Strolling the alleys of Florence I came across a Leather School. In a medieval, beautiful frescoed dormitory owned by the Medici family resides a school teaching leather craftsmanship. The lovely director gave me a school and introduced me to the students mostly Korean and Japanese.
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Scuola del Cuoio
Strolling the alleys of Florence I came across a Leather School. In a medieval, beautiful frescoed dormitory owned by the Medici family resides a school teaching leather craftsmanship. The lovely director gave me a school and introduced me to the students mostly Korean and Japanese.
Saturday, November 15, 2008
Wednesday, November 12, 2008
SC
Louis Vuitton is building up highest expectations for Sofia Coppola's collaboration with LV or her friend Marc respectively:
This should be the epitome of a real cool handbag. We are able to see for ourselves next spring.
Suzy Menkes writes:
Not everybody is impressed. NYMag:
This should be the epitome of a real cool handbag. We are able to see for ourselves next spring.
Suzy Menkes writes:
But in the collection of bags and shoes that she has been working on with Louis Vuitton for the last year, Coppola has achieved her dream. The bags are grown-up and sophisticated. The shoes are elegant and comfortable. And when they go on sale next spring, after a launch party in Tokyo in December, they will show another facet of the quintessentially cool pop culture icon.
Not everybody is impressed. NYMag:
We're intrigued, but not expecting much. Coppola wanted a day bag that was "chic, discreet and lightweight and that isn't enormous," adding that "it is hard to find [a] bag without a lot of hardware." She opens the roomy bag (selling in the monogram version at €1,600, or about $2,190), showing how there is an open pocket enabling her to grab her telephone. The evening clutch (€800), with its pochette containing a mirror, is "a thing I wanted for myself."
Hm. We have lots of great reasonably priced bags with great telephone pockets (thank you). Maybe the $2,190 version comes with magical powers that prevent the phone from slipping out. And the shoes?
A gilded wedge ankle-strap sandal (€500) was stirred by the memory of her mother's Yves Saint Laurent shoes in the 1970s. ("I loved the 1970s' interpretation of the '30s and '40s," she says.)
Yes, nothing tickles a fancy like Yves Saint Laurent. Is it us, or is this the least exciting buildup to a launch ever? We blame the prose.
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