Retrospective Look, Editorial: ‘Take the High Road,’ Vogue UK, September 2008

'Take the High Road' editorial, Vogue UK, September 2008. Fashion editor Kate Phelan, photographed by Venetia Scott.

‘Take the High Road’ editorial, Vogue UK, September 2008. Fashion editor Kate Phelan, photographed by Venetia Scott.

 

Dear all… apologies for not having posted in a couple of weeks… a combination of masses of editing, final book prep (which will mean more time for writing here!), a weekend away, a family birthday and my little one’s winter sniffles (to put it mildly) has kept me busy… but now it is time for tweed!

After the ‘Dream a little dream’ shoot photographed for Vogue UK October 2013 by Venetia Scott, I found myself thinking of another of her editorials, ‘Take the High Road,’ from Vogue UK September  2008 (and very luckily my copy, which could have been in a number of places, was sitting on one of the sitting-room bookcases).

At the time it appeared on the newsstands, I was working at Brown Thomas Dublin, and we had a sleeveless version of the Dior dress pictured above – with Givenchy shirt – with a flat bow as seen on the waist here neatly capping each shoulder. It was made of a gorgeous wool tweed, soft to the touch; beautifully constructed and finished: a grown-up dress for best-behaviour family occasions.

But as soon as I saw the Vogue editorial, it completely radicalised that dress for me, gave it attitude in a kind of punky-aristo way. (And for the purposes of the definition of Punk, which appeared to cause a certain amount of controversy in light of the 2013 Met exhibition, of course the pairing of ‘punk’ and ‘aristo’ may seem anathema; for me ‘punky-aristo’ is a term which attempts to convey the appropriation of certain punk sensibilities or aesthetics by another non-Punk grouping, here aristo(cratic) girls on a Scottish estate.)

(For all images, click/tap to enlarge and for gallery view. All fashion credits appear below.)

Beyond that particular garment the ‘Take the High Road’ editorial really made me think about the relationship between garments on hangers and garments on bodies in imaginary scenarios: or, the art of the fashion editor. I remember Grace Coddington’s tale of a shoot with Norman Parkinson in the recent and wonderful BBC Arena documentary, in which she described the story of a girl cast away on an island with a trunk of marvellous clothes; the imaginary quality of the story and her conviction about telling it really resonated. This belief in the scenario, the set-up, which in the ‘Take the High Road’ case is the Scottish Highlands; with girls in tartans, tweeds, big teenage hair, dark eyes, moments of introspection and a sense of attitude, is the stuff of fashion-editorial dreams.

Coincidentally, it seems fitting that as the ‘Isabella Blow: Fashion Galore!’ exhibition opens at Somerset House in London, that I should have been thinking about this 2008 editorial, which was in turn inspired by an iconic shoot on which Blow worked as stylist in the early 1990s (fashion editor Kate Phelan refers to the inspiration in ‘Vogue Contributors,’ September 2008).

‘Anglo-Saxon Attitude,’ Vogue UK’s December 1993 editorial (unofficially known as the ‘Babes in London’ shoot), was photographed by Stephen Meisel, with fashion editor Joe McKenna and Blow as stylist. It featured Stella Tennant, Bella Freud, Plum Sykes, Honor Fraser, and Lady Louise Campbell as models, in grungy, aristo-boho form, and local London settings, streets and apparently deserted (or perhaps morning) pubs, with Tennant photographed wearing a gorgeous wisp of a Philip Treacy hat in one image, as though she was tottering home from an all-night party, which had involved a degree of dressing-up.

I will feature that editorial in another post; here, for now, is the  rest of ‘Take the High Road.’ Look out for the Alice-in-Wonderland-like, girl-in-a-garden-reading image: such a contrast to the other images full of attitude, which speak equally of the self-invention of the girls through dress and accessorising in their Highlands isolation, and the imagination of fashion editor Kate Phelan and photographer Venetia Scott (no doubt fuelled by the AW08 collections at Alexander McQueen and D&G Dolce & Gabbana). Will it inspire a punky attitude in your winter dressing this season?

