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ASU FIDM Museum
United States
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 20 พ.ค. 2015
We're thrilled to announce that FIDM Museum is now officially ASU FIDM Museum. The museum will continue to operate in Los Angeles as part of Arizona State University's fashion program, ASU FIDM. Thank you for your ongoing support and engagement!
Collection Conversation #31
Curator Kevin Jones discusses a mutual passion for historic fashion with costume designer, milliner, and collector Mela Hoyt-Heydon. Mela is a member of our FIDM Museum Fashion Council & has been a generous donor as well…
มุมมอง: 202
วีดีโอ
Creating the Costumes of Spencer: With Costume Designer Jacqueline Durran
มุมมอง 8612 ปีที่แล้ว
Oscar Award-winning costume designer Jacqueline Durran joins FIDM Museum Curator Kevin Jones for a Q&A about her work on Spencer, directed by Pablo Larraín. The film is inspired by Princess Diana's (Kristen Stewart) decision to end her marriage to Prince Charles (Jack Farthing) and leave the British royal family. In this recorded event, you’ll learn how Jacqueline developed and designed the sig...
Collection Conversations #30
มุมมอง 892 ปีที่แล้ว
Museum curator Kevin Jones discusses Gilded Age fashions with Elizabeth L. Block, author of Dressing Up: The Women Who Influenced French Fashion.
Collection Conversations #29
มุมมอง 632 ปีที่แล้ว
Museum Digital Media Manager/Registrar Leigh Wishner discusses the fine art of kimono with certified kimono dresser/entrepreneur Laura Wong of BoroBoro.
Unboxing #78 - Menswear
มุมมอง 933 ปีที่แล้ว
Associate Curator Christina Johnson shares highlights of our historic menswear collection.
Collection Conversations #28
มุมมอง 863 ปีที่แล้ว
Museum Digital Media Manager/Registrar Leigh Wishner discusses Egyptomania & Orientalism with Dr. Victoria Rose Pass.
Creating The Costumes of The Masked Singer, With Costume Designer Marina Toybina
มุมมอง 1K3 ปีที่แล้ว
Watch this illuminating hour-long conversation with six-time Emmy winner and FIDM Alumna Marina Toybina, and learn about her work as Costume Designer for Fox’s hit singing competition show, The Masked Singer. As costume designer for The Masked Singer, Marina has the unique challenge of designing for a host of top-secret celebrities who appear in elaborate costumes and full face masks to conceal...
Unboxing #77 - Swimsuits
มุมมอง 1243 ปีที่แล้ว
Associate Curator Christina Johnson takes viewers through a selection of swimwear designs.
Unboxing #76 - The Wizard of Jeanz
มุมมอง 1023 ปีที่แล้ว
Museum Associate Joanna Abijaoude takes a look at the unique book-to-garment collection "The Wizard of Jeanz" by Japanese designer Hiroaki Ohya.
Collection Conversations #27
มุมมอง 1443 ปีที่แล้ว
Museum Associate Joanna Abijaoude speaks with Elizabeth Way, editor of the new book “Black Designers in American Fashion.” Liz walks us through the editing process from proposal to publication, plus gives us insights into her ongoing research.
Unboxing #75 - Matching Accessories
มุมมอง 1183 ปีที่แล้ว
Museum Associate Joanna Abijaoude shares matching purse and shoe sets from the 1940s to the early 2000s.
Creating the Costumes of Hamilton with Paul Tazewell
มุมมอง 7043 ปีที่แล้ว
Emmy- and Tony-award winning costume designer Paul Tazewell joins FIDM Museum Curator Kevin Jones for a Q&A about his work on the Original Broadway production of Hamilton, the acclaimed musical by Lin-Manuel Miranda. In this live event, you’ll learn how Paul developed and designed the iconic costumes for the cast portraying the Founding Fathers and other revolutionary historical figures in the ...
FIDM Museum Storage Tour
มุมมอง 1.5K3 ปีที่แล้ว
FIDM Museum Associate Joanna Abijaoude and Registrar Leigh Wishner give a tour of Museum storage and the Study Collection for FIDM 3 Days of Fashion participants.
Collection Conversations #26
มุมมอง 583 ปีที่แล้ว
Associate Curator Christina Johnson and Registrar/Coordinator Leigh Wishner hold another Collection Conversation about their research process. Picking up where they left off in their last conversation, Christina and Leigh delve into their personal research projects and recognize the importance of reparative scholarship. Catch up on their previous discussion on IGTV (Collection Conversation #23)...
