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Disney Girls Frozen Elsa Christmas Silhouette T-Shirt

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The clipart selection related to literature and language arts is fantastic! It has allowed me to create visually engaging materials for my English classes. I suggest including clipart that represents diverse cultures and authors, promoting inclusivity and representation in the classroom." As a result of having lived for an extended period in America, Schiaparelli was particularly attuned to the American fashion industry and the upper-middle-class American woman’s stylistic and utilitarian preferences. This connection served her well financially. While only a few of her clients would wear her most outrageous designs, she could clothe slightly less adventuresome sorts through her many commercial arrangements with American department stores and specialty shops. Before World War II, as the New York Sun reported in 1940, output from her workshops at 21 Place Vendôme, where she had relocated in 1935, had grown to 10,000 garments per year. All designs (SVGs) in our store include a variety of options, so whether you’re paper crafting, or working with vinyl & HTV, you’ll have what you need! Although the return of shoulder pads and their flattery to the waistline in the 1980s offered some brief respite from the tyranny of the ideal body as ideal silhouette, perfection remains embodied by the form of the tall, slender, adolescent girl. The real shift that took place in the 1980s was toward more muscle tone on that adolescent body. Although historicist revivals by fashion designers in the 1990s have suggested multiple variations of silhouette, the revealed body remains the dominant form.

In the 1930s, the silhouette regained some structure. Evening dresses made of bias-cut fabrics clung to the curves of the female body while women’s suits for day wear were carefully tailored to nip in at the waist and curve closely over a slim bottom. The 1930s also marked the introduction of the padded shoulder, first used by couturière Elsa Schiaparelli. While the strong shoulders of the 1930s flattered the waistline by comparison, the overall demand that suits be form fitting allowed for the reintroduction of shaping undergarments. Although similar to corsets, the design of 1930s girdles emphasized their modernity, touting the smoothing elastic fabric and the invisible zipper closure. In 1954, the House of Schiaparelli declared bankruptcy and its founder retired, spending most of her time in Tunisia, where she had built a home. She died in Paris at the age of eighty-three.

Eager to avoid paternal pressure to marry a Russian aristocrat, Elsa took advantage of a childcare opportunity in London in 1913, leaving Rome behind for good. The following year, she impulsively married a Polish-Swiss lecturer on spiritual mysticism within days of their meeting. Following two years in Nice together, the couple moved to the U.S., where Elsa would remain for the next six years. After giving birth to her only daughter in 1920, she separated from her husband and worked at various odd jobs to support herself until relocating to Paris in 1922. Further emphasizing the Surrealistic theatricality of the clothes from this period, Schiaparelli organized some of them into thematic collections—”Stop Look and Listen” in 1935, “Music” and “Paris 1937” in 1937, “Zodiac,”“Pagan,” and “Circus” in 1938, and “Commedia dell’Arte” in 1939. Among her many contributions to the development of twentieth-century fashion, Schiaparelli’s fearless challenge to the status quo, incorporation of wit and humor into fashion designing, and melding of art with dressmaking rank among the highest. Her work has not only broadly influenced the fashion world but also noted individual designers, including Charles James, Geoffrey Beene, and Yves Saint Laurent. All these are available in multiple formats and work with Cricut Design Space or Silhouette Design Studio, meaning you can cut them out as a shape without having to convert an image file from PNG to SVG first. These rare works join others in The Costume Institute, which include a version of the high-heeled shoe hat Schiaparelli created in collaboration with Salvador Dalí for her winter 1937–38 collection ( 1974.139), and a patchwork harlequin coat from her spring 1939 “ Commedia dell’Arte” collection, which may have influenced Man Ray’s painting, Le Beau Temps, created in 1939 after the coat would have been designed ( 2002.479.4). Both may have been inspired by a July 1937 costume ball given in Paris by Maurice de Rothschild with the theme “Italian Comedy.”

