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I thought urban commuting cyclists should have their own look to distinguish them from sports cyclists. And I don't think we should all have to wear neon lime-green nylon. Plus my nylon jacket never seems to come clean in the wash. Thus my cycling jacket design was born. Made from army surplus fabric from snow camo backpack covers and salvaged buttons from grandma's button box. It looks a bit like a fencing jacket. I used a Simplicity pattern for a man's Renaissance doublet with detachable sleeves. My sleeves attach with velcro on one side and snap tape on the other so I can easily tell which sleeve goes to which side.
The pattern had the sleeves slit to show the shirt underneath, but I made the slit with a flap to close it off or button it open. The sleeves remain unattached at the armpit for further ventilation. I also redesigned the front closure for the fun of it. I put velcro where there are not buttons which makes it easy to throw on and have it partially closed. The buttons are big enough for one handed buttoning. It's quite functional.
This image is from a set called "What's That You're Wearing".
The photographs in this set were produced from negatives serendipitously discovered in my other collections. The ordinary to exceptional choices of personal fashion through the eyes of the family camera.
Please go here to see more images from "What's That You're Wearing"
www.flickr.com/photos/69559277@N04/sets/72157640797725143/
Produced from the original negative in my collection.
Primavera , 2020
Fashion 16
Valencia , España
Skaja Lee photo studio
Photographer: 李斯克 (Skaja Lee)
Model: Yaiza Galdon Ferri
#Skajalee #modelo #Model #teens #fashion #elegant #atardecer #luz #Valencia #Sigma #sd1m #light #lamoda #fotografia #Spaingirl #spainish #Española #España #Valencia #actriz #woman #Chica #photography #bonita #Mediterraneo #retrato #portrait #jovenes #16 #cuteteens #atardecer
This image is from a set called "What's That You're Wearing".
The photographs in this set were produced from negatives serendipitously discovered in my other collections. The ordinary to exceptional choices of personal fashion through the eyes of the family camera.
Please go here to see more images from "What's That You're Wearing"
www.flickr.com/photos/69559277@N04/sets/72157640797725143/
Produced from the original negative in my collection.
This image is from a set called "What's That You're Wearing".
The photographs in this set were produced from negatives serendipitously discovered in my other collections. The ordinary to exceptional choices of personal fashion through the eyes of the family camera.
Please go here to see more images from "What's That You're Wearing"
www.flickr.com/photos/69559277@N04/sets/72157640797725143/
Produced from the original negative in my collection.
Please go here to see more images from "What's That You're Wearing"
www.flickr.com/photos/69559277@N04/sets/72157640797725143/
Produced from the original negative in my collection.
Swiss Fashion Days Zurich - the biggest fashion event of Switzerland
Numerous talents, successful designers from Switzerland and well-known international designers presented their spring / summer collections in Zurich.
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© Ioan C. Bacivarov
All the photos on this gallery are protected by the international laws of copyright and they are not for being used on any site, blog or forum, transmitted or manipulated without the explicit written permission of the author. Thank you in advance
Please view my most interesting photos on flickriver stream: www.flickriver.com/photos/ioan_bacivarov/
Many thanks for yours visits and comments!
Photo on the Left:
Our American Century Turbulent Years: The 60s. 1998. Edited by Sara Brash and Loretta Britten. Alexandria, Virginia: Time-Life Books, 159. (Photography Copyright Apple Corps LTD., London.)
Photo on the Right:
Our American Century Turbulent Years: The 60s. 1998. Edited by Sara Brash and Loretta Britten. Alexandria, Virginia: Time-Life Books, 156. (Photography taken by: Harry Benson, 1964.)
With their very first entrance into America (pictured right in 1964), the Beatles like the rest of their country at that initial time defined and solidified the mod culture of the early 60’s. The Beatles took the popular transformation of the crew cut and parted hair to that of longer, un-parted hair. They often had an effect on men’s fashion, with the appearance of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts club band album in 1967, satin uniforms with braids like those on the cover became popular (American Decades: 1960-1969 1995).
Just as they had defined the cleanness of the mod look, they took a complete opposite direction when they decided to loosen up and thus help in the defining of the youth counterculture (pictured left in August 1969.)Their style of music and dress over a single decade alone is somewhat of an outward illustration of the changes of that time. From their initial boyish clean-cut looks and matching coats upon their arrival to their long hair and beards like those being sported by many of the hippies, they had helped to launch not only the wearing of long hair by men; but as the years passed, the wearing of outlandish outfits to their gradual but dramatic loosening of appearance over the decade (Chalmers 1991).
At their peak in 1966, the summer of love, their songs were reflective of the unfolding of drugs, as they got high with such songs as “Revolver” and higher with “Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds” (Chalmers 1991).
They followed not only the hippie movement in their fashion, but also in their call for peace as John Lennon wrote the anti-Vietnam War anthem “Give Peace a Chance.” However, one song, “Helter Skelter”, was greatly misinterpreted leading to a far cry from peace (Chalmers 1991).
“The range and excitement of the Beatles’ musicianship and creative talent were part of the bridge that brought the high culture into a loose combination with the popular culture of the sixties. The constant experimentation with dress, drug, lifestyle, and musical form both reflected the frantic pace of the sixties and also influenced the many young people who took the Beatles as cultural heroes and models” (Chalmers 1991).
American Decades: 1960-1969. 1995. Edited by Richard Layman. New York: Gale Research International Limited.
Chalmers, David. And the Crooked Places Made Straight: The Struggle for Social Change in the 1960s. 1991. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press.
For further information on the Beatles: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beatles
Please go here to see more images from "What's That You're Wearing"
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Fashion, Feathers & Style
Amie's huge wardrobe and her extensive library of poses, always ensure a good shoot.
my girlfriend and I done some tests for our fashion photography needs... this is one of this session... I think that it will be great at the end...
on this image she doesn't wear anything special, I just hunted pose and light for that need...
and yes, I brought old chair to the corn field :) from my point of view results are great, and we are both satisfied :)
please take a look at another image from this series :)
More fashion from Clear Lan! Though they don't make fashion to TBLeague/Phicen figures, I order Curvy Barbie sized knit items that generally fit my TBLeague ladies!
This image is from a set called "What's That You're Wearing".
The photographs in this set were produced from negatives serendipitously discovered in my other collections. The ordinary to exceptional choices of personal fashion through the eyes of the family camera.
Please go here to see more images from "What's That You're Wearing"
www.flickr.com/photos/69559277@N04/sets/72157640797725143/
Produced from the original negative in my collection.