Creating The Costumes of WandaVision, With Costume Designer Mayes C. Rubeo
มุมมอง 1263 ปีที่แล้ว
Academy Award-Nominated costume designer Mayes C. Rubeo joins FIDM Museum Associate Joanna Abijaoude for a Q&A about her work on WandaVision, a television miniseries set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) and created for Disney . Learn how Mayes designed looks for the Marvel Comics characters Wanda (Elizabeth Olsen) and Vision (Paul Bettany)’s strange new reality that takes them through dif...
Unboxing #73 - Study Collection Head-to-Toe
มุมมอง 1063 ปีที่แล้ว
Unboxing #73 - Study Collection Head-to-Toe
Unboxing #71 - Chinese Bamboo Undershirt
มุมมอง 983 ปีที่แล้ว
Unboxing #71 - Chinese Bamboo Undershirt
A Conversation with Halston Costume Designer Jeriana San Juan
มุมมอง 3393 ปีที่แล้ว
A Conversation with Halston Costume Designer Jeriana San Juan
A Conversation with Costume Designer Trish Summerville
มุมมอง 1833 ปีที่แล้ว
A Conversation with Costume Designer Trish Summerville
Me encanta son todas encantadoras
A classy lady, who enjoyed a privileged life but was aware of her privileges...Great hostess too, her book about it is fun and great to read.
Does anyone here know who her hairdresser was??? Her hair was always perfect!!!!
I love love LOVE Jean Harlow . And so happy I found this video ! The dresses in Bombshell were sooo gorgeous
I work at the Chinese as a tour guide and I’ve become a historian through how captivating the history behind the theatre is. These photos with Jean and Sid are so beautiful. Thank you so much for sharing.
Girlfriend of Nancy Reagan? So she wore Minnie Mouse Haute Couture, By Marc Bohan! Nothing to learn here: she certainly wasn't the kind of Diana Vreeland creative type. She was more the type of name dropping: Grace Kelly, Nan, etc. + charities: the way of avoiding taxes for the rich and powerful that destroyed the western economy. She probably is in Hell and she doesn't understand why: I did Charity! Why m I here?
Her comment on GF Ferre'aggravets me a lot: isn't HC supposed to be a dream that actually becomes adapt to your real needs and the world you live in? She was not capable to translate herself in his creations, and the reason could be she was getting old, or maybe she was just a rich American who needed to be lead to the dress: You should partecipate, as a client, to the creativity process, but she could not with Ferre': very telling about her nature! Not for nothing she held Bohan in great esteem... not somebody who could revolutionize anything made of fabric. She had money but she wasn't much more than a wearer: she would be ideal client of MGC & Virgine.
Don't be silly. Not every designer is meant for everyone. It didn't suit her.
Are Betsy's pearls real?
Plastic women married to men who wanted a trophy wife. What a sad, pointless existence. High style? Hardly. Given endless amounts of money so many things are possible. But--if these pitiful creatures could create 'style' out of the bargain basement--that's more an achievement.
Can you tell/show how you reinforce the edges&folds?
for rich people. not working class like me.
I was proud my grandmother had class when all those other grandmothers were trash, lol. Gatekeeping grandmas.
Betsy granddaughters are the brand new blond swans of the 2000's
So sad her husband carried on a relationship with a known prostitute for years. Very sad....
Sad her husband carried along a relationship with a prostitute for years. Very sad.
Amy, We love, love, love you. And never ever ever leaving yourself out there alone. I'm old and this industry hurst people for fun.
A cameo by the great florist, David Jones! "Betts, how did you manage ALL those buttons!"
if you can afford haut couture, you have real style and a lot of money
The last piece she bought was PRE LVMH tells a lot right there
The grand daughters seem so intimidated about being elegant and fashionable how is that ?
She spent her whole life buying expensive clothes and wearing them. What a waste of a life. She wasn't a designer, a muse, an artist, a philanthropist, activist. She did nothing with her privilege. She shopped.
Grow up, you ninny.
No, Betsy was very much into philanthropy as well
"Mrs. Alfred Bloomingdale?" Really? Is it 1947?
All the rose colored glasses in these comments are sending me! Couturiers still exist, they're just not the same names as in the past. Chanel, Dior, Givenchy, Louis Vuitton, Hermes...they've all gone corporate and make most of their profits from perfume and cosmetics. None of them are true luxury brands anymore.
The stiff hair.
As soon as mrs Bloomingdale said she didn't want robes with embroidery, due to the price, my heart sank... Nobody in their right mind says no to a dreamlike garment decorated by Maison Lesage !
As much as I love fashion, they're just clothes. You have to wear clothes or you get arrested. I'm 71 and pretty much wear either old preppie or bohemian. I've kept my designer stuff but can't be bothered to wear them. Except...the shoes😅
What a beautiful spirit she was and modest and grateful for all she had been given!
