Saturday, December 20, 2008

Pop Couture

Sometimes the Web is most satisfying when it confirms a cliché from the world offline.

For adventures in digital culture, don't miss The Medium, a blog by Virginia Heffernan.

I’m thinking of the captivating street-style photoblogs, which display snapshots of chic pedestrians in cities around the world. Such blogs exist for Tel Aviv, Stockholm, Moscow, Sydney, Seoul, Berlin, Dublin, London — you name it. Survey them one morning over coffee, and you’ll feel like a boulevardier of the whole world, breezing past one stunning creature after another, free to cruelly assess or dumbly gaze — at supreme leisure and invulnerable to reciprocal scrutiny.

What can be learned from a global anthology of fantastic-­looking people? First off, you might find that looking at people on city streets is almost a perfect allegory of Web-browsing. Tellingly, the major Chinese search engine, Baidu, takes its name from an ancient poem about the search for (what the portal’s FAQ calls) “a retreating beauty amid chaotic glamour.” Anyone encountering the bedlam of the Web seeks a resting place, even — at times — a literal or figurative embrace. The suspense of that exploration is mirrored in the story you find on the street-style blogs: the search for a quiet connection with beauty in a metropolis of strangers.

Designers pull out of Fashion Week

Top designer Betsey Johnson is ending her 5 year run at New York fashion week, instead opting to have a small (about 200 guests-ish) cocktail party where guests can view this season’s designs.

Many other designers are following this new trend and deciding to skip out on the fancy Bryant Park tents. DKNY also decided to stage a presentation rather than a runway show this season, and designers Vera Wang and J. Mendel are also considering going a similar route. Carmen Marc Valvo is also ending their 10 year run in Bryant Park, also opting for a cheaper solution.

While Johnson’s camp did not comment on her decision to not do this year’s fashion week, Valvo did comment and confirm it was because they needed to find a cheaper way to present their designs.

The one bright side to the fashion recession: Betsey Johnson is going to collaborate with a retailer for a limited-time only line that will launch in the fall!!!! Most likely it would be either H&M or Target since they have done this type of thing many times in the past.

And! The even better part to this piece of news is that more designers are likely to follow the trend and make more affordable clothing and collaborate with more retailers!

Betsey Johnson started her line in 1978, making wild, crazy Rock’n’Roll style clothes. She has managed to keep her vision alive for the last 30 years. The only thing left to do is make her clothing more affordable and accessible!

TRIBAL CULTURE

MARRIAGE SYSTEM OF TRIBALS

Among the social institutions, marriage appears to be the most important one. It is practiced almost universally by the tribal people, the only exception being the hos of Kolhan. The extreme cupidity of fathers of kolhan brides and their high sense of family dignity have made them to demand an unusually high price for the hands of their daughter in marriage.

Maiden aged 40 to 50 are a common sight in Kolhan villages. However, recently young man and women began to arrange for their own unions without the knowledge of their parents and went through the operations of mock capture of the bride. The father of the bride in such cases demanded a higher price but not with the hope receiving any payment.

Bridezzz





Season In Bangladesh

Bangladesh is called the land of six seasons (Sadartu). It has a temperate climate because of its physical location. Though the climate of Bangladesh is mainly sub-tropical monsoon, ie warm and humid; Bangla calendar year is traditionally divided into six seasons: Grisma (summer), Barsa (rainy), Sarat (autumn), Hemanta (late autumn), Shhit (winter) and Basanta (spring). Each season comprises two months, but some seasons flow into other seasons, while others are short. Actually, Bangladesh has three distinct seasons: the pre-monsoon hot season from March through May, rainy monsoon season which lasts from June through October, and a cool dry winter season from November through February. However, March may also be considered as the spring season, and the period from mid-October through mid-November may be called the autumn.