Showing posts with label handbags. Show all posts
Showing posts with label handbags. Show all posts

Friday, September 5, 2025

Pieces

Oilily (Netherlands)
Infant's Romper
1987
cotton
Centraal Museum, Utrecht


Oilily (Netherlands)
Child's Dress
1989
cotton
Centraal Museum, Utrecht

Anonymous European Maker
Infant's Cap
ca. 1750
silk embroidery on silk, edged with gold bobbin-lace
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Anonymous British Maker
Child's Dress
17th century
embroidered linen (white on white)
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Anonymous British Maker
Child's Dress
ca. 1720
silk-satin
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Anonymous French Maker
Folding Purse
18th century
embroidered silk trimmed with metallic lace and dyed raffia
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Beauvais Tapestry Manufactory, France
Handbag
1928
silk tapestry
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Beauvais Tapestry Manufactory, France
Handbag
1928
silk tapestry
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Sloan & Co., Newark, NJ
Egyptian Revival Reticule
ca. 1880
gold mesh on gold frame
with turquoise scarab
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Leah Shenandoah
Handbag
2009
rabbit skin with satin lining and handle of silver beads
National Museum of the American Indian, Washington DC

Auguste Malpertuy
for Furnion Père & Fils Ainé (Lyon)
Napoleon III
1855
woven portrait in silk jacquard
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Neyret Frères after Paul Hermann Wagner
Bons Amis
ca. 1880-90
woven picture in silk jacquard
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Timney Fowler Ltd. (London)
Heads
1983
screenprinted cotton furnishing fabric
Victoria & Albert Museum, London

Anonymous American Maker
Fortune-Telling Apron
ca. 1875-1925
embroidered silk-satin
National Museum of American History, Washington DC

Anonymous Paraguayan Maker
Handkerchief Border
ca. 1880
cotton (ñandutí lace)
National Museum of American History, Washington DC

Anonymous French Weavers
Fabric Panel - Directoire Motifs
ca. 1795-99
silk-satin
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Anonymous French Maker
Front Section of Waistcoat
ca. 1730-40
silk embroidery on silk satin
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

    Eternal things are raised far above this orb of generation and corruption, where the first matter, like a still flowing and ebbing sea, with diverse waves, but the same water, keepeth a restless and never tiring current.  What is below, in the universality of the kind, not in itself, doth abide; Man a long line of years hath continued, this man every hundredth is swept away.  This air-encircled globe is the sole region of Death, the grave, where everything that taketh life must rot, the lists of fortune and change, only glorious in the inconstancy and varying alterations of it; which, though many, seem yet to abide one, and being a certain entire one, are ever many.  The never-agreeing bodies of the elemental brethren turn one in another: the earth changeth her countenance with the seasons, sometimes looking cold and naked, other times hot and flowery.  Nay, I can not tell how, but even the lowest of those celestial bodies, that mother of months and empress of seas and moisture, as if she were a mirror of our constant mutability, appeareth (by her great nearness unto us) to participate of our alterations, never seeing us twice with that same face, now looking black, then pale and wan, sometimes again in the perfection and fulness of her beauty shining over us.  Death here no less than life doth act a part; the taking away of what is old being the making way for what is young.  This earth is as a table-book, and men are the notes; the first are washen out, that new may be written in.  

– William Drummond of Hawthornden, from A Cypress Grove (London: Hawthornden Press, 1919, reprinting the original edition of 1623)

Friday, July 18, 2014

Posing I

Karolina Kurkova for Vogue Mexico

Kai Newman for Vogue Germany

Bekah Jenkins for Red Magazine

Nora Shopova for Vogue Turkey

Luma Grothe for Grey Magazine

Carola Remer for L'Officiel Mexico

Claudia Schiffer for Dolce & Gabbana

Doug for Glamour Magazine

Doug for Glamour Magazine

Doug for Saint Laurent Paris
One Management in New York represents many fashion models and keeps the world informed about their professional doings. I appreciate this service because the places where the models appear are inevitably of a widely scattered nature and would be hard to track down if the agency had not already done the job.

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

Juergen Teller












Juergen Teller produced a portfolio of photographs called A Dozen Girls on commission from Louis Vuitton for the upcoming autumn/winter collection designed by Nicolas Ghesquière.

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Raised Waistline



This past spring, Nicolas Ghesquière presented his first Paris runway show since leaving the house of Balenciaga in 2012. He has taken up a new mission, designing for Louis Vuitton. His first show unified itself around a single design element  the waistline, elevated an inch or two above the natural waist. Along the line of this raised waist, the points of two elongated triangles converged. Broad-shouldered bodice-triangles mirrored A-line skirt-triangles. An astute German commentator referred to this collection as "1970s feminist architecture."

Freja Beha Erichsen opened the show




This ritual took place in a purpose-built pavilion on the grounds of the Louvre. Guests assembled under artificial light, with the walls apparently solid metal. When the show started the walls became blinds that opened. Daylight, seldom seen at fashion shows, caused excitement. (The infinitely famous editor of Vogue is seated near the right edge of photo immediately above, in a green-patterned garment.)




 Old friends also attended, of course 


Chiara Mastroianni and Catherine Deneuve

Hidetoshi Nakata and N.G.

Isabelle Huppert and N.G.