Couture Interiors: Living With FashionLaurence King Publishing, 20 sept. 2007 - 224 pages Examining the imaginative and compelling way in which fashion has permeated 21st-century culture, this book considers the relationship between fashion on the catwalk and architecture, interiors, and products. Many fashion designers extend their aesthetic into interiors and products for the home as a natural progression from clothing the body. The home is now subject to the same directional trends as fashion, in part because so many designers are extending their practice to include interiors, as well as products, and accessories. The fusion between fashion and interiors has never been more relevant. The proliferation of ideas, the speed of manufacture, and an increasingly visually literate consumer, have all resulted in interiors being subject to the same desire for fashionability, innovation and change as fashion. Thisinvestigation of the hectic dissemination of trends takes the reader on an eclectic, adventurous excursion into living with fashion. |
Expressions et termes fréquents
accessories aesthetic antique architect architecture Armani artefacts Belford brand British designer Casa catwalk Celia Birtwell ceramics chair Christopher clothes collaboration colour palette consumer contemporary design couture hotel created culture decoration designer's desire developed Dior dress Eley Kishimoto embellishment embroidery Etro fashion and interiors fashion designers fashion industry fashion label Fendi furnishings garment global haute couture Heatherwick Hella Jongerius home collection homeware iconic ideas increasingly innovation inspired interior design Issey Miyake Italian fashion Jaime Hayon Jasper Conran knitting lifestyle London look Louis Vuitton luxury manufacturers Marcel Wanders materials Matthew Williamson Missoni modern Neisha Neisha Crosland NUNO Orla Kiely paint Pantone pattern Paul Smith Philip Treacy pieces product design Pucci range recycled reflect retail Roland Mouret Rug Company selling signature style silk sofa space Stephen Walters surface sustainability taste techniques textile designer texture things Thomas Heatherwick traditional trends Versace Vivienne Westwood wallpaper weaving