A la prochaine (it won’t be so long ’til the next time, promise!), bisou!

Sinéad

Photographed by Venetia Scott. Fashion Editor: Kate Phelan. Models: Agnete Hegelund and Kamila Filipcikova. Hair: Duffy. Make-up: Hannah Murray. Production: 10-4 Inc.

(2) Puff-sleeved wool dress, Alexander McQueen. Bow headband with veil, Benoit Missolin. Chain necklace, Stephen Zweck, New York. Tartan rosette, feather brooch, both Piob Mor of Scotland. Fingerless gloves, Chanel.

(3) Cashmere coat, cashmere trousers, both Ralph Lauren. Silk-organza blouse, Douglas Hannant, New York. Velour trilby, J Smith Esquire. Leather gloves, Hermès. Antique grouse-foot brooch, Sylvie Spectrum, Gray’s Antique Market. Felt and feather brooch, Piob Mhor of Scotland.

(4) Strapless wool dress, left, tights, both D&G Dolce & Gabbana. Leather belt, Ralph Lauren. Patent leather shoes, Peter Jensen for Topshop. Pearl flower necklace, Alexis Bittar, New York. Chain necklace and bracelet, Stephen Zweck, New York. Wool beret, Piob Mhor of Scotland. Wool dress, right, tights, both D&G Dolce & Gabbana. Leather belt, Piob Mhor of Scotland. Boots Philosophy di Alberta Ferretti. Beaded pendant necklace, Gerard Yosca, New York. Antique silver locket, Aurum, Gray’s Antique Market. Hat, Toast.

(5) Silk blouse, silk scarf, wool skirt, all Dolce & Gabbana. Striped socks, Karen Walker, at Matches. Argyle socks, Burlington. Leather boots, Alexander McQueen. Tartan beret, crinoline headpiece, both Noel Stewart. Bib necklace, Gerard Yosca, New York. Gold cuffs, Gerard Yosca, New York and Stephen Dweck, New York.

(6) Tweed jacket, Chanel. Chiffon blouse with velvet ties, Escada. Wool skirt, Louis Vuitton. Wool sash, Piob Mhor of Scotland. Chain-link necklace, Ghost, at Liberty. Rabbit-fur hat, CA4LA.

(7) Argyle-knit jacket and matching skirt, Vivienne Westwood Gold Label. Checked cotton/silk top, Vivienne Westwood Red Label. Organic-cotton blouse, Bamford. Cotton hat with checked brim, D&G Dolce & Gabbana.

(8) Wool jacket with ponyskin collar, Anne Valerie Hash, at Harvey Nichols and Liberty. Red checked jacked, Vivienne Westwood Red Label. Lace shirt, Roberto Cavalli. Hat, J Smith Esquire.

(9) Checked wool dress, Dior. Cotton shirt, Givenchy by Riccardo Tisci. Ribbon, in hair, VV Rouleaux.

(10) Checked cotton jacket, Comme des Garçons at Dover Street Market. Silk-organza blouse, Douglas Hannant, New York. Strapless velvet dress, Lanvin. Headdress, to order, Benoit Missolin.

(11) Strapless wool dress, House of Holland, at Dover Street Market. Tweed and leather shoes, Chanel. Socks,  Piob Mhor of Scotland. Necklace, Stephen Dweck, New York. Ribbons, in hair, VV Rouleaux.

(12) Feathered silk dress, Burberry Prorsum. Swarovski-crystal necklace, Philippe Ferrandis, Paris. Leather gloves, Causse, Paris. Tweed and leather shoes, Chanel.Cashmere tights, Dolce & Gabbana. Socks,  Piob Mhor of Scotland.

Editorial: ‘Dream a little dream,’ Vogue UK, October 2013

(Styled by Bay Garnett, photographs by Venetia Scott, model Georgia May Jagger. Hair by Tomo Jidai. Make-up, Sharon Dowsett. Production, 10-4 Inc. Location: Great Dixter, East Sussex. Digital artwork, Ben Pickett at Touch. Click on/tap images for captions and gallery view.)

