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Leopards Aren’t Just In The Jungle Any More

by Beverley
March 17th, 2012

This beautiful short video of Cartier Jeweler’s new ad brought back many memories for me. As Cartier’s Leopard tore majestically through the snow of St. Petersburg followed by horses pulling a troika I remembered the 40 miles in deep snow driving from St. Petersburg to the Winter Palace and the incredible world of the past we found there.

And I remembered a rug for the floor in a pawn shop in Shanghai, China in February 1975. It was a large rug, possibly 15 feet by 15 feet, made entirely of magnificent Snow Leopard pelts. I was both sickened at the thought of those beautiful animals being slain only to be walked on and awed by the beauty of the rug. It was lined in deep red velvet and surrounded by a thick border of the same.

The man running the government pawn shop was anxious to get rid of it but there was no way I could have lived with it even if I could have brought it home on the plane and gotten it through U.S. customs. There were amazing items for sale in the pawn shop. Many left by fleeing Europeans in 1949 with the takeover by the Communist government. One thing I did buy was a beautiful Chinese opera headdress made of blue kingfisher feathers.

The Kingfisher Feather headdress I bought in the pawn shop in Shanghai in February 1975

Not knowing anything about my purchase, I sent a photo and query to Arts of Asia magazine and they answered in a future edition with the photo and comment “Mrs. Jackson was very fortunate to get into the pawn shop. A few short months after her visit a law was passed that no westerners could ever purchase from Chinese pawn shops again.” And they still can’t. This is good however since poor peasants will pawn everything they own to buy seeds to plant in spring, even their winter clothes and blankets, and hope that crops will be good and they will be able to get things back again.

Well the magnificent Leopard in the video has so far taken me back to St. Petersburg and old China and he has taken me to Paris as well. Now to present day Leopard business. Leopard prints once again were shown in so many of the Paris collections last week. Will designers never tire of the design?

About five years ago I weakened for a Snow Leopard (fake) purse in the window of a famous French designer’s boutique in the lobby of the Bellagio Hotel in Las Vegas. I was ashamed of spending so much on a purse. But considering I’ve carried it for almost five years and it’s still in style I guess I should give up the guilt!

Fortunately today all these items are made of silk and cotton prints or printed calf skin. In the 1960’s when Leopard coats were all the rage after Jackie Kennedy was photographed wearing one the animals were being slaughtered at a tremendous rate. One furrier admitted in 1967 that as many as eight pelts were needed to make a coat. Fortunately in 1970 U.S. state laws began being passed banning the sale of fur from Leopard, Cheetah, Snow Leopard, Tiger, Jaguar and two small spotted cats (Margay and Ocelot). The U.S. Endangered Species Act of 1973 finally cut off imports by adding the full species of most large and many small spotted cats. And many countries in Europe and elsewhere enacted domestic legislation to cut off the trade it items made of the cat furs. Sadly though illegal killing and trade goes on today in some countries. The use of various parts of the cats for medicinal products is one reason. I had the horrible experience of seeing a blanket spread on the ground in a parking lot where Asian tourists swarmed in late 1970’s in China selling items from endangered species still bleeding — bears paws etc. This prompted me to get involved with World Wildlife and other organizations. But if the demand and money are there the killing will continue. In our grandchildren’s world I am afraid all that will be left of these magnificent Leopards and other great cats will be videos like shown above or animals in cages in a zoo.

Rennie, I told you we weren’t going to show that! Why did you drag it out here?

By The Way
This blog was started to sell my new book and I keep going off on other topics. Please do check out The Beautiful Lady Was A Palace Eunuch at Amazon.com
Acknowledgement:
Kathleen Fetner, Technical Advisor and Friend
Categories Editorial, My Life
Comments (2)

I Fell For Sneakers Before Models Were Falling In Stilettos

by Beverley
March 7th, 2012

Since you are still getting daily news about Paris collections Kathleen and I decided to post the advance written Sunday blog for you to ahead of time to read along with all the daily reports from Paris.

