Thursday, December 30, 2010

Travis Banton- The Golden Age of Design-Paramount Studios


Edith Head

Travis Banton (August 18, 1894 – February 2, 1958) was the chief designer at Paramount Pictures. He is considered one of the most important Hollywood costume designers of the 1930s.
He was born in Waco, Texas. Travis moved to New York City as a child. Banton was educated at Columbia University and at the Art Students League where he studied art and fashion design.
An early apprenticeship with a high-society costume dressmaker earned him fame. When Mary Pickford selected one of his dresses for her wedding to Douglas Fairbanks, his reputation was established.
He opened his own dressmaking salon in New York City, and soon was asked to create costumes for the Ziegfeld Follies. In 1924, Travis Banton moved to Hollywood when Paramount contracted with him to create costumes for his first film, The Dressmaker From Paris.                                                                             
Beginning with Norma Talmadge in "Poppy," Banton designed clothing for Pola Negri and Clara Bow in the 1920s. In the '30s and '40s Banton designed for such stars as Kay Francis, Lilyan Tashman, Sylvia Sidney, Gail Patrick, Helen Vinson, and Claudette Colbert. Ultimately, Travis Banton may be best remembered for forging the style of such Hollywood icons as Carole Lombard, Marlene Dietrich, and the inimitable Mae West.
Glamour, understated elegance, and exquisite fabrics endeared Travis Banton to the most celebrated of Hollywood's beauties and made him one of the most sought-after costume designer of his era. As a viewing of such films as The Gilded Lily (1935) and Desire (1936)reveals, his clothes were marked by simple but stylish cuts (often on the bias), rich fabrics (such as satin and lame), and extravagant decoration (beads, fur, and feathers).
When Designer Howard Greer left Paramount, Banton was promoted to Head Designer and was responsible for dressing the studio's most illustrious stars. Because of his alcoholism and reputedly also at the instigation of his subordinate Edith Head, Banton was forced to leave Paramount. He started his own business and also designed for Twentieth Century-Fox from 1939-1941 and Universal from 1945-1948.

 Actresses he designed for

Clara Bow in It, 1927

Monday, December 27, 2010

The Golden Age -Howard Greer

  1. Howard Greer (16 April 1896 – April 1974, Los Angeles[1]) was a Hollywood fashion designer and a costume designer in the Golden Age of American cinema.
Greer began his fashion career at Lucile in 1916, working in both her New York and Chicago branches before serving in France in World War I. After the war, he remained in Europe, working for Lucille, Paul Poiret, and Molyneux, and designing for the theatre. He returned to America in 1921, and through his theatre work was hired as chief designer for Famous Players-Lasky studios,[2] which was later to emerge from several reorganizations and mergers as Paramount Pictures.
Greer left his post at Paramount and opened his own couture operation in Hollywood in December 1927,[2] where he designed custom clothing for the stars until his retirement in 1962. He also continued to create costumes for films into the 1950s, and designed mass-market clothing.
His best known film work includes the Katharine Hepburn films Christopher Strong (1933) and Bringing Up Baby (1938), and the gowns for 1940's My Favorite Wife.                                                                   
Greer published an autobiography, Designing Male, in 1951.

Sunday, December 26, 2010

Legion of Decency- 1934

The birth of censorship, and do take the time to look at the list at the lower end of page you might be surprised at the Films listed