After the particularly glittery, jet-black, dark-star vibe of Hallowe’en 2013 (thanks to Marc Jacobs for Louis Vuitton SS14 and to the last-minute make-up suggestions of Harper’s Bazaar and Into The Gloss), returning to the ‘Dream a little dream’ editorial in Vogue UK’s October 2013 issue seems a breath of fresh air in more ways than one.

Shot on location in the gardens of Great Dixter, East Sussex, by Venetia Scott whose work has inspired for many years (and to whom I will return in future posts), ‘Dream a little dream’ captures the innocent insouciance of dreamy October days, those days which surprise with their warmth and mists… in this season of mists and mellow fruitfulness. The editorial story begins: ‘The winsome heroines of Victorian literature inspire the romantic return of opulent, feminine pieces that will continue to tell stories for seasons to come.’

The pieces featured certainly have a timeless quality, as does Georgia May Jagger here, thanks to  Bay Garnett’s styling (which often has a quietly bohemian quality), and Jagger’s own inner resolve, with her hair slightly mussed, and the unselfconscious air of a girl who has had to amuse herself and fill her hours in this garden, with flowers and her white horse for company, and if the first image is anything to go by, a longing for life beyond the garden walls.

Hands in pockets (a very modern pose), looking off to the right and out of the frame, she is inaccessible, apparently lost in her thoughts, as Victorian literary heroines often are. She is mostly captured in moments of restfulness but more than capable of action (running through a field in a Valentino silk-chiffon dress for example); is perfectly at home amongst the flower-filled meadows and orchards and yet yearns for something more.

A gorgeous editorial, it is also refreshing for its discretion,  its mix of innocence and knowingness: Jagger’s heroine mostly ignoring the viewer (appearing lost in thought, entranced by her surroundings or the company of her clearly beloved horse) and only in one remarkable shot gazing out of the frame, directly to us, through iris heads, in an image of Indian-summer laziness, both candid and sensuous in its soft-focus. In this image we see the woman in the girl.

The strength of the shoot means that we can imagine our heroine jettisoning her precious wardrobe and setting off on her horse on an adventure, hoping one day to return to her home; to the cherished garden and her favourite coats and dresses as pictured here; but she is not a girl to be bound by them.

The images are grouped in pairs sharing similar tones; the opening grey-blue early-morning misty garden (1 and 2); the blue-accented shots of orchard and flower-filled meadow (3 and 4); the rose-inflected sense of time standing still while the heroine looks up the path for something or someone and stands in the rose garden (5 and 6); the white and gold fields (7 and 8); the dark navy and purple-iris notes of  images 9 and 10;  and the white, gold and blue-grey of images 11 and 12.

Ending with the carefree radiance of a sun-warmed smile, lying amongst the oversized daisies in Dries Van Noten’s floral patterned duster coat (the caption references William Morris’s first print, ‘Daisy’ from 1864), this is a girl who is at one with, and at one with wearing, her flowers. And, we have little doubt, is about to experience  life’s beauty beyond the garden walls.

What do you wear for a walk in the garden or park? And would this inspire you to add a little Victoriana to your look?

A la prochaine, bisou!

Sinéad

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From top, left to right: flocked wool-mix coat, Emporio Armani. Cotton/silk dress, Giles. Vintage cluster brooch, Ting’s, at Gray’s Antique Market.

Organza blouse, Lanvin. Denim skirt, Ashish, at Browns Focus. Wool belt, Luisa Beccaria. Leather brogues, Bally. Printed silk dress, Rochas. Vintage lace blouse, Elizabeth Avey. Resin and crystal ring, Miriam Salat.

Silk coat, Louis Vuitton. Embroidered silk-chiffon blouse, Alberta Ferretti. Silk/cotton shirt, Claire Barrow. Vintage ribbon belt, Elizabeth Avey. Lace dress, stretch satin bra, satin knickers, all Dolce & Gabbana. Pearl pendant necklace, Laura Lee Jewellery.

