Photographer and artist, Joe Mehl came down from Phoenix this weekend to pitch this collaboration idea he had, with a staggering amount of enthusiasm and a big ol’ wack of stickers in tow. They looked like this:

That’s Ryan’s photo of Addam’s haircut, doused in fractals and what he calls “light paintings.” Said project will be unveiled sometime in ….2010.
Joe came along to see my lovely and dear friend, Emilie, perform for the halloween edition of Black Cherry Burlesque. After pulling an impromptu all-nighter the night previous, let’s just say that I was in no condition to be out and about at a bewitchingly rowdy bar. So my (equally hungover) friends and I found a quiet, dark, comfy booth in the back, where we ended up missing the first few minutes of the show… the exact minutes we’d pried ourselves out of our beds to see. Oops. Sorry, Emilie! We were even more sorry when we realized how next-level this show had been so far… Mary Poppins and Spock Girl were amazing.
Check out Emilie’s last Halloween performance Friday night, Oct 23 at 11:30pm at the Surly Wench in Tucson! I know I am!
Anyway, it sucked that we weren’t allowed to take photos of the show, but Joe ended up getting some great shots of me my extra styley friend Abraham, and Joe’s friend David wandering around 4th Avenue and Hotel Congress. Wearing my beloved Mary Quant vintage dress almost made up for the hangover… although that didn’t help any with my photogenicity that night.

 mary quant dress


Oh and here’s a doozie shot of our “street.”


vintage Mary Quant shift – $30 US Vintage, Chicago
houndstooth stockings – Marshall’s $7
suede ankle booties – Diana’s (thrifted)
Photos by Joe Mehl
When these illustrations found their way into my inbox, I was titillated. aleXsandro Palombo, a young italian fashion designer and knitwear revolutionary, is soon releasing this cheeky book of illustrations rife with political and religious imagery (and some very recognizable Fashion Royalty), pre-destined to ruffle some tail feather in the fashion sphere. His exact social commentary is unclear in the following few examples, but the decidedly shrewd wit wafting from the pages is drawn with a charming naiveté – luring you in until you’re up to your eyeballs in a stew of Roald Dahl and Toulouse-Lautrec-esque cultural surrealism.
“The book features around 100 illustrations by Palombo in which the designer analyses eleven years of his creations, accompanied by a symbolical figure, a melancholic yet exuberant little clown called Vanitas who, turning into a Virgil-like figure, guides him through the personal memories and dreams behind Palombo’s collections. The reader joins them through this journey, takes part in the making of the various garments and sits down in the front row to see the final catwalk, which represents the climax of this adventure into the world of fashion. During the final catwalk Vanitas presents Palombo’s new creations while the designer makes a satire of the fashion universe and of its main representatives.
‘In his previous collections and catwalks Palombo explored religious themes, but also the clashes between the East and the West and the Christian and Islamic worlds, with models wearing balaclavas, military symbols and keffieyhs, this is why in the book there are references to Oriana Fallaci, the Italian author and journalist who produced great pieces of journalism for decades, but focused in later years on writing against Islam.
‘The book also features brief pieces by people who met Palombo and had the chance of getting to know his work and personality.
There are some elements in Vanitas – the figure of the clown, the chromatically vivid illustrations and the dreamy moods – that make me think about Federico Fellini’s atmospheres and drawings.”
-Book Preview: Vanitas, Inshallah by aleXsandro Palombo
by Irenebrination

In some ways it may seem that Mr. Palombo is dabbling in controversy for the sake of controversy, but he insists this is not so. In response such claims regarding his outlandishly subversive runway show in 2003, he explained:
”My home in Salento, in the extreme south of Italy, is a land of sacrilege,” he said after the show. ”A sacrilege that is the culmination of many cultures that coexist there — Arabic, Muslim, Israeli, Albanian, Greek, Norman and many others. My philosophy is one of encounters involving many diverse ethnicities, faiths and religions from around the world.”
On that note… Happy V day, all y’all! I’m going to get dressed up in something ridiculous.
Thanks to the amazing Modepass for featuring me in Flair Magazine this week, I feel honoured.
Have a lovely, chocolate-covered day!
I’ve been meaning to post these amazing photos by Sofia Sanchez & Mauro Mongiello for a few weeks. So creepy in such a non-specific way. Something about the saccharine colors combined with Hitchcock-esque lighting and overly stationary blonde curls. They also kinda bring to mind an irritating habit of Hollywood lately – young’un as accessory… and also these unsettling airbrushed Baby Pageant photos. Maybe it’s the interspersed ventriloquist dummie that’s heightening that mood for me.
Gorgeous anyway. Model Siri Tollerod was the perfect choice, she exudes “militaristic perfectionist,” well, perfectly. I think I need some Pepto-Pink lipstick.









source: foto decadent
Outside the LACMA , where they had the most amazing exhibit of Vanity Fair portraits. This was a super cozy outfit for the flight home…



Yup… just jeans and a tee.
f21 trompe l’oeil sailor tee – thrifted in LA, $3
cuffed skinny jeans – Bows and Arrows Vintage (Sacramento – L&17th), $10
velcro slip-on sneaks – thrifted in Chicago, $2
leather navy pleated bag – thrifted in Chicago, $1.50
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
The ingenious Emily Larned of RedCharming, who I’ve written about before, sent me scans of her new publication, LOOKBOOK 54. It is all about the glorious T, a wearable blank canvas as it were. The concept is simple, but best explained by the artist herself…
What is the most reductive form that can yield the most variety in meaning? Possibly the white t-shirt. Tight it is James Dean, huge it is hip hop. It’s not what you wear, it’s how you wear it.
In LOOKBOOK 54, fifty-four different characters are created with nothing but one XL white t-shirt and common household supplies (binder clips, safety pins, duct tape) used as styling aids. All accessories serve a function and the shirt is never cut or permanently altered. The book is designed such that each sheet has the front and back of each look, but then these sheets are nested one inside another into a single large pamphlet bound together by an (archival) plastiband. You can view the 54 looks by flipping through the book to see juxtapositions of all fronts and then all backs, or you can remove the plastiband, take apart the book, and instantaneously see the two views of each look.


The patterned backdrop used in the shoot is another way one thing can behave like many things: it is oriented vertically when the shirt is styled as a dress, horizontally when styled as a top, and diagonally in the accompanying booklet LOOKBOOK 54 COMPANION, which features accessories, make-up, and hair styles all made with office supplies. For safekeeping, the two books are packaged together in a resealable polypropylene bag. And, for the collector, there’s the very Special Limited Edition: signed copies of LOOKBOOK 54 and the COMPANION accompanied by an XL white t-shirt, housed together in a sewn-by-the-artist drawstring bag made from the photoshoot backdrop. The edition is limited to the supply of the original backdrop fabric, and is available exclusively through Booklyn.
These 3 looks are enough to set my gourd a-wondering about what mind-borders the other FIFTY ONE looks could be knockin down! I’m off to the dollar store to load up on XL white wonders and then find out what drugs she’s taking.
You can purchase the book and preview a few more looks here.
|
All images were either used with permission or found on the web and believed to be in the public domain. If any images that appear are in violation of copyright law, please let me know and i will remove them immediately.
Thanks for reading,
Amber
painfullyhip at gmail.com

|