[lace] Re: Lace in Fashion
You can see the sash (near hand on model left) and there is an ellipse between it and the dress, but you see that the top of the lace is standing proud and away from the fabric (in this case, a sheer overlayer that is of a chiffon nature). It has the appearance one creates with an illusion of the eye, which is a diffused quality over the solid underlayer. (There is much playing with techniques in which sheer over which solid, viewed up close or at a distance, fluid vs. more structured in the design elements, creates the ideal objective. The edge of it shows it is a machine lace that has been appliqued/applied to the sheer, but on first viewing and in the smaller picture, it appeared that it could have been machine embroidered on the sheer layer). Best, Susan Reishus *** "I think that the black sheer by her hand is part of the tail of the sash." Brenda *** "I looked quickly before seeing your post, and saw that near the left hand of the model (viewer's right), the sheer pulls away from the underlayer and the embroidery is on the sheer." Susan Reishus *** "I'm not so sure the gold "lace" is on the black sheer. http://www.vogue.com.au/fashion+shows/galleries/pre+fall+2011+carolina+herre ra,11953" Robin - To unsubscribe send email to majord...@arachne.com containing the line: unsubscribe lace y...@address.here. For help, write to arachne.modera...@gmail.com. Photo site: http://community.webshots.com/user/arachne2003
Re: [lace] Re: Lace in Fashion
I think that the black sheer by her hand is part of the tail of the sash. Brenda On 5 Jul 2011, at 03:01, Susan Reishus wrote: > "I'm not so sure the gold "lace" is on the black sheer. > http://www.vogue.com.au/fashion+shows/galleries/pre+fall+2011+carolina+herrera,11953"; > > *** > > I looked quickly before seeing your post, and saw that near the left hand of > the model (viewer's right), the sheer pulls away from the underlayer and the > embroidery is on the sheer. Brenda in Allhallows www.brendapaternoster.co.uk - To unsubscribe send email to majord...@arachne.com containing the line: unsubscribe lace y...@address.here. For help, write to arachne.modera...@gmail.com. Photo site: http://community.webshots.com/user/arachne2003
[lace] Re: Lace in Fashion
"I'm not so sure the gold "lace" is on the black sheer. http://www.vogue.com.au/fashion+shows/galleries/pre+fall+2011+carolina+herrera,11953"; *** I looked quickly before seeing your post, and saw that near the left hand of the model (viewer's right), the sheer pulls away from the underlayer and the embroidery is on the sheer. Best, Susan Reishus - To unsubscribe send email to majord...@arachne.com containing the line: unsubscribe lace y...@address.here. For help, write to arachne.modera...@gmail.com. Photo site: http://community.webshots.com/user/arachne2003
[lace] Re: lace in fashion
On May 17, 2006, at 22:22, Janice Blair wrote: Alice wrote: I was at the hairdressers last week reading one of those magazines that just have lots of things to buy. It had an article about lace including lace wallpaper, but the thing that caught my eye was a tote bag made of raffia or straw with a border at the bottom of about four 3" squares of Irish crochet. There was also some crochet on the large fastener. What got my interest and astonishment was the price - $3,500. It was by Dolce & Gabanna Some people must have more money than sense but it was good to see lace on unusual items. That one sent me digging through some old, almost forgotten, "stuff"... :) Years ago -- long before I started making BL -- I made myself a pocketbook for summertime "occasions". Took a 50-cent, cream-colored, 13"x8" filet-crochet "doily" as the base (those things used to be dirt cheap in antique and second-hand stores; probably still are). Folded the length: 7.5"+1.5"+4". Made it into an "envelope" bag by crocheting two sides (1.5"x4"), each with a strong loop at the top, to the folded doily. Made a (same colour) lining. Same size as the bag, but with the bottom (1.5"x8") re-inforced with a strip of flexible plastic (cut off an old binder, but almost anything would serve, as long as it's washable). Crocheted a tab for the front, hammering in half of a snap through the (re-inforced) lining first. Crocheted a cord to go through the side loops (I like bags which hang over the shoulder and low enough for easy access to my pack of cigs ). The second half of the snap was pounded in through both the "doily" and the lining. And I added a couple of crocheted "buttons" (scrounged off MIL's bedjacket that she was about to toss out) to dangle off the tab, "for fun". The doily was $0.52 (tax included ); the matching crochet cotton (for sides, front tab and cord) was about $1. The lining was fabric left over from lining curtains and the hammer-in snaps I always had on hand for the Polish style pillow- and quilt-cases and for my son's clothes (those crotch snaps, which make a diaper change easy, were a _revelation_; I'd seen nothing like