vardathemessage (
vardathemessage) wrote2004-06-20 12:46 am
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Entry tags:
Costumes
script:
MONTAGE (ARCHIVAL FOOTAGE): GLITTER KIDS – 1972
... It appears today's youngsters have fashioned a whole new bent on the so-called sexual liberation of the flower-power set.
Costume designer Sandy Powell was a teenager in London in 1974 and made a lot of her own clothes, a look she gave the kids in the film, glamming their regular clothes up on a budget. "It was a homemade look, which I incorporated into my designs for the film. A lot of people criticized it, saying it wasn't really like that. But I thought, 'Well maybe it wasn't in your world, but it was in mine.' "
MONTAGE (ARCHIVAL FOOTAGE): GLITTER KIDS – 1972
... It appears today's youngsters have fashioned a whole new bent on the so-called sexual liberation of the flower-power set.
Costume designer Sandy Powell was a teenager in London in 1974 and made a lot of her own clothes, a look she gave the kids in the film, glamming their regular clothes up on a budget. "It was a homemade look, which I incorporated into my designs for the film. A lot of people criticized it, saying it wasn't really like that. But I thought, 'Well maybe it wasn't in your world, but it was in mine.' "
DIY
As for me, in 1969 I flounced around HS with a red poppy-patterned silk tie woven into my waist-length hair, wearing a girl scout uniform intended for a 2nd grader, black tights, high clunky heeled mary-janes (truely!!), red lipstick, Twiggy-painted eyelashes, top and bottem lid, and strings of colored wooden beads earned by myself as a campfire girl years before. Nothing that showed up in fashion magazines later as officially and commercially Glam can top that, believe me.
Varda Mistress Bona!
I supposed the DIY phenomenon holds true for punk today, you can get the t-shirt at the mall, but a vintage Ramones or Clash one from your dad has more cachet. (Just don't tell anyone where you got it.)
Re: DIY
Re: DIY