I just love her too much! Thanks for uploading these beautiful documentaries!
Betsy reminds me of Catherine the Princess of Wales. Both lovely women, tall, beautiful, elegant, poised and with the body of a catwalk model.
I think she much more elegant then Catherine
I'm 60. I remember the big thick fall edition of Vogue, how we looked forward to it! I made most of my clothes and good fabrics were readily available. I haven't lost my desire for style but the lack of good fabrics is just so disappointing. I have a wealth of styles in my head, and a great many sketches but no fabrics to create them with :(
I agree about the lack of suitable fabrics. Fabric stores seem to full of quilting fabrics.
This is disheartening 😢
I stopped reading Vogue.
you are 100 % correct all by deliberation
Get to the fabric district in NYC.... There are a few stores which sell mill ends of fabrics used for designers... American,not so much European. European designer fabrics could be found in Milan,...
Love her - so elegant, so well spoken
the hairdos are just horrid
She was great! Her granddaughters not so much.
These Bloomingdale girls are hella pissed they didn't get that 'ture!
Must have been painful to find out her husband had a 12 year affair with Vicki Morgan, 36 years his junior.
That’s a shady rabbit hole to go down for sure.
I worked as a coordinator for trunk shows at a high end luxury department store in Beverly Hills years ago. Whenever we had something for Oscar de la Renta, Valentino, Bill Blass, Christian Lacroix, Chado by Ralph Ricci Mrs. Bloomingdale would come in to see these collections and place an order. I would get excited to see clients like her instead of an a-list celebrity who usually drops by. I was always curious and anxious to see which looks she would order from these collections. It was fun to see how a haute couture client selects their picks from these designers. This gracious woman has devine taste and respect for couture with great style. For me she’s one of the all time best dressed socialites up there with Nan Kempner and Lynn Wyatt.
Makes me think back to reading Suzy in the Daily News & W. Mercedes Kellogg, Ann Bass, Pat Buckley, Nancy Kissinger, Blaine Trump.
okay
Mrs Bloomingdale had class. She was wealthy, but gracious and sharing and relatable. This documentary is so lovely and inspiring. PS Mrs B was also very beautiful, desirable, and sexy. It must have been very exciting to spend time with her, what a woman.🙂🙂🙂❤💯
And of course, because she kept her slim figure, like the NY Swans, so she always carried the clothes beautifully. Nowadays, the women are doing surgery to get a better figure or exaggerate their bosoms and behinds. 😮
Beautiful video! In 1979 on an art history study tour of Europe our Parisian tour guide invited me to a Givenchy show. I can’t believe I said no thank you!
She had me at the black dress with feathers. ❤
Today's fashion is trash This is beautiful
No one really dresses like this anymore. When in person interviews were done, and ended just recently, the young people would come in in bermuda shorts. low cut tank tops and big earrings
And film & pop stars have to show their butts and as much of their bodies through the dresses they wear on the red carpet. No class!😮
What about a special on Vicki Morgan's line of lingerie?
Men really are the best designers. Especially the gay men. The flare, the exuberance and the attention to detail....
Mrs. Bloomingdale was beautiful in her time.
She was dignified.
I'd say Betsy lived a charmed life. Lucky her.
After watching this I wondered who her English mother was, so I read her Wiki page, and realised this docu only shows the good bits! When her husband died his long term on again/off again mistress sued his estate for palimony, as he had promised she would be taken care of for the rest of her life, but when he died Betsy cut her off. The said mistress was murdered before the suit ended, her estate was awarded $200,000. The mistress was also a drug addict and occasional prostitute, Alfred apparently had some really weird sexual preferences, like beating his partners with a leather belt! So as they say, "all that glitters is not gold", imagine getting into bed with that dude every night! Betsy also had legal woes with customs, as she had given the wrong prices for a collection of French couture gowns that she bought, so it might all look charmed on the surface.
Oh my! The good ole days! They dressed with elegance and class back then…what the hell happened?
My grandpa blames the 60s and the counter culture/ hippies.
Some people dressed very well, I think over time people realized much of what we did was unnecessary and uncomfortable, for example, men wearing suits to work. While in some professions and situations yes it made sense, I remember how uncomfortable it could be. I do agree that people do not take care as to how they look and that the dominance of youth culture sucks all the oxygen out of the room.
Pretty boring. Bunch of old buddies with too much money and not enough to do.
works of art for the uber rich ladys whose hubbys were of questionable business practices.....how lovely......
she was best friends to nancy reagan, nuff said.