Cotton blouse, Chloé. Wool-lace skirt, Eudon Choi.Wool belt, as before.Crystal Brooch, Linda Bee, Gray’s Antique Market. Vintage brogues, from a selection, Vestiairecollective.com. Silk-chiffon dress, Valentino.

Embroidered silk/wool coat, Céline. Wool/cotton blouse, Paul & Joe. Wool belt, as before. Coin pendant necklace, from Laura Lee Jewellery. Lace shirt, Paul & Joe. Silk skirt, Rochas. Vintage brogues, as before.

Patchwork lace dress with peplum, Alexandra Rich, at Selfridges. Wool/alpaca coat, Dries Van Noten. Lace dress, Emilio Pucci. Coin pendant necklace and pearl necklace, as before.

Editorial: ‘Dark Star,’ Harper’s Bazaar UK, September 2013

(Styled by Cathy Kasterine, photographs by Tom Allen, model Iris Van Berne. Hair by Raphael Salley. Make-up, Thomas de Kluyver, using Chanel. Production, Johnny Bamford. Stylist’s assistants Benjamin Canares and Vincent Pons. Location: Dartmoor. Click on images for captions and gallery view.)

I had intended to feature a different fashion story as my first editorial post (which will follow) but then came to the realisation that since so much of this blog hinges on the Harper’s Bazaar UK ‘Dark Star’ shoot (as I explained in my first post) and since it was so beautifully done, that it would be good to include it here in full. The story begins: ‘Part governess, part queen of the night, this season’s heroine is a vision from a gothic romance on the wilds of Dartmoor.’ And you can be sure that its influence will be felt from exclusive department stores to the high street this season.

I always think there is such an ephemeral quality to fashion editorials: they are published, are circulated for a month, and then often disappear from sight; the best ones leaving their imprints on the imagination. Of course magazines are kept like treasures by some readers, and some of their images are available online for others who go looking; but often when photographs appear online the full styling credits are lost, so you have to guess as to what exactly the model is wearing.

So in case any of you who read my first post were wondering who created the incredible billowing black dress (Gareth Pugh: one of his ‘bin bag’ dresses, with a raffia-like quality) or pearl-studded coat (to order from Alexander McQueen), here are the styling (garments, accessories) credits to accompany the photographs. If you click on each image, it will bring up a gallery view and caption. All styling credits are also listed below.

Enjoy!

Bisou,

Sinéad

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From top, left to right: black wool and angora dress, Rochas. Black leather boots, Manolo Blahnik. Gold and ruby earrings, Stone Paris. Sequined and beaded silk dress, gold-plated metal crown, both Dolce & Gabbana.

Silk blend dress with Swarovski pearls, Emilia Wickstead. Boots, model’s own. Embroidered dress, suede belt, both Prada. Silver tiara, Maria Nilsdotter. Gold and ruby earrings, Stone Paris.

Cotton shirt, flannel skirt, cashmere and leather cape, all Hermès. Boots, model’s own. Black viscose and polyester dress, matching jacket, and resin necklace, all Christopher Kane.

White silk poplin shirt, black crepe skirt, both Balenciaga. Gold and ruby earrings, Stone Paris. Bin bag dress, Gareth Pugh. White gold and diamond earrings, gold and diamond ring, both Stone Paris.

Taffeta gown, Ralph Lauren Collection. Rose gold and diamond earrings; rose gold and diamond ring, Stone Paris.

Wool cashmere sweater, knitted flannel skirt, silk coat,  all Céline. Gold and ruby earrings, Stone Paris. Boots, model’s own. Black silk and lace dress, Gucci. Gold and diamond earrings, Annoushka. Black grosgrain ribbon, VV Rouleaux.

Silk blouse, Francesco Scognamiglio. Silk blend dress, Roberto Cavalli. White gold and diamond earrings, pendant, rings, all Stone Paris. Leather coat with pearls, chiffon and organza shirt with pearls, both Alexander McQueen.