that back in Poland of 33 yrs ago ) Thanks, Janice, for reminding me of the bag. It's really too small for everyday use, which is why it had been stashed in the back of the closet for 20 yrs or so and entirely forgotten. But I dug it up just now and it's still _nice_. Once it's washed, it'll go well with one of the outfits I plan to take with me for the "CA wedding" (DH's nephew). And I'll feel very, very smug about my -- parsimonious -- fashionable wear :) -- Tamara P Duvallhttp://t-n-lace.net/ Lexington, Virginia, USA (Formerly of Warsaw, Poland) - To unsubscribe send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] containing the line: unsubscribe lace [EMAIL PROTECTED] For help, write to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
FW: [lace] Re: lace in fashion
I just noticed that this list works different from all other lists I belong to, in that hitting reply sends the email to an individual, instead of to the list. How confusing!! Sorry Tamara, it should have gone to the list. Marianne Marianne Gallant Vernon, BC Canada http://www.yarnshop.ca [EMAIL PROTECTED] -Original Message- From: Marianne Gallant [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, February 07, 2006 9:39 PM To: 'Tamara P Duvall' Subject: RE: [lace] Re: lace in fashion Well, here is a different opinion. You all seem to think this is a wedding dress, because one of the headlines is 'wedding scoop'. But the picture is too small to read what is says under that, is it referring to the dress?? To me this looks more like it has to do with the 'sexy ideas for every shape' article that is mentioned at the bottom of the page. To me this looks more like an evening dress than a wedding dress, and as you all know, a lot of evening dresses can be quite provocative when I first looked at the picture it didn't say 'wedding dress' to me at all, but more evening dress, or maybe even negligeewhich could be as sexy as one wanted Don't jump to conclusions because of reading only one headlineDon't forget, this is the February issue, think Valentine'sIf it was a June issue I would say 'Wedding dress', but not the February issue. Marianne Marianne Gallant Vernon, BC Canada http://www.yarnshop.ca [EMAIL PROTECTED] -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Tamara P Duvall Sent: Tuesday, February 07, 2006 7:20 PM To: lace Arachne Subject: [lace] Re: lace in fashion On Feb 7, 2006, at 21:09, Weronika Patena wrote: > I wore a backless dress when I got married, Dahlink... I've only ever saw your dress from the front; you never sent any photos of the back, though I assumed there was a substantial area of the back exposed, since it was a halter dress. If your dress was "backless" in the sense that the skirt started where the lace on this one starts, then that's no more thand what a swimsuit exposes. But, if your dress was backless all the way to _below_ your butt (which, to all intents and purposes this one is), then I'm almost sorry I made you that lace bracelet/cuff to go with it :) Also, your dress had a stole (which I assume you wore for the ceremony). In this dress, the lace on the back is the main feature; it's not likely it would be covered with anything. Also, your wedding was outside, and your dress was blue -- far less formal. This one, being white, suggests a long trek down the church aisle on your father's arm, with 300 or people more staring at your exposed behind as you pass. Chances are, that at least half of those people would be in your parents' generation, definitely making judgements (from the shape of the butt to the propriety of exposing it, depending on the sex of the viewer)... > I'm not offended or anything, just wanted to explain that I know > plenty of girls in > their right minds who could potentially get married in something like > this. Then I'd question their "right minds" :) I would also wonder about how the groom felt about the ribald jokes he'd be bound to receive from the males of _your_ generation. > it depends on whether she's dressing provocatively on purpose, not on > whether > other people see her clothes as provocative. There used to be a joke, which circulated in my youth, and it went something like this: "If one person tells you you're drunk, ignore it. If three people tell you you're drunk, go sleep it off". Nobody lives in a vacuum; if 300 people are likely to think the worse of you because of what you do, and if you do not consider their possible reaction, then you _are_ provocative on purpose (vide the recent and continuing hoopla about the cartoons of Muhammad). Being provocative/offensive on purpose may be worth it when one is defending an abiding principle; fighting over the right to go bare-butt down the church aisle because it "feels good" seems, to me, a frivolous pursuit. Yours, off the stump for the night -- Tamara P Duvallhttp://t-n-lace.net/ Lexington, Virginia, USA (Formerly of Warsaw, Poland) - To unsubscribe send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] containing the line: unsubscribe lace [EMAIL PROTECTED] For help, write to [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG Free Edition. Version: 7.1.375 / Virus Database: 267.15.2/253 - Release Date: 2/7/2006 - To unsubscribe send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] containing the line: unsubscribe lace [EMAIL PROTECTED] For help, write to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[lace] re: Lace in Fashion
