Filed under: - Jo, Art, Couture, Design, Desirables, Inspirables, Our Style, Outfit Photos, Photography, Travel | Tags: Art, Christian Lacroix, Colours, Couture, Design, Fashion, First Thai Food, National Musuem of Singapore, Purvis Street
I’m not sure about you, but when my age just tipped two digits (ie, 10), my classmates and I were obsessed with mouthing the word “colourful”, because it looked like you were saying “I love you”, and that was oh-so-taboo.
Over the weekend, colourful and I love you have become essentially one and the same to me. It seemed like colours that day were so tremendously yummy and vivid in what I ate and where I went. It was like the surroundings made up for my lack of colourful clothes, haha.
My boyfriend and I took a break from the usual shopping and eating around the places that we had to run errands at. Instead, we made an effort to trek to places we’ve been wanting to go. We felt so much like tourists
First we went to First Thai Food at 23 Purvis Street. It is run by real Thais, (don’t I make them sound like some rare commodity? Fact is, there are very few native Thais who run Thai restaurants in Singapore) and they make AWESOME and AUTHENTIC Thai food.


We ordered a green chicken curry and seafood tom yam soup. The tom yam soup was certainly altered to suit Singaporeans’ (and the many tourists in the area) tastebuds better. It wasn’t half as spicy as all the ones I tried in Bangkok. But it was good, sour, appetizing, with ultra fresh ingredients. Prawns! I lurve.
It is a shop house at the corner of the block and it is decorated with lots of artificial flowers, paintings and photographs of random people, famous people, Thais and their King. The walls are tiled with pale blue and pink squares. There must be a good hundred eye catching things in the shop, but somehow they didn’t come across as offbeat or anything.
The walls outside are a bright orange and yellow, and I couldn’t resist taking a picture! So here’s what I wore anyway. Stripes |||||||||||||||||||||||||||.


Yeap those neon flowers are part of the decor in the shop as well.
We ventured into Actually… a nice white-washed shop with very exciting wares to liven up its arty pallid interiors. I want a Freitag bag!


Next we went to the National Musuem of Singapore to view Christian Lacroix the Costumier.
Musuems always remind me of art student days. Sarah and I were just plain secondary school students taking art… but I always liked saying art student hahahah.




Looking at all these drawings made me feel like I should not exist, as with many other exhibitions have.
Now for the real thing. Since pictures paint a thousand words, allow me to inject a 6000 word essay about the exhibition.


You have to go for the one of the guided tours with the curator. She speaks beautifully and she gives the costumes life!
All the costumes were made for the stage – operas, plays and all kinds of lavish productions. It is amazing to hear how dedicated and meticulous Lacroix was about these costumes, from fringes to polka dotted lining, how the depth of colour deepens as the story progresses, how he fused modern day influences with that of Baroque…



Long draped dresses that resembled Greek columns splashed with neon paint.

I felt so wholesomely decadent walking around, listening, reading and observing. Ah.
“Couture dresses should be perfect at close range. Ready-to-wear should be concrete and practical. Fashion should be a matter of look, everyday life and current atmosphere.
On stage, there are only symbols, effects and illusions. Costumes must speak outright when actors, dancers or singers enter the stage.” – Christian Lacroix
We went for a neighbouring exhibition, Come-in: Interior Design as a Contemporary Art Medium in Germany. Pretty mind-boggling stuff!


Interior design to me is something that ought to be pretty idosyncratic and individualistic. It should recognize, or at least anticipate the presence of discrete, individual people.
For the interiors and furnishings of homes or maybe offices, there are many elements of discrete items – like chairs (as opposed to benches – collective), cutlery of different shapes, sizes and designs (YOUR favourite cup to drink from, for example), cubicles or rooms (not a vast space – though this can be easily challenged)..
But what happens when you take these seemingly discrete items, then join and disjoin them at the oddest of places? Kinda unwelcoming eh.
Random thoughts.
But what’s interior design to you?
Anyway. Interesting textures ahead!



We ended the day with home-made dinner! Spaghetti with pesto sauce and a homemade ginger-spring onion with olive oil sauce that is typically eaten with bak zham gai (literally translated as white chopped chicken? Actually, just boiled chicken).

It was t3h sm3x.
Happy weekend!
Filed under: - Jo, 2009 Spring/Summer, Couture, Runway Reviews | Tags: Couture, Fashion, Givenchy, Models, Runway, Spring 2009, Style



I love how the dress mirrors the runway in that there are petals all over. Or at least I think that’s what they are!

