JAN
2005
20

Ridiculous

Ridiculous!

Manolo says, of the course she looks unhappy. Would not you?

JAN
2005
19

Achievable Body Types

Pudgy? That's Not The Barrier to a career as a male model....in Hong Kong!

Manolo says, perhaps the Manolo he should move to the Hong Kong and become the male model. The standards there they do not appear prohibitively high.

JAN
2005
19

The Poncho it is Over

The Poncho it is Over

Manolo says, the George Bush, he is here to remind you that the fashion mania for the poncho, it is still over.

JAN
2005
17

Lopsided

Lopsided
Manolo says, speaking of the Globes of the Gold…who designed this dress? Popeye the Sailorman?

The New First Lady of the Missouri

Manolo says, magnificent, no?

P.S. Manolo says, many thanks to the Manolo’s internet friend, Tom of the Missouri.

JAN
2005
07

News Flash! The Stilettos Are “Hot”!

Manolo says, here is the very obvious news from the newspapers: Stilettos are Soaring in Popularity.

Stiletto heels force a woman’s back to arch, pushing her bosom out in the front and her rear in the back, further accentuating the feminine silhouette. Men like it, and so do women, says fashion historian Caroline Cox.

“Men like an exaggerated female figure. Stilettos also make a woman seem quite delicate because you have to balance (in the shoes). She might need a man’s hand,” Cox says.

“Women like them because they have a reputation of being glamorous and sexy. Women also get height, which makes them feel powerful.”

Cox wrote Stiletto (HarperDesignInternational), which traces the modern history of the ultra-high heel. She credits 1950s’ shoemakers Roger Vivier, Andrew Perugia, Salvatore Ferragamo and Charles Jourdan for rescuing women from the utilitarian wartime footwear of the previous decade.

Since then, stilettos have remained a fixture on the fashion scene, hitting heights in the ’50s and ’80s, and they’re soaring now. Cox notes, though, that the look of the modern stiletto is evolving from a witchlike pointy toe to a rounder toe, and Prada, a favorite among the stylish set, is returning to a thicker cone-shape heel that was popular 20 years ago instead of the narrower slope familiar to fans of Jimmy Choo and Manolo Blahnik.

In the 1960s, the heel was square, while in the late ’70s – as a backlash against the wedge and the clog – stilettos either had a punk-rock edge or they were disco sandals, Cox explains.

Manolo says, it is obvious, nothing can make the legs of the woman look better than the stiletto heels.

Also, the books by the Caroline Cox they are always worth the reading if you are interested in the history and the meaning of the fashion, and who is not intested in that?

JAN
2005
06

Pennant

Manolo asks, what the Chloe Sevigny is wearing, should it not be flapping in the wind at the place of the used cars?