+shmoolicious Clare Stewart, Director of the BFI, is wearing a dress by Henrietta Ludgate, the British fashion designer. Ms Stewart has worn several of Ms Ludgate's designs over the years to events such as these.
Thank you for trying to solve this conundrum for me. I now know that somebody actually got paid for "designing" it. The real question "what is she wearing?!" will, however, always unanswered, along with "why?" "what possessed her?" "how can somebody make such clothes?" "does she not have a mirror?" etc
+shmoolicious As a man I feel a complete outsider to the world of women's fashion, but I'm game to offer a possible suggestion: I think Clare Stewart, in hiring Henrietta Ludgate to design clothes for the opening/closing sessions of the BFI London Film Festival was doing two things: (1) she wanted clothes that suited her body, not a model's body, and (2) she wanted to wear an anti-fashion outfit. I think that, as a girl from the same suburb in Melbourne, Australia as the comic Dame Edna Everadge, she was gently mocking contemporary obsession with fashion choices.
The more important question here is - why do you care what she is wearing? It has nothing to do with the content of the video itself. People can be so petty sometimes.
His - ‘It’s Only The End Of The World’ is one of the Master chamber pieces of the C21st. Perceptive insight with nuanced emotional insight.
Still not shown in the USA. :(
what is she wearing?!
+shmoolicious Clare Stewart, Director of the BFI, is wearing a dress by Henrietta Ludgate, the British fashion designer. Ms Stewart has worn several of Ms Ludgate's designs over the years to events such as these.
Thank you for trying to solve this conundrum for me. I now know that somebody actually got paid for "designing" it. The real question "what is she wearing?!" will, however, always unanswered, along with "why?" "what possessed her?" "how can somebody make such clothes?" "does she not have a mirror?" etc
+shmoolicious As a man I feel a complete outsider to the world of women's fashion, but I'm game to offer a possible suggestion: I think Clare Stewart, in hiring Henrietta Ludgate to design clothes for the opening/closing sessions of the BFI London Film Festival was doing two things: (1) she wanted clothes that suited her body, not a model's body, and (2) she wanted to wear an anti-fashion outfit. I think that, as a girl from the same suburb in Melbourne, Australia as the comic Dame Edna Everadge, she was gently mocking contemporary obsession with fashion choices.
The more important question here is - why do you care what she is wearing? It has nothing to do with the content of the video itself. People can be so petty sometimes.
Interesting interview but what in the name of balls is she wearing? Very distracting