Bright Star Dark Star

(click on image for caption)

In September 2013, during Paris Fashion Week, this blog somehow became a reality. (And no-one is more surprised by this than I am.)

‘Bright Star Dark Star’ is a space for writing about the past and present of fashion: designers, dresses, blazers, accessories; coats, heels and hats; international collections, fashion week shows, fashion photography; editors, editorials, campaigns; exhibitions and museums. I’ll also post on fashion in art, film and history. (And I promise you now that future posts will not be as long, but I thought some background was important here to situate the blog, and me.)

My name is Sinéad Furlong-Clancy, I’m an independent art and fashion historian living in Dublin, previously in Paris and London (well almost London: Surrey), where I grew up. I’m also a writer, stylist, lecturer and consultant, with a PhD in art, fashion and nineteenth-century Paris, soon to be published as a book by Mellen, New York.

Often found very happily if busily balancing two schedules, a research/teaching programme and another fashion/style advising position, I have gained years of experience in the fashion industry, most recently working with international womenswear collections, personal shopping and styling, in The Designer Rooms at Brown Thomas Dublin, with favourites Dries Van Noten, Alexander McQueen, Balenciaga, Stella McCartney, Prada, Miu Miu, Chloé: the list goes on… This was before I became a Mum in late 2010 (something else ‘about’ me!) and decided to take the opportunity to work independently and focus on my book and research (not to mention my young family).

My first daily encounters with fashion blogs came while at Brown Thomas, in early 2009, when my then-boyfriend, now husband, and I would compare notes on The Sartorialist and Garance Doré via texts during breaks from work (and no, while very stylish, he is not in the field). I loved the back-and-forth, looking at their photographs capturing street style and fashion-week style; and also loved Garance’s illustrations, stories and wit, and Scott’s vintage photographs and the stories that came with them.

My Mum’s innate style, elegance and dressmaking skills were early influences, as were her fashion magazines, which opened windows into other worlds, at times ethereal, saturated with colour, or darkly gothic. This tension between the depicted bright world of fashion and its darker or more melancholy elements was made all the more apparent coming from a colourful mid-eighties childhood of polka dots and ra-ra skirts, to the heroin-chic grunge of my late teens. By that time, I was collecting the same magazines she had, and new ones like The Face and i-D, forming my own collections of images, ideas, inspirations, with mood board-like collages decorating diaries, folders, sketchbooks.  This continued through college and summer jobs, in tandem with graduate studies in Dublin and Paris, and summers researching at the Musée de la Mode de la Ville de Paris (the newly re-opened Palais Galliera) for my PhD on art, fashion and nineteenth-century Paris; also while teaching fashion students at the National College of Art and Design in Dublin.

The bright/dark contrast was perhaps even sharper for me as I lost my beloved mother to cancer a few months before my fourteenth birthday. What she wore, what she had bought for us to wear, what we shopped for together and what she had made for us as small children in exquisite Liberty print fabrics, all of these things shaped my memories of her; that and her incredible sense of fun and empathy, whether for children or adults. I still have and wear a beautifully tailored David Charles wool navy blazer that must have been one of the last things she bought for me (the label reads ‘age 14 years’). But all of her beautiful clothes were packed away soon after and given to charity, and this was another, secondary loss; her perfume, her warmth had seemed to fill the wardrobe space; for a few brief weeks I unpacked shoe boxes and stood in her shoes, where she had stood. Then it was empty. Justine Picardie considers ‘the life and afterlife of clothes’ in her moving, inspired and ‘courageously playful’ book My Mother’s Wedding Dress. But for my bereft but incredibly strong Dad, with four children aged between 6 and 13, it was the only way forward.

