Purchasers in New York City and Los Angeles can use the same day messenger service and have the book in their hands almost immediately.

As a side note, rumor has it that Pierre Cardin will be making a personal appearance at ASSOULINE at The Plaza this fall! Details to come!

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The Bombshell Manual of Style

The Bombshell Manual of Style

This isn’t really a manual, per se, but it’s an interesting read nonetheless. The author, Laren Stover, did an incredible amount of research on “bombshells” – think Elizabeth Taylor, Marilyn Monroe, Greta Garbo, and…Kim Basinger? Whatever – I think this research involved watching a lot of old movies and sorting out the style that these actresses portrayed both on the screen and off.

There is a lot of stereotyping in The Bombshell Manual of Style, but I found myself nodding along more often than not. The Bombshell Fragrances list is exhaustive and pretty accurate, as well as some of the “road tested” outfits. The illustrations are by the always-talented and extremely popular Ruben Toledo and is worth flipping through just for those.

It gives off a bit of “single lady in the city” vibe, but if you can get past that (decorate my apartment in pink and white? I wouldn’t do that even if I was single and living in NYC), the information here is quite good. It certainly encourages you to slip on some silk pajamas, grab some champagne and your toy poodle, and settle in for a read.

Unfortunately, all I had on had was a leopard print snuggie and two cats. But that’s okay – I think I’m still bombshell material.

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lacoste

It wasn’t so long ago that the appearance of this open-mouthed crocodile was an entrance ticket into the stylish cliques of my middle school. If one sported the little gator (we called them “Izods” back in the day), it was generally assumed by the rest of the population that you had access to serious fashion, including Jordaches and Polo shirts. If one had the collar turned up (and these days they call that a “popped” collar, although I don’t remember using that term in the mid-80s, but I could be wrong), one was really riding the crest of fashion, almost enough to be quite New Wave.

We didn’t know that it was a luxury tennis brand. We just knew that it was desirable and stylish, and girls really needed one in pink. In fact, if you could layer that pink one with, say, a white one underneath, we were pretty certain that it was the best offering to the fashion gods one could imagine.

We also liked parachute pants, but that is for another time.

Now, however, I’m older and so much wiser – no parachute pants for me – and I can appreciate the backstory of the Lacoste brand. How Rene Lacoste was THE tennis star in the twenties, who always had that certain something that set him apart. I can also appreciate how the brand was among the first to bring luxury to the masses.

This book illuminates the contemporary relevance of the legacy of René Lacoste, who, in his glory days at the end of the Roaring Twenties, was the best tennis player in the world. A conqueror, an innovator, a designer, he always displayed a certain flair. And those qualities endure. A story about fluidity, softness, comfort, the sun and the sea, endurance. A story about what Christophe Lemaire calls a “democratic luxuriousness,” perhaps a luxuriousness of detail. A story about a sensation, a light, a color, a texture, a pattern, the freedom of a body in motion and at rest. A story about the Club collection, the Sport collection, the women’s collections; about windowpane check, contrast piping, stretch knit polo shirts: “a world of design with a human dimension.”

This book is the story (or one story) of a culture that gives voice to many personal stories—the story of a transgenerational and transcultural cult brand; of a laughing crocodile beloved by children; of a breath, an emotion, a moment to be savored; of well-being; of vitality. The story of everything we’ve done and of everything we have yet to do, all thanks to a single pensée, a single thought, that inspires expression in every form.

And really, I can’t explain it any better than that.

Lacoste: The Element of Style is now available for pre-order from Amazon.com, and will be available at all the exclusive Assouline locations, including the Paris boutique and the boutique in the Plaza Hotel in New York City.