Big news out of the currently occurring Paris fall 2012 ready to wear collection was, Hussein Chalayan showed some of his collection with models wearing not the six inch stilettos heels that have had models falling off the runway but sneakers. Not those weird Alexander McQueen creations that Daphne Guinness and Lady Gaga stumble around in. But sneakers! For older generations, sneakers are glorified tennis shoes! Fashionista‘s important blog reports: “Every editor and fashion industry leader is running around Paris collections wearing sneakers.” Then Gwen Paltrow’s very good blog “GOOP” presented a pair of gold sneakers with information of where to purchase them. Today I received notice from Bergdorf Goodman that Lanvin has come out with a pair of gold sneakers with black patent toes for $725.00!

And I’m sitting back smiling to myself. In 2001 I was lecturing on Chinese footbinding and my then three year old book Splendid Slippers – A Thousand Years of an Erotic Tradition at San Francisco’s Legion of Honor Museum. The capacity audience was most attentive for my hour plus lecture and kept me there about 40 minutes more answering questions. Naturally this was all very flattering. But my feet hurt!!! I was wearing a fairly sensible pair of vintage Roger Vivier shoes from Paris many years before when the late Mr. Vivier had only one outlet, his area in the Christian Dior shop in Paris. Now the brand name has been sold and I have no idea who is behind the company. He had a heel that was very sensible for that time, I think it was called a French heel. But sensible or not, standing that long in one place — my feet hurt!

Leaving the museum I took a cab straight to the San Francisco branch of Saks Fifth Avenue and staggered into the shoe department. Collapsing into a chair I announced to the nice salesman who presented himself, “I want the most comfortable shoes you have in Saks. I don’t care what they look like.”

Beverley's Icon shoes

Beverley’s Icon shoes

More of my Icon shoe collection

More of my Icon shoe collection

“You’re in luck,” he replied. “We’ve just started carrying a new brand called Icon and the first shipment came in this morning. They are made of soft Italian leather and they have no heel.” He brought me the only pair in my size. They were very fine tennis shoes in my estimation, but the price a great deal more than the $35 I was used to paying for my canvas tennis shoes. I started to balk at the price, but meanwhile he slid my hurtin’ feet into the Icons and it was heaven. There is soft padding in the shoe so it’s like walking on foam. That Italian leather they used for the original Icons was almost as soft as glove leather. But I could feel good support. I walked out of the store in them and have been wearing Icons ever since. My friends go from one shoe fad to another and I just buy another pair of Icons when the seasons change and that womanly “I’ve got to have a new pair of shoes” feeling strikes.

My evening sneakers

My evening sneakers

More of my Icons. Didn't realize I had so many!!

More of my Icons. Didn’t realize I had so many!!

These aren’t Icons. They are Pumas. I just got creative and added crystals to make an evening shoe. I have lots of crystals because I’ve been spraying and “jeweling” canes for myself since i have to use one after a fall. Something surprising, I’ve noticed last few days Rennie doesn’t stand still near me when I’m working with crystals and Crazy Glue. Could she possibly think I’d stick crystals on her? Now I wonder how I’d do it if………..

Along the way four years ago Stuart Weitzman came out with gold, copper, silver python sneakers (tennis shoes!) So I got those too. And do they come in handy. Three years ago I was in San Francisco for the Asia Museum evening gala celebrating a special exhibition from Shanghai Museum. I took a favorite very fancy antique Chinese robe to wear for the event and I even dug out a pair of silver Vivier pumps to wear again just this once. That was the plan. However the hotel maid had moved a bedside table from where it had been the previous day and late at night I walked right into it and broke a toe. So much for high heel silver pumps. Luckily I had those silver Weitzman sneakers in the suitcase. So I went to the gala looking like an elegant Chinese princess, until you got to the feet clad in silver “tennis shoes”.

