Andererseits die Formulierung "make them feel just happening enough" - sehr groß.
Back in the 1960's, it was the peace movement. Now it is the piece movement that's influencing fashion.
For fall, shoppers are most likely to do one of two things. They'll either invest in something over the top -- a farm in St. Moritz and a brown Fendi crocodile coat with sable collar, say -- or more likely, after careful consideration of the collections, choose 5 to 10 great pieces that will bring luster to their existing wardrobes and make them feel just happening enough -- from office to dinner and back home again -- to appear positively savvy.
Sure, there are trends and ideas (orange is the new black; fur is the new cashmere), moods (1960's futurism a la Paco Rabanne and Pierre Cardin) and inspirations (''Chicago,'' for its neo-deco flapper style, and ''The Matrix,'' for its racing-edge leather). But the democratic way of fashion today is: no edicts. Think high; think low. Dress as you like -- just dress. Fashion is new clothes; style is how you put the pieces together.
In the poster for "The Swimming Pool," a new film by the French director François Ozon, Ludivine Sagnier lies soporifically on a granite patio in a chevron-patterned bikini whose construction clearly did not tax the world's fabric supply. To an American eye, the image seems almost anachronistic for the very reason that Ms. Sagnier isn't spear-fishing in her bare bikini, wrestling felons or competing in an Australian surfing competition.
Elsewhere in popular culture — or the American sector of it at least — the bikini has undergone a transition from a symbol of languorous sexuality, as embodied by Ms. Sagnier, to a symbol of tough, bloodletting, physical showmanship.
In movies like "Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle," and television series like "Boarding House: North Shore" on WB and "Surf Girls" on MTV, the tiny, triangle-topped bikini is the millennial equivalent of the power suit — the costume for women who ride 20-foot waves or smash the foreheads of evildoers, thus proving they are just as combative as men.
NYT: More Itsy-Bitsy Teeny-Weeny Than Ever. By GINIA BELLAFANTE.
- She was really.....
- Such a sweet girl.
- She was a nice girl.
- Radiating sweetness.
- I’d never use a girl like her.
- No, but look, women like that: I’ll fuck you tonight but tomorrow I won’t know you anymore.
- That’s the difference, some sluts:
- You chat them up and fuck them the same night.
- Yeah, but you can spot that, which ones are like that.
Buchlunge, Geschlechtsauszeichnung, Radialstriemen, Spermathek, Tarsalklauen, Thoraxgrube, subadult
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