Showing posts with label Jennifer Hudson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jennifer Hudson. Show all posts

Monday, February 1, 2010

Red Carpet Fashion at the 52nd Annual Grammy Awards

Lady Gaga looked like Armani Prive's 2010 couture version of Cinderella. The pop star was whimsical on the red carpet. Her gown was made from custom-made crystals and she paired it with her heelless, glass slippers. Leave it to Lady Gaga to bring art to life.

Rihanna was my absolute favorite - Best dressed in a feathered Elie Saab frock. Her dress showcased all her best features from her toned arms to curvy hips.

Did Melody Thornton borrow this frock from Beyonce? Doesn’t this dress seem like something Beyonce would wear or have worn already?!

Pink looked like a million dollars in her Tony Ward Haute Couture floor-length ombre dress - and it had nothing to do with the Neil Lane jewels (that were worth nearly 3 mill).

Taylor Swift turned heads in a sapphire, off-the-shoulder Kaufman Franco gown. She paired it perfectly with chandelier earrings and sideswept choiffe.


Boring! Beyonce’s style is oh so typical and predictable. Again, instead of opting to show off features other than her curves – such as her legs, she chose a form-fitting Stephane Rolland gown that hugged her hips.


J-Hud looked posh in a Victoria Beckham beauty. The songstress wore all black from head to toe: dark nylons, Lucite bangles, and Yves St. Laurent "Trib Two" platform pumps.

While some had mixed views of Ciara wearing a lace jumpsuit from Givenchy, I think she looked fierce! Not everyone can pull it off, but Ci Ci did. Her look was romantic, bold and beautiful.

Ashanti looked good, but could’ve looked even better had she cut off that train: it was distracting and unnecessary.

Worst Dressed

Oops, she did it again! It looks like Britney forgot her dress and wore her slip instead.

Snooki looked more like Hookie at the Grammys. The self-described guidette wore a tacky purple mini and hoof-like heels. This may be appropriate for the Shore but not for the Grammys.




Shaila Durcal came dressed in what appeared to be a table cloth.

Some people will do anything for attention… and in this case it was Imogen He.

We want to know: who do you think was the best and/or worst dressed celebrity at this year's Grammy awards?

Monday, June 22, 2009

Plus-size Fashion Dilemmas

Source: By Ruth La Ferla


This month, a couple of years after Beth Ditto complained about the lack of plus-size fashion in Topshop, Arcadia plans to unveil a collection that Ms. Ditto designed for Evans, the company’s plus-size division. Available in the United States on the Web, it highlights cutting-edge looks like a corset dress and a cropped biker jacket.

The collection is the latest in an outpouring of fashions aimed at trend-driven, round-figured teenagers and young women, a population that has long echoed Ms. Ditto’s complaint that it is ignored by most merchants and brands.


Other stores and designers have picked up the message. Forever 21, a purveyor of cheap chic, introduced its plus-size line, Faith 21, this spring. Target recently began offering Pure Energy, exuberantly patterned dresses and tops for young women. Those follow hip niche labels like Karen Kane and Kiyonna, which are sold at boutiques.


All the lines see potential profit in offering stylish alternatives to the ubiquitous track suit. From a business perspective, that makes sense: the customer base is increasing, as health authorities have long pointed out. Some 17 percent of teenagers are overweight, according to the surgeon general’s office, more than three times the rate of a generation ago.



The market for youth-oriented plus sizes (usually 14 to 24) showed strong growth a couple of years ago, several years after the fast-fashion chain H&M entered the business. (H&M has since dropped its plus-size line, for reasons it would not disclose.)


Last year, sales of plus sizes to girls and young women ages 13 to 34 reached $5.8 billion, according to the NPD Group, a market research firm.


With consumer spending falling everywhere, that momentum has been lost: Sales declined 15.3 percent for plus-size shoppers 13 to 17 and 10.1 percent for those 18 to 34 in April and May, compared with the period a year ago, NPD says.


