Cruella's Devilishly Remarkable Costume Design

Disney live-action remakes of animation films have come under the scrutiny of a vocal number of fans of the originals. Either from their uncreative approach at almost precisely copying the source material while adding nothing more than a little sprinkle of overcooked CGI and a pinch of Uncanny Valley to many more abstract or object-based characters like the Genie from Aladdin and Lumiere and Cogsworth from Beauty and the Beast, or from the movie’s blind faith towards recreating the magic of the animation instead of what makes the original films great, these motion pictures have received a lot of hate regardless.

This criticism is not particularly part of my experience. (I appreciate a lot of aspects of 2019’s Aladdin, including the Bollywood-inspired dance sequences and Jasmine’s new song and her portrayal as a princess who cares about politics, Agrabah, and its citizens, earning the position of Sultana, and 2019’s Lion King is a visual and technological marvel regardless of the “emotionless” character facial expressions.) Moreover, even if such opinions thrive in places like Metacritic, Twitter, and sometimes YouTube, box office numbers provide a whole new worldview to the vocally unbeloved motion pictures. As two examples, Beauty and the Beast made $1.26 billion globally, while The Lion King made $1.56 billion worldwide.

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This more optimistic perspective to the live-action remakes where, in the majority of times, people keep on coming back for more, not unlike the MCU movies with the amount of money both franchises make with their hits and misses, partially proves that not everybody who watches a movie and enjoys it goes on social media to defend it, so the unilateral view presented about them on social media is not the only reality of the situation (even film reviewers have disparate opinions). That is a factor, amongst many others, people should consider when reviewing a movie’s performance above only believing in the words of the vocal majority. If someone does not like how Disney treats their live-action remakes and finds a community of people who agree, they can and should have their opinions, and Disney can learn from some critiques, but to believe that their views are the truth of the matter and that everyone else stands with them is misguided. Still, if you have either liked or disliked the movies, you are very much entitled to do so.

Controversy (and a touch of audience alienation) aside, the most recent episode of this “love it or hate it” franchise, rather a quasi-installment to the list of Disney live-action remakes, is Cruella. Actually, in my opinion, my little rant above was totally unnecessary for this post because simply put, Cruella falls considerably far away from the wardrobe of remakes, both in content and tone, so I may have just borrowed your time a tiny bit more than I should have. Oopsie. Either way, this The Devil Wears Prada-esque feature-length is more akin to a prequel than a remake (especially if you consider the 1996’s 101 Dalmation to be one of the first Disney live-action spins and that Emma Stone’s character is a past version of Glenn Close’s) and more closely resembles Maleficent in its focus on making a villain the protagonist.

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The only manner in which Cruella could be called a pure live-action remake would be if, for example, 2019’s The Lion King was about how Mufasa and Scar’s father was a segregationist and dictatorial king against the Hienas, and Mufasa was congruent to such policies while Scar was a rebellious opponent of the marginalization of the species. Or maybe if 2015’s Cinderella featured an intricate Regency or Victorian-era love triangle between Lady Tremaine and Cinderella’s Mother and Father and how Tremaine poisoned Mother because the antagonist got impregnated by a husband she did not want to have due to an arranged marriage (Father was going to be her original match) and began to be increasingly afraid that the horrible husband would send Drizella and Anastasia away due to certain congenital conditions that made them look different. Hence, the only way for her to conquer Father back was to poison her miserable husband, inherit his fortune, and then kill Mother to get her out of the picture. But none of the situations described above are true, and I am rather having fun stalling the audience from the post’s actual content. Yet, it appears that with Cruella, a movie that is being compared with DC’s Joker in its depiction of a protagonist’s downfall into badness/madness, her appeal comes from seeing what made Estella become Cruella, a wholly original interpretation of such a character. Are we supposed to morally like the villains they come to become? Of course not, but at least Disney is adding a little more PG-13 spice into what makes their iconic villains both likable and “bad” with this film, which does precisely that with literal style.

Cruella seems to have appeased some critics that are calling it “the best live-action Disney update yet,” update being the keyword here since “remake” entails the unquantified modification of a plot in structure, characterization, context, and production, while “update” has a more varied tone to the number of narratives one can tell inside an already existing story (the end of the movie creates a direct reference to the original). Nonetheless, for those who still believe Cruella is a remake, the fact that it exists as very much its own thing years apart from the story in 101 Dalmations without many special effects has offset most, if not all, the criticism the remake-haters have about this Disney franchise. If somebody is to criticize the movie, they will now focus on its inherited flaws (if or when they find it) rather than the fact that it is trying too hard and failing at reproducing the magic of the original. Now, I have my own opinions about Cruella, but I will keep them separate so I can divert my attention to breaking down the undeniably gorgeous and highly stylish costume designing of the movie, one of its undoubtful highlights. This may sound inconsiderate and rude, but if a person left the film thinking that its costume designs are “average” compared to other movies in general, I am astounded at that person’s blind moxie.