The National Legion of Decency was an organization dedicated to identifying and combating objectionable content, from the point of view of the Roman Catholic Church in the United States, in motion pictures. For the first quarter-century or so of its existence, the legion wielded great power in the American motion picture industry.
The Legion was founded in 1933 by Archbishop of Cincinnati John T. McNicholas as the Catholic Legion of Decency (CLOD) in response to an address given by apostolic delegate Archbishop Amleto Giovanni Cicognani at the Catholic Charities Convention in New York City. Cicognani warned against the "massacre of innocence of youth" and urged a campaign for "the purification of the cinema."
An important aspect of the studio system was the Production Code, which was implemented in 1934 in response to pressure from the Legion of Decency and public protest against the graphic violence and sexual suggestiveness of some sound films (the urban gangster films, for example, and the films of Mae West). The Legion had been established in 1933 by the American bishops of the Roman Catholic.
The Legion's ratings were applied to movies made in the United States (which were subject to the Production Code until 1967) as well as those imported from other countries. Beginning in 1968, the ratings were applied in addition to any rating assigned by the MPAA film rating system.
Legion-organized boycotts made a C rating harmful to a film's distribution and profitability. Accordingly, for the majority of years that the rating was applied, most condemned films were made outside of the United States, where their producers didn't have as much to fear from the condemnation. Of the 53 movies the Legion had placed on its condemned list by 1943, only Howard Hughes' The Outlaw came from a major US studio, and it had not been approved by the Production Code or distributed widely.1933
Blood Money
Design for Living
Extase -- One of the first foreign films to be condemned.
Grandeur and Decadence -- One of the first foreign films to be condemned.
Queen Christina
The Worst Woman in Paris

 1934

Finishing School
The Life of Vergie Winters
Madame DuBarry
Men in White
One More River
Riptide
The Scarlet Empress

 1937

Damaged Goods 1940
Strange Cargo -- Initially condemned, the studio released a cut version.
This Thing Called Love

 1941

No Greater Sin -- Not approved by the Production Code.
Two-Faced Woman
Volpone

1942

White Cargo

 1943

The Outlaw

 1945

Mom and Dad
 1947
Black Narcissus
Forever Amber 
 1948
Three Daring Daughters

1950

Bitter Rice (initial American release[1])

1951

M
The M
1953
The Moon is Blue -- The first studio-produced film to deliberately bypass Production Code approval. Also the first condemned studio film to turn a PROFIT]
1954 The French Line

 1955
Rififi -- Initially condemned, was re-released with changes for B rating.
I Am A Camera

1956

And God Created Woman
Baby Doll -- The first film to be approved by the Production Code but condemned by the Legion of Decency.
The Seven Year Itch -- Had to cut scenes from the original play to be approved by Legion of Decency 1957
Love in the Afternoon -- Initially condemned, the studio changed the ending.

 1959

Some Like it Hot-  Shakespeare-Wow

 1960
Breathless
Never on Sunday
Psycho- Duh
Spartacus- what naked men

 1961

A Cold Wind in August
Jules and Jim
Viridiana

 1962

Boccaccio '70

 1963


 1964

Kiss Me, Stupid
From Russia With Love- A bond Film
Of Human Bondage

 1965

The Pawnbroker

 1966

Blowup
Masculin, féminin
Torn Curtain

 1967

Hurry Sundown
A Fistful of Dollars-Clint Eastwood
Reflections in a Golden Eye

 1968
Rosemary's Baby- Duh
The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
The Odd Couple- wonder what that was about

1969

I Am Curious (Yellow)

 1971

A Clockwork Orange -wow
The Last Picture Show
Billy Jack- why
\

1973
Last Tango in Paris- what didn't like the dancing
The Wicker Man- pagan film
High Plains Drifter-  Clint Eastwood

 1975

Rocky Horror Picture Show- Gee this is a surprise
Lemora

 1976

The Outlaw Josey Wales- Clint Eastwood
Carrie
The Omen- Gee

 1978

Grease- John Travolta
Dawn of the Dead

 1979

All That Jazz-Really

 1980

American Gigolo- Gee
Dressed to Kill
Friday the 13th
Little Darlings
Used Cars

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Orry-Kelly Designer for Film

