Friday, December 30, 2011

Looking Back: The Craziest Fashions That Came Out of 2011

Adapted from the Today Show

2011 was a fun and interesting year for fashion, beauty and style in general. We got some interesting new trends as well as some revival trends. Some of my personal favorites were last spring's surf-inspired resort collections, the fun, bright neon colors that popped up early and stuck around for most of the year, and the cool color-blocking which was so versatile and could be used in so many ways. However, there were some really strange things that popped up this year that (hopefully) will not return next year. Here, I'll be reviewing some of the truly craziest. Enjoy!




CRAZY dresses: Don't get me wrong, I love Duchamp's work, but a dress inspired by the Fountain? Not exactly something I'd like to wear. And an angry birds dress is funny, but a little ridiculous. However, since this is wife of the man who invented the popular game, we'll let it slide this time.



Freaky Bikinis: A bikini made of solar panels, while convenient and eco-friendly, is taking environmentalism a little over the top. And a bikini made of glass? Not only is that weird, but it's dangerous! The model, Kristin Cavallari, said it was cut her skin while she wore it!




Lip tattoos: The brand Violent Lips offers a collection of "lip tattoos" that are a quick and easy way to print your lips. The glitter ones are a nice idea, but ones printed with the British flag or leopard print? I think I'll pass.



Paper eyelashes: Fake lashes have been making a comeback since the stars of Jersey Shore popularized the heavily-lashed look and fake eyelashes become more affordable and easy to apply. However, the brand PAPERSELF took this trend to the next level by releasing their line of design-cut paper eyelashes. With designs ranging from deer and peacocks to flowers and paisley, not only will people not know what it is because it's so small, but they will probably give you some really weird looks when you inform them that your eyelashes are a "paper revolution."


And last, but certainly not least...


Hair necklace: I really don't know what to say about this. You know how your skin crawls when you notice that someone has left hair in the shower or the sink? Now imagine wearing that hair around your neck, as a piece of jewelry. A frightening image indeed.



What crazy trends will come out of 2012? We'll just have to wait and see. Happy New Year everyone!

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

7 Resolutions Not to Bother Making....


Wishing everyone the best in 2012!!

~KD Team

Monday, December 26, 2011

Spotlight on Yana...














Yana has been with Kim Designs since 2007.
She resides in Canada.

Friday, December 23, 2011

Colors of the Season: Red & Green Christmas Edition

Merry Christmas everyone! Tomorrow is Christmas Eve, so in honor of the holiday I've decided to honor one of the most popular and widely-known holidays of the year with this post. The classic colors of Christmas are red and green and what wonderful colors they are. These colors have been used together for centuries, not only for the holiday but also in the wonderful tartan and plaid patterns which are both traditional and popular in England, Ireland and Scotland. These patterns are one of my favorite ways to add a little holiday cheer to my life. A tartan blanket or pillow on a neutral sofa adds a fun and colorful addition for the holiday season. A great plaid skirt can make a wonderful holiday outfit (try to find one that doesn't make you look like you just got home from school), and I love wearing red or green plaid scarves under my gray peacoat to keep my neck warm and add a splash of color and pattern to my outerwear. Beside these great patterns, red and green make for some of the best traditional holiday decor. Not only are they lovely colors for wrapping paper, but they also make great colors for accent candles, throw pillows, blankets, place settings, dish ware, rugs and more! And who could forget the traditional evergreen Christmas tree. Another popular use for evergreen decor is the Christmas wreath that many people display outside their houses as a sign of holiday welcome. Another popular red-and-green holiday motif is holly. The rich, green leaves and bright red berries of the holly plant make the perfect Christmas accent (just don't eat the berries!).

I hope you enjoy these festive images - just in time for the holidays! Have a merry holiday season and a happy New Year!










A replica of the Charlie Brown Christmas tree - so cute!










And for the ornament of the week...

A beautiful hand-blown glass Christmas ornament!




Merry Christmas!



Rising Chinese Designer, Zhou Fan - inspiration:


Zhou Fan is a rising star in the Chinese art scene – he is a young, yet extremely creative, Chinese contemporary artist. His paintings have attracted attention at exhibitions in New York, Germany and Shanghai. In the Chinese Art Prize 2007, Zhou Fan was selected as one of the top 3 emerging Chinese contemporary artists (out of over 1300 entries into the art prize) by Gerard Goodrow, Director of Art Cologne, Jeff Kelley, Curator of the Asian Art Museum in California and other important judges.