 

The Undertaking

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Two-time Oscar-winner costume designer Jenny Beavan is a master in her craft, and Cruella solidified her status as such even more. Previously working on Mad Max: Furry Road, The King’s Speech, A Room with a View, and on both installments of Robert Downey Jr. and Jude Law’s Sherlock Holmes series, Beavan was contacted by Disney producer Kristin Burr to helm the project after helping her with 2018’s Christopher Robin, a movie that is in itself a unique spin on Winnie-the-Pooh. In an interview with Popsugar, Beavan mentions that after reading the script for the first time, the designer was doubtful is she would be able to take the movie on and that she started “everything — with complete terror, obviously, because it was so enormous.” Enormous such a creative undertaking was.

The main character and the antagonist had 80 costumes weaved for them combined: 47 for Estella/Cruella, played by Emma Stone, and 33 for the Baroness, played by Emma Thompson. For the rest of the principal cast, 197 garments were constructed. Even if these numbers don’t feel very magnificent, especially when you compare Daphne’s 104 dresses alone in Bridgerton (granted, it is a Netflix series with eight episodes in its first season), making almost 80 Haute-couture garments that are supposed to depict different levels of creative fashion designing, with varied shapes, colors, fabrics, cuts, and sewing skills, be unique in their own ways is sincerely astounding. The amount of variation found in the sketches sprinkled throughout Cruella alone is enough for a whole fashion show. But then, every time the Baroness appeared in it, she wore something different, highly fashionable, and sometimes even timeless, a result of her being, first, an aristocrat, and second, the head of her fashion label. To design 33 unique premium-looking garbs for one movie is to create and weave for a small portion of the celebrities from the Met Gala or an award show at once, and that is impressive. But then, the movie depicts around six major fashion events, and they all feature Haute-couture for both Cruella and the gala guests, perplexing me even more about how a group of fashionistas and seamstresses were able to come up with all the costumes for it.

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I am going to skip over Estella’s garments (more subtle than her counterpart’s but still complex and fashion-forward) to highlight only Cruella’s and the Baroness’ in the following paragraphs, but I need first to stop and say that the work Jenny Beavan and her team put into crafting all of Cruella’s looks alone should be recorded in film history, preferably in a museum displaying all the original costumes. Now that I said it, let's talk about inspirations.

 

Rock & Vogue

Cruella’s story transpires in the British ‘70s, a time of rebellious countercultural movements marked by underground musical genres like hardcore and punk rock (Sex Pistols and The Clash come to mind) and alternative designers such as Dame Vivienne Westwood, who brought modern punk and new wave fashion into the spotlight. In an interview with Vogue UK, Beavan explains that the designer was one of the inspirations for the rebellious personality Cruella imbues into her work, together with BodyMap, an early 80s fashion label marked by their peculiar fashion shows and clothing with lots of prints and layered shapes, and Nina Hagen, an internationally renowned German punk and new wave singer known for her subversive sense of style (a combo between Madonna, Kiss, and David Bowie). In a virtual press conference for the movie, she further mentions Galliano and Alexander McQueen as part of her “mood board” inspirations, and the latter’s aesthetic, which Cruella’s director Craig Gillespie praised while talking to the LA Times for the “shock value of his shows and the creative outrageousness of some of his work,” heavily influenced how Cruella was visually portrayed and the way she planned her pop-up shows, even if McQueen found his label in 1992.

Moreover, the ‘70s were a time when what was in vogue expanded the expressive freedom of ‘60’s clothing, now featuring nipped, tight waists, exaggerated flared shapes, and more. Talking to Collider, Beavan spotlights Dior, Balenciaga, and other great ‘50s, ‘60s, and ‘70s fashion designers (like Elsa Schiaparelli) as primary inspirations for the Baroness’ evolving aesthetic, after she “looked at the really high fashion of the period, particularly [on] Vogue,” a resource that is “very available online.” In the movie, the Baroness appears as a character with a style that I would call chrono-fluid, meaning that her sense of fashion does not belong to only one decade but rather exists in a fluid state between years. For instance, her closet pulls from the ‘50s and ‘60s aesthetics while staying fashionable 5 or 15 years later. Basically, throughout the movie, the Baroness wears both past and present designs from her label, and as mentioned before, Beavan looked into previous years to build the antagonist’s look, and because she has been in the fashion business for a long time, the character’s sense of style both exists inside and transcends the borders of time.

