On Tuesday September 28th, 2021 actresses Léa Seydoux and Ana de Armas attended the world premiere of No Time To Die wearing jewelry by Chopard

Léa selected to wear a pair of “Nuage”  earrings featuring brilliant-cut diamonds (totalling 3.77cts) Lea also selected an exquisite butterfly ring featuring pear shaped diamonds (totaling 14.5cts) in 18-carat white gold from The Haute Joaillerie collection and Precious Lace collections.

Ana selected to wear a pair of earrings featuring brilliant pear cut diamonds (totaling 26.78cts) a ring featuring a marquise brilliant cut diamond (totaling 9ct) with further brilliant cut diamonds set in 18-carat white gold, another ring featuring emerald cut diamonds (7.45ct) set in FairMined white gold, a pair of round brilliant solitaire earrings and lastly a ring featuring diamonds in 18-carat white gold.

 

 

 

 

 

Bvlgari announces the appointment of Chiara Ferragni as a new PR ambassador. A long-time client of the Roman high jewelry house, the global fashion opinion leader and entrepreneur shares with Bvlgari the same joyful, independent, bold and authentic approach which has enchanted millions of followers across the globe.

In her new role, Chiara Ferragni will support the brand in communicating its core values to a cross-generational, international audience.

In the images shot in a Milano studio by photographer Giulio Rustichelli, Chiara Ferragni poses wearing some of Bvlgari’s most iconic jewelry styles, spanning from the signature B.Zero1 collection and the Serpenti and Serpenti Viper range to a stunning Monete high jewelry necklace.

“We are honored to welcome Chiara Ferragni to the Bvlgari family as new Global ambassador,” says Bvlgari chief executive officer Jean-Christophe Babin. “I think that Chiara perfectly embodies the most authentic spirit of our company, which is rooted in highly positive values, including joy, creativity, beauty, magnificence, quality, but also grace and generosity. In her new role, Chiara will be an incredible alley to make our messages resonate across also the young generations. She is also for me as CEO an extraordinary sparring partner on fashion and luxury trends.”

“I’m so proud to be part of the Bvlgari family because there is a strong bond not only with the brand, but also with Jean-Christophe Babin and Lucia Silvestri, states Chiara Ferragni. The Bvlgari legacy is about audacity, boldness and iconic Italian design famous all over the world, all values that we share since ever. This is the reason why we are joining forces to focus on having a social impact with our future activities.”

Due to the world’s recent state, the Metropolitan Museum of Art had to postpone its blockbuster spring 2020 Costume Institute art exhibition“About Time: Fashion and Duration” Met Galawhich was originally planned to take place on 4th May 2020.

Unraveling Details About Met Gala's "About Time: Fashion and Duration" Unraveling Details About Met Gala’s “About Time: Fashion and Duration” Unraveling Details About Met Galas About Time Fashion and Duration

Met Gala‘s “About Time: Fashion and Duration” was set to explore fashion’s unique ability to time travel, melding clothing styles from different periods together to create ‘new’ ideas, moving in cycles at the same time as moving forward, and ensuring that some styles are considered timeless and ephemeral. Let’s take a look!

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Unraveling Details About Met Gala's "About Time: Fashion and Duration" Unraveling Details About Met Gala’s “About Time: Fashion and Duration” Discover The Luxury Fashion Garments Behind The Postponed Met Gala 9

Left: Suit, Gabrielle Chanel, Spring/Summer 1963; Brooklyn museum costume collection at the MET, a gift of the Brooklyn Museum, 2009; Gift of Jane Holzer, 1977 | Right: Suit, Karl Lagerfeld for the house of Chanel, Spring/Summer 1994; courtesy CHANEL Patrimoine collection, Paris; all garment images © Nicholas Alan Cope, courtesy of the Metropolitan Museum of Art

Unraveling Details About Met Gala's "About Time: Fashion and Duration" Unraveling Details About Met Gala’s “About Time: Fashion and Duration” Discover The Luxury Fashion Garments Behind The Postponed Met Gala 10

Left: Dress, Iris Van Herpen, Fall/Winter 2012–13 Haute Couture; gift of Iris Van Herpen, in honor of Harold Koda, 2016 | Right: Ballgown, Charles James, 1951; Brooklyn museum costume collection at the MET, a gift of the Brooklyn Museum, 2009; gift of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Coulson, 1964

While the Met is still closed, the organization decided to share its curated collection of contemporary and historic garments which traces a century and a half of fashion. Scheduled to open to the public on October 29, 2020, the presented work dates as far back as 1870, in honor of the museum’s 150th anniversary.

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Left: Dinner dress, Mrs. Arnold; Brooklyn museum costume collection at the MET, a gift of the Brooklyn Museum, 2009; gift of Sally Ingalls, 1932 | Right: Ensemble, Comme des Garçons, Fall/Winter 2004–5; courtesy Comme des Garçons

Unraveling Details About Met Gala's "About Time: Fashion and Duration" Unraveling Details About Met Gala’s “About Time: Fashion and Duration” Discover The Luxury Fashion Garments Behind The Postponed Met Gala 2

left: riding jacket, Morin Blossier; gift of Miss Irene Lewisohn, 1937 | Right: ensemble, Nicolas Ghesquière for Louis Vuitton, Spring/Summer 2018; courtesy collection Louis Vuitton

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left: evening dress, Weeks; Brooklyn museum costume collection at the MET, a gift of the Brooklyn Museum, 2009; gift of the estate of Mrs. Arthur F. Schermerhorn, 1957 | right: dress, Comme des Garçons, Fall/Winter 2012–13; courtesy Comme des Garçons

Presented entirely with black garments, the Met Gala‘s “About time: fashion and duration” emphasizes the evolving silhouettes and use of secondary detailing. With the collection of pieces ranging from 1870 to the present, curators aim to connect the concept of “duration” with debates about diversity, inclusivity, sustainability, and other ethical issues that will surely express a continuing impact throughout the next decade of luxury fashion. Employing Henri Bergson’s concept of la durée (duration), it will explore how clothes generate temporal associations that conflate past, present, and future. Virginia Woolf will serve as the “ghost narrator” of the exhibition.