The Bright Star of the blog’s title is a reference to Jane Campion’s 2009 film Bright Star about John Keats and Fanny Brawne, which really resonated with me when I saw it first (and still does, it is incredibly powerful and beautifully shot… a Parisian friend recently messaged just after having seen it… my response: ‘Are you still weeping?!’… answer: ‘Yes!’). Why so significant? Bright Star opened at the Irish Film Institute two months after my then-boyfriend asked me to marry him (you can read about that and the story of my wedding dress, a couture gown by my friend, fashion designer  Sean Byrne, 2009 Young Designer of the Year, whom I knew from Brown Thomas,  in ‘Material Girl,’  by Kirsty Blake Knox, Sunday Independent Style magazine, April 2010). Campion’s film takes its name from Keats’s sonnet ‘Bright Star‘ written about Fanny Brawne; the inscription chosen by my husband for the inside of my wedding band (kept secret until after the ceremony) reads ‘My bright star…’ (For his ring I chose a lyric from French band Phoenix, ‘always and forevermore’… Not Keats I grant you, but we did see them at Barcelona’s 2009 Primavera, obsess about Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix on many of our summer roadtrips, and get engaged at Electric Picnic, so…). For me ‘Bright Star’ has a personal resonance but it also contains a significant reference to fashion history: in the film’s depiction of early nineteenth-century London, Fanny Brawne designs, makes and wears her own very stylish clothes and accessories, and early in the film points out that she can make a living from what she does, in apparent contrast to the poets Keats and Brown.

Still from Jane Campion's 2009 film 'Bright Star,' with Abbie Cornish as Fanny  Brawne.Still from Jane Campion’s 2009 film Bright Star, with Abbie Cornish as Fanny Brawne.

For the blog, Bright Star also stands for the upbeat nature of certain fashion editorials, collections, shows; whereas Dark Star represents a melancholy, gothic, or subversive fashion heroine. (Of course in real life, this idea can extend to the way we think about dressing to suit different moods, times of day, events, locations, and seasons. Sometimes we might feel, or need to be, more dark star than bright… more night-loving rock chick than broderie-anglaise-wearing girl in a garden. Make-up has a big part to play in this too: from bare-faced to kohl-eyed, we play with different degrees of the bright-dark spectrum every day.) The exquisite ‘Dark  Star’ editorial in the September 2013 edition of Harper’s Bazaar UK, styled by Cathy Kasterine with photographs by Tom Allen and model Iris Van Berne, radiates strength in the best girl-in-a-wild-landscape editorial tradition. An example of perfect casting: a celebrity model would have overwhelmed the concept, the imaginary nature of this fashion story. Without this editorial, it is likely I would still be thinking about rather than writing a blog. The ‘Dark Star’ shoot was the catalyst:  I paired Bright and Dark Stars; and that was that.

This was Justine Picardie’s impressive first September edition at the helm of Harper’s Bazaar UK. A flurry of tweets between us about the sublime cover featuring Natalia Vodianova and ‘Dark Star’ shoot gave me the impetus to put my thoughts out there (out here, I guess, blogosphere!). And this feeling was compounded as I found myself collecting visual references for ‘Bright Star’ and ‘Dark Star’ as I worked on an art/fashion history paper for an Oxford conference in early September, where I found much inspiration and new friends, including Rosie Findlay, aka fashademic, whom I will write more about, a style blogger and PhD candidate at the University of Sydney whose subject is personal style blogs. Her interest in performativity reveals a focus on how bloggers selectively edit their lives/wardrobes/subject-matter, and this was also a spur to figuring out how I could share some of my thoughts and ideas in the blogging arena. Later in September, the ‘Bright Star Dark Star’ idea was still with me, vying for space in my brain, as I prepped for a lecture for the National Gallery of Ireland on fabric and fashion in Morisot and Renoir. With thoughts of the arena, Brené Brown‘s TED talk advice … don’t wait until you’re perfect; that will never happen, and anyway even if you were, that’s not what we want to see… was probably the ultimate impetus…

Finally, during  September 2013’s fashion weeks, as a relative newcomer to Twitter, only joining the action in April, I found myself wanting to share and comment more than was probably reasonable, aflutter with the instantaneity of it all, and I realised that a blog, my idea in the making, my ‘Bright Star Dark Star’ could be a place for such commentary. So here I am! (I promise that the posts will never be as long again!) Hope you enjoy it.

Sinéad

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