yves saint laurent arabic hoodie

Baby Doll Kiss & Blush KISS YOUR CHEEKS, BLUSH YOUR LIPS Yves Saint Laurent introduces a double play of colour for lips and cheeks. A hybrid between a lip colour and a blush, this innovative air-whipped formula allows for an instant application on both lips and cheeks. For any enquiries, please use the contact details below or view our FAQs Online EnquiriesMonday to Saturday: 9:00am - 9:00pmSunday: 11:00am - 6:00pm UK Landline: 0333 300 1000International/Mobile: +44 (0)20 3626 7020 In-store EnquiriesMon - Sat: 9:45am - 9:00pm Sun: 11:30am - 6:00pmT: +44 (0)20 7730 1234 Monday to Saturday: 10:00am - 9:00pmSunday: 11:30am* - 6:00pm *Browsing only between 11:30am and 12 noon , sign up below Submit your enquiry using the boxes below and add items to your favourites by clicking on the heart icon. My recently added itemsOne of the biggest fashion stories of the year was, without a doubt, the renaming of storied Parisian fashion house Yves Saint Laurent to Saint Laurent.

With Hedi Slimane behind the latest evolution of the brand, the product looks great, but most still ahve a hard time stomaching the renaming, especially considering the iconic status of the interlocked YSL logo. Someone (we’re not sure who is behind these) has very succinctly expressed this disdain through a single graphic, available on black tees and crewneck sweatshirts. Ships from and sold by deals 'n stuff. Perfume, cologne, makeup, and more. Saint Laurent in Damen Central Kurdish (کوردیی ناوەندی) Haitian Creole (Haitian Creole) The official Saint Laurent Twitter page Welcome to the official Yves Saint Laurent Beauty Twitter account.1950 S FashionFashion IiiFashion HouseClassic FashionFashion VintageVintage ClothingVintage DressesFashion DesignLoose ClothingForwardTrapèze Afternoon Dress, Yves Saint Laurent for Christian Dior, Paris, France: 1958, mohair. "This dress is from Yves Saint Laurent's historic first collection for the House of Christian Dior in 1958.

Trapèze was introduced with this collection." Pussycat bow blouse designed by Elspeth Champcommunal for Worth London, 1945
lifeguard hoodie tumblr A pussy bow or pussycat bow is a style of neckwear often associated with women's blouses and bodices.
hoodie allen laptop stickerIt takes the form of a bow tied at the neck similar to those tied around the neck of kittens, cats, and the like.
smartwool phd hoodie While bows at the neck had been worn since at least the 19th century, the term "pussy bow" or "pussy cat bow" took hold in the 20th century.
kwabs hoodieIn 1934, the St. Petersburg Times offered a pattern for an Anne Adams dress featuring a convertible collar which could be worn in four different ways, including as "an intriguingly feminine pussy cat bow tied high under your chin."
the north face indi hoodie fleece jacket - women's

[2] In 1947, pussy cat bows were part of the look inspired by Gibson Girls and 1890s fashions created by designers such as Omar Kiam.
hoodie speedpaint By the 1960s, pussy bows were a fixture in American fashion having been incorporated by top designers like Coco Chanel and Yves Saint Laurent. During the 1980s, the pussy bow blouse became a key part of Margaret Thatcher's political image after she became Prime Minister of the United Kingdom in 1979, and became closely linked with her.[8] Thatcher reportedly said she thought bows were "rather softening" and "pretty," and at her funeral in 2013, the then Prime Minister's wife paid tribute by wearing a pussy bow blouse.[9] The Thatcher look was imitated by other female politicians.Some people spend hundreds, even thousands of dollars to ensure that designers’ logos are prominently featured on their handbags, sneakers and jackets. But for $28, a different kind of fashion-insider cachet, knowing and impudent, can be bought.

That’s the price of a T-shirt from Reason Clothing, whose apparel uses nearly identical fonts of high-fashion labels to turn Dior into “Poor,” Fendi into “Trendi,” or Balmain into “Nawman.”Reason is one of many streetwear brands currently dealing in label parodies. T-shirts produced by the year-old brand Conflict of Interest NYC include “Ballinciaga,” “Bodega Vendetta,” and “Ill Slander.” A “Homiés” shirt (after Hermès) made by Brian Lichtenberg of Los Angeles has been worn by Rihanna and Miley Cyrus. The designer has also spoofed Céline (“Féline”) and Balmain (“Ballin”).Often, the riffs take the form of imperatives. One NYCParis T-shirt demands, “Célineme Alone,” while a friendlier Criminal Damage shirt turns Givenchy into “Giveintome.” A popular line of hats and shirts by the label SSUR spins the Comme des Garçons logo into an unprintable plea to calm down. (Profanity, too, is common.)“It’s fashion, but it’s poking fun at high fashion,” said David X. Prutting, 32, a photographer and a founder of the Billy Farrell Agency, who recently wore a Conflict of Interest shirt smattered with logo parodies to a party he was photographing at Jeffrey, the luxury boutique in the meatpacking district.

