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We offer over 1500 latest style and unique occasion dresses such as prom dresses, evening gowns, cocktail dresses, formal dresses in UK, including long, short, high low, sexy, vintage, plus size styles. All of our dresses are tailor made, we offer free choice of colour and size. Need a dress for a day to remember? Marie Prom is your destination.

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New York, NY – Indiaspopup.com, a premier online destination for luxury designer wear showcased Prema Badiani’s “Root Cause” collection at the Indian Consulate in New York City.

Based out of New York, Indiaspopup.com, promotes talented Indian designers by showcasing their work on an international level and Badianis collection was the first in a series of such events.

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Fashion Designer Premal Badiani displays her creation of evening gown at New York Fashion Week. February 14, 2017. Photo: Jay Mandal/On Assignment“We are very proud of the craftsmanship and creativity of our Indian Designers and hope to make a major dent in the global fashion market,” said Dr. Shweta Reddy, Founder of Indiaspopup.com.

The event was held at the consulate as part of the New York Fashion week and helped open an avenue for an entire community of Indian Textile makers.

Her label “Premal Badiani ” has become synonymous with sophisticated drama, feminine motifs, unabashed grandeur and contemporary structure. Her enthusiasm for fashion resonates in her designs, resplendent with signature layering, dazzling embellishments, intricate draping and exquisite attention to detail.

Driven by artistic, modern and luxurious design and style, couture-like quality and a high level of customer service, her label holds an impeccable customer appeal.

“Mine is a lifestyle brand, born out of passion for creation and design, inspired by the rich heritage of India. It’s an exclusive blend of luxury, opulence, intricate craftsmanship, exquisite embroideries with fresh cuts and the finest quality of fabrics and global designs that define modern Indian couture”, said Badiani.

Badiani has also joined hands with NGO Hearts@Work foundation led by the successful entrepreneur Viral S. Desai who has been persistently making tremendous efforts with his various initiatives in the field of environmental awareness to bring in the 360-degree sustainability in the society. The brand is honored to announce an association with the ‘Clean India, Green India’ initiative.

On their platform, Indiaspopup features several super talented designers including Falguni & Shane Peacock, Rohit Gandhi, Rahul khanna, Varun Bahl, Anupama Dayal , Gaurav Gupta and of course Premal Badiani. Designs which are carefully chosen are put together on a single platform to make shopping a great experience for all.

The event also featured Mirza Ghalib wines from Sufi Wine Group

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It’s a not a wedding of two complete strangers unless there’s a party of weirdos at the reception. Tara Ward reviews the most memorable guests (so far) on Married At First Sight.

There’s nothing better than spending Valentine’s Day watching a Married At First Sight marathon. Forget all that love and flowers bullshit, give me six hours of clumsy kisses and awkward silences as brides and grooms meet for the first time at the altar, their loins firmly girded in the hope of finding The One.

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Bless them, Eros, for they are fools, and everything about this show warms the cockles of my cold, dead heart.

Married at First Sight couples entrust a panel of ‘experts’ to find their perfect match — the Kim to their Kanye, the George to their Mildred, the S Club to their 7. If that doesn’t make your palms sweat in dizzy anticipation, each bride and groom comes with a tribe of entertaining weirdoes charmingly referred to as “family and friends”.

Let’s take a slow walk down the aisle of failed hopes and dreams to meet this season’s most memorable wedding guests.

The psychic bridesmaid

If there were an award for Bridesmaid of the Year then Amanda would win, hands down. Hands down the toilet, in fact, because not only did Amanda voluntarily fish a wedding ring out of the loo, she was also ‘slightly telepathic’. This sounds like being ‘slightly pregnant’ or ‘slightly dead’, but who am I to scoff, the woman threw her arm into a public toilet bowl in the name of true love.

Look out Kelvin Cruickshank, there’s a new wizard in town. The groom visited Amanda’s dreams to reveal he was ‘an Aussie bloke’ named Simon. If only Amanda could have foreseen that she’d hate Simon because he was a vertically challenged clown with a bad perm. Slightly paraphrasing, but you get the idea.

Marie is the new television legend of our age. As bride Scarlett vowed to protect her new husband from zombies, her mother sat in the front row, fuming like a blocked chimney over groom Michael’s refusal to make eye contact with her.

“Am I invisible?” she shouted. Nobody replied. Was Marie another of Bridesmaid Amanda’s slightly telepathic projections? It was hard to know, but Marie banged the hate drum until someone caught her beat. “He’s got no manners!” she moaned to the groom’s family. “I was going ‘Oink! Oink!’”

