Showing posts with label film. Show all posts
Showing posts with label film. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 4, 2015

i spy: laughing ladies, Lanvin polka dots, more delicious Hamm, and summer lushness from Klimt

In this edition of I Spy: laughing ladies in the 1930s, superb Helsinki street style, more Hamm, and a bar that never changes.

See more inspiration on my Tumblr and Pinterest.


* In tribute to what would have been Orson Welles' 100th birthday this year, one of my all-time favorite films, The Third Man, has been restored.  This is a German poster for the movie by Heinrich Stengel.  You can see many more beautiful examples of posters for this film at the following link. | MUBI Notebook blog
* Photo of Woody Guthrie performing at McSorley's Ale House in NYC in 1943. (Photo by Eric Schaal-The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images.)  What I love about this is McSorley's looks almost exactly like this to this day--down to the sawdust on the floor.  And Woody's outfit is terrific. | LIFE magazine on Tumblr
* A wonderful photo, dated 1939, of two ladies laughing, apparently at something in Esquire magazine.  I wish I knew what it was! | roni greenwood on Flickr
* If, like me, you're missing Mad Men and Jon Hamm's handsome (and sometimes ridiculous) face, you have options.  You can re-watch Mad Men, and/or you can enjoy him along with Daniel Radcliffe as a 1930s Russian morphine addict in the funny and dark A Young Doctor's Notebook and Other Stories, based on the stories by Mikhail Bulgakov.  Both series of the show are now available on Netflix.  (You can also see Hamm in A Wet Hot American Summer First Day of Camp on Netflix now.)  And that's your Hamm News for the day. | my screenshot; more on my Tumblr
* Ilka Chase modeling a fantastic polka dot dress by Lanvin in May 1925, photo by Edward Steichen. | Corbis



* Gustav Klimt's The Park, 1910 or earlier. | Wikimedia Commons
* Great street style, Victoria in Helsinki!  Love those pants and the pop of color from her scarf.  I'm so glad that Hel-Looks appears to be back in Helsinki and posting street style. | Hel-Looks
* A circa 1920s vasculum.  Isn't it beautiful?  These were used by botanists to safely collect and store plants without crushing them when in the field. | Live Auctioneers
* A door handle in the Bremen City Hall, designed by Franz von Stuck.  This makes me really bummed that I never got to visit the Museum Villa Stuck when we were in Munich.  Next trip! | Culture Design blog

xo
K

Friday, March 6, 2015

i spy: Bette in ski gear, a brilliant spy film, a winter queen

February, you are so short!  But still filled with good things.  Here are a few things that I enjoyed looking at in February.  You can see much more on my Tumblr and Pinterest.


clockwise, starting upper left:

Montmarte, a watercolor by Frans Masereel, 1925. | Ketterer Kunst
* Don and Peggy in Mad Men, Season 4, Episode 7, The Suitcase.  I've been rewatching the series--something I very rarely do--in anticipation of it ending next month, and have been really enjoying it all over again.  Actually, I'm enjoying it much more than my first viewing.  In a show filled with interesting relationships, Don and Peggy's remains my favorite and the one most intriguing to me.  The Suitcase is rightly considered one of the best episodes of the series. | my screencap
* 1936 photo of Michigan governor Frank D. Fitzgerald crowning Shirley Squier Snow Queen at the Winter Festival in Petoskey.  I'm loving the (Hudson's Bay?) coats they're wearing. | The Lively Morgue (the New York Time's Tumblr)
* An undated photos (early 1940s?) of Bette Davis in winter gear at her Butternut Cottage home in Sugar Hill, New Hampshire.  There is always something lovely about seeing a classic film star like Davis in "regular" clothing, unstyled and still looking so lovely.  Also, how great is that pair of slippers next to her?  | NHmagazine.com
* Photo of the late Philip Seymour Hoffman and author John le Carré during the filming of A Most Wanted Man, the most underrated film of last year (that I saw).  Hoffman and the rest of the cast is incredible in it.  Boy, are we ever going to miss Hoffman. | New York Times