Orry-Kelly One Of the Fabulously Film Designers of  Hollywoods Hey Day
 
Orry-Kelly studied art in Australia but came to New York as an actor. Between stints as a song-and-dance man, he designed for vaudeville and Broadway productions. After arriving in Hollywood, Jack Warner promised him a job in the costume department if he could please leading ladies Kay Francis and Ruth Chatterton. It was money in the bank for Orry-Kelly.
His style differed from those of other Hollywood designers. He avoided Adrian's black-and-white contrasts in favor of a wide range of grays. His fabrics were of as high quality as Travis Banton's, but he disdained the Paramount "shimmer." Nonetheless, costumes by Orry-Kelly were never dull. He cut with style and enhanced with intricate details. Tiny pleats and piping created subtle surface shadows, as did the textured embroideries, open work, crocheted lace, and trapunto. Appreciating skilled handiwork, he even included handpainted fabrics for some of his designs. As more daring decoration, he might add polka dots or punctuate with rows of buttons.
However, decoration was not his aim when working with Bette Davis. As a former actor, he understood the necessity of depicting a character's depth. Davis demanded that each role have a life of its own, with costumes playing a significant part in defining each character's image. At times, Orry-Kelly virtually resculpted her body to achieve a desired effect, and their successes included Jezebel , Dark Victory , The Little Foxes , Now, Voyager , and many others. One of Davis's earliest and least favorite films, Fashions of 1934 , which stars some of Orry-Kelly's more imaginative creations, stands out as a delightful spoof of the fashion world.
Orry-Kelly's unpretentious style well served Warner Bros. He peopled its gritty gangster features with many a well-heeled moll. He'd take the kind of girl that "a man's man" could "go for," and wrap her in wools as beautiful as chinchilla. His costumes for The Maltese Falcon and Casablanca spoke with the rich spareness of Hemingway.
But the Orry-Kelly style hardly suited everyone. The studio delegated Busby Berkeley production numbers to Milo Anderson, who also designed most of the Olivia de Havilland pictures. And when Orry-Kelly worked at Fox in the 1940s, he was never quite comfortable with those glitzy Betty Grable extravaganzas.
Freelancing in the 1950s widened Orry-Kelly's range. He put Katharine Hepburn in sportswear for Pat and Mike , Shirley Jones in gingham for Oklahoma! , Rosalind Russell in everything for Auntie Mame , and Marilyn Monroe in barely anything for Some Like It Hot . The early 1960s assigned lly to several adult dramas, including Sweet Bird of Youth and Five Finger Exercise .
—Edith C. Lee

 















Costume Designer. Nationality: American. Born: John Orry Kelly in Kiama, New South Wales, 31 December 1897; emigrated to the United States, 1923. Education: Studied singing and art in Sydney. Career: Worked as mural painter in Sydney before emigrating, then worked as waiter, clerk, actor, decorative painter for shops and theater productions, and for Fox silent film titles, and costume designer for vaudeville shows at the Palace Theater, New York; 1931—moved to Hollywood, then chief designer for Warner Bros., 1932–43, 20th Century-Fox, 1943–47, Universal, 1947–50, and then freelance. Awards: Academy Award for An American in Paris , 1951; Les Girls , 1957; Some Like It Hot , 1959. Died: Hollywood, California, 26 February 1964.
                
                Orry with Edith Head>

Films as Costume Designer:

1932
The Rich Are Always with Us (Green) (co); So Big (Wellman); You Said a Mouthful (Bacon); I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang (LeRoy); The Crash (Dieterle); The Match King (Bretherton and Keighley); One Way Passage (Garnett); Week-End Marriage (Freeland); Winner Takes All (Del Ruth); Crooner (Bacon); Tiger Shark (Hawks); Two against the World (Mayo) (co); Cabin in the Cotton (Curtiz); Three on a Match (LeRoy); Scarlet Dawn (Dieterle); Lawyer Man (Dieterle); Employees Entrance (Del Ruth); Frisco Jenny (Wellman); Twenty Thousand Years in Sing Sing (Curtiz); Ladies They Talk About (Bretherton)
1933
Captured (Del Ruth); Central Airport (Wellman); Convention City (Mayo); Ex-Lady (Florey); Female (Curtiz); 42nd Street (Bacon) (co); Hard to Handle (LeRoy); The House on 56th Street (Florey) (co); The Narrow Corner (Green); The Picture Snatcher (Bacon); Private Detective 62 (Curtiz); The Working Man (Adolfi); The Mystery of the Wax Museum
 
