Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Harper’s"


6 mentions found


Is It Time to Give Up on My White Sneakers?
  + stars: | 2023-05-01 | by ( Vanessa Friedman | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
As I enter the job market, I am reconsidering the staple of the white sneaker. If I wear sneakers, will people take me seriously? Or that the filmmaker Chloé Zhao wore Hermès white sneakers with her gown when she won an Oscar back in 2021. Once you start thinking about white sneakers, you start seeing them everywhere. British Esquire called the white sneaker “the blank canvas upon which any modern look can be built.” Harper’s Bazaar crowed, “The best white sneakers can do it all.”The fact is, more than 100 years after Keds introduced its white sneaker, almost 90 years since Chuck Taylor popularized the style with Converse and more than half a century since Stan Smith changed the game — and amid all the color-crazed mayhem of endlessly mutating sneaker culture — white sneakers remain the Platonic ideal of a shoe: eternal, versatile, comfortable.
POUT PORTFOLIO Clockwise from left: a MAC red shade, $22, Mac.com; a World War II U.S. Army Private; Grace Jones, painted-up and performing in 1981; Paloma Picasso in all her glossy glory c.1974; Actress Clara Bow and her iconic pout c.1927; editor Diana Vreeland in her go-to rouge lip in 1982. “LET PLEASURE be your guide,” says Jeanne Moreau in the 1990 film “La Femme Nikita.” Her character, Amande, an archetypal femme fatale, is tutoring a scruffy teenage assassin-in-training (Anne Parillaud) in the art of applying lipstick. “And don’t forget,” she tells her charge, “there are two things that have no limit: femininity and the means of taking advantage of it.”It’s a (literally) killer quote, as well as a primer on the power of lipstick. Harper’s Bazaar recognized this power in 1937, the year it declared that putting on lipstick was one of the 20th century’s signature gestures. When challenges arise, the magazine pronounced, gliding on a little lippie “reinforces the spirit.” In the midst of the Great Depression, lipstick was a balm for both the soul and the lips—a true luxury that, back then, could be had for about 20 cents.
Has the Basic Black Dress Disappeared?
  + stars: | 2023-03-04 | by ( Christine Lennon | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +1 min
AS A BABY EDITOR at fashion magazines in the 1990s, I was raised on a steady visual diet of the chicest black clothes. The office grown-ups at Harper’s Bazaar, W and Vogue would glide down the halls in form-fitting knits or svelte Helmut Lang pants that grazed their Manolo Blahnik BB pumps. Their sleek black Jil Sander suits and pencil skirts were constructed with care. My middle-aged years, it seemed, were going to be sartorially amazing: Choosing an artful black wardrobe would give me license to ignore lesser trends, signify maturity and fill my closet with essentials to rely on for decades—especially once I had the financial leeway to splurge on quality pieces. My commute is 30 feet to an office above our garage, my co-workers two terriers that shed shamelessly, leaving anything I wear covered in hair.
They’re Cover Girls. They’re in Their 70s.
  + stars: | 2023-01-14 | by ( Rory Satran | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +1 min
Ninety-year-old Frances Dunscombe only began modeling at age 82 after the death of her husband. Now, several years into her modeling career, she’s done lingerie pictures, worn Prada in Hunger magazine and been on the cover of Harper’s Bazaar UK. Ms. Dunscombe, who lives in Surrey, United Kingdom, sees her mission as inspiring and advocating for older women. “I get extremely irritated when fashion editors promote the most frumpy of clothes for the older age groups,” she said. “Aren’t they aware of what is going on at the moment?
‘Emancipation’ Review: Escaping Slavery, Will Smith Style
  + stars: | 2022-12-02 | by ( Kyle Smith | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +1 min
Public support for the Civil War in the North was at a nadir in 1863 when the abolitionist magazine Harper’s Weekly published in a special July 4 edition an engraving of a photograph of an escaped slave with a horribly scarred back. The photograph itself was widely circulated, became known as “the scourged back” or “whipped Peter,” and helped renew Northern public support for the war, months after President Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation had failed to do the same. As with much else about enslaved people, though, reliable details about the subject of the photo are hard to come by. Nevertheless, “whipped Peter” has inspired the big-budget movie “Emancipation,” starring Will Smith as the escapee, who was photographed in Baton Rouge, La., after an arduous journey through swampland. A legend that began with the (probably fictional) Harper’s text accompanying the image, and two other images in the magazine that are said to be of the scourged escapee but clearly depict a different and much younger black man, has it that Peter joined the Union Army and fought bravely, though historians such as David Silkenat of the University of Edinburgh have argued that this was simply one of many wartime tall tales used for propaganda purposes.
Harker's comments also helped support the 10-year Treasury yield's march past 14-year highs. "Harper’s comments provided further confirmation that the Fed is all in on continued aggressive policy and future (interest) rate increases." The pan-European STOXX 600 index (.STOXX) rose 0.26% and MSCI's gauge of stocks across the globe (.MIWD00000PUS) shed 0.55%. Benchmark Treasury yields resumed their rise after economic data appeared to confirm the Fed is unlikely to relent in its aggressive campaign to rein in inflation. The Japanese yen weakened 0.10% to 150.05 per dollar, while Sterling was last trading at $1.1229, up 0.13% on the day.
Total: 6