xo
K

Wednesday, June 25, 2014

intermezzo

I'm not sure why it took me so long to watch Intermezzo.  Ingrid Bergman and Leslie Howard are two of my favorite actors.  I didn't love it as much as I love other films they've each made--it's a love story, and a bit on the soapy side--but it was still worth watching.  Howard plays a famous concert violinist who falls in love with his daughter's piano teacher, played by Bergman. The movie came out in 1939 and was Bergman's first American film.  (She had already starred, three years earlier, in the original Swedish language version of the film, playing the same role.)


Bergman's wardrobe in this film is by Irene (a.k.a. Irene Lentz).  She is not as famous today as Edith Head or Adrian, but during Hollywood's golden age she was well-known as a designer of both elegant dresses and sophisticated, well-tailored, California style women's wear.  (She is possibly best remembered for the "scandalous" shorts and cropped top worn by Lana Turner in The Postman Always Rings Twice.)  

I love the dress Bergman is wearing here:  the large, contrasting collar, military style buttons and cinched-in waist with wide belt.  Bergman is so young and sweet-looking; this dress gives her piano teacher character a bit of gravitas.


Gratuitous tuxedo shot of Leslie Howard.


Bergman in a light colored pinafore style dress that emphasizes her youth. . . 


. . . especially when contrasted with the darker, more sophisticated-looking dress worn here by Edna Best, who plays Howard's wife.


This is, I think, one of just two evening gowns worn by Bergman in the film.  Notice again the belt and large buckle detail at the waist.


Despite its soapy ending, Intermezzo is worth watching for Bergman and Howard, and for the lovely music in the film.  Additionally, the cinematography is gorgeous.  I will always be a sucker for a lamplit foggy evening in a European city.  And there is just a hint at the terrible times to come for Europe during this scene when Howard says something to Bergman about "the time when Vienna was a happy city."



I have a small obsession with bar and restaurant scenes in 1930s and 1940s films.


Okay, back to the clothes.  My favorite outfits, of course, were those worn by Bergman when she and Howard are on holiday.  My screenshots aren't the greatest, but I love the skirts, pants and casual slingbacks she wears.


Those pockets!




This--the pants, the belt, the scarf/tie--is my favorite!  And those stripes on Howard are awfully cute.  It's interesting how here--just when they are at the pinnacle of happiness, which is about to disappear--Bergman looks so powerful and in control.  And Howard looks a bit like a little boy.



Some serious 1930s pouf action on those sleeves.  Bergman has decided she must let Howard go.  To say goodbye (although he doesn't yet know it's goodbye), she wears, arguably, the most romantic-looking outfit of the film.


The fabric those sleeves are made from really is gorgeous.  I think it's lace (click on the pic to see it bigger).  I love the echo here of their previous scene in the train station, where they were supposed to say goodbye and didn't.  Now they are saying goodbye for good. . . though Howard doesn't know it yet.

xo
K

Monday, June 3, 2013

moonrise kingdom, a year later


Of course I saw Moonrise Kingdom when it first came out.  And I loved it.  I'm a Wes Anderson fan.  His films are often dismissively put in the "quirky" category.  Yet each of his films seems to me like a carefully crafted object, every detail from the set design to the clothing to the music to the color of the light perfectly chosen.  

I just watched Moonrise for a second time.  I didn't do a blog post after I first saw it.  Everybody else was.  And I couldn't blame them.  A film set on an idyllic New England island in the mid 1960s--and made by Wes Anderson--was going to be full of fantastic styling, both the sets and clothing.  

I do often watch favorite films more than once, and it's the rare one that I love just as much or even more the second time.  Moonrise falls in this category.  It could very well be that part of this is the fact that Mr. Anderson and I are the same age (well I'm three months older), but his vision of childhood takes me right back into my own.  The importance of books and music, a fantasy life, the somewhat frightening specter of adulthood lurking around the corner...and yet the desire to grow up and be independent.  Wes Anderson captures this better than anybody.  Watching this film--Suzy looking out at the island with her binoculars, or sitting and reading her beloved books--reminded me so much of my own younger self, spending a day reading in a chair or playing dress up with old clothes.

