Wednesday, October 21, 2020

From Rebecca To Moulin Rouge: The Femme Fatale Power Of A Red Dress

What color best embodies jealousy? One might, at first, be inclined to say green. After all, it’s the shade most readily associated with envy: a bilious, sometimes lurid hue well befitting the green-eyed monster. In Netflix’s new film adaptation of Daphne Du Maurier’s gothic masterpiece Rebecca though, another color dominates the screen. One that’s perhaps better suited to a situation where it’s hard to distinguish nervous resentment from a creeping sense of being haunted. Here, jealousy comes clad in bright, intrusive red. “It’s such a symbolic color,” Rebecca’s costume designer, Julian Day, says. “It’s about the blood that runs through your veins.” 

First published in 1938, Rebecca follows the story of an unnamed young woman (played in the Netflix film by Lily James) working as a ladies’ companion in Monte Carlo. There she meets brooding widower Max de Winter (Armie Hammer), whose first wife died under mysterious circumstances the year before. One long Riviera drive leads to another, and soon this young woman finds herself removed from a meek life in the shadows, and becoming de Winter’s second wife and unprepared lady of the huge stately home on the Cornish coast. The house is named Manderley, and, as the new wife soon realizes, it is bedeviled by the absence of the first Mrs. De Winter — the titular Rebecca. 

As with its 1940 predecessor directed by Alfred Hitchcock, in this film adaptation, Manderley makes for a thoroughly gothic (if somewhat glossy) setting. Thunder cracks. Starlings hover ominously. Housekeeper Mrs. Danvers (Kristin Scott Thomas) conceals fury beneath tight-lipped froideur and cares for her former mistress’ belongings with possessive devotion. Everywhere the new wife turns, she learns of the dead Rebecca’s many charms: her charisma, her fearlessness, her extraordinary beauty. It’s not just recollections or belongings that plague the second Mrs. De Winter though, reminding her of everything that she’s not. Rebecca’s ghost stalks both her dreams and her panic attacks, only ever seen from a distance, walking away from her girlish replacement in a rippling, red gown. During the story’s famous party scene, these glimpses take on an almost hallucinogenic quality, the gown more like a warning beacon wavering in and out of sight. 

“Ever since I started designing I’ve always tried to use red, especially on female characters,” Day says. It’s true. From Brighton Rock to My Summer of Love, Day’s film credits come splashed in scarlet. “It’s a very arresting color,” he adds. “When you’re doing a crowd scene and there are lots of colors going on, red really stands out.” Consequently, it was an obvious choice for a character, or rather a presence, who demands attention even after death. “It’s such a symbolic color,” Day reflects. “The color of wine, of death, of life…” 

In the case of Rebecca, it’s also a subtle nod to the original text. There, one of Rebecca’s dresses, discovered by the new Mrs. de Winter still hanging in a wardrobe, is described as “wine-coloured and soft.” This evocative gown, surrounded by “gold brocade” and a “train of white satin” forms a sinister reminder of its former inhabitant. As the film progresses and the questions surrounding Rebecca’s death grow ever darker, this garment takes on increasingly unnerving meaning.  

Editorial use only. No book cover usage. Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ed Clark/20th Century Fox/Kobal/Shutterstock (5886079bv) Marilyn Monroe, Jane Russell Gentlemen Prefer Blondes – 1953 Director: Howard Hawks 20th Century Fox USA Film Portrait Les Hommes préfèrent les blondes (1953)
Editorial use only. No book cover usage. Mandatory Credit: Photo by Sue Adler/20th Century Fox/Kobal/Shutterstock (5883223o) John Leguizamo, Nicole Kidman, Ewan McGregor Moulin Rouge – 2001 Director: Baz Luhrmann 20th Century Fox USA Scene Still

Red dresses in film have always spelled trouble. To put a woman in red is to immediately place her in a long and often complicated lineage. The women in red who grace our screens tend to be seductive, enchanting, threatening, brave, wayward, and caught in the spotlight of the male gaze — sometimes all at once. The color red is the natural domain of the femme fatale, whether she paints it on her lips or slinks around with a scarlet hem drifting at her ankles. Think of Marilyn Monroe and Jane Russell wiggling across the stage in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, red gowns offset by white feathers and piles of jewels, or Jessica Rabbit as a parody of barely contained femininity in a sparkling ruby dress in Who Killed Roger Rabbit. Most notably, recall Nicole Kidman in Moulin Rouge playing Satine, a courtesan clad in her namesake fabric as Christian (Ewan McGregor) tries to convince her of the merits of freely reciprocated love. 