Now the rest of the world may be making a big discovery — fancy sneakers/tennis shoes are the new thing. But as the kids say, “Been there, done that” and I’m still doing it and will continue the rest of my life. Life is so much more pleasant ladies when your feet don’t hurt. Toss those red soled Louboutins and Manolas. Get comfy tennis shoes. Sorry, I mean sneakers.

By The Way
This blog was started to sell my new book and I keep going off on other topics. Please do check out The Beautiful Lady Was A Palace Eunuch at Amazon.com
Acknowledgement:
Kathleen Fetner, Technical Advisor and Friend
Categories My Life
Comments (5)

Il Teatro Alla Moda Comes To Beverly Hills

by Beverley
November 14th, 2011

People who love beautiful costumes, appreciate textile creativity and superb workmanship, should head straight to this special exhibition (Theater in Fashion translated from the Italian). Wallis Annenberg has brought the exhibition to Beverly Hills in connection with the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts in the historic Italianate style 1933 Beverly Hills Post Office currently being restored. The Center won’t be ready for opening until the fall of 2013, but that didn’t stop Wallis. She found a wonderful site on North Beverly Drive where the exhibition has been installed. It was scheduled to be in Beverly Hills for only one month, then back to Italy to a museum in Venice but it has just been announced it will be staying in Beverly Hills until December 15th now.

This perfectly spectacular exhibition consists of costumes designed by the greatest Italian haute couture designers for opera, ballet and concert soloists. It has previously been shown in Rome and Milan, and as I mentioned above heads back to Italy and the city of canals and gondolas from California. The curator of this exhibition, Massimiliano Capella, has assembled the most colorful assortment of costumes that explore the relationship between the performing arts and the great Italian designers. Those designers are Armani, Capucci, Coveri, Ferretti, Fendi, Gigli, Marras, Missoni, Ungaro, Valentino and Versace.

There is one exception to Italians in this exhibition, French Coco Chanel. She does show up everywhere doesn’t she. Another new book about her, films, documentaries. And now she’s found her way into an all Italian exhibition! But she really deserves to be there for the important part she had in Serge Diaghilev’s Ballet Russe production of Jean Cocteau‘s Le Tren Bleu in 1924. This production took place at the Theatre of the Champs-Elysees which has special meaning for me. The theatre was built by the late Madame Ganna Walska whom I had the honor of having a correspondence with for some years and meeting just once. It was a very emotional meeting at her famous Santa Barbara Lotusland gardens and home. But that is a very special story I’ll share with you all one day. Fortunately my good friend Hania Tallmadge, Madame’s niece, was there with a camera and there is a photograph to document the momentous meeting with tiny Madame in her nineties and me hugging and crying. About the Theatre, after singing not too successfully in an opera she produced in the fine theatre she’d built, Madame gave the theatre to the City of Paris.

Oh dear, there I go straying again! Back to Coco! Her representation in the Italian exhibition is a marvelous bathing suit made of jersey, a fabric previously only worn by the working class in France. Over it was a striking Japanese style white kimono printed in black that I truly coveted. The curator has found a drawing of one of the other bathing suits for Le Tren Bleu which is pictured here. One highlight of this great ballet in 1924 Wallis wasn’t able to bring over was the famous curtain Pablo Picasso designed for the Theatre de Champs Elysee. The curtain stretches to over 34 feet by 38 feet. Serge Diaghilev always did think big! After spending most of last 80 years in storage it was taken out and shown at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London in the autumn of 2010.

Now let’s look at some pictures of the costumes in the exhibition: I was particularly delighted by Gianni Versace’s Bavarian costumes for the 1989 production of Doktor Faustus. Spectacular in black and white basically, but one with a Mondrian like design in color on one side. Here you see front and side view plus one of the original designs by Versace. Another of the Bavarian costumes in all black and white that really caught the eye is also pictured.