On a far less deep and thoughtful level, the often gray and rainy New England beach setting, and the Bishops' wonderful, slightly ramshackle and eccentric home, remind me of where I live now...in a house in frequently gray and rainy Michigan, on a lake, in a somewhat ramshackle and eccentric, yet cozy home.

I know what you really want to see are pictures.  Enjoy, and if you haven't seen Moonrise Kingdom yet, do.  Or go and watch it again.

The cast--which includes Bill Murray, Frances McDormand, Tilda Swinton, and Edward Norton--is amazing.  And the two newcomers playing young lovers Sam and Suzy are perfect.  Their (signature Anderson) deadpan delivery is spot on, and both young actors are charming as heck. 


Jared Gilman as Sam wears a coonskin cap with his scouting outfit, excellent thick horn rimmed glasses, and a brooch that belonged to his deceased mother.  He's pretty tough and strong for a young fellow...well, he's had to be.  (As he tells Suzy when she says she wishes she could have been an orphan, as their lives--in books--seem more special: "I love you, but you don't know what you're talking about.")  Sam also has a  little corncob pipe that, along with those glasses, gives him an air of wise old adventurer.


Kara Hayward as Suzy wears little mod dresses with contrasting white cuffs and collars, knee socks, and blue eyeshadow and heavy black eyeliner--she's girlish, but stretching toward womanhood.  She also wears a red beret with a pink Inverness coat (just like my other favorite movie character last year, Dr. King Schultz!).  Suzy is a pretty serious girl; her candy colored clothing helps show that despite her seeming maturity, she is still firmly planted in childhood.  And she has her own wisdom to impart, having watched her parents' marriage founder: "Being married.  Sometimes it seems sad to me.  It might be better just to go steady permanently."


Frances McDormand, as Suzy's mother Laura, wears a succession of easy shift dresses in very Lilly Pulitzer-esque prints (perhaps they are Pulitzers) with chunky sweaters or a windbreaker, head scarf, and great shades.  She's a stylish, but not at all fussy, mom.


Bill Murray as dad Walt wears crazy print pants.  I wouldn't be surprised if he had some Lilly Pulitzer pants in his wardrobe.  Laura and Walt are both lawyers, but are dressed like lawyers on vacation.  I wouldn't be surprised if Bill Murray actually wore pants like this in real life.


Narrator/weather commentator Bob Balaban in a fantastic red wool coat, green knit cap, and more excellent horn rimmed glasses.  Note the touch of plaid lining his coat's hood.


The sets and settings are just as fantastic as the clothing.  


I love the plaid on the stairs, the rose pattern rug on the floor, the trees and birds painted on the walls, and the arched doorways.  The striped sofa.  Yeah, I love it all.  When can I move in?



Suzy reading while her brothers play music.  More on the music later...but first: what does Suzy read?


Even Suzy's books are rendered in great detail.  I love these faux book covers--particularly The Francine Odysseys.


And check out plaid robed Ed Norton in his plaid tent.  (There's a touch of plaid in nearly every one of these shots.  I think Mr. Anderson likes plaid as much as I do!)


Last, but not least, the music in Moonrise Kingdom brings the whole film to another level.  Twangy Hank Williams songs underline lovelorn Duffy Sharp's (Bruce Willis) longing for Laura Bishop.  Suzy and Sam dance in their underwear on the beach to Francoise Hardy.  The Bishop children have a portable record player (an object of much conflict amongst them) on which they listen to Benjamin Britten's "The Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra."