In The Matrix, the woman in the red dress is an intentionally designed distraction. In Pretty Woman, sex worker Vivian Ward (Julia Roberts) connotes new — and commanding — elegance in her red ballgown and opera gloves. During the school dance scene in Grease, it is, of course, the color that Rizzo turns up in — her tomato cocktail frock contrasting with Sandy’s insipidly pale shades.

Editorial use only. No book cover usage. Mandatory Credit: Photo by Touchstone/Kobal/Shutterstock (5884486l) Richard Gere, Julia Roberts Pretty Woman – 1990 Director: Garry Marshall Touchstone Pictures USA Scene Still Comedy

In fact, in both film and folklore, red is often the antithesis of white. In the world of ghosts, a white lady might have been spurned or drowned or left at the altar. But a phantom lady in red was probably involved in some kind of questionable activity. White bestows virginal purity. Red is all too knowing. Contextually, this makes sense. Red, traditionally, signifies many things: Danger. Desire. Luck. Shame. It is the color of flushed skin and fire, of great power, good fortune, and seeping guilt. It embodies all the things that the mild-mannered second Mrs. De Winter, who comes dressed in lighter tones, seems to lack. 

Editorial use only. No book cover usage. Mandatory Credit: Photo by Moviestore/Shutterstock (10780315b) Marianne Jean-Baptiste ‘In Fabric’ film – 2018 Directed by Peter Strickland

Red garments are also a classic gothic trope. Angela Carter’s darkly revised fairytales in The Bloody Chamber gleam with ruby chokers and feature vampires clad in blood-stained lace. Peter Strickland’s surreal 2018 film In Fabric features an actual haunted red dress. Du Maurier makes chilling use of red elsewhere in her work, too, most notably in her short story Don’t Look Now about a couple being haunted by visions of their dead daughter wearing a crimson coat in Venice. In Nicholas Roeg’s 1973 film adaptation, which Day cites as another key point of visual inspiration for Rebecca’s costuming, the color is literally inescapable. 

In Rebecca, the glamour and horror of the red dress converge. As the narrative progresses, the second Mrs. de Winter finds herself at first unwittingly emulating her predecessor, before supplanting her. This gothic doubling is partly spelled out in the colors she wears. As the film reaches its uneasy, rather too hasty conclusion, a revision in our understanding of the red dress is required, too. This is no straightforward account of innocence versus experience. Instead, it is a story in which no-one escapes clean-handed. We realize, too, that the dead Rebecca, as with plenty of those other famous women dressed in red gowns, was a consummate performer. Like a good many femme fatales, she blurred the boundaries between acting out her own desires and becoming a cipher for others to project their hopes, their fears, their furies, and their jealousies onto. And like a good many of them, she suffered for it. 

Du Maurier began writing Rebecca at the age of 30 while living in Egypt where, lonely and disgruntled, she grew paranoid about a woman her husband had previously been briefly engaged to — a woman who signed her name with an “R.” She began the story with the vague idea of one woman envying another, writing in her notes that “wife 2 is haunted day and night… a tragedy is looming very close and CRASH! BANG! Something happens.” It’s an apt summary of what makes a gothic plot satisfying: dread, drama, a resounding crescendo. 

Rebecca itself is an ambivalent story, full of twists and turns and nasty revelations. It is a book in which haunting comes in many forms, and a film where jealousy and power are interrogated afresh. The red dress plays only a very fleeting part in the action, but it’s a detail — brazen, bright, disconcerting — that lingers, much like the ghostly woman who wears it. 

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Tracee Ellis Ross Will Convince You To Wear A Corduroy Suit With Chunky Sneakers

BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA – FEBRUARY 09: Tracee Ellis Ross attends the 2020 Vanity Fair Oscar Party at Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts on February 09, 2020 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by David Crotty/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images)

Mid-trip down the aisle to showcase her hair care brand Pattern Beauty’s new Ulta launch, Black-ish star Tracee Ellis Ross took a fiver to document her outfit — and, once you see it, you’ll see why. For the occasion, Ellis Ross paired an electric blue corduroy suit — sleeves and pant hems casually rolled up — with a bright yellow face mask and matching chunky sneakers courtesy of Pyer Moss. “Found a mask to match my kicks,” she captioned an Instagram photo of the look. “Thank you Kerby Jean-Raymond and Pyer Moss for these fly ass, otherworldly shoes.” According to the comment section, her mask came from jewelry and accessories designer Lele Sadoughi’s Golden Flower three-set mask set. Upon closer examination, it’s made of ribbed velvet. Between the matching mask-and-sneaker combination and the slouchy fit on her mood-lifting suit, the look hits several of 2020’s biggest fashion trends. 

