Showing posts with label Harper's Bazaar March 1963. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harper's Bazaar March 1963. Show all posts

Thursday, November 28, 2013

CAPUCCI - COMING DOWN TO EARTH


CAPUCCI

White coming down to earth... white cotton matelasse embellished with jewelled buttons like bright covered paving stones that echo the fabrics weave. Slightly shaped and softly skimming into a minimal a-line. In Hurel cotton.

Melvin Sokolsky experienced a recurring dream in which he floated  within a bubble across exotic landscapes. This was the origin of his "bubble series" presenting the Paris spring collections of 1963.

Photographed by Melvin Sokolsky
Model: Simone D'Aillencourt
Harper's Bazaar March 1963



Wednesday, November 27, 2013

KATIE FORD - LACEY FORD - ELISA ROSELLI - AMANDA BROWN - TAKE A BOW


Elisa Roselli



Smocking bodice on a lawn dress dusted with green and pink posies, bound with course white lace. By Sunny Lee in Dumari cotton. Bonnie Doon socks, Capezio shoes.


Elisa Roselli at left wears ruffles and rickrack with flouncing at the hem of ivory and blue cotton.

Amanda Brown models the lifted waist rising on a cool little cotton dress wallpaper-printed with enormous delicacy in bright red, blue and gold by Moppets.


Lacey Ford

Putting frills on a fragilely flower-patterned red on white dress - double-ruffle sleeves that complement the full skirt. Full set of brass buttons in back. Very girly-girly in ABC cotton by Helen Lee.


Katie Ford

A toile-printed afternoon dress in pale blue on ivory, as delicate as Delft china, sashed at the waist with a sky blue velvet ribbon. By Kate Greenaway in Springmaid cotton.


Young Wallpaper Prints
Photography: Francesco Scavullo
Harper's Bazaar March 1963

...eye on children's fashions at devodotcom

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

EVENINGS IN PARIS 1963


GRES

Pristine perfection evening cape falling like a handkerchief in front, crosses at the back and wraps around a long linear column dress that is slit on one side. In Staron crepe. Chignon shaoed like a bow by Alexandre of Paris.


SIMONETTA AND FABIANI

Shining black organza satin, high on front, plunging into a deep U in the back. the slightly lifted waist is looped with a sash of scarlet satin. In Lesage silk. The headdress, inspired by the eighteenth-century Peking dynasty is by Alexandre of Paris.


SAINT-LAURENT

Fragile white organdie transparent evening covering over a two-part organdie dress densely worked with bas-relief white broderie. In Brivet Organdie. 

The Alexandre of Paris hair creation here, and throughout this editorial, was an integral part of the couture fashion of the sixties. His work was the finishing touch to the formal evening ensemble - and as fashionable as the fashions themselves.



SAINT-LAURENT

Counterpoint sleeve. Elegant jumper dress with the new wide shoulder casually scarved and just skimming the body. The fuller-sleeved shirt underneath is deeply cuffed. 


CARDIN

The ruffle - two rows in  in pitch black organza fanning high front and back on a whisper of mousseline. Light and utterly feminine, eased into the natural waist by a soft tie sash. In Chatillon-Mouly-Roussel silk.


CARDIN

A waist-deep cowl of white crepe drops to new depths of provocation and balances a black rose on a thread. The skirt, black and clinging. In Lajoinie crepe. Coiffure; Alexandre of Paris.


DIOR

The Breton, young yet worldly. The brim of white straw so sheer the light shines through. The crown shaped like a baby's cap and the chin strap of pitch black shantung. The dress - important to the silhouette at Dior: the sculptured shoulders.

Paris Says:
Harper's Bazaar March 1963
Photography: Melvin Sokolsky

... eye on the sixties at devodotcom

Friday, November 22, 2013

HAVE A NICE WEEKEND!


Lanvin: Yellow Circles, Orange Pants



Harper's Bazaar March 1963
Blowing into Town
Photography: Melvin Sokolsky


Wednesday, April 4, 2012

MR. BLACKWELL - 1963


MR. BLACKWELL - 1963

Born Richard Selzer, the former child actor invented the name “Dick Ellis” for his stage career and reinvented himself in 1958 as a fashion designer with a new surname and a line of clothing called simply, "Mr. Blackwell."  He enjoyed his reputation as America’s best known and sometimes feared fashion critic and creator of the “Ten Worst Dressed Women List.” Of his eagerly anticipated annual list Mr. Blackwell reported he was “sick of the ugly clothes that were being presented in the fashion industry and, as a dress designer, wanted to express his opinion.”

The list was started by Blackwell in 1960 with Anna Magnani in the number one spot - Brigitte Bardot a close second, and appeared January of each year through 2008 when Victoria Bekham beat out Amy Winehouse for the top spot on the list.


Whirlwind Of: Clinging Lines
Harper's Bazaar March 1963
Photography: Hiro Wakabayashi


1960 admin girl @ devodotcom



























Tuesday, April 3, 2012

HEAD - 1963

Dramatic White - Gently Carved
The sculptured hat of ivory crepe with folds of the snood draping in smooth and perfect order fom a casque atop the head - by Halston of Bergdorf Goodman

Sculptured arabesque of white organdie flippantly circling the head, curving like cygnet feathers over a wisp of veiling by Mr. John

Dramatic White, Gently Carved
Harper's Bazaar March 1963
Photography: AVEDON