And best of all?  The local church puts on a charming production of Britten's "Noye's Fludde," (fitting, as the movie is set during a massive storm) with the children dressed in animal costumes.  This music, and Britten's "Cuckoo" both figure prominently in the film.  I'd never listened to Britten before, but I fell completely and fully in love with the music.  It fits into the film so brilliantly.  Anderson said he and his brother were in a production of "Noye's Fludde" when they were young, and he says it very much influenced the film.



Just as I was shocked that Up could have beaten out Fantastic Mr. Fox at the Oscars, this year I couldn't believe that Moonrise Kingdom didn't get a best picture nomination (much less win).  I can't wait until Anderson's next film, The Grand Budapest Hotel.  And I'll also throw this wish out to the universe:  I would dearly love to see my favorite actor, Christoph Waltz, in a Wes Anderson film.

Waiting impatiently for The Grand Budapest Hotel...

xo



Wednesday, March 13, 2013

i spy: a painted flapper, art deco architecture, a handsome absurdist

I glean the images for these posts from my Tumblr blog, alwaysalwaysalwaysthesea, which is basically what the inside of my brain looks like at any given moment.  February may be a short month, but to look at my Tumblr, it was a busy one.  Yes, let's face it, a huge portion of my Tumblr right now is Christoph Waltz.  I don't apologize for this.  (And, as an aside:  hey bloggers?  Stop apologizing for what you do or don't post.  You don't have to do this.  Really.)  It's my blog, my brain, and Waltz to me is what I imagine a shot of serotonin would feel like to someone who has Seasonal Affective Disorder.  So there!  But even aside from all the Waltz goodness, there were an awful lot of other things that were inspiring me last month.  

Have a look.


1 / still from one of my very favorite films, The Third Man / via
2 / a great photo of Katharine Hepburn / via
3 / art deco building drawing by architect Hugh Ferriss / via
4 / postcard by Wiener Werkstätte artist Koloman Moser, ca 1898 / via
5 / handsome writer Albert Camus, photographed by Cecil Beaton, 1946 / via


1 / Flapper, painting by Margaret Preston, 1925 / via
2 / West Flanders, Belgium, photo by Mathijs Delvia / via
3 / Louis Vuitton travel library / via
4 / won his second Oscar and was the best-dressed man there while doing so / via 
5 / I was and am fascinated by the story of the discovery of Richard III's remains beaneath a Leicester parking lot / via

xo
K

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

richard armitage in vintage

A handsome actor in period clothing.  Do I need to say more?  No?  I didn't think so.  (But I'm going to anyway.)  The photos below are in chronological order of setting.


As John Thornton in North and South, based on the 1855 novel by Elizabeth Gaskell.  The setting is industrial era Victorian England.  John Thornton runs the family cotton mill; he is serious and hard-working.  Thornton's dark and brooding nature is echoed in his sober, dark suit, tall stovepipe hat, and smartly tied cravats.  Cravats which are removed (along with jacket) later in the series to surprisingly arousing effect.  (For an in depth and fascinating look at Mr. Thornton's wardrobe, including the very interesting possible meanings of various cravat knots, see this post at the Feminema blog.)  Suffice to say, John Thornton's wardrobe remains among my very favorites in the Armitage ouevre.


On the opposite end of the spectrum, Richard wore the looser, more bohemian, and slightly shabby wardrobe of a struggling artist when he portrayed Claude Monet in the BBC production, The Impressionists.  I wasn't a huge fan of the hair or the scraggly goatee, but the clothing itself wasn't too terrible.  Still, I prefer Mr. Armitage in something a bit more tailored.


In Malice Aforethought (based on a 1931 novel and apparently set at that same period), Richard plays a wealthy, snide fellow--once again, with questionable facial hair.  We don't see much of him in this production, but I like this light colored windowpane check suit and sweater vest, which he wears to a backyard tennis match.  He looks quite smart, and it's nice to see him in light colors for a change.


As Nazi agent Heinz Kruger--in action.  You can't tell here, but the jacket is double-breasted--not my favorite thing in men's fashion--but he wears it well.  Sometimes Armitage reminds me a little of Cary Grant.  I'd love to see him in some 1930s-1940s period pieces, not just for the wardrobe but because it would be nice to see him in another romantic comedy (he was adorable in the Vicar of Dibley).  But lately it seems like he's contracted the Sean Bean Curse, and his characters keep getting killed.