Unraveling Details About Met Gala's "About Time: Fashion and Duration" Unraveling Details About Met Gala’s “About Time: Fashion and Duration” Discover The Luxury Fashion Garments Behind The Postponed Met Gala 4

left: dress, Jean-Paul Gaultier, Fall/Winter 1984– 85; purchase, friends of the costume institute gifts, 2010 | right: ‘tulip’ evening dress, Charles James; gift of Elizabeth de Cuevas, 2015

Unraveling Details About Met Gala's "About Time: Fashion and Duration" Unraveling Details About Met Gala’s “About Time: Fashion and Duration” Discover The Luxury Fashion Garments Behind The Postponed Met Gala 5left: ensemble, Viktor & Rolf, Spring/Summer 2005; on loan from the central museum, Utrecht | right: evening dress, Madeleine Vionnet, 1939; gift of Mrs Harrison Williams, 1952

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left: afternoon dress, American, ca. 1877; gift of Theodore Fischer Ells, 1975 | right: ‘bumster’ skirt, Alexander McQueen, Fall/Winter 1995–96, edition 2010; courtesy Alexander McQueen

A timeline of 120 garments will unfold in two adjacent galleries fabricated as enormous clock faces and organized around the principle of sixty minutes of fashion. Each “minute” will feature a pair of garments—the primary work representing the linear nature of fashion and the secondary work its cyclical character. Each pair will be connected through shape, motif, material, pattern, technique, or decoration. For example, a black silk faille princess-line dress from the late 1870s will be paired with an Alexander McQueen “bumster” skirt from 1995.

Unraveling Details About Met Gala's "About Time: Fashion and Duration" Unraveling Details About Met Gala’s “About Time: Fashion and Duration” Discover The Luxury Fashion Garments Behind The Postponed Met Gala 7left: evening dress, probably American, ca. 1928; gift of Richard Martin and Harold Koda, 1992 | right: dress, John Galliano, Spring/Summer 1997, edition 2008; gift of John Galliano, 2012

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left: evening jacket, Elsa Schiaparelli, winter 1938–39; gift of Mrs. Pauline potter, 1950 | right: ‘broken mirrors’ ensemble, Yves Saint Laurent, Fall/Winter 1978–79; courtesy Musée Yves Saint Laurent Paris © Yves Saint Laurent

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All of the primary garments will be black, to emphasize their evolving silhouettes, and the second will be either black or white, to underscore their mutually reinforcing associations. The exhibition will conclude with a small selection of garments from 2020 that links the concept of duration to debates about diversity, inclusivity, sustainability, traceability, transparency, longevity, collaboration, and other ethical issues germane to the next decade of fashion. The exhibition will be accompanied by a catalog.

Still yet to be seen is the theatrical design of the gallery space, which is scheduled to be unveiled this fall.

“Fashion is indelibly connected to time. It not only reflects and represents the spirit of the times, but it also changes and develops with the times, serving as an especially sensitive and accurate timepiece. Through a series of chronologies, the exhibition will use the concept of duration to analyze the temporal twists and turns of fashion history.” – Andrew Bolton, the Wendy Yu curator in charge of the Met Gala‘s costume institute

Private Collection Boca do Lobo Unraveling Details About Met Gala’s “About Time: Fashion and Duration” bl private collection 750

 

Chaumet Secrets

Maison Chaumet le ofrece un nuevo viaje fuera del tiempo con #ChaumetatHome.

Esperando darle la bienvenida en breve.

Chaumet Secrets

Chaumet Secrets

Estén atentos y a salvo.

Adorno de tiara, aigrette u corpiño, este par de alas evoca la independencia y la fuerza del carácter de su prestigioso propietario, el multimillonario Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney. Creada en 1910, adornada con esmalte translúcido y engastada con 1.274 diamantes, esta joya transformable reinterpreta las alas de las valquirias, inspiradas en las óperas de Wagner.

Ya en 1906, Maison Chaumet estaba ofreciendo un estilo de tiara decididamente moderno con un motivo de sol radiante. En 1914, la princesa Yusupova eligió este estilo de moda para su nuera y sobrina del zar, la legendaria y bella Gran Duquesa Irina de Rusia. Oculto durante la Revolución de 1917, la tiara del resplandor solar se perdió para siempre.

Para su boda con el Príncipe Sixto de Borbón-Parma celebrada en 1919, Hedwige de La Rochefoucauld-Doudeauville recibió esta tiara fucsia. Ahora parte de la colección patrimonial de la Maison, la tiara fucsia sigue siendo una de las creaciones más emblemáticas de Chaumet.

Chaumet Secrets

OUR MAISON

La historia de Chaumet ha estado entrelazada con la Historia de Francia desde su fundación en 1780, en París. De hecho, la Maison se convirtió rápidamente en el joyero oficial de la emperatriz Josephine. El savoir-faire de la Alta Joyería de la Maison se ha transmitido a través de generaciones de joyeros durante casi 240 años. Elaboradas en el corazón del lugar Vendôme, las creaciones de joyería y relojería reflejan estas habilidades excepcionales y rinden homenaje al estilo parisino.