Install this theme
Untitled on We Heart It. http://weheartit.com/entry/14239620

Untitled on We Heart It. http://weheartit.com/entry/14239620

jadoreprettythings:

Kermit Tesoro shoes. Very Alexander McQueen. 

jadoreprettythings:

Kermit Tesoro shoes. Very Alexander McQueen. 

monsieur-j:

Alexander McQueen Savage Beauty: Fall/Winter 2008-2009 - The Girl Who Lived In The Tree Collection

monsieur-j:

Alexander McQueen Savage Beauty: Fall/Winter 2008-2009 - The Girl Who Lived In The Tree Collection

There is no way back for me now. I am going to take you on journeys you’ve never dreamed were possible.
Alexander McQueen (via jerris)
keepcalmandbefashionable:

I am not one to mourn obsessively over ‘celebrity deaths’, of course I feel sympathy towards family and friends of the celebrity and it is a terrible circumstance but of course I am able to carry on with my day and don’t think twice about it. However, a year later, I still feel saddened by Alexander McQueens death. Everytime I scroll through his collections or read old articles about him I feel that it is such a shame, such a shame, that his life was cut so short. I feel that he was a truly creative and innovative genius who inspired many. Time and time again he would raise expectations with his outrageous designs from his Spine corset in 1998 to his Rainbow collection in 2008, his ever-so-popular-yet-mental Armadillo shoes and famous skull scarves. To put it in teenage talk “it sucks” that he isn’t alive anymore, because he was one designer (along with Karl Lagerfeld and Stella McCartney) that I wanted to meet before I died. Regardless of how fabulous Sarah Burton (AMs Current Creative Director) is, Alexander McQueen will never be truly the same.RIP MCQUEEN.

keepcalmandbefashionable:

I am not one to mourn obsessively over ‘celebrity deaths’, of course I feel sympathy towards family and friends of the celebrity and it is a terrible circumstance but of course I am able to carry on with my day and don’t think twice about it. However, a year later, I still feel saddened by Alexander McQueens death. Everytime I scroll through his collections or read old articles about him I feel that it is such a shame, such a shame, that his life was cut so short. I feel that he was a truly creative and innovative genius who inspired many. Time and time again he would raise expectations with his outrageous designs from his Spine corset in 1998 to his Rainbow collection in 2008, his ever-so-popular-yet-mental Armadillo shoes and famous skull scarves. To put it in teenage talk “it sucks” that he isn’t alive anymore, because he was one designer (along with Karl Lagerfeld and Stella McCartney) that I wanted to meet before I died. Regardless of how fabulous Sarah Burton (AMs Current Creative Director) is, Alexander McQueen will never be truly the same.

RIP MCQUEEN.

inspirationsbox:

Alexander McQueen Dress, Widows of Culloden, Autumn Winter 2006–7  
Savage beauty exhibition.

inspirationsbox:

Alexander McQueen Dress, Widows of Culloden, Autumn Winter 2006–7  

Savage beauty exhibition.

taitandco:

Today I finally made it to The Metropolitan Museum of Art to see the Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty exhibit. It was amazing! The presentation gave an overview of McQueen’s  work in a context that helped to explain his creative process. Since  studying McQueen and seeing early pieces at the The Museum at FIT (my alma mater) I’ve been intrigued and it is wonderful to see that the general public is fascinated to such a degree.
Since photography is forbidden, I am not going to say where I got  these pictures, but I will say that I did not take them! The exhibit  runs through August 7th, and if you aren’t currently a member of the  museum, I strongly suggest you become one to avoid the staggering long  entrance lines.

taitandco:

Today I finally made it to The Metropolitan Museum of Art to see the Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty exhibit. It was amazing! The presentation gave an overview of McQueen’s work in a context that helped to explain his creative process. Since studying McQueen and seeing early pieces at the The Museum at FIT (my alma mater) I’ve been intrigued and it is wonderful to see that the general public is fascinated to such a degree.

Since photography is forbidden, I am not going to say where I got these pictures, but I will say that I did not take them! The exhibit runs through August 7th, and if you aren’t currently a member of the museum, I strongly suggest you become one to avoid the staggering long entrance lines.