Orry-Kelly with Kay Francis
(Curtiz); Voltaire (Adolfi); The Little Giant (Del Ruth); The Mind Reader (Del Ruth); The King's Vacation (Adolfi); Parachute Jumper (Green); Grand Slam (Dieterle); Blondie Johnson (Enright); Gold Diggers of 1933 (LeRoy); Baby Face (Green); The Life of Jimmy Dolan ( The Kid's Last Fight ) (Mayo); Lilly Turner (Wellman); Heroes for Sale (Wellman); The Mayor of Hell (Mayo); The Silk Express (Enright); Mary Stevens M.D. (Bacon); The Kennel Murder Case (Curtiz); She Had to Say Yes (Berkeley and Amy); College Coach (Wellman); The World Changes (LeRoy); Son of a Sailor (Bacon); Massacre (Crosland); Journal of a Crime (Keighley); Harold Teen ( The Dancing Foot ) (Roth)
1934
As the Earth Turns (Green); British Agent (Curtiz); The Circus Clown (Enright); Dames (Enright); Dark Hazard (Green); Desirable (Mayo); Dr. Monica (Keighley); The Dragon Murder Case (Humberstone); Easy to Love (Keighley); Fashions of 1934 (Dieterle); The Firebird (Dieterle); Flirtation Walk (Borzage); Happiness Ahead (LeRoy); Hi, Nellie (LeRoy); Housewife (Green); I Am a Thief (Florey); Kansas City Princess (Keighley); The Key (Curtiz); Madame Du Barry (Dieterle); The Merry Frinks (Green); Merry Wives of Reno (Humberstone); Midnight Alibi (Crosland); Murder in the Clouds (Lederman); The Personality Kid (Crosland); Return of the Terror (Bretherton); Wonder Bar (Bacon); Babbitt (Keighley); I've Got Your Number (Enright); Gambling Lady (Mayo); Heat Lightning (LeRoy); Jimmy the Gent (Curtiz); Bedside (Flrey); A Modern Hero (Pabst); Twenty Million Sweethearts (Enright); Smarty ( Hit Me Again ) (Florey); He Was Her Man (Bacon); Underworld (Del Ruth); A Very Honorable Guy (Bacon); Fog over Frisco (Dieterle); Here Comes the Navy (Bacon); Registered Nurse (Florey); Friends of Mr. Sweeney (Ludwig); Side Street (Green); The Case of the Howling Dog (Crosland); A Lost Lady (Green); Big Hearted Herbert (Keighley); Gentlemen Are Born (Green); The St. Louis Kid ( A Perfect Weekend ) (Enright); I Sell Anything (Florey); Maybe It's Love (McG ann); The Secret Bride ( Concealment ) (Dieterle); Gold Diggers of 1935 (Berkeley)
1935
Bordertown (Mayo); Broadway Gondolier (Bacon); Broadway Hostess (McDonald); Dangerous (Green); The Frisco Kid (Bacon); G-Men (Keighley); I Found Stella Parish (LeRoy); In Caliente (Bacon); Living on Velvet (Borzage); Miss Pacific Fleet (Enright); Page Miss Glory (LeRoy) (co); The Payoff (Florey); Shipmates Forever (Borzage); Stars over Broadway (Keighley); Sweet Adeline (LeRoy); The Widow from Monte Carlo (Collins); The Woman in Red (Florey); Front Page Woman (Curtiz); The Goose and the Gander (Green); Special Agent (Keighley); Stranded (Borzage); The Petrified Forest (Mayo); The Case of the Curious Bride (Curtiz); The Florentine Dagger (Florey); Going Highbrow (Florey); The Girl from Tenth Avenue ( Men on Her Mind ) (Green); Bright Lights ( Funny Face ) (Berkeley); The Irish in Us (Bacon); I Live for Love ( I Live for You ) (Berkeley); Little Big Shot (Curtiz); Ceiling Zero (Hawks); Freshman Love ( Rhythm on the River ) (McGann)
1936
China Clipper (Enright); Colleen (Green); Gold Diggers of 1937 (Bacon); The Golden Arrow (Green); Hearts Divided (Borzage); I Married a Doctor (Mayo); Isle of Fury (McDonald); Jailbreak (Grinde); The Law in Her Hands (Clemens); Murder by an Aristocrat (McDonald); Polo Joe (McGann); Satan Met a Lady (Dieterle); The Singing Kid (Keighley); Snowed Under (Enright); Stage Struck (Berkeley); Stolen Holiday (Curtiz); Times Square Playboy (McGann); The White Angel (Dieterle); Cain and Mabel (Bacon); The Walking Dead (Curtiz); Three Men on a Horse (LeRoy); Jailbreak ( Murder in the Big House ) (Grinde); Give Me Your Heart ( Sweet Aloes ) (Mayo); Here Comes Carter ( Voice of Scandal ) (Clemens)