Richard as bitter, hard-drinking Phillip Durrant in Miss Marple: Ordeal by Innocence.  It's set in the 1950s, but the contained, almost claustrophobic setting of a posh English manor house makes the era seem moot.  Richard wears classic, timeless tweedy suit jackets or--as you see here--wooly knitwear.  I kind of really want to snuggle up to him here, despite his snarl.



And finally, as Ricky Deeming in George Gently: Gently Go Man.  The George Gently series is set in the 1960s.  (It also has a beautiful northern England setting and lots of fun 1960s fashions--worth checking out beyond the single episode Armitage is in.)  Richard doesn't wear anything particularly 1960s here, but, wardrobe-wise, it competes with North and South for my favorite.  I love the motorcycle jacket with the scarf and Elvis-y hair.  And that plaid shirt.  I really really really love that.  I would like to think of Richard wearing lots of plaid shirts in his off-screen life.  (I would like to see Richard in a more typically 1960s Rat Pack or mod suit one day.)

A couple of notes: I did not include Edwardian costume drama Marie Lloyd here, because I have not seen it.  I also didn't include Robin Hood because the costumes were (purposefully) not historically accurate. 

Of course, I have to wonder if Richard Armitage wears vintage in his offscreen life.  From interviews, it sounds like he doesn't think terribly much about clothing or fashion, so I'd guess he probably doesn't wear vintage...at least not on purpose.  He has also talked in interviews about being somewhat thrifty (owning an older model car, for example), and then there's this...

There is a series of candid photos of Richard in 2010 carrying this fantastic bag.  I'm not sure if it's very old (looking closely at the photo at full size makes me think not), but it's certainly well-used.  Which I like, and take as a good sign.  I bet a good stylist could get him wearing vintage, and wearing it very well.


(All photos via RichardArmitageNet.com)

xo
K

Monday, February 27, 2012

post Oscar shop preview

I watched the Oscars last night (which you'll know if you follow my Twitter feed).  I love movies, but as years pass, I seem to get less enjoyment out of watching these award shows.  I do not think--based on the nominations and often, the winners--that they mean anything much at all. 

I also can't say I was super inspired by any of the fashions I saw this year.  I can't recall being excited by any Oscar fashion since Michelle Williams wore that great saffron yellow gown, but I'm not really all that much into Oscar style glam anyway.  Still, it was cool to see the wins for Hugo and The Artist, two of the better films I saw this year (both of which have great period settings and costumes, as well).  I was also happy that The Shore won for best live action short film.  Andy and I saw all the live action shorts on Saturday; if you get a chance to see them, you should check them out.  (Tuba Atlantic was particularly good, also.)

Alright, enough about the silly awards ceremony.  Here's an epic preview of what's coming to the shop this week!

1960's L'Aiglon candy stripe dress.


1960s tapestry print cropped blouse, by Jo Matthews.


1940s gray chevron stripe suit by Lilli Ann.


1950s black silk blouse by Le Charme.


1960s tropical flower print shift with bow neck.


1950s red plaid skirt with belt, by Petti-gree.


1950s dot print cotton dress with Peter Pan collar.


1960s red floral print blouse, by The Villager.


Bohemian black floral print dress with woven bodice and bell sleeves.


1970s Levi's denim blazer.


1950s brick red shantung dress by Herman Marcus.


1950s yellow rose print blouse by Macshore Classics.


1960s robin's egg blue piqué dress with roll collar and bow.


1940s black sequin jacket.


1950s spring flowers dress, by Shelton Stroller.


Space dyed sweater vest.


1960s blue abstract print dress, by Pennypacker.


1960s mid century barkcloth print cotton blouse.


1950s gray tufted thread dress with scattered rhinestones and piqué trim.

xo
K

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