Showing posts with label scarlett johansson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label scarlett johansson. Show all posts

Friday, May 6, 2016

PINK HAIR

More stars get in on the pink hair. For the spring/summer 99 collection, the supermodel Kate Moss stood out with long straight locks dyed a deep shade of hot pink, years later, for the spring/summer 2016 on Louis Vuitton, Giamba, Julien David, Maison Marginal and Haider Ackermann we sow some models with pink hair. Two models as Fernanda Ly and Charlotte Fee, have made their hallmark. Some actresses dye their hair pink to script requirements, other just to follow a trend. From the tips to total look, but better if the base is blonde.
Dakota and Elle Fanning

Angelina Jolie - Kate Moss - Drew Barrymore - Sienna Miller - Rosie Huntinghton-Whiteley

Cara Delevingne - Charlotte Fee - Pyper America Smith - Gemma Ward - Kendall Jenner

Bianca Balti - Georgia May Jegger - Natasha Poly - Fernanda Ly - Amanda Seyfried

Blake Lively - Kate Hudson - Rachel McAdams - Scarlet Johansson - Emma Stone

Avril Lavigne - Rita Ora - Hilary Duff - Grimes - Katy Perry

Natalie Portman - Kristen Dunst - Brigitte Bardot - Twiggy - Shirley Maclaine
From the catwalks Spring-Summer 2016:
Giamba - Julien David - Louis Vuitton - Haider Ackermann - Maison Margiela 

Monday, April 27, 2015

FASHION PHOTOGRAPHERS - CORINNE DAY

Corinne Day was a British photographer,she left the school at 16 and it is noted in 1989 for a series of images made using his friends as models and portraying them with a knowing look and inside the world it describes. Typical representative of the new photography English,she influence on the style and perception of photography in the early 1990s has been immense. As a self taught photographer, Day brought a more hard edged documentary look to fashion image making, in which she often included biographical elements. Corinne begins publishing of independent magazines, then she was regularly commissioned by British, Italian and Japanese Vogue. Corinne Day was the photographer of a generation – the woman credited with launching Kate Moss’s career, she spent the 90s working for magazines from The Face to Vogue and establishing a raw, documentary-style aesthetic within fashion photography.

Kate Moss

Gisele Bundchen

Natalie Portman

Scarlet Johansson

Gemma Ward

Jessica Stam

Jessica Stam
Freja Bhea Erichsen

Freja Bhea Erichsen


Kate Moss

Lou Doillon

Rosemary Ferguson
Kate Moss

Friday, January 30, 2015

SMOKE

 "The most precious things are lighter than the air." Paul Auster wrote in his book "Smoke" that later became a film.
 If  the slang term "Bogart"  is used .to mean to keep something all for oneself, thus depriving anyone else of having any, derived from the last name of famous actor Humphrey Bogart because he often kept a cigarette in the corner of his mouth, seemingly never actually drawing on it or smoking it.
  How can we imagine  femmes fatale as Marlene Dietrich often portrayed with a cigarette in his hands or Rita Hayworth in "Gilda" and Uma Thurman in "Pulp Fiction" without a cigarette between his fingers? How would it be possible to describe the character of Zeno Cosini without his last cigarette!    In the last month in Italy circulates the absurd idea by  Minister of Health to prohibit the use of cigarettes in movies and fiction. Obviously some filmmakers have replied: "What sense does limit the actions of a fictional character? Artistic expression hasn't the mission to educate "

 « Le cose più preziose sono più leggere dell'aria.» così scriveva Paul Auster nel suo libro Smoke poi diventato anche un film.
 Se in slang il termine "Bogart" viene usato col significato di condividere, deriva proprio dal cognome dell'attore Humphrey Bogart il quale teneva spesso una sigaretta all'angolo della bocca senza apparentemente volerla fumare.
Possiamo immaginarci Femmes fatale come Marlene Dietrich perennemente ritrartta con una sigaretta tra le mani  o Rita Hayworth in Gilda e Uma Thurman in Pulp Fiction senza la sigaretta tra le dita ? Come sarebbe possibile raccontare il personaggio di Zeno Cosini senza la sua "ultima sigaretta"!
 In Italia da un mese a questa parte circola l'idea assurda da parte del ministro della salute di vietare l'uso delle sigarette nei film e nelle fiction. Ovviamente alcuni registi si sono rivoltati: “Ma che senso ha limitare le azioni di un personaggio immaginario? L’espressione artistica non ha la missione di educare”
ph.Jeanlup Sreff-Harper's Bazaar 1964
Tippi Hedren by Philippe Halsman 1962
Marlene Dietrich
Catherine Deneuve by Helmut Newton
Coco Chanel by Horst P. Horst
Lisa Fonssagrives by Irving Penn 1949
Sophia Loren

Linda Evangelista by Helmut Newton


ph.Irvin Penn 1949
Sheila Terry
Angelina Jolie
Kate Moss
Candice Swanepoel by Steven Meisel
Charlotte Gainsbourg
Claudia Cardinale

Helena Christensen by Peter Lindberg
ph.Helmut Newton
Isabella Rossellini
Jean Moral "Femme a la cigarette" 1930
Kate Winslet
Keira Knightley
Lauren Bacall
Madonna
Monica Bellucci in "Malena"
Marilyn Monroe
Nadja Auremann
Naomi Combpell
Naomi Watts

Natalia Vodianova
Natasha Poly
Penelope Crutz
Charlotte Rampling
Piper Perabo
Romy Schneider
Rita Hayworth
Scarlett Johansson
Sasha Pivovarova
Brigitte Bardot
Sharon Stone

Sophie Marceau


Stephanie Seymour
Uma Thurman in "Pulp Fiction"
Jean Seberg in "A bout de souffle"
Vanessa Paradis
Audrey Hepburn in  Breakfast at Tiffany's
David Bowie and Liz Taylor
Sally Mann

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