1937
Another Dawn (Dieterle); Call It a Day (Mayo); First Lady (Hogan); The Go-Getter (Berkeley); Green Light (Borzage); Hollywood Hotel (Berkeley); It's Love I'm After (Mayo); Kid Galahad (Curtiz); Marked Woman (Bacon); That Certain Woman (Goulding); Ever Since Eve (Bacon); The King and the Chorus Girl ( Romance Is Sacred ) (LeRoy); The Singing Marine (Enright); Tovarich (Litvak) (co)
1938
Confession (May); Angels with Dirty Faces (Curtiz); Four Daughters (Curtiz) (co); Four's a Crowd (Curtiz); Jezebel (Wyler); My Bill (Farrow); Secrets of an Actress (Keighley); The Sisters (Litvak); Comet over Broadway (Berkeley); Women Are Like That (Logan)
1939
Dark Victory (Goulding); Juarez (Dieterle); King of the Underworld (Seiler); The Oklahoma Kid (Bacon); The Old Maid (Goulding); Women in the Wind (Farrow); The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex (Curtiz); On Your Toes (Enright); Wings of the Navy (Bacon); When Tomorrow Comes (Stahl); Indianapolis Speedway ( Devil on Wheels ) (Bacon)
1940
All This, and Heaven Too (Litvak); The Letter (Wyler); The Sea Hawk (Curtiz); 'Til We Meet Again (Goulding); My Love Comes Back (Bernhardt); A Dispatch from Reuters ( This Man Reuter ) (Dieterle); No Time for Comedy (Keighley)
1941
The Bride Came C.O.D. (Keighley); The Great Lie (Goulding); Kings Row (Wood); The Little Foxes (Wyler); The Maltese Falcon (Huston); The Man Who Came to Dinner (Keighley); The Strawberry Blonde (Walsh); Affectionately Yours (Bacon); Million Dollar Baby (Bernhardt); They Died with Their Boots On (Walsh)
1942
Casablanca (Curtiz); In This Our Life (Huston); Now, Voyager (Rapper); The Hard Way (V. Sherman); George Washington Slept Here (Keighley)
1943
Old Acquaintance (V. Sherman); This Is the Army (Curtiz); Mission to Moscow (Curtiz); Edge of Darkness (Milestone); Watch on the Rhine (Shumlin); Princess O'Rourke (Krasna)
1944
Arsenic and Old Lace (Capra); Mr. Skeffington (V. Sherman)
1945
The Corn Is Green (Rapper); The Dolly Sisters (Cummings); Conflict (Bernhardt); London Town ( My Heart Goes Crazy ) (Ruggles); Temptation (Pichel)
1946
A Stolen Life (Bernhardt)
1947
The Shocking Miss Pilgrim (Seaton); Ivy (Wood); Something in the Wind (Pichel); Mother Wore Tights (W. Lang) (co); Night Song (Cromwell); A Woman's Vengeance (Z. Korda)
1948
For the Love of Mary (de Cordova); Larceny (G. Sherman) (co); One Touch of Venus (Seiter); Rogues' Regiment (Florey); Berlin Express (Tourneur) (co)
1949
Family Honeymoon (Binyon); The Lady Gambles (Gordon); South Sea Sinner ( East of Java ) (Humberstone); Undertow (Castle); Johnny Stool Pigeon (Castle); Woman in Hiding (Gordon); Take One False Step (Erskine); Once More My Darling (Montgomery)
1950
Deported (Siodmak); Under the Gun (Tetzlaff); Behave Yourself (Beck); One Way Street (Fregonese); Harvey (Koster)
1951
An American in Paris (Minnelli) (co); The Lady Says No! (Ross)
1953
I Confess (Hitchcock)
1954
She Couldn't Say No ( Beautiful but Dangerous ) (Bacon)
1955
Oklahoma! (Zinnemann) (co)
1957
Les Girls (Cukor)
1958
Auntie Mame (Da Costa)
1959
Too Much, Too Soon (Napoleon); The Hanging Tree (Daves) (co); Some Like It Hot (Wilder)
1962
The Chapman Report (Cukor); Five Finger Exercise (Daniel Mann); The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (Minnelli) (co); Gypsy (LeRoy); A Majority of One (LeRoy); Sweet Bird of Youth (Brooks); Two for the Seesaw (Wise)
1963
In the Cool of the Day (Stevens) (co); Irma La Douce (Wilder)
1964
Sunday in New York (Tewksbury)
1965
Lady L . (Ustinov)

