Vogue Australia
Source Vogue Australia. Photographer Troyt Coburn.
Categories: In MagazinesTagged: Australia, beach, nautical, navy, sailor, vogue
Source Vogue Australia. Photographer Troyt Coburn.
Categories: In MagazinesSet during the Great Depression, Public Enemies is the true story of FBI agent Melvin Purvis’s attempt to stop criminals John Dillinger, Baby Face Nelson, and Pretty Boy Floyd. The film is an adaptation of Bryan Burrough’s non-fiction book Public Enemies: America’s Greatest Crime Wave and the Birth of the FBI, 1933–34. Christian Bale plays FBI agent Purvis, Johnny Depp plays Dillinger, Marion Cotillard plays Dillinger’s girlfriend Billie Frechette, Channing Tatum plays Floyd and Giovanni Ribisi plays Alvin Karpis.
The film starts in 1933 and is essentially a gangster flick, so expect plenty of three-piece suits, fedoras, overcoats, double breasted jackets, leather gloves, and gangster chic. Looks to be a great flick for vintage car enthusiasts also, chase scenes, crashes and all.
Universal Pictures’ Public Enemies (2009)
Copyright © Universal Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
Thanks to Starlet Showcase for posting these great photos from a 1944 issue of Life Magazine, a kind of 1940s-Sartorialist look at girls passing the intersection of Hollywood and Vine, in Los Angeles. A nice glimpse of real-life fashion in mid-40′s USA.
Categories: In Magazines, On The Street, Vintage PhotosImages of Queen Latifah by photographer Mary Ellen Matthews.
Categories: CelebritiesFrench actress Audrey Tautou (of Amelie fame), plays 1920s fashion designer Coco Chanel in the 2009 film, Coco Avant Chanel (Coco Before Chanel).
Categories: Celebrities, On FilmCheck out these beauties at the Bata Shoe Museum. The website reads:
“These shoes and their matching handbag were purchased at Owens and Elmes in Toronto in 1944 and complimented the appearance of a fortunate woman from Hamilton, Ontario. The shoes would most truthfully be described as peep-toe, platform sling-backs, but they are part of the larger genre known as “platforms”. The open toes and straps of these shoes are a refined response to the sandal trend of the 1930s, the first time that women in the 20th century could show glimpses of their bare feet. Evening sandals were introduced in the late ‘30s once daytime sandals became fashionable as families across the continent flocked to beaches for affordable holidays.
The platform under the ball of the foot and the heel are made from wood, the shoes are covered in a green fabric that is meant to look like suede and they’re trimmed with snakeskin. None of these materials were on the European or North American war-time ration lists, which included among other materials, petroleum, leather, rubber and silk. This list of rationed materials strained the resources of the shoemaking industry because it left very few materials for production. This difficulty was embraced as a challenge by innovative shoemakers and these shoes are a good example of the quirky fashion of the ‘40s which focussed more on the creation of the image of women “making do” and “taking care” of the home front, rather than the sexy glamour of the preceding 1930s.”
Categories: Accessories, ShoesAmelia Earhart-inspired collection at Jean Paul Gaultier.
Categories: On CatwalksCheck out Eye Bobs online glasses store, “helping the middle aged read menus in style.” Thanks to Hollister Hovey for the link.
Categories: Accessories, Men's FashionAll wearing Remix Vintage, from left to right: Sharon Davis, Mia Goldsmith, Katie Anderson, Katja Hrastar.
Categories: Events & Festivals, ShoesPhotos by the brilliant Bobby Bonsey, taken at Herrang Dance Camp July 2009 (Herrang, Sweden).
Above: Peter Loggins. Below: Lennart Westerlund, Shane McCarthy, Mimmi Gunnarsson, Fatima Teffahi.
And yet another tip from The Sartorialist, this book: Elegance – The Seeberger Brothers and the Birth of Fashion Photography by Chronicle Books.
Categories: Books, Men's Fashion, Vintage Photos