“Neigh! Neigh!’ might have been a better animal impression, Marie, going by this screenshot. (Chillax, Mr Ed. Scarlett didn’t marry you for your gums).

This was alarming news. “You don’t judge someone by their book!” Cheryl’s sister squawked. She raised an important question: just what is Cheryl’s book? Sweaty Legs and Pseudo Sisters?Perhaps Who Invited Her? Or my personal favourite: My Da’s a Bawbag?

Bawbag or no, Married at First Sight is the wedding gift that keeps on giving, the gold-plated ring down the toilet that continues to sparkle beneath the filthiest of waters. Will the magic ever end? Like, my Emma answer is, like, ah, no.

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Stars—they're just like us! Over the past nine months, glamorously low-key options from new New York–based label Cinq à Sept have been popping up on the talk show and premiere circuit, worn by the sort of A-listers who typically prom dresses london in designer exclusives. There was Jennifer Lawrence at the Seoul premiere of Passengers in a sporty crop top paired with a floaty pink skirt; Jessica Chastain on Ellen in a sheath dress, its straps preslipped to hang just so on the arm; Bella Hadid at the couture shows in Paris in a pair of the brand's super-wide-leg trousers. The truly radical thing: None of those pieces costs more than $500, and each is available to mere mortals at a store where, chances are, you already shop.

Cinq à Sept (French for "five to seven"), a contemporary line conceived by Jane Siskin—the retail visionary behind 7 For All Mankind and the Olsen twins' diffusion line Elizabeth and James—is named for the magic hour when, according to Siskin, "anything seems possible." It debuted at Saks this past June and, from the looks of things, struck gold: The company has projected first-year sales of $85 million and is now carried in 288 stores, including Bergdorf Goodman, Neiman Marcus, and Nordstrom. And it's not alone.

"The big shift in contemporary is that it's becoming far more design led," says Net-a-Porter fashion director Lisa Aiken. For years, "it was the bread and butter for many retailers but didn't really bring new ideas to the table." Now, in addition to Cinq à Sept, the luxury e-com behemoth has picked up a bevy of midpriced international labels that are setting trends rather than following them. These include Self-Portrait, London- based Malaysian designer Han Chong's Instagram-friendly range of guipure lace dresses whose flattering reveal-and-conceal cutouts and sheer overlays are favored by Beyoncé, Kerry Washington, and Chiara Ferragni; as well as the Danish label Ganni, which got a major lift in 2015 from Kate Bosworth, who tagged a photo of herself and pal Helena Christensen twinning in $570 faux-fur bombers as #gannigirls. A search of the hashtag also pulls up Kendall Jenner and Rihanna in Ganni's effortless floral dresses and trophy outerwear. "I think we owe Kate a beer for that one," jokes the label's designer, Ditte Reffstrup.

"I call it 'reverse sticker shock,'" Siskin says of the current wave of designers selling clothes with a mix of desirability and affordability not seen since before the days of street-style stars and digital influencers. Her next words will be music to most shoppers' ears: "We aspire to make a beautiful dress that the customer would expect, based on everything else on the floor, to be $795—and then she turns over the ticket and sees that it's $395."

With competition heating up in a category that, for years, has been chugging along while making few headlines, some contemporary-fashion stalwarts are benefiting, too. "I don't think there is a bigger trend right now than off-the-shoulder," Net-a-Porter's Aiken says, "and the first brand we carried it from was Tibi." That label was founded two decades ago, during the heyday of youthful, fashion-forward companies such as Catherine Malandrino and Daryl K. (Remember them? Designers who made cool clothes you wore everywhere and could actually afford?) Tibi survived to win over Generation Selfie, thanks to founder Amy Smilovic's savvy evolution; these days, her signature bohemianism informs not sweet prints, but exaggerated, color-drenched silhouettes that come alternatively exploded or shrunken. As for the brand's recent rainbow of au moment off-the-shoulder tops, Aiken says: "We sold them out over and over again."

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Gerry Ryan's daughter Lottie will be given away on her wedding day by her brother Rex, it has been reported.

There will be wedding bells for the 30-year-old DJ, who is the eldest daughter of the late broadcasting legend, and her fiance Fabio Aprile in May.

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The notoriously private couple have been dating for over a decade and will tie the knot in Italy in three months time.

Lottie's and her long term love are believed to have opted for a Mediterranean wedding as Dubliner Fabio's family hail from Italy.

The lovebirds are shunning an extravagant showbiz bash for an intimate ceremony with just family and close friends.

