May 21, 2012
Razieh Bagheri Tour Details

Razieh
Bagheri
Razieh Bagheri
 

Rima Boutique

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Phone
916-797-7462

 
   
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Rima Boutique
5530 douglas blvd #140, California 95746
Details:
Couture beginnings
The first designer who was not merely a dressmaker was Charles
Frederick Worth (1826-1895). Before the former draper set up his
maison couture fashion house in Paris, clothing design and
creation was handled by largely anonymous people, and high
fashion descended from style worn at royal courts. Worth's
success was such that he was able to dictate to his customers
what they should wear, instead of following their lead as earlier
dressmakers had done. The term couturier was in fact first
created in order to describe him.

It was during this period that many design houses began to hire
artists to sketch or paint designs for garments. The images alone
could be presented to clients much more cheaply than by producing
an actual sample garment in the workroom. If the client liked the
design, they ordered it and the resulting garment made money for
the house. Thus, the tradition of designers sketching out garment
designs instead of presenting completed garments on models to
customers began as an economy.


Late twentieth century
During the late twentieth century, fashions began to criss-cross
international boundaries with rapidity. Popular Western styles
were adopted all over the world, and many designers from outside
of the West had a profound impact on fashion. Synthetic materials
such as Lycra, Spandex, and viscose became widely-used, and
fashion, after two decades of looking to the future, once again
turned to the past for inspiration.


1980s
The society of the Eighties no longer criticized itself as
consumerist, but was, instead, interested in 'the spectacle'. The
self-conscious image of the decade was very good for the fashion
industry, which had never been quite so a la mode. Fashion shows
were transfigured into media-saturated spectaculars and
frequently televised, taking high priority in the social
calendar. Appearance was related to performance, which was of
supreme importance to a whole generation of young urban
professionals, whose desire to look the part related to a craving
for power. The way in which men and women associated with the
latest styles was no more a matter of passive submission but one
of active choice. As fashion once again looked to the past,
baroque evening dress and long gowns made a reappearance.

The two French fashion designers who best defined the look of the
period were Thierry Mugler and Azzedine Alaia. Strongly
influenced by his early career in the theater, Thierry Mugler
produced fashion designs that combined Hollywood retro and
futurism, with rounded hips, sharply accentuated shoulders, and a
slight hint of the galactic heroine. Mugler's glamorous dresses
were a remarkable success, and signified the complete end of the
hippy era and its unstructured silhouette. Known for his
awe-inspiring combinations, Azzedine Alaia greatly influenced the
silhouette of the woman of the Eighties. The master of all kinds
of techniques that had previously been known only to haute
couture, he experimented with many new and underused materials,
such as Lycra and viscose. The finish, simplicity, and sheer
sexiness of Alaia's look made women of every generation identify
with his seductive style, and during the 1980s he achieved a
certain glory and was held in high regard by members of his own
profession.

Also creating designs very typical of the era were Claude
Montana, whose imposing, broad-shouldered designs, often made of
leather, would not have looked out of place in the futuristic
universe of Thierry Mugler, and Christian Lacroix, who sent shock
waves through the world of haute couture, with his flounced
skirts, embroidered corselets, bustles, and polka-dotted
crinolines which evoked the rhythms of flamenco.

A number of promising newcomers entered the fashion scene in the
Eighties. Angelo Tarlazzi, an extraordinary technician who once
worked for Patou, bewitched both the press and his customers with
his 'handkerchief' dresses. Made of squares of fabric, they
transpired, when you came to put them on, to be far more
complicated than at first appeared. Many a Parisian soiree of the
80's was enlivened by his dresses, all in a fluid and original
style, in which cutting and sewing were kept to a minimum.
Chantal Thomas, the queen of sexy stockings and lace, won a
devoted following for her seductive underwear and for evening
gowns that looked like nightdresses and vice versa. Guy Paulin
was one of the first designers to promote a severe, plain, and
uncluttered look. His garments were classical in their
proportions and made for comfort and simplicity, with their
harmonious lines reinforced by a subtle palette of colors and
fine materials. Under his own name, Joseph designed luxurious
knitwear along classic lines, creating loose, sexy garments in
neutral colors. Carolina Herrera, long regarded as one of the
most elegant members of the jet set, in 1981 launched a series of
collections aimed at women like herself, featuring impeccably cut
clothes of high quality and attractive evening dresses.

Japanese designers such as Rei Kawakubo and Yohji Yamamoto
offered a look which marked a total break with the prevailing
fashion image of the time. Flat shoes, no make-up, reserve,
modesty, and secrecy were the hallmarks of this modern look.
Eventually, it began to include details from the fashions of the
past, as Europe's ancient sites were revisited by these
anarchists of fashion, whose influence on shape of clothes, at
the end of the twentieth-century, became legendary.

