11 Dec 2011

“Tangerine Tango” is Pantone's top color for 2012


I was  waiting for this news! but when it's been announced, I was too busy to write about it! :-/ 
The Pantone Color Institute announced the news last Friday! Pantone has named “Tangerine Tango,” a radiant red-orange, as the top color of 2012.
So, what did Eiseman said? 
"Sophisticated but at the same time dramatic and seductive, Tangerine Tango is an orange with a lot of depth to it,” said Leatrice Eiseman, executive director of the Pantone Color Institute®. “Reminiscent of the radiant shadings of a sunset, Tangerine Tango marries the vivaciousness and adrenaline rush of red with the friendliness and warmth of yellow, to form a high-visibility, magnetic hue that emanates heat and energy.”



I kinda like it ! It's not an easy color to work on tho! Will revise some styles & trends of our new guest in the coming posts ..


Busy these days with TD  and preparing for the participation in the Home Show 2011 witch is gonna start on the 13th Dec for 3 days.. Plz come and bring your family & friends along :D will be looking forward to meet you in person !


 Enjoy the DaY!

4 Dec 2011

Look if you will, but touch at your own peril!


Incredible dress! 

Feels Lovely !

That's what's made from!

a gown hewn from black Napa leather and more than 94 pounds of adamantine dressmaker pins!

It's not wearable for sure :)

This is one of  Susie MacMurray's sculptures. 
Susie MacMurray's work encompasses drawing, sculpture and architectural installations.  An engagement with materials is central to MacMurray's practice. Her role is one of alchemist: combining material, form and context in deceptively simple ways to stimulate associations within the viewers' minds and to elicit nuanced meanings.

 The dress is at the Victoria & Albert Museum’s “Power of Making”exhibit in London, the prickly garment translates the grief of lost love into a shroud that inflicts physical pain and repels human contact and sympathy. Widow is the fourth in a series of garment sculptures that explore concepts of female identity—pins have strong associations with so-called “women’s work”—and vulnerability. Look if you will, but touch at your own peril!