Just 40 of the couple's nearest and dearest will join them for their big day abroad, including Lottie's mum Morah and siblings Rex, 26, Bonnie, 23, Elliot, 19, and Babette, 16.

A source told the Sunday World: "It is being held on a Monday, with many of Lottie's family and friends flying out a few days early.

"They are planning to have a big party back in Ireland on their return for their extended family and friends who cannot make it to Italy."

Lottie's actor brother Rex will walk his big sister down the aisle soon after the seventh anniversary of their famous dad Gerry's death.

The 53-year-old was found dead in his Leeson Street apartment in April 2010 after suffering a heart attack.

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Kate Moss has access to the latest off-the-runway styles and most extravagant couture. But when she goes out, the supermodel relies on the same ensemble she’s sported for 15 years: a little black plus size formal dresses topped with a leopard-print coat.

Moss isn’t alone. Over the years, plenty of the world’s most stylish women have adopted a uniform, from Coco Chanel — with her trim skirt suits and piles of costume jewelry — to Carolina Herrera, who is rarely seen without a crisp, white button-down. And then, of course, there’s Steve Jobs, whose black mock turtleneck, dad jeans and New Balance combo became as iconic as his streamlined Apple products.

The Post talked to three local women who have freely adopted their own uniforms, to see how they manage wearing the same thing every day.

Jennifer Ruff’s closet is stuffed to the gills like Carrie Bradshaw’s. But unlike TV’s most famous fashionista, Ruff — a publicist who lives on the Upper East Side — keeps filling her wardrobe with the same garments over and over again.

“I must have 20 of the same silk shirt in different colors, more than 40 [pairs of] skinny jeans, three identical fur vests, eight raincoats that are all slightly different and so many Belstaff motorcycle jackets, it’s silly,” says the 46-year-old. She also has a Belstaff puffer vest “in six different colors,” three Rick Owens leather jackets and “quite a bit of” Yves Saint Laurent “Tribute” heels and boots in black or brown.

And then there’s her collection of Hermès arm candy: 20 leather bracelets and 28 enamel cuffs in a rainbow of hues.

“I’m really kind of crazy when it comes to my uniform,” she says.

Ruff used to be more experimental with her style, but that changed about 10 years ago, when her friend introduced her to Tucker designer Gaby Basora. At a sample sale, Ruff fell in love with a simple silk blouse, and asked Basora if she would custom-make her a bunch in different shades.

“That’s when I really found my style,” she says.

Ruff does still shop, buying a couple of new pieces a season — a boot here, a Belstaff jacket with custom embroidery there — but she never gets bored of her sartorial template.

“It’s so easy getting dressed every morning!” she says. “I get up and feel a color, and then I’ll use that color in either the jewelry or shirt and build from there.”

Celebrities such as Lena Dunham and Lorde go crazy for Samantha Pleet’s unicorn-printed minidresses and ruffled, striped crop tops. But the designer prefers to outfit herself in a utilitarian black jumpsuit.

“I have five I rotate [among],” the 34-year-old tells The Post, adding that she accessorizes her one-piece garments with a beret, her signature blunt bangs, and black ankle boots.

“Even when I go out I wear a black jumpsuit — I’ll just put some makeup on beforehand.”

Pleet started wearing these items almost exclusively about 10 years ago, shortly after starting her own line.

“Being in fashion, I used to dress pretty crazy — really short shorts, thigh-high boots, crazy hats,” she says. “But once I started designing for myself, I needed to think about my work, not about what I would wear in the morning.”

The Chelsea resident always loved rompers and jumpsuits, and she realized these garments were perfect for running around, sewing and doing fittings.

“It’s a great uniform for a creative working person,” she says. And she finds a lot of variation in her limited palette. She owns two long-sleeved, V-neck wool-cashmere jumpsuits from Brooklyn label In God We Trust; an off-the-shoulder number from her own upcoming spring collection; a silk option with a twist detail and subtle side cutouts; and a high-waisted version with a zipper and wrap top — which, the new mom says, “Makes me feel sexy after having a baby.”

Pleet does have a few more colorful alternatives — including one in, yes, a unicorn print — as well as fancier dresses she’ll trot out once in a while.

“Of course, I get bored and need to wear something totally magical and very princess, just to change it up,” she says. “But I like the youthfulness that jumpsuits have. They make me feel [like] I can take on the world and do whatever I want.”

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Here is another quirky, chic and weird AF trend pioneered by the Kardashians that has become a huge trend now- The corset waist belt.