The ‘70s were the stylistic soul of Cruella’s fashion, primarily due to the visual aesthetic of the time as explored above, but Beavan also imbued the decade into the process of preliminary dressing and fitting of Cruella’s movie costumes. In the Vogue UK interview, writer Radhika Seth asked her if her team had sourced vintage clothes from London and New York. The costume designer explained that, like she used to do in her past — getting her clothes on vintage shops, especially on Portobello Road because she could not afford more popular brands like Westwood or Biba — Beavan and her team found different garments from London’s Portobello Road Market and A Current Affair fair on Brooklyn, New York City, to build the preliminary fitting outfits for Emma Stone by combining different garbs in a myriad of combinations until they felt suitable for her and the portrayal of Estella and Cruella. One of Braven’s main goals was to not overdue the already excessive ‘70s style because then the movie’s clothing could look more like a party costume than actual garments. Moreover, she did not intend to be entirely faithful to the ‘70s, so Cruella could still feel like a contemporary piece based on the past. In the end, even though none of the garments in the film were part of this vintage mish-mash of elements, rather being remade following the overall shape and image created by the preliminary costumes, the whole idea of taking vintage clothing and reshaping them reverberated into the narrative in Estella’s approach to creating Cruella’s outfits, especially Baroness’ red dress she wears for the Black and White Gala.

 

Cruella- Red Ravage

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Now that the inspirations segment is done, onto the designs themselves. Approaching Cruella’s overall palette, Jenny Beavan mentions that the eponymous protagonist’s colors “were clear: black and white with some grey, plus the red for the signature moments” (and her lipstick). Such a scarlet moment arrives in the Baroness’ above-mentioned Black and White Gala, where the character of Cruella first steals both the movie and the fashion scene. Draped in a white silk robe (maybe charmeuse) with a black eye masquerade mask and her iconic black and white hair, Cruella makes her first fashion statement by setting it on fire (all special effects) to uncover her interpretation of the Baroness label vintage red dress in an event where people cannot wear color.

In the Collider interview, Beavan explains that she found a cheap red dress in a shop in Beverly Hills, and upon seeing it on Emma Stone’s body, she thought, “This could almost work, she looks so good.” However, because the fashion moments were dictated by the script, it already mentioned that the Baroness’s luxury fashion label once sold such a dress, so it could not look like an inexpensive gown. Thus, taking inspiration from Charles James 1955 Tree dress, an iconic 20th-century designer known for his fascination with exploring and conforming to body shapes and a highly structured aesthetic, the costume designer and her team decided to remake the gown they purchased before to match the story, where Estella would have deconstructed and reconstructed it with her imbued rebellious persona. In Beavan’s words, “The idea was that there was enough fabric in this dress, (...) that you could just about believe that she made it from this original work that she found.” The idea came from fashion artisan Ian Wallace, who also finalized its look.

 

Cruella-Unruly Highlights

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Throughout the film, Cruella also appears briefly with highly creative and majorly fashionable gowns in what Beavan calls photobomb moments since they feature the protagonist stealing the entrance buzz from the Baroness in front of a big fashion event. For a fan of fashion, these consecutive scenes that display Cruella in her high-collar leather biker jacket, orange sequin pants, and black makeup spelling “The Future;” in her British General uniform-inspired blue and red coat with adorned epaulets with golden miniature horses and carriages, black and white crown, and large frilly pink and black train skirt; and in her newspaper bodice and garbage-patterned skirt, are quick snippets of inspiring splendor. Those photobomb moments, coupled with the rock runaway show in the moth dress scene where the protagonist dons a fake Dalmatian coat and skirt outfit, were thought of by Beavan as the antithesis of an average fashion display. Therefore, their revolutionary, energetic, punk essence, the opposite of Baroness’ ordinary and stagnant approach to fashion shows representative of tradition, inspired how the costume designs would look like, be reused, and shift, from leaning towards a more defiant look (motorcycle outfit) to moving into a more militaristic side as satire (British army coat) to going into a more fantastical side (the newspaper/garbage dress).

Kirsten Fletcher, a designer who sculpts fashion into art, was the fashionista Beavan’s team worked with to construct the three photobomb designs and many other costumes. Working at Shepperton Studios in the U.K., where most of Cruella’s garments were weaved and put together, Fletcher had to undertake the challenge of, in Beavan’s words, making “a skirt that you can A) climb onto a car in and, and B) you can swish around to cover up [the car]” in regards to the military/skirt getup. The skirt had to be the perfect weight for it to be light enough for Stone to wear but heavy enough to be swished around the Baroness’ vehicle and stay there. Beavan also mentions that they “did an original version with a more frilly [look], which looked fabulous, but it was too heavy,” so Fletcher and Beavan’s team had to improvise, and after some trial and error, they came up with an idea of layering the skirt with petals. Around 5,060 petals were hand-sewn into the costume by the group, which made it an optimum weight. Fletcher also gave a lot of input into crafting the garbage truck dress, one-of-a-kind, which Beavan states loving making, and Stone mentions as her favorite.