This ensemble is hardly the first winning combination Ellis Ross has given us since lockdown began. At the 2020 Emmys, the actress laid out her own mini red carpet to show off a gold sparkling Alexandre Vauthier gown, which she paired with a matching gold face mask. (We’re starting to see a trend here.) Later this year, in September, Ellis Ross dressed up her PANGAIA aqua-colored sweatsuit with a pair of white Bottega Veneta heels, extra-large gold hoops, and her signature bold, red lip. She sported the mint-colored version of the same PANGAIA co-ord a week earlier in her Black-ish trailer, but, instead of heels, she wore the casual look with Nike Daisy Chain Air Max 95s. Her latest ‘fit isn’t even her first rendezvous with suits and sneakers. In August, she wore a yellow, oversized suit from The Row with Nike Air Max 1 Premium Red Curry sneakers. Even with so many looks in the bag, though, her Pyer Moss kicks easily take the cake. 

Ellis Ross and Jean-Raymond, the founder and creative director of Pyer Moss and the new global creative director of Reebok, go way back. According to Vogue, the former’s been a fan of the designer ever since he showed his first collection in 2013. “[Kerby] is building a narrative that speaks about heritage and activism,” she told the publication in 2019 after the two sat on a panel together at a Forces of Fashion event. “His first collection invoked knowingness and a sense of home. There’s something that happens when you see yourself and your culture represented, not as an object, but as a subject.” The actress wore head-to-toe Pyer Moss — from the brand’s third collection — for a Who What Wear shoot in March, and, during New York Fashion Week, she presented Jean-Raymond with Harlem’s Fashion Row’s Designer of the Year award. It’s only natural, then, that she’d be the first celebrity to show off the brand’s latest venture. (The Sculpt 1 sneaker is the first-ever shoe manufactured by Pyer Moss, and it’s been in the works for three years!) 

“We started working on this shoe in 2017,” Jean-Raymond wrote on Instagram. “We were told it couldn’t be done for so many reasons but we persisted and here they are.” The Sculpt 1 sneaker, of course, sold out immediately. Ellis Ross’ yellow face mask, however, is very much available. Shop it now on LeleSadoughi.com.

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डेनिम की मिनी स्कर्ट में नजर आईं करिश्मा तन्ना, लुक लगा एकदम शानदार October 21, 2020 at 03:34AM

करिश्मा तन्ना एक बार फिर स्टाइलिश लुक में स्पॉट हुईं। उन्हें डेनिम की मिनी स्कर्ट और उसके साथ टी-शर्ट पहनी हुई थी। इस लुक में यह अदाकारा काफी कंफर्टेबल और कूल नजर आ रही थी।

How to take care of your skin after excessive use of mask

How to take care of your skin after excessive use of mask


Lingerie As Outerwear, The Fashion Trend That Took Over Instagram In Lockdown

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half dressed

A post shared by Megan Adelaide Vega (@meganadelaide) on Sep 11, 2020 at 2:28pm PDT

By now, we’ve all heard about the success of loungewear during lockdown. The fact that sweatpants prevailed while all else was put on pause has been thoroughly hammered into our brains by reports, collections focusing on loungewear, and even NYFW trends. But what did people wear when they weren’t bundled up in hoodies and joggers? (Certainly not jeans.) According to Instagram, intimates, from nightgowns to bras and boxer shorts, were the other quarantine go-to. But rather than wearing underwear as just underwear, homebodies are now styling their lingerie in ways more appropriate for daytime wear.

Despite its popularity in lockdown, the lingerie-as-outerwear trend actually traces back to B.C. (before coronavirus). Last September, Katie Holmes made waves on Instagram and beyond when she was photographed hailing a cab in Manhattan wearing a cashmere bra underneath a matching cashmere cardigan. (Both items, courtesy of NY-based brand Khaite, quickly sold out despite the bra alone costing $520, and the cardigan ringing in at $1,540; they’ve both since been restocked.) Months later, at Jacquemus’ fall ‘20 runway show in January, we seldom saw a model walk wearing a full-length top. Instead, most of the womenswear ensembles included in the 63-look collection were topped off with bras — bras, we might add, that were made of mohair with “whisper thin straps.” (Swoon.) Fellow designers followed suit in February, with wearable intimates, from corsets to garters, finding their way onto runways at Dion Lee, Rosetta Getty, and Sandy Liang in New York and Gucci and Fendi in Milan. 