Plus-size lines aimed at older women have also suffered; chains including Ann Taylor and Old Navy have removed larger sizes from stores (they still sell them online).


Faith 21 was introduced “because our customers were asking for larger sizes, and to fill a void in the market for trendy and fashionable plus-size clothing,” said Linda Chang, the senior manager of marketing for Forever 21. It includes some 250 styles.


Smaller stores are also catering to shoppers who want figure-hugging fashions like their thinner friends. “Some of those girls feel like they have the brio to pull off a fitted look,” said Stephanie Sack, the owner of Vive la Femme, a plus-size boutique on fashionable Damen Avenue in Chicago. She confided that when she was 20, “I would have choked somebody to get my hand on a studded belt to fit me.”



“When you’re fat you stand out anyway,” said Annie Maribona, the shop’s founder and part owner. “It’s really important to go all the way and do something fun or even outrageous with your clothes.”


Stores as diverse as Kmart and Lord & Taylor have dispensed with conventional big girls’ “dos and don’ts,” offering the hothouse colors and exuberant prints, the ruffles and flounces of their so-called straight-size counterparts. Even horizontal stripes, once a fashion sin for the overweight, animate some looks in Kmart’s Piper & Blue collection.


“I’ve noticed lately that they are trying to make big sizes more into style,” said Kathy Salinas, as she considered a zebra-striped Piper & Blue tunic at a Kmart in downtown Manhattan this week. “You see that at regular stores, not just the plus-size stores, and that’s a good thing.”


Round-figured young women have found inspiration in popular culture. Ms. Ditto, who settled her girth on tiny gilt chairs at some 10 fashion shows this year, along with the actress Jennifer Hudson and the singer Adele, all appear in full-figured glory in the current issue of Elle.




The glamorously curvy Jordin Sparks captivated viewers on “American Idol,” then moved on to a recording career. On Stylista, a reality show on the CW network last fall, a curvy contestant named Danielle competed for a job as a junior editor at Elle.


More than tokenism, such fashion and media tactics seem born of a conviction that larger young women have become more self-accepting. “They are inclined to show off the parts of their bodies they love,” said Ms. Sack, the Chicago retailer. Pushing the trend is a broad movement of fat acceptance among academics, anti-bias activists and some psychologists. “It’s important to reclaim ‘fat’ as a descriptive, as even something positive,” argued Ms. Maribona of Fat Fancy.


"Fashion Is Foremost Inspiration"
- Suzanna


Always For Me Plus Size Swimwear

Friday, May 15, 2009

When Bad Fashion Happens to Good People: Jennifer Hudson



This morning Jennifer Hudson performed on the Today Show wearing the ultimate Fashion Faux Pas! She looked like a blast from the past that we'd all like to forget. J-Hud wore a red ruffled sleeveless, top and charcoal pleated jeans that were far from flattering. This has got to be the worst case of camel-toe-itis I've seen thus far. It makes you wonder if she had a date planned with Joe the Camel afterwards. I call this her "throw back" look --- throw it back it the closet that is. She had her security in place but where were the fashion police --- why wasn't she red carded?


Due to her size, its very important that Jennifer chooses the right garments that will compliment her figure - which her stylist and fashion team failed to do in this case. I can't believe they let her walk out looking like this - aren't her pre-American Idol days over?!? The only fabulous thing she has on are her shoes. The jeans made her butt appear as flat as a pancake, her over-sized top added emphasis to her big bust line, and her accessories gave her wardrobe a lackluster lift. Accessories are supposed to compliment to your look and not fill a void. With this getup, she's one faux pas away from looking like a train wreck. For someone as fabulous as Jennifer - this is not a good look for the Dream Girl at all. The sad part about this is that Jenny seems as though she's actually feeling this look. SMH. Shame - shame.

I can't bare to see her like this anymore.


On a scale of 1 to 10, I'll give give J-Hud a 5 ... most of that is due to the phenominal performance she gave this morning.

"Fashion Is Foremost Inspiration"

- Suzanna

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