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I could continue writing about the ludicrous and beautiful garments Cruella wears in the rest of the movie, but the Baroness will be left out of this post for too long if I do so. However, if you would like to know, my favorite outfit is the Cruella DeVil look Stone wears with the half-black (latex?) jacket, half-white (satin?) shirt after (spoiler alert) the Baroness is arrested. It is peculiarly empowering (should I say this?), simple in execution yet succinctly creative with the coat/shirt knitted design, and the perfect balance of white tints and black shades where Cruella’s darker persona overshadows Estella’s brighter side. Moreover, I appreciate that Cruella’s attire when moving into the “Hell Hall” has similar pointed shoulder structures to the ones seen worn by Glen Close’s Cruella de Vil, a subtle reference to a past film and a possible future. So, let us not waste more time and onto Baroness Von Hellman.

 

The Baroness-The Splendor of the Callous

While Cruella lives in the duality of black and white (splashed with red and grey), the Baroness dwells mostly on browns, golds, and some shades of black. As previously mentioned, she is slightly old-fashioned, having a taste that conforms to the 1950s and ‘60s fashion scene while simultaneously updating them to the ‘70s style, and many times with her, the difference between the concept of a gala dress and a day-to-day garment relies on subtle, yet apparent nuances in color, shape, and texture. She is so fashionable that the clothing she wears to go out often looks as close to Haute-couture as the outfits she wears in her events and galas. The Baroness is the definition of dress to impress. Partnering with costume maker Jane Law, who had previously worked on 1996’s 101 Dalmations and Mad Max: Fury Road with Jenny Beavan, the costume designer took a different approach to creating the prototypes for Emma Thompson’s fitting.

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Because Beavan already knew Thompson from Sense and Sensibility and other previous events, she understood the actress’s shape, framing, style, and general behavior towards wearing the clothes Beavan designed for her. In the Collider interview, she explains that “Emma Thompson has a stunningly good figure and loves wearing clothes like this (...), which also brings something to the whole costume. Some people just stand in it, but she embodies it.” From this previous knowledge, the costume designer bought various fabrics that could work well with both Thompson’s poise and body and the ‘50s, ‘60s, and ‘70s fashion aesthetic, giving preference to more sculptural textiles, “fabrics with a good stiffness and body to it.” Then, Beavan and Law would drape the fabrics directly in a mannequin to build the prototype. They would then decide if the prototypes were proper and which scene they would belong in and then call in Thompson to try it all. They aimed to achieve an “obviously asymmetric and very fitted, very snobbish” overall look, as Beavan mentioned in the movie’s virtual press conference.

At the same virtual event, Nadia Stacey, the film’s makeup and hairstylist who did a spectacular job with, in particular, Cruella’s different hairstyles and makeup touch-ups in every single new costume, explained that to conform to the sculpted look of the Baroness, Stacey ran with the idea “that she perfected her look, and everything is kind of variation on a theme.” That is why, throughout the film, the Baroness remains with the same general giant top knot bun hair (sometimes covered with a turban, other times loose, curled, or braided), and her makeup drives focus from her eyelids to her lipstick colors. While Cruella’s makeup and hairstyle constantly change to fit her costumes, where the audience sometimes sees her doing a Harley Quinn and painting her face white or playing with eye shapes and different lipstick colors and glossiness (my true lack of understanding of makeup artistry is showing here), the Baroness’ makeup and hairstyle are modeled to be constant to her personality; fashionable, yet rigid.

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Finally, at the beginning of Cruella, the Baroness is hosting a ball for her 18th century inspired collection, a highly produced scene that feels more like a “blink and you miss it” moment more than anything. Such a mission to dress a whole room and the movie’s antagonist in highly tailored and fabric-heavy period clothing, especially ones influenced by Marie Antoinette’s outfits, should appear to be a massive undertaking. But it feels like, with today’s enormous interest in period pieces (Bridgerton, The Tudors, Outlander, Elizabeth, Marie Antoinette, The Other Boleyn Girl, Mary Queen of Scotts, The Favorite, Anna Karenina, Pride and Prejudice, anything related to royalty or Jane Austen, really), so many costume houses are specialized in period clothing from almost any century, especially those with the most amount of artistic evidence pointing to their fashion realities. Beavan mentions in the Collider interview that she was quickly able to find the right places that sell the period-accurate textiles and patterns and decided to combine them with “1960’s jewelry, hair, and makeup because people don’t normally do full 18th century [costumes].” Therefore, the costume designer felt it was both possible and doable to recreate the past and blend it with the present’s fashion aesthetic to form an opulent scene that, though brief, was still able to present to the audience that the Baroness was both a creative force and a highly wealthy woman.

