rhiannonmars
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- May 18, 2005
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My opinion
I bought some Marc Jacobs items about 4 years ago and liked him then. At the time he was doing more silk tops with delicate art deco prints. I know from time to time he does 1920's looking couture dresses, but I prefer to buy original 1920's dresses for 1/8th the cost! Also, I have a top that has a whimsicle print of a unicorn, princess, and knight in light pastel colors. It reminds me of bed sheets or fabric from the early 80's, my child hood. He definately is good with nostalgia. Sometimes he does 1940's inspired shoes, which I find cute. I appreciate any designers that bring back old looks from eras I was not able to experience, but would have loved to!
I soooo wanted these shoes, but the color in person is not red, it is orange. Orange patent leather just doesn't wet my whistle, and so I find small problems like this in every piece he puts out.
Since then, I have bought nothing Marc Jacobs. His inspiration clearly comes from ~70's salvation army clothes. When I was a teen and wanted to be different, I shopped the salvation army so I see his inspiration. His colors are always slightly off, dirty and dingy. Sometimes the cuts of his tops have really high colars, like the 70's victorian revival. Often his fabrics are to heavy or stiff. His shoes come in colors like "lobster", in other words, puke orange/red. Tops come in oranges, off teals, dusty blues or are too big a mix for colors, which gets hard to coordinate. Shoes come in red+blue, which makes me think of red lipstick and blue eyeshadow, a big no no. The heels on alot of his shoes are really clunky. I prefer something more deliate.
This top definately shows me all that is weird/grose in Marc Jacobs...(orange, see through, clay colored velvet). ... I do commend him though for being different, as well as the people who are brave enough to wear something like this.
I think his designs are nice for LV. It is like a high end 70's stewardess look. It is clean and chic, but definately more retro into an era I am not that connected with.
I guess all in all he has gotten a little to "whimsicle" for my taste.
I bought some Marc Jacobs items about 4 years ago and liked him then. At the time he was doing more silk tops with delicate art deco prints. I know from time to time he does 1920's looking couture dresses, but I prefer to buy original 1920's dresses for 1/8th the cost! Also, I have a top that has a whimsicle print of a unicorn, princess, and knight in light pastel colors. It reminds me of bed sheets or fabric from the early 80's, my child hood. He definately is good with nostalgia. Sometimes he does 1940's inspired shoes, which I find cute. I appreciate any designers that bring back old looks from eras I was not able to experience, but would have loved to!
I soooo wanted these shoes, but the color in person is not red, it is orange. Orange patent leather just doesn't wet my whistle, and so I find small problems like this in every piece he puts out.
Since then, I have bought nothing Marc Jacobs. His inspiration clearly comes from ~70's salvation army clothes. When I was a teen and wanted to be different, I shopped the salvation army so I see his inspiration. His colors are always slightly off, dirty and dingy. Sometimes the cuts of his tops have really high colars, like the 70's victorian revival. Often his fabrics are to heavy or stiff. His shoes come in colors like "lobster", in other words, puke orange/red. Tops come in oranges, off teals, dusty blues or are too big a mix for colors, which gets hard to coordinate. Shoes come in red+blue, which makes me think of red lipstick and blue eyeshadow, a big no no. The heels on alot of his shoes are really clunky. I prefer something more deliate.
This top definately shows me all that is weird/grose in Marc Jacobs...(orange, see through, clay colored velvet). ... I do commend him though for being different, as well as the people who are brave enough to wear something like this.
I think his designs are nice for LV. It is like a high end 70's stewardess look. It is clean and chic, but definately more retro into an era I am not that connected with.
I guess all in all he has gotten a little to "whimsicle" for my taste.
Yes it does!

Same thing if you don't have Sofia's bustline (as I don't either) ... just buy the bottom half. The best way to ensure you never, ever see yourself coming or going (and that you're expressing yourself rather than someone else) is to buy separates from different lines.