One of most striking gowns in the exhibition was a red georgette Capucci design with cascading double ruffles made for Katia Riccarelli to wear for a Paris concert. And since we usually associate the opera Salome with seven veils and things like that Gianni Versace’s design for Helga Dernesch to wear playing Herodias in Salome comes as a major surprise! It’s very up to date black silk crepe de chine, pleated and draped with a sensational black velvet skirt. A design for this gown is also shown here.

Missoni costumes for a production of Lucia di Lammermoor performed in Milan’s Teatro all Scala are also a major surprise. This opera was the second opera I ever saw when I was very young and my memories are of Lily Pons in something chiffony swirling around her, not Scottish plaids and kilt. But Missoni saw kilt in tartans of orange and blue. He dressed Luciano Pavarotti singing the role of Sir Edgardo di Ravenswood in pants of big tartan geometric pattern of blue, burgundy and black with burgundy leather cloak and gray wool tam with pom pom. I’d love to have seen that! Sadly I don’t even have a photo to show, only a description. But we can use our imaginations can’t we!

By The Way
This blog was started to sell my new book and I keep going off on other topics. Please do check out The Beautiful Lady Was A Palace Eunuch at Amazon.com
Acknowledgement:
Kathleen Fetner, Technical Advisor and Friend
Categories Editorial
Comments (0)

A Lot of Dresses Have Gone Over My Head

by Beverley
September 25th, 2011

Hundreds of blogs are appearing on our screens with spring 2012 fashion as our calendars only take us into first week of autumn. The Collections are being paraded on runways in New York, London, Milan, and Paris. The topic of whom Dior will select to replace the disgraced, disgraceful but unarguably talented John Galliano is making the fashion columns and blogs again.

While all this doesn’t really affect my wardrobe in any major way it does bring back “Remembrances of Dresses Past”. When I was growing up in Los Angeles everything I wore came from a magnificent Art Deco department store Bullocks Wilshire. The clothing that covered me when I was brought home from the Hollywood Presbyterian Hospital was from Bullocks Wilshire. My haircuts took place with me sitting on one of the genuine carousel animals in Bullocks Wilshire’s children’s barber shop. The white Mary Jane shoes for dress that indicated spring had sprung came from BW as had the black patent leather Mary Janes being replaced. My dresses came from the same place as did my coats, camel hair or navy blue wool. When I was older my Westlake School for Girls uniforms and my voluminous wedding gown did too.

A great treat through the years was lunch with my mother in the BW Tea Room where pretty thin models paraded the latest from the elegant 2nd floor French Room. I always ordered their Welsh Rarebit with chocolate ice cream for dessert. The store was a place of unchanging tradition. It was the same men year in and year out, wearing discreet uniforms and clean white gloves, who moved the shiny brass elevator controls to carry us from floor to floor, announcing each floor as we smoothly arrived. I think those men spent their entire lives going up & down announcing “Fifth floor Tea Room & Ladies Lounge, Second floor French Room and Irene Collection”. And they knew us all by name. I knew I was getting older when they switched from “Good day Beverley” to “Good day Miss Beverley”.

Huell Howser visits Leslie Steinberg of the Southwestern University School of Law, which has lovingly restored the Bullocks Tea Room to its original splendor.

I remember getting the first outfit of my own choice, not my mother’s. I was about 14 and my friend the late Carole Elliott’s mother was a buyer at BW. Well armed with birthday money off to BW Carole and I went. On mezzanine floor Ladies Sportswear I chose a very tailored soft moss green wool gabardine dress with brown leather belt. I had a waist back then. Actually a very small waist in those days! And brown & white Spectator pumps with very conservative heel. That might have been the day I became Miss Beverley.

I cried The Day Bullocks Wilshire closed. Everyone did! We’d lost a way of life and many long time friends.