In American fashion the seductive, clinging style of Donna Karan
and the casual sophistication of Ralph Lauren were very
influential. A star of the New York social scene, Donna Karan
brought a very personal and feminine approach to the severe,
sober-colored, casual look that dominated American ready-to-wear.
Setting up her own label in 1984, her designs won instant
popularity among active urban women who greatly appreciated the
understated luxury of her clothes. In 1971 Ralph Lauren opened a
boutique for both men and women in Beverly Hills. His
aristocratic style at prices the average American could afford
created a sensation. For an elite faced with all kinds of
avant-garde fashions, it represented a rallying point, endorsing
a classic look that had been adopted for an active life. The
number one of American ready-to-wear, Lauren was equally
successful with his sportswear and jeans, which allowed him to
reach the widest possible range of social classes and age
groups.

Central to the success of a new wave of American sportswear was
the Perry Ellis label, established in 1978, which used color and
natural fibers to great advantage in its elegant variations on
the basics. Norma Kamali, with her short skirts made of
sweatshirting, leotards, headbands, and leg warmers, made jogging
look fashionable. Kamali also created the popular 'rah-rah
skirt'. Also notable is the extreme popularity of the Adidas
sports label, which achieved an incredible level of street cred
in the '80s, inciting the hip hop group Run DMC to release the
single 'My Adidas' in 1986. The legendary shoe designer Manolo
Blahnik also rose to fame during the 1980s.

The multiplicity of trends that bloomed during the 80s were
curtailed by the economic recession that set in at the beginning
of the 1990s. The 1990s opened our eyes to a fresh look.


1990s
In the 1990s it was no longer the done thing to follow fashion
slavishly, a sharp contrast to the highly a la mode '70s and
'80s. The phobia of being underdressed was finally completely
displaced by the fear of overdressing. Fashion in the '90s united
around a new standard, minimalism, and styles of stark simplicity
became the vogue. Despite the best efforts of a few designers to
keep the flag for pretty dresses flying, by the end of the decade
the notion of ostentatious finery had virtually disappeared. As
well as the styling of the product, its promotion in the media
became crucial to its success and image. The financial pressures
of the decade had a devastating effect on the development of new
talent and lessened the autonomy enjoyed by more established
designers.

Fashion at the end of the 20th century tackled themes that
fashion had not previously embraced. These themes included rape,
disability, religious violence, death, and body modification.
There was a dramatic move away from the sexy styles aimed at the
glamorous femme fatale of the Eighties and many designers, taken
with a vision of romantic poverty, adopted the style of the
poverty-stricken waif, dressed in a stark, perversely sober
palette, with a face devoid of make-up. Clothes by ready-to-wear
retailers such as The Gap, Banana Republic, and Eddie Bauer came
to the forefront of fashion, managing to tap into the needs of
women who simply wanted comfortable, wearable clothes. Retro
clothing inspired by the 1960s and 1970s was popular for much of
the 1990s.

The famous Italian fashion house, Gucci was created in 1921, by
Guccio Gucci and was originally a firm that sold luxury leather
goods. Under Guccio Gucci's children, by the end of the 1960s the
label had expanded to include a plethora of products with a
distinctly Latin glamor. However, only in the '90s, when the
Gucci heirs gave up control of the company to Invest Corp., who
planned to turn the business around, did it truly begin to enjoy
the kind of success it enjoys in the present day. Employing an
unknown designer, Tom Ford, as design director in 1994, the
fashion house was endowed with a great prestige, as Ford
triggered a tidal wave with his chic and shocking collections,
perfumes for men and women, revamped boutiques, and advertising
campaigns. In 1998 Gucci is named "European Company of the year"
by European Business Press Federation. Today it is the second
biggest-selling fashion brand (after LVMH) worldwide with US$7
billion worldwide of revenue in 2006 according to BusinessWeek
magazine. Most importantly Gucci is the biggest-selling Italian
brand in the world.

In the '90s the designer label Prada became a true creative force
in the fashion industry. The Milanese company was first
established in 1923, two years after Gucci, and like Gucci, it
was a firm that sold high-quality shoes and leather. It was not
until the Eighties that Miuccia Prada, the niece of the company's
founder, began to produce ready-to-wear fashion, gaining fame for
her subtle, streamlined, yet unquestionably luxurious style, that
catered for the privileged young woman who prefers understatement
to flamboyant extravagance.