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Fashion is Art

Altogether, Jenny Beavan’s costume designs in Cruella are artfully conceived of, to say the least. Her masterful job in bringing a second life to the 1970s aesthetic in tandem with a more contemporary approach to conceptualization, visual impact, and the crafting process is what the designer excels at in the movie, creating time-appropriate garments that feel timely in Cruella and the Baroness’ bodies. If the movie’s costumes are not given an iconic status in the future — being nominated and receiving several awards, being featured in a fashion exhibition, stirring up some creative trends on the internet based on its looks — I would be shocked and a little disappointed. (Update: Between many accolades, Cruella won Best Costume Design at the 94th Academy Awards and Excellence in Period Film at the 24th Costume Designers Guild Awards). The level of creative input and fashion knowledge applied in coming up with Haute-couture designs that would fit Cruella’s chic and fashionable, yet insanely whimsical rebellious nature was sky high, and adding onto it the Baroness’ luxury label outfits may have set the bar up and opened up new possibilities for future designers to apply their grasp of fashion history, industry, and techniques and combine them with the forever growing creative power of artists in a world where art and design are highly accessible through the internet.

Accordingly, I am not surprised a Cruella sequel got greenlit by Disney. Executives seemed satisfied, audiences flabbergasted by the costumes, and the numbers spoke for themselves (not necessarily the box office ones since the movie is also watchable on Disney + Premier Access). Even though Beavan may not work on this sequel (this is not confirmed, only my own speculation) due to her not been very thrilled with Disney licensing clothing lines from brands like Her Universe and Rag & Bone based on her designs without her direct knowledge nor input of some kind, something that, interestingly enough has happened many times in movies before like Harley Quinn: Birds of Prey, Clueless, and Enchanted, her impact has been felt with vigor. I hope that, if Cruella II actually happens, the costume design is as unique as what Beavan created and that Disney justly treats designers by letting them know beforehand about marketing opportunities and working with them to craft the marketable items. In the same virtual press conference I referenced so many times before, Beavan said, “In fact, in my real life, I have no interest in clothes. I just love telling stories with them. So for me, that was just brilliant,” so I hope she continues telling more stories and inspiring future costume designers to do so. I, for one, am inspired.


Source: https://www.ign.com/articles/disney-cruell...

Exploring ABBA’s Outrageously Expressive Fashion

Perhaps one of the biggest musical acts of all time, Swedish pop group ABBA has remained a cultural icon for decades. ABBA is best known for the distinctive, energetic sound of their hits such as “Dancing Queen” and “Mamma Mia.” The vibrant energy of their music is mirrored by their equally distinctive style, defined by bright, metallic colors and bold silhouettes.

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The outrageously expressive aesthetic of ABBA’s style has proven incredibly divisive. On the one hand, critics have described ABBA’s costumes as tacky and unappealing. Band member Björn Ulvaeus himself has expressed public contempt for the group’s outfits, recently commenting, “In my honest opinion we looked like nuts in those years. Nobody can have been as badly dressed on stage as we were.” By contrast, fans have come to appreciate how bold and funky the group’s outfits are. Millions of fans have visited the ABBA Museum in Sweden, where ABBA’s original costumes are displayed, and many have also been inspired to recreate the group’s more iconic outfits.

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Interestingly enough, ABBA’s defining style arose not out of sartorial intent but due to the tax-deductible convenience of the outfits. Swedish tax code allowed for any costumes that were so outrageous they could only be worn in performances to be categorized as tax-deductible. As a result, ABBA made their stage costumes as bold as possible, inadvertently becoming style icons.

ABBA’s style remains incredibly relevant today, nearly five decades after the group first emerged. This is largely in part due to the success of the Mamma Mia musical and movies, featuring the group’s songs. Furthermore, as vintage style has grown more popular and ‘70s fashion has reemerged in popularity, ABBA’s definitive style, from flared pants to colorful jumpsuits to animal-themed graphic tees, has become more and more relevant. In many ways, ABBA’s style has come to be representative of the ‘70s as a whole, particularly in terms of disco fashion.

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The role that ABBA’s costumes have played in developing the group’s image is an important example of how musicians are often defined just as much by their clothes as by their music. Around the same time that ABBA was active, other artists such as Elton John and David Bowie were pushing boundaries with their flamboyant styles. In more recent years, artists such as Lady Gaga and Katy Perry have rocked the boat with their outrageous stage costumes. For these artists, performance goes beyond just the music they sing - their role as performers is enhanced by the often outlandish costumes they choose to wear.

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Creativity in Quarantine: Glenys McGuire and Ruby Bromberg

To remedy the feelings of isolation that manifest all too often in the time of COVID, University of Chicago first-years Glenys McGuire and Ruby Bromberg took matters into their own hands through a DIY creative project in their Woodlawn dorm rooms. The project? First, a meshing of wardrobes. Second, a photoshoot.

