
Corset News Archive - 01-Jun-2007
I THINK it is time we had a little chat. By the level of frustration vented in the letters that arrive in this office, it is clear to me that it is time to point out the futility of challenging the ongoing love affair between youth and fashion.
A high-kicking troupe of can-can dancers will bring a taste of 1800s Parisienne culture to Warwick International Festival later this month.
Couples Can Save Big With the Right Gown and Flowers
Not so long ago, Anna Paquin fretted she might have a career confined by a corset.
How will Gordon Brown make his mark as prime minister? After the long-drawn-out departure of Tony Blair, his successor will have to dispel the scepticism felt about a government gone stale after ten years in office.
Girls Aloud can sing and dance, but they've swapped all that action to play plastic mannequins in a new television commercial. The girls made rather eye-catching window dressing in tiny mini skirts, high heels and busty tops.
SHELTON ? It was "a lot of money" but well worth it, developer John Guedes said Thursday after spending $5.6 million to buy the riverfront property of the former Tilcon asphalt plant.
Dear Gore Verbinski: Yo-ho! Hearty congratulations for making a franchise out of animatronic puppets with hurkier-jerkier motions than a Taylor Hicks seizure.
If fans had some difficulty following the story of the Pirates of the Caribbean saga, Keira Knightley can sympathise. The 22-year-old beauty who makes her third appearance as Elizabeth Swan in Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End says even she got confused at times.
NEW YORK ? The exhibition "Poiret: King of Fashion" at the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Costume Institute is both graceful and muscular, serving as a thoughtful and enlightening homage to a little-known French designer who was influential in the years before the First World War. It is...