Showing posts with label fashion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fashion. Show all posts

Monday, July 14, 2008

Sharpening Pencil Skirts

Bill Cunningham for The Times
It is without a hint of shame that I tell you that my favorite part of the online edition of the Sunday New York Times has become Bill Cunningham's audio slide shows of On the Street. For three-or-four minutes he discusses fashionable trends he's seen on New York streets and his take is always fascinating. Whether he's discussing low-slung men's jeans or oversize handbags, his enthusiasm and admiration for the trend, and his passion for fashion in general, is really quite special. I believe he only began these interactive audio discussions earlier this year (I could be wrong on that date), but the interjection of his voice and his sparkling personality is what his column has always needed—you just didn't realize it until he started doing it! (Granted, I've always glanced at On the Street, which has been around for in the hard-copy NYT for something like 35 years, and I know it's wildly popular and Bill is credited with making street fashion "important," but I only became addicted when the audio was added).


This week was especially of interest to me because he talks about the trend of women wearing tight pencil skirts paired with spiked heels on blistering hot July days. His point of view is fabulous, and he goes in depth into the cut and tailoring of the backside and likens "this very disciplined look" to a new form of hobble skirt (as anyone who reads this blog knows, the Hobble Skirt was my favorite chapter to research in my book). His vocabulary is marvelous (he calls spiked heels "a saucy, bit of a sagacious kind of look") and his depth of fashion history is vast. Toward the middle he discusses "French skirts," a cut I wasn't familiar with.

I strongly recommend listening to this week's short audio and when you're done, catch up on all of Bill's interactive features and read this terrific profile of him in ArtForum by now-fellow NYT fashion writer, Guy Trebay. It's a great piece of background on Bill written 12 years ago in 1996, and even then establishes his legacy as an influential fixture, albeit humble one, in the fashion world. And then if you're looking for even more information on pencil skirts, read "Cold War Years," chapter 9 in The Long (and Short) of It: The Madcap History of the Skirt.

Saturday, September 1, 2007

The skirt may be the next fad


Well, this is exciting news. Reuters reports yesterday that the skirt may be the next big clothing trend, following the eventual waning of the ubiquitous dress. I actually love wearing dresses as much as skirts and blouses, particularly in cold weather--keeps the waist warmer!--but it would be nice to see choices of both in stores. Why does it always have to be one or the other: skirts or dresses?

"The skirt is such a conversation. All the stores are talking about it -- 'Will it hit, when will it hit?'" said Krissy Meehan, head of wholesale sales for Urban Outfitters Inc's Free People line.

"Everyone's stocking skirts just to see what happens. Everyone's playing back-up," says another buyer.

The article then goes on to say that skirts might not be the next trend: The Next Big Thing just might be pants or...shorts. Pshaw!

Read the whole article here:

Monday, February 12, 2007

February 12 - Health & Beauty Revolution


I just finished a pretty great interview on WS Radio.com on The Health & Beauty Revolution with the host Patty Kovacs. Patty was so gracious and complimentary about my book and said every woman should buy it--wow!

It's interesting now that I've done a few of these shows to hear how badly women want to know WHAT they should wear, as if there is a one-skirt-fits-all out there that will solve their wardrobe dilemmas. I keep saying fashion should be fun, not stressful, but good clothing is clearly challenging and shopping is not fun for a lot of women. Women should strive to find clothes that make them feel confident and comfortable, and sometimes that means getting rid of all your ill-fitting clothes (donate them to Goodwill; don't throw them out!) and taking the time to shop at different stores until you find the right clothes for your body and personality. Of course A-line skirts look good on everyone and make calves look slimmer. So you can always get a bunch of those. The Gap or Banana always has that style in stock.

I updated my web site this weekend, adding a few magazine clips to the Clips page and will keep adding more as I get savvier on the computer. Tonight I pre-record a show for "Making Waves," a magazine-style show on WJFF Radio Catskill that will run next Monday. Be sure to tune in to KOPB-FM this Thursday at 1:05 to hear me on Oregon Public Broadcasting. It should be a fun one!

Thursday, February 15, 2007

1:05 PM PST
KOPB-FM (91.5)
Portland, Oregon


Monday, February 19, 2007
5:30 p.m. PST
WJFF Radio Catskill
Making Waves with Sabrina Artel


Tuesday, February 20, 2007

6:30 AM PST
NATIONAL Interivew/giveaway
CABLE RADIO NETWORK
AM Show
Los Angeles


10:00 AM PST
WFPL
Louisville, KY


Wednesday, February 21, 2007

8 a.m. PST
WPR: Wisconsin Public Radio
Kathleen Dunn Show
one hour interview

2:44 PM to 2:56 PM PST
WKCT-AM:
Drive Time with Alan Palmer
Bowling Green, KY

Friday, March 23, 2007
6:40 - 6:55 am PST
WLIU-RADIO
In the Morning
Southampton, NY

Tuesday, April 3, 2007
8 - 8:30 AM PST
WICN-FM
Inquiry
Boston, MA