qui suis-je?


An extended journal of LA COUTURIER especially for POP Magazine documenting the musings, ramblings, and advice of a coquettish girl with an potentially unhealthy obsession with bags and cocktail rings, who calls herself la couturier. Hardly an expert at fashion; simply one who immerses herself in it. It is here where she presents an edgier version of her take on fashion, her dreams, her aspirations, hoping to inspire in some way or another. je m'appelle la couturier. comment ça va?


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Email me at: lacouturier.nyc@gmail.com about anything & everything! Questions, tips, the likes - never hesitate!



breaking it down…


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April 24th, 2010

the mulberry leah.


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The Mulberry Leah on the runway.

I’m no fan of pink (never have been, unless it was on my nails, toes, or in lipsticks). But somehow, the bright splashes of pink via the shoes and bag was styled more eclectic than girly. Coral lips, big, crimped hair, and bright pink compliment a sophisticated outfit rather well, if not impeccably.

Darlings. Like I always say. It’s always about juxtaposition and balance.


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March 28th, 2010

Style inspiration, No. 1


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I kind of, sort of, like really adore Dasha’s style.

I need a subscription to POP magazine, a.s.a.p.


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February 17th, 2010

Giveaway on ze other blog.


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perricone-md-gentle-cleanser-giveaway

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For the rules & to enter, click away here or on the picture, babes!


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February 14th, 2010

R.I.P., Alexander McQueen.


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{ tribute painting |  d a n n y  r o b e r t s  }

It’s rather unsettling to be here writing this; a part of me harbors this notion that no, it can’t quite possibly be real, that the one and only Alexander McQueen is  d e a d . Suicide was the stipulation for the death of this iconic British designer.

Harsh, isn’t it? Those words. The finality of the words death and dead that we all sought to avoid, and herein we try to appease our souls with less confined descriptions: rest in peaceleft the Earthescaped worldliness, etc. Our minds, with the knowledge of our own fragility, grow scared at every reminder of our mortality. It’s admittedly pathetic, but nonetheless human.

I know I’m perhaps the last to dedicate a tribute of sorts to Alexander McQueen; what exactly do I write about him that could put to justice to the amount of beauty and artistic genius he gave to the world? Alexandra Schulman at Voguehad said, “Lee McQueen influenced a whole generation of designers. His brilliant imagination knew no bounds as he conjured up collection after collection of extraordinary designs.”

It was exactly that - his boundless imagination and lack of inhibition – that brought him to where he was today. I do believe that my reverence for him – and countless others’ admiration for the designer – was for that very quality. Few people possess the ability to do so without recoiling from insecurities or fear of what others would think. On a smaller scale, we shelter a part of ourselves from the brutality of the world, so save our egos and creative bits should our peers scoff at what isn’t in the norm. To be able to forgo any and all insecurities, self- and societal restraints, is a feat to be praised for, especially when displayed for the entire world to see, and ultimately, judge. That, in itself, should be commended.

Thus the news of Alexander McQueen’s suicide is especially devastating for any who have heard of the iconic name; in my mind he (and the likes of Karl Lagerfeld) were near immortal: physically as the last man standing, and intangibly as in their influence upon the exclusive fashion world. Yet at the same time it was strangely forsee-able. I obviously have no personal connections to the man, but in seeing his designs, brash and impulsive (writing “I am a c*nt into the sleeve of Prince Charles’ suit!), there was an undercurrent of pessimism in his romantically, arch-romantic collections – elements that perhaps reflected his inner self. His collections were always beautiful in a nonconventional fashion, yet dark.

Choosing the perfect image to accompany my tribute post to Alexander McQueen stopped upon seeing 

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Danny Robert’s painting. The colors, the brushstrokes, even the face itself reminded me of Van Gogh: the same pessimism – that incomprehensible, otherworldly sadness – and creative ingeniousness captured brilliantly in Robert’s tribute represented the essence this news, and the emotions, almost all too perfectly. The contemplativeness of the eyes that led to the mind.

We all cringe at the headlines everywhere: ALEXANDER MCQUEEN, AGE 40 DEAD. Bolded, in the rather unfeeling Times New Roman font – all the more imprinting the finality of his leave. It’s a funny thing, how we think death means the end of all good that came from that being, when in fact, it only immortalizes him.

His soul, his influence, his impact – that, mes chéries, lives on.

bisous, xx


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