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Since arriving on campus this past September and forging an undeniably strong friendship, Ruby and Glenys have discussed sharing closets on multiple occasions. While they each maintain a distinct style aesthetic -- Ruby’s more of a 70’s chic and Glenys’ more of a general vintage/retro influenced by London street-style -- their closets speak to the same overall vibe while perhaps reflecting different eras. In other words, they maintain a similar aesthetic, but present that aesthetic rather differently, resulting in two distinctive styles. 

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While Ruby likes to rock tighter-fitting clothes with a statement piece or two, Glen’s outfits make a statement more through the cohesion of its different elements and thus through the entire outfit as a single entity. Such a contrast was the impetus behind the meshing of wardrobes -- to dress each other in items they wouldn’t normally wear, allowing themselves to push each other out of their comfort zones with respect to how they would normally present themselves. For example, Glen dressed Ruby in baggier clothes that Ruby would not have worn on a normal day.

Ruby found that she was able to love the way she felt in this entirely different cut; she still felt sexy, even without sporting a tight-fitting pair of pants. Glen, however, relies more on her face and hair (rather than her clothes) as manifestations of her femininity. Back in London, she typically wore darker, baggier clothes that some would characterize as “androgynous.” Yet through this meshing of wardrobes, she tried on more colorful, tighter-fitting pieces and too found success and joy in how she perceived herself.

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Such an intellectual and stylistic fusion could only be memorialized with a photoshoot. As they experimented with different outfit combinations, Ruby and Glen spoke at length about body image and the extent to which curating their own aesthetic makes them feel prouder and more confident in their bodies. While snapping solo pictures of each other, the conversation soon drifted into one about the juxtaposition of oneself with others in group pictures. The shots they captured below thus served to draw attention to the flattery inherent in individual, rather than collective beauty. 

This project, of creating remarkably well-composed images with just a dorm room and one other person available, was for Glenys and Ruby not only a means of creative expression, but also a morale booster amidst a time of emotional frustration and isolation.


The Sound of Philadelphia Still Echoes Through Pop Music

 

The nu-disco age of pop seems poised to be the soundtrack of the 2020s, as jazz was for the roaring 1920s. This year has seen an influx of disco-inspired hits as popstars like Dua Lipa, Miley Cyrus, Doja Cat and Lady Gaga have all leaned into the genre’s conventions. The bleakness of this year has certainly made an excellent case for a return to the escapism of disco. It’s a genre laced with a certain larger-than-life opulence that pours out of the sweeping nature of the orchestration and the cinematic level of production. These qualities helped shape disco after they were flooded into the mainstream by Philadelphia soul, more commonly known as TSOP (the Sound of Philadelphia).

While cities like Nashville and Detroit have booming music tourism economies honoring their respective places in music history, Philadelphia, as local record store owner Max Ochester succinctly put it, “is the city that sleeps on itself.” Philadelphia’s vast influence on music is often overlooked, with dangerous consequences—the last remaining home of Philly soul, Sigma Studios, is in danger of demolition to make way for the construction of residential properties on the lucrative Center City property. Artists and archivists are pushing for it to be designated a historic site in order to preserve the city’s cultural legacy, and on November 13th the case will go in front of the Philadelphia Historical Commission.

Philly soul served as a crucial cultural bridge between Motown’s gospel-laced R&B and the disco of the late ‘70s. Philly soul smoothed out some of the grit from soul to modernize the genre and pave the way for its slick convergence with pop—think Michael Jackson’s Off The Wall, Earth Wind and Fire, and Chic. Grounded in Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff’s Philadelphia International Records and the songwriting of Thom Bell and Linda Creed, the sound of Philadelphia was founded on lush, orchestra-based soul, unrelenting horns, and funk-inspired rhythms that flowed into the arrangements. For a brief introduction to the magic of TSOP, here are a few essential tracks:

Ready or Not - The Delfonics (1969)

Conventional wisdom says to pick The Delfonics’ Grammy-winning Didn’t I (Blow Your Mind) for a list of this kind, but I threw this one in for the hip-hop heads. This track had an epic comeback in the late ‘90s, as its uniquely bombastic production was sampled to form the basis of three hip-hop classics in three consecutive years—The Fugees’ Ready or Not (1996), Missy Elliott and Da Brat’s Sock it 2 Me (1997), and Dr. Dre and Eminem’s Forgot About Dre (1998).

Back Stabbers - The O’Jays (1972)

One of the most grandiose songs in the history of music, rhythmically and harmonically flawless, Back Stabbers is a verifiable suite. A frantic, paranoid build up of strings and colossal horns climax to the thrumming bass line of a pre-chorus that demands “what they do?!” What the O’Jays did, at least, was make a masterpiece.

