10.4 C
London
Tuesday, April 16, 2024
HomeFashionCalling all fashionistas: Oscar wants you.

Calling all fashionistas: Oscar wants you.

Date:

Related stories

Styles notes with Neelam: East meets West

  HOW WOMEN ARE CONFIDENTLY EMBRACING A BLEND OF BOTH...

Gucci revives classics to regain edge

Gucci is revisiting 1960s handbags and other classics in...

Britain’s most fashionable man? Vogue hails Prince Charles

His daughters-in-law Kate and Meghan are regularly lauded for...

India’s garment workers cover bosses’ lockdown losses

From unpaid overtime to wage cuts, Indian garment workers...

THE FILM academy is adding a ‘Project Runway’ element to the Oscars this year by asking the public to vote on which dress the trophy presenter will wear.
 
The academy tapped seven emerging designers to create gowns for the competition. They unveiled their entries Tuesday during the annual Oscar fashion show at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ headquarters.
 
The winning dress "will be seen on Oscar night probably more than any other gown on the red carpet," said Oscar fashion coordinator Patty Fox. She and show producers Laurence Mark and Bill Condon selected the competing designers.
 
Moire Conroy, Alan Del Rosario, Sam Kori George, Marianne Kooimans, Maria Pinto, Nicolas Putvinski and Robert Rodriguez each had about three weeks to design their dress.
 
Del Rosario, who already counts Michelle Pfeiffer and Debra Messing among his clients, said he was inspired by ‘old Hollywood glamor’ when creating his strapless silk-and-lace mermaid gown.
 
"The Oscars is all-time glamour," he said. "It’s one of those events when a woman can go all out."
 
Maria Pinto, famous for making Michelle Obama’s Inauguration Day dress, called her Oscar entry ‘modern Marie Antoinette’.
 
The strapless silver column ‘is a study of control and release’, she said, noting that pleats at the waist shape a makeshift bustle in back.
 
Putvinski cited New York City skyscrapers as the inspiration for his flowing white gown with folds of silver across the front. Rodriguez also chose white, looking to Grace Kelly as a muse for his silk Grecian column accented with an asymmetrical black strap.
 
Conroy was inspired by the ’60s summer of love for her floaty gray chiffon design, while George was inspired by champagne — specifically the Taittinger girl — for his strapless silver crepe gown adorned with handmade orchids. Kooimans showed an intricately embroidered, one-shouldered dress dripping with antique diamond brooches.
 
Oscar-worthy gems decorated each of the dresses. Neil Lane, a red-carpet regular who has worked with Marisa Tomei and Angelina Jolie, said he expects vintage looks and subdued glamour at the Oscars this year.
 
"Everything is classical," he said. "Everything goes back to the golden days of Hollywood."
 
Fox said that while she didn’t offer the design contestants any guidelines, she hoped they’d embrace classic colors and styles.
 
"All the fashion gods were with us," she said.
 
Fans can vote online for their favorite gown until February 17. The winner of ‘Oscars Designer Challenge’ will be announced during the red-carpet show before the February 22 Academy Awards.
 
Meanwhile, other Oscar fashion preparations were under way at a penthouse on nearby Rodeo Drive.

That’s where Spanx, the body-shaping undergarments favored by Beyonce, Kate Winslet, Anne Hathaway and dozens of other Hollywood beauties, set up its annual awards-season suite.

So many stylists request the tummy-flattening, hip-slimming underthings this time of year that the Atlanta-based company comes to Los Angeles to dole out boxloads of products in person, said spokeswoman Maggie Adams.

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

eleven + eleven =