The first thing that strikes people when they view Zhou Fan’s work is how his paintings are so colourful and detailed. Zhou Fan spends many hours carefully painting the details and tiny lines which compose his subjects. Some people have remarked that the paintings have a “Japanese quality” to them.  Zhou Fan is in fact ¾ Chinese and ¼ Japanese, and while his Japanese side has probably had some influence on the artist’s interests, Zhou has spent his whole life in China and cannot even speak Japanese. Zhou Fan paints his works so colourfully because his subject matter, such as jellyfish, is colourful. Jellyfish can glow a multitude of colours as they float in the ocean’s skies. While they are calm and soothing fish to look at, they pack a powerful sting that can even kill small fish or animals. Zhou has explained that one of his priorities is to make his works attractive, which is another reason why he makes his works so colourful. “Visual effect” is one of the priorities of any artist, according to Zhou.

Zhou Fan has been very inspired by his childhood. While the artist has always had a strong fascination for Jellyfish, Zhou’s “Love of Jellyfish” series of paintings is based on dreams that he had as a young boy of many jellyfish floating in the sky, some of which fell to the ground on parachutes and became mushrooms. These dreams had a strong impact on the artist, and he remembers them vividly. The artist explains, “Somehow I feel that it is easier to focus on dreams than reality”. According to psychologists, our daily fantasies and dreams are actually extensions and expansion of our reality.

In another series of paintings, Zhou Fan paints a fat boy, with many moles and a big tire-ring of fat around his neck. The series is titled: “Teacher, I won’t do it again”. The fat boy is crying, and he has a band-aid on his finger, which has clearly been bleeding. In some of the paintings in the series, the boy has a candy in his hand; presumably, the boy has been eating too much candy and the teacher scolded him, so he is crying. This subject-matter, too, harks back to Zhou Fan’s childhood, when he had a very fat classmate in school who could not stop eating candies. Zhou was sympathetic towards the boy and felt bad when teachers were harsh to his fat classmate. Even Zhou’s classmates were mean to the boy and picked on him a lot.

While Zhou Fan’s paintings may at first look happy and cheerful because they are colourful, many of the artist’s works have a sad undertone to them. Zhou seems to be quite sensitive to the fact that people can be cruel and destructive, and he can see the effect China’s societal changes are having on individuals and the society as a whole. Clearly, the crying fat boy, while he looks humorous, is actually tormented by his teacher and classmates. Communist concepts of everyone being equal are not a reality for the fat boy; even though he has done nothing wrong to anyone, he is still put down and looked down on. The boy is discriminated against. In another painting, Zhou Fan has placed a figure of a boy in the bottom left corner; the boy’s hand is on his face, and coming out of his hand appears to be either jellyfish tentacles or noodle-looking things. Zhou explains about the boy, “The boy crying in the painting keeps things within him, is easily sad, and he refuses to face reality.” This is also a commentary on society – that boys are supposed to keep their emotions within them, and as a result they are sad inside. Also, refusing to face reality points to the fact that the boy does not like reality – so he wants to ignore it. What is so bad about reality that a young boy does not want to face reality? Again, China’s tremendous current social changes have made life confusing and sometimes even terrifying for children growing up in such an environment.
Zhou Fan says that he has been influenced by paintings from the Qing Dynasty, when they combined all sorts of unrelated “flowers and birds” in order to create an atmosphere within the works. In his newest series of paintings, Zhou Fan has several paintings of women wearing hats composed of a wide variety of living things, which seem to be unrelated, such as ladybugs, plants, flowers, fish and jellyfish. At first glance, it seems to be surprising that these things have been placed together – and it provides much food for thought. Yet after looking at the works and pondering them for a while, these things are painted together so harmoniously that they seem to fit together, like pieces in a fantasy puzzle. Zhou’s variety of combined beings also reflects life in China, with so many different influences, historical, modern, Eastern and Western come into our lives from different angles.
In Zhou Fan’s newest series, often tentacles of the jellyfish are dangling down from the women’s headwear, and in one painting the tentacles are reaching down, holding up an object in front of a woman, like a carrot held on a stick in front of a donkey. The various, twisted tentacles could be said to represent the complications of life and how twists and entanglements of even small things can tie people down. But also, they are simply the result of wearing a hat made of jellyfish! Zhou Fan likes to combine the impossible, and while it looks beautiful within the paintings, the results can be confusing and chaotic-seeming.
  
  


 


  

 
above taken from:
 

Friday, December 16, 2011