My reaction was what a shame that a lovely display of lace (whatever the type) was spoiled by how it was displayed...to make a statement that's for sure. It took me a few minutes to find it on the site, turns out it's the cover of the Feb issue not the Mar one, in the meantime I typed lace in their search engine and was intrigued to see a lace skirt under "desk to date"...worn very sedately over a longer skirt. Interesting too that there's a link to Louise Vermuelen's site (I'm sure I've seen this mentioned on Arachne) "real Belgian lace manufactory". Better than Walmart that's for sure...and there were a few things that piqued my interest. Back to my Bucks samples, and re-considering whether to go to Montreal or do something else instead... JulieO in Whitehorse, Yukon, Canada...remarkably mild for early February although a nice layer of fresh snow makes it still winter. e-mail address: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - To unsubscribe send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] containing the line: unsubscribe lace [EMAIL PROTECTED] For help, write to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: [lace] Re: lace in fashion
I thought that the lace looked lined with a skin tone lining. Not really to my taste though. It would accentuate the size of the wearers butt wouldn't it. Cheers, Yvonne. - To unsubscribe send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] containing the line: unsubscribe lace [EMAIL PROTECTED] For help, write to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[lace] Re: lace in fashion
On Feb 7, 2006, at 21:09, Weronika Patena wrote: I wore a backless dress when I got married, Dahlink... I've only ever saw your dress from the front; you never sent any photos of the back, though I assumed there was a substantial area of the back exposed, since it was a halter dress. If your dress was "backless" in the sense that the skirt started where the lace on this one starts, then that's no more thand what a swimsuit exposes. But, if your dress was backless all the way to _below_ your butt (which, to all intents and purposes this one is), then I'm almost sorry I made you that lace bracelet/cuff to go with it :) Also, your dress had a stole (which I assume you wore for the ceremony). In this dress, the lace on the back is the main feature; it's not likely it would be covered with anything. Also, your wedding was outside, and your dress was blue -- far less formal. This one, being white, suggests a long trek down the church aisle on your father's arm, with 300 or people more staring at your exposed behind as you pass. Chances are, that at least half of those people would be in your parents' generation, definitely making judgements (from the shape of the butt to the propriety of exposing it, depending on the sex of the viewer)... I'm not offended or anything, just wanted to explain that I know plenty of girls in their right minds who could potentially get married in something like this. Then I'd question their "right minds" :) I would also wonder about how the groom felt about the ribald jokes he'd be bound to receive from the males of _your_ generation. it depends on whether she's dressing provocatively on purpose, not on whether other people see her clothes as provocative. There used to be a joke, which circulated in my youth, and it went something like this: "If one person tells you you're drunk, ignore it. If three people tell you you're drunk, go sleep it off". Nobody lives in a vacuum; if 300 people are likely to think the worse of you because of what you do, and if you do not consider their possible reaction, then you _are_ provocative on purpose (vide the recent and continuing hoopla about the cartoons of Muhammad). Being provocative/offensive on purpose may be worth it when one is defending an abiding principle; fighting over the right to go bare-butt down the church aisle because it "feels good" seems, to me, a frivolous pursuit. Yours, off the stump for the night -- Tamara P Duvallhttp://t-n-lace.net/ Lexington, Virginia, USA (Formerly of Warsaw, Poland) - To unsubscribe send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] containing the line: unsubscribe lace [EMAIL PROTECTED] For help, write to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[lace] Re: lace in fashion
