Re: YY store
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![](http://www.prettypretty.be/prettypretty/image/06/yy/y11.jpg)
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HEADS UP |
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DON'T BE surprised if fashion chameleon Agyness Deyn is photographed out in Hoxton wearing a veil before long; Japanese milliner Misa Harada's bridal-themed spring/summer 2008 collaboration with Yohji Yamamoto is putting wedding chic at the very top of the style register. "The collection is entitled Just Married - this symbolises the designer's marriage, or commitment, to the label and also the Yohji Yamamoto concept: women wearing men's clothes," Harada tells us. "My take on the collection was to translate masculine hat forms to feminine ones, adding a touch of haute couture. Yohji's team gave me complete freedom over my designs, which was lovely." Teamed with Yamamoto's starkly pretty clothes, the headwear certainly makes a statement, which is precisely what Harada - who confesses she got into millinery "totally by accident", after being encouraged by Philip Treacy's tutor to apply for the Royal College of Art in the Eighties - intends to do in her work. "I am here to introduce the fun of wearing hats," she says. "My hats are totally wearable and never occasionwear. Japanese people are always so hungry for fashion - their attention to detail is always phenomenal and always fascinates me." (April 11 2008, AM) |
HEADS UP |
![]() |
DON'T BE surprised if fashion chameleon Agyness Deyn is photographed out in Hoxton wearing a veil before long; Japanese milliner Misa Harada's bridal-themed spring/summer 2008 collaboration with Yohji Yamamoto is putting wedding chic at the very top of the style register. "The collection is entitled Just Married - this symbolises the designer's marriage, or commitment, to the label and also the Yohji Yamamoto concept: women wearing men's clothes," Harada tells us. "My take on the collection was to translate masculine hat forms to feminine ones, adding a touch of haute couture. Yohji's team gave me complete freedom over my designs, which was lovely." Teamed with Yamamoto's starkly pretty clothes, the headwear certainly makes a statement, which is precisely what Harada - who confesses she got into millinery "totally by accident", after being encouraged by Philip Treacy's tutor to apply for the Royal College of Art in the Eighties - intends to do in her work. "I am here to introduce the fun of wearing hats," she says. "My hats are totally wearable and never occasionwear. Japanese people are always so hungry for fashion - their attention to detail is always phenomenal and always fascinates me." (April 11 2008, AM) |
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