Could It Be I’m Falling In Love - The Spinners (1972)

The Spinners’ self-titled third album is emblematic of the distance between Detroit and Philly soul. The group started off at Motown Records but migrated to Atlantic in 1972 and handed the production reins to Philly soul architect Thom Bell. The lead single off of Spinners (1973) was the more popular track I’ll Be Around, but Could It Be I’m Falling In Love is a more notable shift away from the doo-wop and gospel-inspired Motown, leaning into a harmonic and ethereal sound.

Me and Mrs. Jones - Billy Paul (1972)

This track is an absolutely immaculately produced coupling of vocals and instrumentals. There is something so…luxe, perhaps, about this song. It so succinctly encapsulates everything beautiful about this era of music, with equal attention to the romance, the grandeur, the mystery, the drama, the sweetness, and the smoothness. That moment when the trumpets and trombones swell to a bang and then completely cut out, leaving Billy Paul’s jazz-inflected voice to belt out “Me…and… Mrs.! Mrs. Jones” a cappella before the orchestration slinks back in and he sighs “we got a thing… going on”? Truly sublime.

Drowning In The Sea Of Love - Joe Simon (1972)

Joe Simon’s music is quite inexplicably underrated in the 21st century. The production on this track, for one, is nothing short of impeccable. A sense of ominousness floods the classic Gamble & Huff production, creating an atmosphere of trepidation you can practically feel, swelling like a wave preparing to engulf our lovesick protagonist. Walk On By-esque background vocals eerily complete a track full of mystique.

Dirty Ol’ Man - The Three Degrees (1973)

The common Three Degrees pick would be their hit single When Will I See You Again, but this defiant, consent-demanding disco anthem was huge in Europe and Japan and deserves more love than it gets. The pre-chorus is a masterclass in dynamics, the harmonies are insanely sharp, and the duel between the bass line and the violins on the chorus deserves an article of its own.

You Make Me Feel Brand New - The Stylistics (1974)

The Stylistics were the more schmaltzy manifestation of Thom Bell’s symphonic soul productions. Led by Russell Thompkins Jr.’s insanely fluid falsetto, the Stylistics tended towards sentimental ballads with rich soundscapes. But it wouldn’t be Philly soul without some genre ambiguity, and this track dips its toes into funk with a sitar line while cushioned in a broad, steady string section.

T.S.O.P. - MFSB (feat. The Three Degrees) (1974)

This instrumental piece is by the Philadelphia International Records’ house band MFSB (Mother Father Sister Brother). MFSB can be heard backing most of the tracks on this list, threading the distinct Philly soul sound through the ‘70s. The band also played a crucial part in the emergence of disco—T.S.O.P. is considered the very first disco song to hit No. 1 on the Billboard 100. It was also the first TV theme song to do so, as Gamble and Huff wrote it for the Soul Train opening credits. The lack of a canonical legacy for Philadelphia's role in music history is quite unbelievable given it literally soundtracked the definitive cultural institution of soul music.

You’ll Never Find Another Love like Mine - Lou Rawls (1976)

There are certain songs that, in theory, simply should not work—a bass crooner’s voice over a rumba rhythm intersected by a disco chorus? But Gamble & Huff worked their magic to create the best bass-led cinematic soul track this side of Barry White.

When Somebody Loves You Back - Teddy Pendergrass (1978)

Teddy Pendergrass emerged from his role as the drummer (and later lead singer) for Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes to become R&B’s preeminent ‘70s sex symbol. He absolutely simmers on this track as horns flutter with insane dynamism around characteristically brash Philly soul strings. Generations later his charisma, style, and impossibly sweet yet brash voice continue to be emulated by R&B heartthrobs.

Ain’t No Stopping Us Now - McFadden and Whitehead (1979)

Philadelphia International Records’ hit-making writer-producer duo McFadden and Whitehead stepped out from behind the scenes with this vivacious disco hit, featuring a booming bass line and throbbing back beat. It’s honestly just sunshine compressed into an audio file.

Check out Gamble and Huff’s 24/7 TSOP Soul Radio for more classic tracks.


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Hausu: A Quarantine Fever Dream

The social conditions we have to adhere to during this pandemic are tricky. It’s a bit of a regression, a lapse into what it feels like being a teenager or a child again stuck in your childhood home. After spending months on campus in a tiny, cramped dorm, or in an apartment with your friends paying rent like a real adult, making your way back home (and so suddenly, at that) feels a bit like reliving your adolescence. 

I was never one to go outside that often. I found peace and solace in lazing around my house, watching the world go by with a window cracked open. Now, I’m sure I’m not the only one who feels a bit trapped, like your home is slowly swallowing you whole. 

It wasn’t until I re-watched the girls in Nobuhiko Ôbayashi’s Japanese horror-comedy Hausu (1977) in honor of his recent passing, that I realized all my fears and quarantine fever-dreams were already put on film.

The vision was born when Toho Studios approached director Nobuhiko Ôbayashi to craft a film akin to Jaws—taking inspiration from the ideas, dreams, and fears of his pre-teen daughter, Ôbayashi composed the frenzy that is Hausu. Instead of a man-eating great white shark, Ôbayashi gave us a teen-girl-eating-house.

