As you may know, I'm one of those Apple fans the media warns about. I've been using an Apple product since the 1980s, and a Mac since 1984.
(I was just a kid when I was converted--so I really never had a chance.)
Steve Jobs changed the way the world looks at technology. We will miss him.
Coney Island and Pillow Talk Poppy Parker.
Showing posts with label icons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label icons. Show all posts
Monday, October 10, 2011
Monday, October 11, 2010
Style Icon: Cheryl Tiegs
By
Raymond

Cheryl Rae Tiegs was born on September 27, 1947 on a farm in Breckenridge, Minnesota. The daughter of Theodore and Phyllis Tiegs, she moved with her family to the Los Angeles suburb of Alhambra in 1952. She attended Alhambra High School, where she was a pep rally leader and played violin in the orchestra. She graduated in 1965. She then went on to attend California State University, Los Angeles and became a little sister to the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity.
Thursday, October 7, 2010
Focus On Fashion: Halston
By
Raymond

One of the most prolific and popular designers of the 1970’s was Halston. He certainly was the definitive 70’s designer and practically defined the decade with his easy to wear sports and evening wear. He was the 70’s party boy who hobnobbed with the stars at Studio 54 and was on everyones lips as well as their backs.


Halston achieved great fame after designing the pillbox hat Jacqueline Kennedy wore to her husband's 1961 presidential inauguration, and when he moved to designing women's wear, Newsweek dubbed him "the premier fashion designer of all America." His designs were worn by Bianca Jagger, Liza Minnelli, Anjelica Huston, Lauren Bacall, Babe Paley, and Elizabeth Taylor, setting a style that would be closely associated with the international jet set of the era.
As "the first designer to realize the potential of licensing himself," his influence went beyond style to reshape the business of fashion. Through his licensing agreement with JC Penney, his designs were accessible to women at a variety of income levels. Although this practice is not uncommon today, it was a controversial move at the time. Halston, his perfume, was sold in a bottle designed by Elsa Peretti and was the second biggest selling perfume of all time.

Despite his achievements, his increasing drug use and failure to meet deadlines (he was reluctant to hire junior designers to design licensed products) undermined his success. In October 1984, he was fired from his own company and lost the right to design and sell clothes under his own name.
On 26 March 1990, Halston died from complications of AIDS in San Francisco, California.
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