In the years that followed my personal fashion went through many phases until I met the remarkable Ursula Parola. She was a master at creating with scissors & needle! Since she was a well-trained perfectionist my Parola gowns where as beautifully constructed as Paris haute couture. Inner seams were perfect double French seams. Jackets were anchored with hidden chains. Button holes were handmade. In other words, perfection of construction. And since I’d always loved fine fabrics we made a great team.

My social life in the early Parola days was tremendously active and I was also writing my social column, the first By The Way for the Santa Barbara News-Press. Full evening dress could be required as often as five nights a week. I ended with a very large closet devoted entirely to full length gowns & flowing capes.

Parola fabric

Here are samples of some of the fabulous silk fabrics I brought from Paris and Lake Como in the late 1970’s and 1980’s for gowns Parola made me. I was into big bright florals at that time.

I’d discovered a fabulous small fabric shop off the Place Vendome in Paris and another at the entrance to the Villa d’Esté on Lake Como. Both shops got the best end lots of silks made specifically for the greatest Italian & Paris designers. The designer’s name was frequently woven into a salvage edge of the fabric and Parola loved hiding the name just once somewhere inside each garment. I wore one dress for years before finding Givenchy‘s hiding place! Some of the fabrics were outrageously expensive but totally safe beneath her scissors. I’ve kept some of those gowns even though they no longer fit and occasions for wearing them minimal. Some have gone to museums with fashion collections in NY.

Ball for Norfolks with Ed Wilson

A Parola gown of reembroidered lace from Lyon, France worn for the Hospice benefit I chaired honoring the late Duke and present Dowager Duchess of Norfolk at Birnam Wood. I’m standing with the late Ed Wilson.

One bright day I arrived at Parola’s for a fitting and a new face, dear wonderful Quy, appeared in the workroom. She and her family had just arrived on a boat from Vietnam, in a new strange country with few possessions, having left behind a most affluent existence when they fled Vietnam.

Parola eventually retired but Quy and I are at it still. Dear friends first and creators second. She and her engineer husband have built a wonderful life as hardworking American citizens. Their university graduate children are all exceedingly successful. It is a truly fine story of what is possible in our country. Quy and I seem to spend as much time at her kitchen table talking and eating Vietnamese salad of shredded chicken breast, cabbage, fresh cilantro with lots of lemon juice and some secret Vietnamese sauce, as we do in the fitting room. Through the years the things we create together have changed. An incorrectly set broken ankle some years ago left me unable to display leg in short skirts so it’s all trousers & long gowns. But the specialty the last few years is assembling pieces of superb vintage Chinese embroidery saved from garments too badly damaged through the centuries to be part of my collection of antique Chinese costume and textiles. The one jacket pictured Quy said was absolutely the last she would make after it required weeks of delicate work. It wasn’t the last but it is her masterpiece of assemblage.

Chinese jacket Quy made

Jacket Quy made from salvagable parts of a badly damaged early 19th century Chinese skirt

The other time she said never again was when I purchased on eBay a size one Galanos dress with the most fabulous top half totally beaded by Lesage in Paris. I found a full page color photo of the dress’s bead design in the book The Master Touch of Lesage written about the four generations of Lesage, the world’s greatest workshop of embroiderers and beaders. I spent many nights carefully taking the perfectly made dress apart. Galanos creations are perfection inside and out. Then with beaded full front, back and two sleeves and weeks of patient work Quy was able to make a brown velvet jacket with one side of front and rolled collar of the Lesage beading. That’s a clue as to what I can get out of a Size ONE!!! She marveled at the Lesage workmanship. With all the cutting and piecing necessary, not a single fine bead, sequin, crystal or pearl fell off. Although marveling at the Lesage masterful technique, when the jacket was finally finished she said “Never again!” I think this time she means it. At least until my next discovery.

By The Way
This blog was started to sell my new book and I keep going off on other topics. Please do check out The Beautiful Lady Was A Palace Eunuch at Amazon.com
Acknowledgement:
Kathleen Fetner, Technical Advisor and Friend
Categories My Life
Comments (2)

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