The supplement pagetop 12 Radar published today a note about Diana Vreeland, a journalist fracesa who exercised enormous influence in the arena of fashion in the U.S. between'50 and'80 decades.
The reporter Felisa Pinto writes:
"Victimaria victim of fashion and at the same time, both as editor, critic, writer and especially arbiter of fashion in the twentieth century, its influence from the pages of Harper 'Bazaar (1937) and then Vogue would be crucial to propagate a style elegant dress and live in the decades of'50 to'80, when she left the magazine to become curator of the great Metropolitan Museum in New York. For it created the Costume Institute, the scene of wonderful samples of the history of costume and their creators favorites such as Balenciaga and Saint Laurent, among other labels, for which samples gave unforgettable. "
"In the 60s, its role as arbiter of chic way in the world through Vogue changes and innovations in the search for new aesthetic, mannequins and photographers as Lord Snow, husband of Margaret of England, David Bailey and the dazzling Richard Avedon , Among those closest to their sensitivity. [...] In'80, opened the term 'look', which defined set of keys to make the dress style and appearance based on the individual personality. "
:: The woman who broke the mold, Diana Vreeland by Felisa Pinto in Radar







