Showing posts with label Emilio Pucci. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Emilio Pucci. Show all posts

Monday, February 8, 2010

Pucci Prints Know No Season

Need a shot of glam to get you through several feet of snow? Have a shoe size that is, shall we say, substantial? Have $249.99 in loose change to spare? (yeah, me neither).

Even if none of the above is true, aren't these slushcutters just splendid. They've cheered my Monday morning immensely, and pricey though they are, they're a lot less expensive than a week in Ticino.

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Who Dressed the Jetset: Emilio Pucci


Tom Ford, please enough with the Isherwood--for your next trick make a film of the life of printmaker, sportsman, U. of Georgia aggie and politico Emilio Pucci. Born to a noble family in Florence in 1914, he maneuvered from a role abetting the Mussolini family in WWII to seeing his own Apollo mission logo land on the moon. Jackie O loved him. Marilyn Monroe loved him so much she is wearing him now (maybe). This is a big life, even for an Italian fashion designer, people not generally known for doing it small.

Pucci is best known, of course, for his brilliantly hued biomorphic prints, which, when applied to the slinky stretchiness of silk jersey knit, came to define the pack-and-go lifestyle of the late-sixties jetsetters.

This week I'd like to follow the trail of the great printmakers who catered to this particular tribe. Pucci, was, of course, the first and foremost. The impact of his signature style was so distinctive it remains instantly recognizable today under current head-of-house Peter Dundas, and is still as covetable on the streets of Ibiza and Southhampton as it was in the marchese's heyday.

Pucci's genius, I think, lies in his ability to lay down a multitude of not-necessarily agreeable colors in a pattern so jumped-up and lively that all arguments are off and they simply must get along. Nature can manage this nicely (above); it's harder for humans, as the heaps of bad vintage psychedelic prints for sale online make clear. It's a testament to Pucci's eye that he accomplished it routinely, and what's more he created a template for others to follow.


These sunglasses, currently for sale on eBay, seem a brilliant way to wear Pucci if you personally are not boarding a Cessna for a fresh island every weekend. High-quality vintage dresses will cost a fortune, but accessories (and his uniforms for Braniff, described here), offer a more affordable option.

More on the great 60s printmakers on through the week.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Coffee, Tea, or Pucci?




But if you think this is rich, check out the tv ad . . . .

http://www.themodernist.com/alexandergirard/braniff2.mov

Who designed those uniforms for Texas-based airline Braniff? Emilio Pucci, from 1964-1975. According to this great little article from the Dallas Historical Society, Pucci, an Italian nobleman, was himself a decorated pilot in the Italian Air Force, so was as familiar with turbines as he was with turbans. Speaking of which, check out the kicky "space helmet" caps he designed for the Braniff trolly dollies.

Not unheard of for Pucci-era Braniff items to come up for sale on eBay: since these were hard-working pieces many of them have seen better days, but if you like what you see, put on a search . . .