Live Streaming... The F/W 2025.26 Fashion Shows
SomethingElse said:I love the match fabric photograph especially. I wonder what sparked the resulting image?
The Spiral shell, France Vers, 1921.
Marlene Dietrich, 1934.
Fred Astaire in "Top Hat". New York, 1927.
Brooklyn Bridge, 1903.
Fredo I was wondering when you would enter, and there you are with your wonderful scans! Thank you!![]()
... I love the Greta Garbo "series" he did
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Yes the whole construction is spellbinding, it's one of these you just keep starring at, following the different patterns it construct... I'm not aware of what sparked this and I had a look through a couple of books I have on him, but couldn't find any information on this photograph!
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c. 1930, reprinted in 1966. This photograph appeared in the American edition of Vogue fashion magazine. It epitomises the glamour of 1930s fashion and captures the desirable look of the period. Here you can see a dress made of extravagant and luxurious fabrics. Dramatic contrasts of light and dark bring out the tactile and visual qualities of the silk georgette, satin and ermine fur trim.
Many of the most important photographers of the day worked for Vogue, which became well-known for the quality of its fashion photography. Edward Steichen took this photograph. In the late 1930s he was the principle 'in-house' photographer for Condé Nast, the publisher of Vogue.
that's funny they're saying this (in bold) because actually i just know him through fashion photography....Edward Steichen. In High Fashion
11 January – 30 March 2008
The Kunsthaus Zürich offers a glimpse at an unknown facet of the work of the great 20th-century American photographer. Forty years after the artist’s death, original prints by Edward Steichen (1879-1973) for Vanity Fair and Vogue are only now available to the public. In the 1920s and 1930s Steichen was at the height of his career as a photographer, and some of the images he created during that period for the magazines published by Condé Nast are among his most striking.
Organized by the Musée de l'Elysée, Lausanne, and the Foundation for the Exhibition of Photography, Minneapolis, in collaboration with Kunsthaus Zürich.