Givenchy Spring 2009 Couture
Couture in close-ups. I wouldn’t have it any other way this season – somewhat short of spectacularly staggering. You think?
Pictures via style.com
Filed under: - Sarah, 2008 Autumn/Winter, 2009 Spring/Summer, Couture, Design, Desirables, Shopping | Tags: Abyzz, boutique, Desmond Yang, Shopping, Singapore Designers
I just chanced upon local designer, Desmond Yang’s standalone boutique (Abyzz) at Millenia Walk.
I was somewhat shocked to see his store (partly because I didn’t know it existed!) but after a bit of contemplation, I went in for a quick looksee.
Having only see his work on the runway (at SFF 08 Blueprint, as mentioned here) and in print previously. I now openly declare:
I AM A FAN!!! ![]()
While at the store, I did not do extensive browsing (i was late for a meeting) BUT, you can tell that a lot of thought, heart and soul goes into each piece.
The amount of details that you find on EACH piece will leave you flabbergasted! I saw skirts with pleats and pockets, interesting stitching and tops that can be worn either way, front to back or back to front…. I WANT!!! The very friendly staff even pointed out a skirt which has NO SEAMS!?! (how do you make a seamless skirt?? makes me think of sleeping beauty [if you've watched the show, you'd know what i mean]) Price-wise, (i didnt dare look:/) but i think they are all reasonably priced (from the few glimpses that i got)
If price is of no concern to you (and lucky you! what with all the sales going on and the financial crisis) then a wardrobe must-have is an Abyzz piece right off the runways of Shanghai. The friendly staff (i’m sorry i didn’t ask for your name!) said each peice was one-of-a-kind. No one else in the WORLD would have the same dress. And these dresses were INSANE! there were pleats on the sleeves and tie sashes. The fabric looked rather sporty but the silhouettes oozed feminity. words cannot fully describe how gorgeous these dresses are but you’d need to put down a high three-figure sum to be the proud owner on one of these one-of-a-kinds..
For the less fortunate (quite literally), the mainstream (read: mass market) options are a good (and lighter-on-the-pocket) way to go.
- Sarah
who has become a library-rat over the past few weeks (exams are around the corner!!! 0.0!!!), is now an Abyzz fan, wants more money (to go shopping!) and can’t find images to accompany this post.
Filed under: - Sarah, Art, Couture, DIY, Desirables, Inspirables, OMGWTFBBQ, Photography, Shoes | Tags: Bags, creativity, Fashion, innovation, inpiration, jewelry, origami, Shoes
A friend introduced me to this origami blog, dedicated to all things origami related and inspired. (view it here) I LOVE its content!!!

Ana Hagopian, a jewelry designer from Barcelona. Her pieces are so delicate and remind me of fruits and flowers (doesn’t the above necklace look like raspberries?! *slurps*)

Well-thought and well-constructed, these bags by Ferry Meewisse from his line Frrry fold away and store flat. With seams and crease lines coinciding, can you say Genius!

Don’t know how much you can store in a Chloe alligator clutch like that. But who cares!!! i love it! (:

André Lima’s collection was compared and contrasted against possible design inspirations (and who knew you could fold paper and make it look like a crab!!!)



You can see the rest of the compare/contrast series here.

Marloes ten Bhomer is the mastermind behind these delicious shoes. It SHOWS that a lot of research and experimenting went into the materials, forms and construction methods.

(i want!!!!)
Last but not least… this series by Taketori BLOWS MY MIND! I think that the gloss of the paper makes it all the more realistic.




I think that if there was an origami heaven, it’d look like that. (:
*sigh*
Filed under: - Sarah, 2008 Autumn/Winter, Couture, Desirables, Inspirables | Tags: Chanel, Couture, Fall 2008
Unlike the over-the-top light fixture contraptions of Viktor and Rolf’s Fall 2007 RTW, Chanel’s Fall 2008 Couture collection saw a handful of models donning frames.

Photos: Alessandro Lucione

Photo: Armandi Grillo
At first sight, the frames distracted me from the clothes. Yet the more I look at the images, the more I take notice of various details of the pieces worn by the models.
Overall, the collection appeared architectural. Even with softer fabrics, details in the layers and pleats were all so purposeful.


Photos: Dominique Charriau
Karl Lagerfeld is one lean, mean, designing machine! With all the labels he heads, plus having to come up with new and innovative things, or simply re-inventing classics, season after season… I wonder how fast his mind must work.
And, really, kudos to anyone who could come up with this hoodie.

Photo: Dominique Charriau
Even if its purely decorative. even if my big head couldnt fit with all those camellias. I LIKE!!!!!!