Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Fashion Statements Point To Second American Revolution

American Vogue: the jaunty, optimistic military chic.

[Editor's note: In keeping with our promise to cover all things pop culture, LFM Co-Editor Govindini Murty will be contributing occasional pieces on fashion and style as part of our exploration of modes of creativity that inspire filmmakers.]

By Govindini Murty. This week on LFM we are celebrating fashion and how it influences cinema and the arts. I will be reviewing several fashion-related films this week and will also be discussing related issues of style and creativity and how they feed the cinematic sense of filmmakers. As an independent filmmaker and creative free spirit myself, I love fashion because I see it as a form of art – wearable art. And just like cinema, fashion is an important indicator of cultural moods and shifting popular tastes.

I find it fascinating that this spring/summer all the fashion magazines are featuring a strong ‘military chic’ trend. American Vogue, Paris Vogue, Elle UK, and Women’s Wear Daily have all recently featured photo spreads with military-inspired fashions. American Vogue photographs the new military chic in a classic, all-American style with cheerful, clean-scrubbed models striding about in a jaunty manner. Paris Vogue, in the decadent style it has made famous, photographs the military chic fashions on a sexy, sultry model posing languidly in the middle of the desert. British Elle, in a photo spread shot by one of my favorite fashion bloggers, Garance Dore, takes military chic to the streets and makes it flirty, youthful, and accessible.

SOURCE: LIBERTAS

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