Poster for House (1977)

Poster for House (1977)

The film follows young teen girl Gorgeous–named for her exceptional beauty–and her six friends Prof, Melody, Fantasy, Kung Fu, Mac, and Sweet. Gorgeous, once excited for summer vacation plans with her father, soon finds them to be ruined when she’s told that her new stepmother would be tagging along with them.

She decides to write a letter to her late mother’s sister, Auntie, asking to come visit her in the countryside instead. Auntie readily responds, and Gorgeous extends the invitation to her six friends as well.

Not long after the girls arrive at Auntie’s manor, they begin to go missing one-by-one, and an initially idyllic vacation soon goes awry. 

It’s not an exaggeration to claim that the eccentric comedy-horror feels nothing short of an acid trip. The syrupy-sweet sunset visuals and cartoonish, bubblegum gore is nearly hallucinogenic. The garish saturation, vibrant color palette, and surreal editing are eerily comical. Piano keys chop off playing fingers; mattresses, pillows, and sheets swallow them whole; and mirrors engulf them as they apply makeup at their vanities. It’s an amalgamation of the dream-like fears of young girls—and it absolutely makes sense that Ôbayashi recruited his daughter for inspiration. It’s much too specific. 

Cinema has a tendency to keep girls inside—from Disney classics like Tangled (2010) and Frozen (2013), to renowned films such as Room (2015), Portrait of a Lady on Fire (2019), and The Virgin Suicides (1999). Though Hausu can be read as a commentary about young girls’ fears of the transition from girlhood to womanhood, much of it has to do with, not what the girl fears, but what society fears about the girl. Make of that what you will.

I’m sure many of us, like the seven girls, would love nothing but to flee to the warm countryside, away from everything and everyone. As I watched them giggle and walk hand-in-hand through the forest to reach Auntie’s manor, I felt a yearning to do the same with my own friends. As I watched the doors swing shut to trap them inside, I wondered how they were going to escape. As I watched the house slowly eat them alive, I mused about whether or not I saw this in my own dreams.

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Top 5 Style Comebacks from the 70s & 80s

With 2020 approaching, MODA Blog rounds up the best, worst, and most iconic phenoms of the 2010s.

I’ve always liked to think of fashion as an investment, justifying purchases by invoking the cyclical nature of trends. “It doesn’t matter if this becomes outmoded. It might be next year, next decade or next half-century… but it will return.” Pieces that our parents, or even grandparents, once wore in decades past seem to be increasingly re-emerging, inspiring the present and future of fashion’s latest. Trends that we thought, and sometimes wished, would never make a comeback are on the rise: here are the top five 70s and 80s revivals:

  1. Mullets

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Bringing to mind images of the legendary David Bowie and his Ziggy Stardust mullet, GQ Men says the following about this returning haircut: “mullets always were provocative, abrasive haircuts – and taking little skill to execute they were inherently DIY, thus channelling Swampy-style eco-warrior sensibilities.” (GQ). If you’re looking for a new re-birth, why not visit your local hairdresser before the new year sets off?

2. Corduroy

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Corduroy is a type of material, distinguished by its textured feel and “cord” pattern. Throughout history, it was mostly used in the making clothes for royals or noblemen. Nowadays, the pattern is incredibly versatile; it can range from trendy, to retro or from casual to smart, depending on how you style it. For instance, if you’re looking for something that adapts to current times, try regular or skinny-fit corduroy pants. If you’re looking to fully channel past times, maybe opt boot-cut pants instead. 

Check out this article for more inspiration on How to Wear Corduroy this coming season: Fashion Trend Walk

3. Baggy Ankle-Length Trousers

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Somewhat of a melange between sweatpants and dad-jeans, “a decade and a handful of half-hearted pants trends later, we've finally found a silhouette with the potential to rival the skinny jean era in a real way.” (Refinery29).

The best part about this upcoming trend? Fashion meets comfort!

4. Grandpa Jumpers

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…most recently styled by the one and only Harry Styles: “the clash of bold stripes and kitschy graphics is like a delicious optical illusion. The pants are hiked-up just enough to add a hint of tailoring and definition to the silhouette, while the shoes and their uplifting colour make for a perfect contrast (Vogue). It definitely sparked images of late 80s/early 90s fashion icon Princess Diana!

5. Flares

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One of the on-going debates of recent years… will jean flares ever make a comeback?  According to Glamour, the key lies in sprinkling some modern spice onto the trend, with pairings such as “self-tie silk blouses, flatforms, and really good tailoring keep the look contemporary, for example; split hems offer a brand-new take on a classic leg shape.” (Glamour)

 

Source: https://www.gq.com/story/tom-cruise