Publications

On ORRY-KELLY: articles—

Chierichetti, David, in Hollywood Costume Design , New York, 1976.
Leese, Elizabeth, in Costume Design in the Movies , New York, 1976.
LaVine, Robert, in In a Glamorous Fashion , New York, 1980.
Gibb, Bill, in Films and Filming (London), December 1983.

Thanks Google for info

Sunday, December 19, 2010

The disapearence of Paula

Okay So I fell off the world for the last week, I am buried in custom work, and have two school projects due before my first show of the year. It is amazing just how much sewing I have done in the last week and have 4 deadlines in 5 days, still have trims to do on some and hems always hems. The Great helper to all  is Morpheus which seems to have forgot to drop by and take me to take place of rest and dreams ,which hasn't helped me feel any better about my blessing. Then there is the clients who think all I have to do is wiggle my nose,and poof it is magically done. I wish I could make them understand I can't sew 12 hours a day every day. But Alas .......
So with that said, I have been knee deep in steel boning and busk, build a wonderful custom corset with a fantasy theme , and it is amazing, still have some finish work on that one. Then there is the 1893 Ladies walking coats 2 yes I said  2 and each is unique. Then we have the 1790's Lades gown with panniers and stomacher which has started to take shape quite nicely, it will be ready for the second fitting around the 27 or so. The fantasy bodice and velvet skirt are ready for their final on the 27th ,and then  a day off.  I will post pictures as I finish off the hems and such  but I still am on my sewing Island and will be until I am OK where I am on the list. I haven't forgot my friends, they just will have to be patience and wait until I feel like I can breathe, or feel my fingers. As ever sewing my way thur this world,one stitch at a time LPASF

Monday, December 13, 2010

Lack of sleep on the mind

Okay, this is now a week of no sleep or little sleep and of course sleep interupted by 2 loving cats that have no sense of time, so was this the cause of the going into old boxes of fabric that my late mother in law gave me at 3 am. Or was it the new project we were giving before break????????  We have been discussing the theory of fashion and influences, during class . We have been covering the pre-war and War era fashions, which has my head buzzing due to all the great designers of the time. You just can not love the era of Hollywood and the stars of that time. Okay, so we have a a set of guide lines set out by the WPB or The War Production Board. They were put into action in April 1942, this will shape all direction of fashion during the decade. The General Limitation Order L-85 was deemed as  necessary to promote national defense and to the eliminating nonessential details and stated the following:
 Short narrow skirts with a hem circumference no larger than 72 inches.Jackets no longer than 25 inches
Hems no deeper than 2 inches.No more than one pocket per blouse and no patch pockets on jackets or coats
No trouser cuffs or pleats.no vest with suit
Belts no larger than 2inches high. No sleeves of bias cut ,Dolmen or leg of mutton .
Exemptions were given to infants,toddler,bridal apparel, maternity wear,and people of "abnormal size", this also applied to Ladies over 5 foot 8 inches, also costumes, burial gowns ,and vestments for religious and judiciary persons.
 Designers were force to work to these rules or face fines or jail.  Mr Ward of  "Montgomery Wards" Dept Store was jailed over these rules. Fine fabrics have started  disappearing,The nylon and silk are being use for the service. The creation of rayon and acetate are now available for cilvians. The Wool fabrics have labels for content for the first time. Cottons has had restrictions placed on them.
So with all of this, I now have to create a Business or Day dress with jacket , for the era of 1942 . We do not have to use period fabric, however we must be considerate of those details,and this:
 "This pledge" that was issued to the consumer by the Dept of Price Administration:
      As a consumer,in the total defense of democracy, I will do my part to make my home,my community my country ready, efficient,and strong by fighting the war with scissors,needle and thread.
                                              silk wool blend from England

