2013年3月4日星期一

a proliferation of M&S sweaters and absolutely no fabulous fashion


So are low-level, commercially viable advances (ever-proliferating brand-name painkillers and little interest in hunting the quark) the scientific equivalent
to a proliferation of M&S sweaters and absolutely no fabulous fashion? Before I can even embark on this hypothesis, we get on to Princess Diana.
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Storey, pioneer of new fashion, confesses that she always planned to do 36 dresses – one for each year of Diana’s life – and is still considering dedicating
the collection to her memory. This seems a little odd; not least since Diana will, inter much alia, be remembered for services to the pink boucle suit.
“I don’t know why I want to dedicate it to her. I can’t even work out what my reaction to her death was. But now the danger is that people will think I would
have wanted her to wear it. People would think of her as a clothes-horse. It’s not that. It’s that she was a rebellious spirit and she did things against the
odds. So I’d like to do that, but I need to think it through a bit more.”
A more cowardly designer might wonder whether hats designed to represent the formation of heart tubes, a scarlet-feathered “heart bird” and a neckline
denoting the development of the thorax, might be considered a touch, er, medical, given the circumstances of the princess’s death.
Such a thought would not occur to Storey. Quite right, too. Her only worry is whether her gesture might be wrongly interpreted as a posthumous attempt to
cash in on Diana’s style. A risk, certainly, but she is not one to sidestep difficult terrain.
For her next project she is considering a collection to illustrate some aspect of geography. Or perhaps physics. Engineering, she says, is one possibility.
Think Isambard Kingdom Brunel rather than underwired bras.
The former British Designer, she’s turning her art into science, by way of sperm kimonos.
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