Guys understand a waistline. They understand a silhouette.
The hardest thing in fashion is not to be known for a logo, but to be known for a silhouette.
Silhouettes are reductions, and racial stereotypes are also reductions of actual human beings.
A film is a great deal about what you see, and the silhouette of a character tells you a lot. I'd love to go into film costume.
Tina Turner is someone that I admire, because she made her strength feminine and sexy. Marilyn Monroe, because she was a curvy woman. I'm drawn to things that have the same kind of silhouettes as what she wore because our bodies are similar.
Embrace an effortless a-line silhouette in the seasons must have indigo shades.
I have been carrying on a dialogue between the landscape and the female body (based on my own silhouette) I am overwhelmed by the feeling of having been cast from the womb (nature). Through my earthbody sculptures I become one with the earth I become an extension of nature and nature becomes an extension of my body
Enhancing a woman's silhouette and enhancing a woman's beauty - both contribute to enhancing her confidence, so they're synonymous, really.
There are not many original shapes or silhouettes -- only a million variations.
That's what I'll be. A silhouette, rarely seen, and yet believed in.
I love the silhouettes of the '50s that were feminine and womanly without being too revealing. I've always gravitated towards that kind of sense of style and fashion.
About the Sauconys, there are a lot of sneakers that are not as marketed as heavily as like Nike but those silhouettes are still fresh. I'll always go to a Saucony.
And what, for instance, would have happened had Romeo and Juliet lived to middle age, their silhouettes broadened by pasta?
It is most difficult to acquire the, how shall I say? the 'depth' of a subject in composition in silhouette.
I've always been intrigued by cutout silhouettes. They are so intriguing, so poetic-the shadow of a soul. They tell everything about a character and they are open to be filled with one's own imagination.
Is standing by the window muttering about blood something he does all the time?" asked Simon. "No," Jace said. "Sometimes he sits on the couch and does it.
I live in L. A. , so layers are essential to my wardrobe. I like slim silhouettes, typically, and I love good tailoring.
I like to wear classic silhouettes and add a punch to it.
I love a loose-fitting skirt with a cinched waist. A feminine silhouette is a no-stress zone - it's comfortable and I don't have to worry about wardrobe malfunctions!
I've never really had a waist. Even when I was at my slimmest, my silhouette was very straight up, straight down. But I have learnt how to give myself a bit of waist by optical illusion. For this, bring on the belts.