                                     Purple rayon blend challis with the Italian boucle wool

So after my late nite digging, these are the fabrics, I have come up with, silk,wool blend an Italian boucle woven wool and a Rayon blend challis all with a purple theme, thanks to surfing vintage shoe sites. Damn websites get you in trouble every time. I love heels and this was an era in which they really began to become an item.  I have drafted my pattern and in the coming days , you will get updates as I put it all together LPASF

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

The Lestat Shirt returned for the Evening

Spent the day working on one of my oldest pieces in my folio. I have been making this style since 1995, many call it a Pirate shirt , however it is my thought of what my favorite Vampire  would have wore . Through the years this shirt has been ask for by many names , and used for all kinds of events. I have always thought the period of the 17th century was a dream for the gentlemen of the era. I think we have lost something when all the rage is a tee shirt and bagging jeans. Elegant is not a word used for a man to day and yet so many fell for Lestat. I dont think it was just the Vampire thing. I really believe the Clothing makes the man or at least creates the mystery that so many of my clients long for. Via La Mystery!!!!!

Saturday, December 4, 2010

This week homework submissions


Spend the day sewing thu the hand basting ,and starting the assemble process, The dress is a 1950 day dress, I choose a  lightweight cashmere /wool blend in red. It has always has been one of my fav's and well here in Florida, it has cooled down to think of warmer fabrics that I don't get to work with very often. I have not decide whether I am going to change the design from the full skirt to the pencil skirt I think both will work, I just think that a wiggle skirt might be the ultatament to the bodice design. The bodice is total bias cut with darts every where including the collar,shoulders bust, sleeves,and and back ,the skirt has six darts as well.  This was very time consuming with the basting and sewing I have not done a really serious press job as of yet and still need to work on hems topstitching, the interior hand work and finish the skirt with what choice I make to the style of the skirt but, at the end of today I put it on the "dummie" and said I was done with this day. Pleased with as far as I had gone and a sense of creation

Friday, December 3, 2010

Review of Fashions

So Did you see Vicki C's Fashion Show or the Grammy Awards ?  I watch the Vicki C and have to say I was not only impressed with the Stage craft, we all are in love with the wings. But what really drew my attention was the first line up," Gingham" ,yep the always little known check pattern  fabric that many of us are using for mocking up toiles.  The use of this lovely little fabric just blew me away, the history of Gingham isn't known to many, useless you a Woman from the depression era. It was created for Feedsacks for animals,it came in differnent sized bags. Many women of the time made dresses from these, even curtains , tableclothes etc. This era was a Make Do, Use Up, or Do with out time. Fashion  has kind of come full circle considering the state of the ecomony. There was a Gingham girl ad campain when the fabric was promoted, it led to dolls printed on the bags as well as apron patterns. Now we are in the middle of a vintage resergence of fashion of the 40's and the fiftys . I have to give cudo's to Vicki C"s  for making ginghan a full attention getter . They have shown that if it ain't broke don't fix it, and that the poor forgotten Little Gigham girl  is still alive and well,  just alot sexier!
The one designer at the Grammy's that got my attention isn't a really known Designer to us however she has a way about her that said Hello I am Definely here. I am talking about Mrs Tina Knowles, most of us aren't aware she has a bigger job in life. She is Beyonce's' Mom, and the green sparkling gowns, she build for Destiny's Child were Beautiful, sexy and graceful. Of course One only had to wipe their mouth over Julia Robert's gown  it was "vintage" Valentino and well we haven't had those kind of designers in a long time. One could only dream. I write this because I believe we have stop dressing as elegantly as we could . So on Dec 17th I challenge{ ask } everyone to pick something that says something about you as a woman, and for my guy friends  No JEANS!!! OR TEE SHIRTS,  pick some upscale and just be aware how you get treated, you might get a suprise. May we always create beautiful things, but to wear them That's Class     LPASF


