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Showing posts with label NEW YORK. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NEW YORK. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

PRABAL GURUNG: Front & Backstage, Fall 2011

PRABAL GURUNG institutes the highest standard of quality and beauty with a philosophy encompassing modern luxury, indelible style, and an astute sense of glamour. Born in Singapore and raised in Kathmandu, Nepal, Prabal Gurung studied design in India and then Parsons School of Design. Gurung served as Design Director at Cynthia Rowley and Bill Blass before debuting his eponymous collection in New York in 2009. Gurung has dressed leading ladies including Michelle Obama, Demi Moore and Oprah Winfrey. He was the recipient of the 2010 Ecco Domani Fashion Fund Award and was selected for a spot at the CFDA Fashion Incubator. Gurung was nominated for the 2010 CFDA Swarovski Womenswear Award and he is currently a 2010 CFDA Vogue Fashion Fund finalist. 
 



VMAGAZINE backstage coverage

Friday, January 21, 2011

Designer Norma Kamali and Vogue Editor Jill Spalding Praise Shen Yun Costume Design

Designer Norma Kamali and Vogue Editor Jill Spalding Praise Shen Yun Costume Design

NEW YORK—“I was very impressed with the clothing and costumes,” said famed designer Norma Kamali after seeing the over 400 hand-made costumes donned by Shen Yun Performing Arts New York Company dancers. Jill Spalding, a writer and editor for Vogue Magazine, was also in attendance at Sunday’s sold-out performance at the David H. Koch Theater at the Lincoln Center. Both appraised the colorful garb of the different regions of China.
“I saw here the best example about how fabric, clothing, and sleeves can enhance the movement and tell the story,” remarked Ms. Kamali, who also designs costumes for dance. Ms. Kamali is better known, however, for her bathing suits, which have been featured on the cover of Cosmopolitan Magazine, and for her parachute designs, on display in the Vanity Fair permanent collection at the Metropolitan Museum. A part of classical Chinese dance, the silk costumes are designed to be a rippling and flowing extension of the dancer.
“When the sleeves became a part of the rhythm and a part of the overall design of the set, it was very impressive!” said Ms. Kamali of the long, cascading sleeves found in several of the Shen Yun dance pieces.

Taken from EPOCH TIMES 
more about “Shen Yun