Looking for inspiration? Looking for new ideas to build your winter wardrobe?
Cinema and television are all sources of ideas. Image proliferation: where to start?
Back to the 1990s. Between minimalist looks, kitsch prints and short cuts, their return to the catwalks is undeniable. From Kurt Cobain-style lumberjack shirts to Kate Moss-style long silk babydolls, tumblers and pinterest sites are taking a closer look at the decade’s wardrobe. And department stores are far from denying it: tartan, velvet and suede will be on every rack for the next collections.
Turtleneck sweaters, velvet kimonos, mini skirts and fringed suede bags for Pimkie…
http://www.pimkie.fr/C-45745-oriental-cosmo.html
Nostalgia and VHS film memories: 5 cult series ideas that are good for winter and your wardrobe:
Rachel’s ( Jennifer Aniston) tartan skirt in “Friends” ( 1994).
Back to Monica’s New York apartment; pizza with Joey, and the ups and downs of Rachel and Ross- Ross and Rachel…
Carlton and Will’s Flashy sweaters and down jacket in “The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air” ( 1992)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2XrQrxVATdM
Credits and cult Handshake, it’s back to Bel-Air. Collision between chic suburbia and hip-hop culture.
Pop colors, flash, reinvested – among others – by Gola who revisits the Harrier.
The deer of the “Beverly Hills 90210” heroines (1993)
Brenda the rebel. Kelly the virtuous. The cult soap opera of the 1990s. More than a series: a part of everyday life for viewers. The characters have grown-and aged-with the teens of the decade.
Buffy’s long white coat.
Long before “Twilight”, “Vampire Diaries” and the like, Buffy was fighting sex symbols with fangs. A high school girl with a difference…and a complicated romance.
The midnight-blue velvet dress from “Sabrina, the Sorcerer’s Apprentice”.
Teens” series with Salem the cat – now a cult favorite; Sabrina experiments with her powers in a childlike way. Surrounded by her aunts in a very “witches” setting.
The 1990s was a decade of series: from drama (90210, Dawson) to sit-com, family series, fantasy shows (Buffy, Charmed…) to filmmakers’ series (Twin Peaks). It’s easy to forget just how rich this era was. If today, we’re emphasizing the new legitimacy of series in the cultural panorama, we mustn’t forget that this format has been proving its worth for over 50 years.
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