“It’s lower-end, obviously, but it’s meant to build a community.” Some of the designers responsible for the parodies insist that they’re high-fashion fans themselves. “I not only love the brands, but I also am indebted to them, even financially,” Mr. Lichtenberg said. “I’m wearing an Hermès bracelet right now, and the same with Balmain. I have, like, 20 pairs of jeans. Céline, I have a bunch of accessories. It’s things I love and admire.” Many fans of the parodies, too, are eager to cite their mainstream fashion bona fides. “I actually have really expensive stuff, but it’s kind of trendy to have something poking fun,” said Ricky Campbell, 32, who wore a Homiés shirt to a Fashion Week party celebrating a new book of photography by the modeling agent Scott Lipps. “I have Louis Vuitton, and all the hot brands, so it’s kind of funny.”Greg Garry, a photo editor, has collected label-parody apparel ever since finding an accidentally misspelled shirt reading “Channel” in Chinatown nearly a decade ago.

“I always call Canal Street ‘Coco Canal,’ ” said Mr. Garry, 42. “Canal Street knocks everyone off, and now people are starting to knock Canal Street off, sort of.” Favorites in his collection include a shirt by the brand House of Diehl with a Ghostbusters logo peeking out from behind the double C.But whether lovingly intended or not, parodying the labels of haute-fashion brands can be a legally perilous endeavor. Some brands are concerned their market value is being diluted by the existence of parody items; the Reason Clothing founders, Phil Bassis and Jonathan Totaro, said they have pulled products after receiving legal notices on multiple occasions.In one high-profile example, the designer Fahad Al-Hunaif originally made a prototype, just for fun, of a hat with a vulgar parody of Cartier. It drew so much interest that Mr. Al-Hunaif produced a limited run of the hats — a few dozen, he estimates — before being served with a cease-and-desist letter from Cartier. (He suspects the brand found his parody after the photographer Terry Richardson posted several photos to his blog of the model Cara Delevingne wearing one.)

For his next project, Mr. Al-Hunaif took on the distinctive Maison Martin Margiela logo, rendering it in Arabic script. “I literally got two samples of the V-neck and the snapback and then I got a cease-and-desist letter from Margiela,” he said.As more and more brands attempt to parody a relatively small number of high-fashion houses, they might face the age-old fashion issue of market oversaturation and customer fatigue. Someone seeking an Yves Saint Laurent parody, for example, could choose a “You’re So Vain” shirt by Oh Hell Clothing; a Chapel Clothing “LSD” T-shirt; a snapback hat by Paislee that features yen, dollar and British pound sterling symbols; or an “Ain’t Laurent Without Yves” shirt by either Reason Clothing or What About Yves, both of which sell the style independently. (Though maybe not for long: Saint Laurent has reportedly taken legal action against the “Ain’t Laurent” designers and stopped doing business with the Parisian boutique Colette, which stocked them.)

Reason and Brian Lichtenberg, too, each sell Homiés shirts. “I don’t know whether he saw ours first, but I know that we didn’t see his,” said Mr. Bassis of Reason. “It’s not crazy to think someone would have the same idea.”Mr. Lichtenberg said he had the Homiés idea first. He recently filed a $100 million lawsuit against his younger brother, Christopher, who is accused of stealing the Ballin design, among other complaints.Mr. Garry, the collector, had another complaint. “Now that it’s become a trend and I’ve seen so much of it lately, I might stop doing it,” he said. “It’s the whole Groucho Marx thing: I don’t want to be part of any club that would have me as a member.” Mr. Al-Hunaif is also expanding his horizons. “I actually have this new T-shirt that I just made, which is basically a full print of tiny iPhone emojis all over,” he said. “They’re coming out really soon, so I’m working on that. If I don’t get a cease-and-desist.” After a pause, Mr. Al-Hunaif wondered: “Who owns emojis, actually?”