Showing posts with label Style. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Style. Show all posts

Thursday, December 6, 2012

Go Buy These: Jeremy Scott & Linda Farrow Sunglasses


With Christmas fast approaching we have the perfect gift for the drug lord friend in your crew. This limited edition collaboration between designer Jeremy Scott and sunglasses designer Linda Farrow feature a gold headpiece frame made of nickel and silver, teamed with brown lenses. Pick em’ up from Colette.

Friday, November 16, 2012

Happy Friday!: Rat Tail



Rattail (haircut)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"A rattail is a hair style that is characterized by a long "tail"-like element of hair growing downward from the back of the head. The rattail usually curls naturally; however, it can be braided, treated as a dread, permed, straightened, or curled with an iron. In some instances, an individual might choose to grow several tails as opposed to a single very long tail.
The rattail saw a brief period of mainstream popularity during the 1980s and has rapidly fallen out of vogue.However, it has recently seen renewed popularity."

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Video: Cover Art Shoot For Santigold's Master of My Make-Believe


Here at Onomatopoeia we like to mix things up a bit, a little bit of art, a little bit of music and more, so when some of these things can come together for a story it’s always exciting.

Santigold has offered a look at the cover of her forthcoming album, Master of My Make-Believe, out May 1 on Downtown/Atlantic.  Via The New York Times' T Style blog, the cover, shot by photographer Jason Schmidt, pictures four versions of Santi White. Santi appears in the center of the photograph as a Mafia boss, which she described to the Times as "some sort of ruler in my own reality." At the character's sides, she appears twice as twin guards, wearing gold bodysuits designed specifically for the shoot by Alexander Wang. And hovering above, Santi #4 is a painting by one our favorite painters out there, Kehinde Wiley, inspired by 18th century artist Joshua Reynolds' "Portrait of an Officer". Check out a behind-the-scenes clip documenting the process of the shoot below…