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This '80s Madonna-style piece which no one wore and was more of a stage show look has already been spotted on Kylie, Gigi, Kendall, and Kim in recent months. It was only a matter of time before the trend caught on and was spotted on fashionistas and fast-fashion stores started marketing their own variants.

A corset belt is basically wearing revamped and augmented versions of the age old corset but over your clothes this time around. While last season your slip long prom dresses made the move from the lingerie section of the clothing segment, this season it is corsets making the shift from lingerie to accessories. Corsets now have a more athletic fabrication.

The most popular way to wear this trend it to wear it over your oversized t-shirts and sweatshirts. This look goes best with oversized tops worn as dresses and paired with knee-high boots skipping pants. To play it safe match the belt to whatever you're wearing it over for a chic, monochromatic look. This statement accessory can be layered it over everything from Hawaiian shirts, to dresses and coats, making it the standout styling trick.

While we are still contemplating the trend and not totally sold it might just be one of those things that come around you try it and apologise a few months later, or look back and laugh at the pictures.

What do you guys think? Does your oversized T-shirt need this Kardashian twist? Comment below and let us know.

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When she started her fashion business, Yvonne Jewnell was so young that she needed her mother to co-sign the papers. It was the summer before she’d enter Parsons to study fashion, and she had made a ready-to-wear collection aptly titled “Genesis” — in reference to her religious background and her new life as a designer. She attended everything from street vending events to designer showcases to push her wares, but soon realized that not many in the industry were willing to provide a platform for a 17-year-old.

“At that age,” she told Racked, “nobody wanted to let me in their runway show. So my mom said, ‘Let’s do our own.’” Six years and a degree later, Jewnell and her mother, Tandra Birkett, set up Harlem Fashion Week to offer a space for exactly those designers who don’t have much chance of making it onto the official New York Fashion Week schedule.

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Fashion Week is known for both its glamorous shows and for the groups of fashion kids trying to push their way inside through the back door. Its front rows and after-parties are mostly destined for celebrities, editors, and industry insiders, and Fashion Week’s runways are for the most part inaccessible to the city’s young designers, too. With big names occupying the official schedule and a total of more than 300 presentations spread over nine days, it’s hard for up-and-comers to garner any noteworthy attention.

What’s more, the price to stage a show during the week is astronomical: Racked reported that the expense for a show starts around $100,000. As a result, NYFW’s schedule is increasingly filled with designers who have already established themselves abroad, including those from Chinaflying in to participate in the American market. Another result is that designers of color are few and far between in Fashion Week’s offerings: The New York Times reported that in the autumn/winter 2015 season, only 2.7 percent of the designers were black. What’s clear is that showing at NYFW has become a luxury good — meant only for those who can afford it.

Only at Parsons did Jewnell start to understand the challenges that await a designer of color. “I never experienced feeling like a minority until I started Parsons,” she told me. She said that some teachers would never let her speak in class, no matter how often she put her hand up. Others mocked her for her use of Adinkra symbols in her work, something she inherited from the Ghanaian influence in her family. “Some of the teachers really made me feel like the black girl,” she said. (Parsons replied in a statement: "Due to our privacy policy, we cannot comment on interactions between students and faculty or administrators. However, The New School is a place of inclusion and celebrates diversity of all forms. We support our students' intellectual and creative growth and encourage their engagement and collaboration in and out of the classroom.”)

Still, “if you can’t get into the party, you have to make your own,” Jewnell said. This season is Harlem Fashion Week’s second run, with Jewnell showing twice herself. With fees that range between $250 and $1,000, it’s no surprise that its offerings are far more diverse: Around 70 percent of Harlem Fashion Week’s 14 participants are designers of color. The packages include runway shows whose size corresponds to the fee level.

“As you’re building a brand, spending so much money to participate in a one-night event can get you in a lot of trouble,” Jewnell explained. “It’s important to participate, but you need to make sure you can cover your costs.”

The unrealistic financial burden of participating in NYFW has spawned a market of alternatives — at least nine in New York City — many of them offering similar services as IMG, the official organizer of NYFW. As with Harlem Fashion Week, the fees often include the venue, PR, market, and hair and makeup — at a fraction of the price. One of the most established options is Nolcha, whose packages range from a trade show presentation in the Bryant Park Hotel to a full runway at ArtBeam in Chelsea. The difference is in price and professional allure: Nolcha’s packages range from $1,500 to $25,000, which, with the help of sponsors like L'Oréal and Citibank, allows Nolcha to stage professional-grade shows that cost from $75,000 upwards. About 60 percent of Nolcha’s participants are designers of color.