On Feb 7, 2006, at 14:45, bevw wrote: ... to wear to the banquet at the next lace event?! On the cover of the February 'Marie Claire' - a beautiful young woman wears a lace-backed dress (note, some interpretation on the term 'back'). No bra and no underpants? No way! The lady is pretty and the lace may be so (hard to see detail on my screen) but have my butt barely veiled, in public? Not even when I was 18-20 and wild (like Clay, I too was a "child of the 60ties") would I have been comfortable in that conoction. OTOH, in today's NYTimes, there was a shirt which I would actually be willing to buy (if the price were reasonable, which isn't likely). Didn't have any lace, but begged for it -- a pendant, a choker or a collar would look spectacular with it. I wouldn't pair it with those black trousers myself (a long skirt, tight in the hips and flaring out at the bottom would go better with the richness of the shirt, IMO), but the shirt itself is yummy. http://www.nytimes.com/2006/02/07/fashion/shows/07FASHION.html? _r=1&pagewanted=all&oref=slogin or: http://tinyurl.com/bbjo6 Under the photo of the silver brocade suit of De La Renta, click for "more photos" and I think it's th 4th or 5th... -- Tamara P Duvallhttp://t-n-lace.net/ Lexington, Virginia, USA (Formerly of Warsaw, Poland) - To unsubscribe send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] containing the line: unsubscribe lace [EMAIL PROTECTED] For help, write to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[lace] Re: lace in fashion
Hello lace-friends, Have a look into Newsweek from january 23, 2006 on page 55 ICON about a book of Carmen Miranda, never heard before, sorry, there is a picture of her with a wonderful piece of lace, probably a fan, as decoration of her hat, also Newsweek from january 30,2006 on page 61 The Good Life under the title Lace Makes The Woman you find summer cloths with lace in a broader sense. Have fun. Ilske - To unsubscribe send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] containing the line: unsubscribe lace [EMAIL PROTECTED] For help, write to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: [lace] Re: lace in fashion
... to which the French Lacemaker should respond, "Our handmade lace is worth the price you will pay for it in order to execute your annual publicity stunt of "fashion". Clay Clay Blackwell [EMAIL PROTECTED] > [Original Message] > From: romdom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > To: lace Arachne > Date: 5/24/2005 6:56:01 PM > Subject: Re: [lace] Re: lace in fashion > > le 24/05/05 4:35, Tamara P Duvall à [EMAIL PROTECTED] a écrit : > > > On May 22, 2005, at 5:48, Carolina de la Guardia wrote: > > > >> some days ago, a Galician fashion designer, contact me asking me for > >> people which can produce laces. > > > > Super news! I just hope he's willing to pay you enough to make it worth > > while :) > > > > T, in rainy Lexington, > > > all the more so as french fashion designers tell lacemakers that making > lace for them is a good enough publicity stunt without asking for money on > top of that !!! > > dominique from warm Paris . > > - > To unsubscribe send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] containing the line: > unsubscribe lace [EMAIL PROTECTED] For help, write to > [EMAIL PROTECTED] - To unsubscribe send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] containing the line: unsubscribe lace [EMAIL PROTECTED] For help, write to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: [lace] Re: lace in fashion
le 24/05/05 4:35, Tamara P Duvall à [EMAIL PROTECTED] a écrit : > On May 22, 2005, at 5:48, Carolina de la Guardia wrote: > >> some days ago, a Galician fashion designer, contact me asking me for >> people which can produce laces. > > Super news! I just hope he's willing to pay you enough to make it worth > while :) > > T, in rainy Lexington, all the more so as french fashion designers tell lacemakers that making lace for them is a good enough publicity stunt without asking for money on top of that !!! dominique from warm Paris . - To unsubscribe send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] containing the line: unsubscribe lace [EMAIL PROTECTED] For help, write to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[lace] Re: lace in fashion
On May 22, 2005, at 5:48, Carolina de la Guardia wrote: some days ago, a Galician fashion designer, contact me asking me for people which can produce laces. It seems that next autum-winter fashion 2006, laces will be the most on complements, collars and insertions. So...lets go to make lace and be in fashion! Super news! I just hope he's willing to pay you enough to make it worth while :) T, in rainy Lexington, where I just finished the lace part of a bracelet for Weronika's wedding ceremony (the wedding itself was unceremonious ). Need to photograph it, and off it goes to CA to be mounted... Then, back to bookmarks for Denver :) -- Tamara P Duvallhttp://t-n-lace.net/ Lexington, Virginia, USA (Formerly of Warsaw, Poland) - To unsubscribe send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] containing the line: unsubscribe lace [EMAIL PROTECTED] For help, write to [EMAIL PROTECTED]