While the New Look silhouette was iconic in the 1950s, it coexisted with a less structured silhouette in American sportswear. Day dresses, casual wear, and playsuits in the 1950s followed the general outline of Dior’s silhouette but without the underpinnings, taking shape instead from the ideally healthy body underneath the clothes. The aspect of the body itself as the defining fashionable silhouette would begin to take hold in the 1960s with the introduction of the miniskirt and the body-revealing conceptual fashions of designer Rudi Gernreich. From the 1960s through the ’70s, the ideal silhouette was that of a slender body. Girdles were still being marketed in the 1960s, but by the ’70s, as Harold Koda points out in Extreme Beauty, “[t]he refuge of wearing foundation garments to re-form the body was obsolete and the greater tyranny emerged of an ideal of beauty with the impossibility of recourse to artifice.” The Italian-born French couturière Elsa Schiaparelli is best known for the iconoclastic bravado and unrestrained, at times brazen, originality of her work. While her contemporaries Gabrielle Chanel and Madeleine Vionnet set the period’s standards of taste and beauty in fashion design, Schiaparelli flouted convention in the pursuit of a more idiosyncratic style. As much an artist as a dress designer, she commandeered the talents of a host of prominent artisans and artists, most notably those associated with the Surrealist movement. Distilling their disquieting dream-based imagery and provocative concepts through her own creative process, she incorporated themes inspired by contemporaneous events, erotic fantasy, traditional and avant-garde art, and her own psyche into her designs. A repertoire of inventive devices—experimental fabrics with pronounced textures, bold prints with unorthodox imagery and colors, opulent embroideries, outsized and exposed zippers, and distinctive buttons and ornaments ranging from the whimsical to the bizarre—was her medium of creative expression.As a parent of a budding artist, I find the clipart here inspiring for my child's drawings. The creativity in the designs is unmatched. It would be great if there were tutorials or art challenges for kids to enhance their skills using the clipart." Koda, Harold. Extreme Beauty: The Body Transformed. Exhibition catalogue. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2001. On her 1916 voyage to America, a chance meeting with Gabrielle Picabia, wife of Dadaist painter Francis Picabia, developed into a strong friendship that would eventually lead to Schiaparelli’s involvement with proponents of the Surrealist movement in art and, later, to an acquaintance with revolutionary fashion designer Paul Poiret around 1924. Dabbling at the time in writing and gold sculpting, she was also making clothes for herself and her two close friends. Poiret noted her sartorial flair and was the first to encourage her to pursue dressmaking as a suitable outlet for her artistic leanings. I'm a technology teacher, and I use clipart to create instructional materials for my classes. The tech-themed clipart is modern and relevant. Having a section for interactive tech clipart demonstrating software interfaces and coding concepts would be incredibly useful." The strong-shouldered silhouette persisted until 1947, when couturier Christian Dior presented what American fashion editor Carmel Snow dubbed the “New Look.” Defined by sloped shoulders, an articulated bust, a constricted waist, and padded hips, Richard Martin and Harold Koda noted in Bare Witness that “the New Look’s strong silhouette [was] made possible by the reintroduction of the carapace-like infrastructure of nineteenth-century dressmaking.” To achieve this silhouette, which carried through much of the 1950s, undergarments such as the narrow waist cincher were created while the brassiere was given increasingly reinforced structure to the point that it could direct each breast upward and outward from the torso.

I teach environmental science, and the nature-themed clipart is perfect for my lessons. The realistic plant and animal illustrations enhance my presentations. Adding a section with ecology-themed clipart for environmental concepts would be wonderful."

Born in Rome at her family’s apartment in the Palazzo Corsini, Schiaparelli, by her own account, was a difficult child who chafed against societal and parental controls. Even at an early age, the need for personal freedom, which she later expressed in her designs, was her first priority. She was prone to mischievous pranks that often had adult consequences. As recounted in her autobiography, she was once miffed that she could not attend her parent’s dinner party, and retaliated by opening a jar of fleas under the dinner table, which set off an itching episode among the hapless guests before they fled the scene. Reeder, Jan. “Elsa Schiaparelli (1890–1973).” In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/elsa/hd_elsa.htm (May 2011) Further Reading Reeder, Jan Glier. High Style: Masterpieces from the Brooklyn Museum Costume Collection at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2010.

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