MILAN, ITALY – FEBRUARY 20: A model walks the runway during the Fendi fashion show as part of Milan Fashion Week Fall/Winter 2020-2021 on February 20, 2020 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by Daniele Venturelli/Daniele Venturelli/Getty Images )
PARIS, FRANCE – JANUARY 18: A model walks the runway during the Jacquemus Menswear Fall/Winter 2020-2021 show as part of Paris Fashion Week on January 18, 2020 in Paris, France. (Photo by Julien M. Hekimian/Getty Images)

Then COVID-19 happened, leaving many fashion brands struggling to make ends meet and consumers saving their pennies for the uncertain future. But while many a pre-pandemic trend (head-to-toe leather and ultra-tailored suiting, for example) didn’t thrive in lockdown for these very reasons, given that everyone already has a collection of intimates on hand, overwear wasn’t going to be one of them. Suddenly, the concept of being “half-dressed” was regular on the Instagram feed, with many styling blazers sans bra with nothing but a cute pair of underwear and loafers and using their lacey bras as tops rather than items meant to be hidden. In the same vein, swimsuit tops became staples outside of water, and boxers were transformed into women’s shorts for photoshoots. Everywhere we looked, the unmentionables were being, well, mentioned.

Holed up at home, it was inevitable that, at a certain point, a craving for fashion that made you feel sexy set in, even if no one was there to see it. That same sentiment has been thoroughly shared on Twitter. One user named Chris Paul wrote, “How did you spend the pandemic?” Followed by: “Mostly just trying on different name-brand underwear and self-photographing my ass for Instagram.” Another, Lord Williams, wrote, “My whole day is now consumed with taking tasteful nudes and eating noodles. Thank you coronavirus for fixing my relationship with myself.”

On the other end, comfortable underwear was also being showcased, with granny panties and bloomers being worn as daywear now more than ever before. (Kim Kardashian West first made granny panties sexy by famously posing in them in her bathtub back in June of 2019.) Today, eight months into the pandemic, granny panties are so popular in fashion that, during Paris Fashion Week in October, fashion influencer Camille Charriere wore a high-cut knit bodysuit — that, styled with a belt, looked like a pair of granny panties on the bottom —and a bedazzled sheer skirt to the Miu Miu show. (The spring ‘21 Miu Miu collection went on to include velvet bloomers and see-through nighties.)

Whether the reasoning for the trend’s rise in popularity in lockdown had more to do with comfort, sex appeal, or trendiness, people are no longer afraid of showing skin on social media. And that’s not changing anytime soon. From where we’re sitting — that is, on the sofa in some combination of cute underwear and an oversized blazer — tops are only getting smaller, bottoms shorter, and clothing more sheer and lingerie-like the farther into 2020 we get. Which begs the question: Will we wear anything but exposed lingerie at home in 2021? If we’re to believe Instagram, it seems unlikely. 

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करीना कपूर खान या अमायरा दस्तूर, वाइट चिकनकारी सूट में किसका लुक था झक्कास किसका बकवास October 21, 2020 at 03:28AM

इस बात में कोई दोराय नहीं कि बॉलीवुड हसीनाएं इस बात को अच्छे से जानती हैं कि अगर घर से बाहर निकल जिस एक चीज की चर्चा सबसे ज्यादा होगी तो वह उनके गुड़ लुक्स हैं, जिसके लिए वह खुद पर लाखों-लाखों खर्च करने से भी नहीं कतरातीं। ऐसा ही आज हमें करीना कपूर खान और अमायरा दस्तूर के बेच देखने को मिला, जिन्होंने एक जैसे चिकनकारी को बेहद दिलकश अंदाज में पहना।

पोल्का डॉट ड्रेस में नुसरत भरूचा का दिखा क्यूट साइड October 21, 2020 at 01:50AM

नुसरत भरूचा (Nushrat Bharucha) बॉलीवुड की उन एक्ट्रेसेस में एक हैं जो अपनी एक्टिंग के साथ-साथ अपने फैशनेबल लुक्स को लेकर भी चर्चा का विषय बनी रहती हैं। हालांकि, ऐसा हो भी क्यों न? नुसरत अक्सर अपने स्टाइलिश लुक्स से फैंस की वाहवाही जो बटोरती हैं।

'घर के कपड़ों' में शिल्पा शेट्टी का दिखा स्टाइलिश अंदाज़, तस्वीरें ऐसी जिन्हें बार-बार देखने का करेगा मन October 21, 2020 at 12:55AM

बॉलीवुड एक्ट्रेस शिल्पा शेट्टी (Shilpa Shetty) यूं तो हमेशा ही अपने ऑन स्क्रीन लुक्स को लेकर चर्चा में बनी रहती हैं, लेकिन जब बात आ जाए अभिनेत्री के ऑफ स्क्रीन अवतारों की तो वो भी कुछ कम हसीन नहीं हैं। ऐसा ही कुछ हमें आज भी देखने को मिला जब वह 'घर के कपड़ों' में भी बेहद स्टाइलिश नजर आईं।