Amy Jeanne
Call Me a Cab
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I like that dress! I would wear it. It's reminiscent of the 1860s.
Honey Bee said:Ok...so now, if it was in your closet, a gift from your favorite relative...what would you do?
I'd take off the bottom ruffles and then[/a] it would be doable
Honey Bee said:Ok...so now, if it was in your closet, a gift from your favorite relative...what would you do?
I'd take off the bottom ruffles and then it would be doable
crwritt said:Somehow, it just doesn't look 40's, not that it wasn't designed by Omar Kiam...
I just spent a little too much time looking him up.
He designed a lot of clothing for movies, historical films included, I can imagine that he designed this as well, and the style just didn't become popular. But if someone is organizing a book, why choose something this obscure and unrepresentative of a designer's style?
It is pretty, maybe its just poorly illustrated?
I'm with you, Amy! I'd wear it, tooAmy Jeanne said:I like that dress! I would wear it. It's reminiscent of the 1860s.
deleteduser said:
HadleyH said:My goodness.... what's that? half hippie, half oriental dancer with that jewelry hanging on the forehead, half peasant girl...
KittyT said:The jewelry doesn't actually scream "peasant" to me but "Orientalism". It's basically a diadem, worn throughout time in various Middle Eastern cultures. If you look at old photos of Mata Hari, you'll often see similar jewelry items. They're also popular among belly dancers.
KittyT said:The jewelry doesn't actually scream "peasant" to me but "Orientalism". It's basically a diadem, worn throughout time in various Middle Eastern cultures. If you look at old photos of Mata Hari, you'll often see similar jewelry items. They're also popular among belly dancers.
HadleyH said:Oh i understand what you are saying.
It's just that the mix of all those styles together well.... it's like a dog's breakfast to me!
and BTW i never saw Mata-Hari wearing a little peasant scarf along with her diadem ... nevah!
LizzieMaine said:That's exactly why I thought. The whole thing comes across to me as sort of an eye-winking parody of pseudo-middle-eastern "exotic" styles, rather than anything intended to be taken seriously, especially since the designer called himself "Omar Kiam." "A loaf of bread, a jug of wine, a ruffled flounce, and thou!"