                                                          GINHAM BEACH WEAR
                                                                          1949


                                                     Vintage recreation of a Butterick pattern
                                                      that almost shut the pattern company down
                                                       due to the demand for the Pattern

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Making time


Home work 1949 pants and vest
 Well this week has been really busy, School work, customs, show in 5wks, Where is that extra 5 days I dream about ? I have a 1895 corset waiting for a new busk  Please Mr Post man hurry that package up. I have a 17th century gown waiting for fitting,tomorrow and a 1870's walking coat to be trimmed out. Sometimes I hate the holiday interuption, stopping to Decorate, but I have learn that with out, outside interuptions I would be sleeping at my machine. It seems that my days are fast diappearing , I just  recieved an invite to post my vintage work on Sense Of Fashion, but without those extra days....
 I spend last nite reading about the Era of the of the 1893, which is the next set of home work a skirt and bodice/blouse combo done in quater and half nch scale drafting . Math that desingers use in Fashion Design.



My Renassainctione work
 I have a degree, which I work for as a single mom , now the kids are grown and it seems that it is even harder and now it seems to be harder to be even more organised with this. I think it will get better but will it be before I pull my hair out. I decide to share pictures of  my work so those of you who haven't had the pleasure can see what I do for a living  So until my next post  Keep creating, We are falling behind their rate of Destrution LPASF

Monday, November 22, 2010

Lessons from the past due to bang my head on a computer

Well over the last two weeks I have probability beat my head against the side of a computer far more that I ever have on a Sewing Machine ! The amazing thing is I am actually beginning to understand a lot More than I ever wanted, and it is not just the Computer, the sewing, but why America is also going to Hell in a hand basket.Weird but true, so Let Me get this off my shoulders before I tell you about my studies
We as citizens of this great county have decide not to do things, the way we know works, we do not have the pride our Parents had. People today could care less if something, they do causes harm to our country. Blaming it on Money,Time, or "It is not going to affect me". It is as simple as this, It has been ignored, forgot, or put in the" Oh well" box . When we were brought up, we believed this Country could do anything! SEE 1960 and Before.
 The closest we get today is reminiscent of old comics,commercials, and old Movies. We supported Our own Industry, We bought things made here, we created some of the best of the best in Many fields.  We Dreamed Big, and we went after it.  What has happen, is we have made the Choice to take the easy way out on a grand scale We don't make anything here, we sell our Ideas to other countries, and then Bitch cause there are no jobs, and Do so STANDING  in a store where every thing was made in China claiming it is cheaper to buy it there. HELLO, if we are to ever have a Nation that we are proud of.  People have to learn to think about each and every action that can damage this country. It is not just the Jerks on the Hill responsibility,  it is each of us, every time we BUY something, Is it really cheaper ? To watch a Million Jobs disappear or pay a little more? I am amazed that we the people do this without thought to the big picture. Our Grandparents  made do,redid, used up or Did without. They Did Not have a Storage unit to Pack their stuff away , cause what they had they were proud of.  Not filling the I Need it now moment. We have to decide if we are part of a future where We are a nation of I , or a Nation of We. Our Grandparents and Great Grands Made that decision and we will have to face the same thing unless we start changing the choices we make. LPASF

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Almost Done

We have added a new coat of paint, and now there is writng on the walls as well. The new shelves for all of the printers , and my pattern software plotter has a place to live. I have been able to work a bit this week , but Things will be much better by the end of the weekend. I still have to rework all the drawers so I can find everything, but it will be so nice to be able to sit and sew without hunting for tools and such.  I put some sewing stuff up on ebay to get rid of it . I just don't have the room I did before,and It can help pay for patterns or something. I am sure my clients think I have forgotten about them, I haven't and will be letting all of them know their shippment dates . I just needed to make sure we had NO more wildlife in the studio. I dont do snakes very well.......