In America three of the most influential fashion designers of the
time were Michael Kors, Marc Jacobs, and Calvin Klein. Michael
Kors set up his own business in 1980. However, it was not until
the Nineties that the designer reached the peak of his
popularity. His knowledge and consciousness of trends enabled him
to produce simple well-cut garments, whose sophistication and
elegance appealed to a whole new breed of wealthy American
customers drawn to the new vogue for minimalist chic. Marc Jacobs
is one of the most notable American designers of the period in
that, unlike many American fashion designers in the past, he was
not so much the co-ordinator of a mass-produced garment as a
designer in the European sense of the word. One of the most
promising talents in the fashion industry at the time, the LVMH
(Louis Vuitton-Moet Henessy) group offered him the job of
designing a line of ready-to-wear to compliment the de-luxe
products of luggage specialist Louis Vuitton in the late '90s.
One of the first fashion designers to anticipate the
globalization of world markets, the already well-known designer
Calvin Klein started to market his fashions, perfumes, and
accessories not only right across the US, but also in Europe and
Asia, achieving an unequaled success. A brilliant artistic
director, Klein used carefully constructed advertisements
containing images tinted with eroticism to promote his
sophisticatedly functional mass-produced designs, which won
massive popularity among the urban youth of the 1990s.

The group of designers known as the 'Antwerp Six' (so named
because all of them were graduates of the Royal Academy of Fine
Arts in Antwerp), who first emerged in the 1980s, came to
prominence in the 1990s. Three of the most influential of the
group were Ann Demeulemeester, Dries van Noten, and Walter Van
Beirendonck. Ann Demeulemeester, from her first collection in
1991, demonstrated a great deal of confidence and inventiveness.
Naturally inclined to understatement, she built her designs on
contradictions, introducing contrasting elements into her fluid
and streamlined fashions, which appealed to women who dressed,
above all, to please themselves. The work of Dries van Noten was
founded on a solid mastery of the art of tailoring, to which the
young designer added discreet touches of fantasy in a highly
personal style. Managing to be both classical and original, his
fashions appealed to those who preferred to express their
individuality rather than slavishly follow trends. Walter Van
Beirendonck, who erupted onto the fashion scene in 1995, produced
decidedly futuristic designs under his label W & LT (Wild and
Lethal Trash). Deliberately using fabrics developed by the very
latest technologies, in violently contrasting colors, he produced
clothes that were full of erotic and sadomasochistic references,
touched with a caustic adolescent humor. His highly distinctive
approach related to a resurgence of anti-fashion, but this time
an anti-fashion with nothing in the least ethnic about its
origins, instead based on science fiction that provided the
inspiration for displays of such high-spirited provocation.

In Italy, Gianni Versace, with his brilliant, sexy, and colorful
designs, and Dolce & Gabbana, with their superfeminine and
fantastical style, broke away from the serious and sober-minded
fashions that dominated during much of the Nineties. The British
designer Vivienne Westwood produced many influential and popular
collections in the early '90s, which included outfits inspired by
eighteenth-century courtesans and the Marquis de Sade, with
rounded hips, corsets, and platform heels. The London-based
designer Rifat Ozbek was also popular, particularly in New York
and Milan. His youthful style, which mixed references to India,
Africa, and his native Turkey with clever takes on historical
clothing, was reminiscent of hippest nightclubs and the more
outrageous street fashions of the time. Rap music was a prominent
influence on popular and street fashion during the early- and
mid-Nineties. Followers of hip hop adopted huge baggy jeans,
similar to those worn in American prisons, with big patterned
shirts and heavy black shoes. The sports label Nike had great
popularity and materials such as Lycra and Spandex were
increasingly used for sportswear. Increasing eco-awareness and
animal rights made even top couture houses such as Chanel
introduce fake fur and natural fibers into their collections.

2000s
In the '00s, as the future began to seem increasingly bleak,
fashion, and indeed the Arts in general, looked to the past for
inspiration, arguably more so than in previous decades. Vintage
clothing, especially from the Sixties, Seventies, and Eighties
(the eighties idea of clashing, electric colours becoming
especially popular in mid-late 2007) became extremely popular and
fashion designers often sought to emulate bygone styles in their
collections. The early '00s saw a continuation of the minimalist
look of the Nineties in high fashion. Later on, designers began
to adopt a more colorful, feminine, excessive, and 'anti-modern'
look. Name brands became of particular importance among young
people and many celebrities launched their own lines of clothing.
Tighter fit clothing and longer hair became mainstream for many
men and women. Rap music also had a considerable influence on
popular fashion, in the early part of the 2000s.

For many of the own-label designers who emerged in the early
years of the twenty-first century, financial factors became
increasingly critical. Many new young talents found they now
depended on investors (to whom, in extreme cases, they would even
surrender their names) and were always burdened by the risk that
their partners, motivated by market realism and the desire for
quick returns, would severely restrict their autonomy.

The mid 2000s celebrated the return of a more feminine look. This
began with the comeback of the dress. The figure-hugging look was
disbanded in the summer of 2007, when designers began to
experiment with flowy, tunic shapes. Bright, block colour also
became a focus. Menswear has become increasingly more important
as well and has too gone in a slightly feminine direction,
especially apparent after the middle of the decade.

Last Tour Update: May 18, 2012
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