According to Nolcha cofounder Kerry Bannigan, she started her business to fill a niche. “Larger fashion houses have the budget to be in the main Fashion Week, but independent brands just don’t have the money to put on a show. Yet, you have to be around at peak time, which is Fashion Week,” she explained. “There are designers who fear that, because they can’t afford to stage a show, they won’t be taken seriously.”

Designer Jodi Cottongim is participating in Nolcha this year with Blackbird Dillinger, the accessories brand she started two years ago. Even though she chose Nolcha’s cheapest option, she says her participation is still a big investment for her young brand. “Any amount is a significant amount of money for me, because I finance everything that happens with my brand with my paycheck.” Still, Cottongim says she feels an obligation as a designer to show during this frenetic week, hoping that publications she admires, like Elle, Women’s Wear Daily or Essence, will pick up on her work. “If you put yourself onto the major circuit, you need the money and sponsors to pull that off,” she said. “But if I don’t step out of the shadows, no one is gonna come to my house, knock on my door and say ‘I heard you have great handbags, can I come in?’”

In the years following her graduation from the Fashion Institute of Technology, Cottongim worked for a range of designers to gain experience and industry knowledge. Even today, she’s still financing her brand with her personal funds that mostly come from freelance work and the corporate jobs she works a few months at a time. According to her, it’s the little things that make a difference. When Juicy Couture, her previous employer, closed, Cottongim took the material from the sample room that was meant to be thrown away and stashed it under her bed instead. In her daily life, she lives without luxuries: no manicures, clothes shopping, or HBO.

However, Cottongim admits that her family and loved ones have been pivotal supporters in her career. She’s hoping that her ex-boyfriend-turned-best friend — a financial guru who works on Wall Street — can be part of the business side of the brand, as even her participation at Nolcha was made possible by his financial contribution. According to Cottongim, soliciting support is a move she took straight out of the playbook of her heroes. “Tory Burch’s husband was a venture capitalist, who helped her to collect the funds for her brand. With Rebecca Minkoff, her brother is the financial side of her business,” she said. “If you have that kind of support — the kind with dollars — it makes a huge difference in what you can do.”

Jewnell also says that her family, especially her mother, has been a big support from the beginning. Tandra Birkett, Jewnell’s mother, says she’s always given her daughter every resource she had. “I built this company on a teacher’s salary. I’m a single mom, and I don’t have any benefactors who said ‘Here’s $20,000.’” The family has a tradition of strong mother-daughter relationships: Birkett received a great deal of support from her own mother when she was pregnant with her daughter as a sophomore at NYU. To this day, Birkett and Jewnell still live together in a townhouse in the Bronx.

Both mother and daughter confirm that it was as much Birkett’s spiritual support as her financial help that brought Jewnell here today. “We didn’t wait for somebody to say ‘Yvonne, let’s have you in the show.’ We created our own show,” Birkett said.

But at a time when more and more big designers are abandoning the traditional runway format, is it still even worth it to use the few funds a brand has to stage a show? Many New York designers have moved away from their hometown this season: Tommy Hilfiger staged a see-now-buy-now show in LA to stand out from the crowd, while Proenza Schouler is moving to Paris Couture Week as part of a retail strategy. Some have opted out of having a traditional show completely: Opening Ceremony staged a protest- and resist-themed ballet show instead.

Nolcha’s Bannigan sees a trend in how big fashion houses are making more cost-effective decisions. Instead of hosting an over-the-top event, brands are opting for more modest affairs, targeting key names and clients. Misha Nonoo moved her presentation onto Snapchat last season, while designers like J. Mendel have shifted to appointment-only previews. Yet she also realizes how those options are still not as viable for young designers. “Independent designers don’t have the production capacity to follow a see-now-buy-now model, for example,” she said. “Our clientele simply can't keep up with the changes in Fashion Week forms.”

As for Jewnell, there is nothing that can replace a traditional fashion show. “It’s about the tangible experience of the audience and the designer being in the same space,” she said. “That’s important for people who enjoy the beauty of fashion, instead of those only interested in buying the clothing.” Cottongim, for her part, challenged a long-standing myth that in the fast-moving, interconnected world of social media, the playing field has leveled between big names and young designers. “How can I get discovered on social media when Alexander Wang and his millions of followers are on it, too?” she asked. Besides, for many young designers, the number of followers doesn’t necessarily translate into financial success, she explained. “I’d rather have 50 followers and 20 people who buy it than five million followers with nobody buying it.”

It’s only slightly ironic that the topic of money isn’t often discussed in a week that is designed to promote the sales of luxurious and expensive apparel. Yet the challenges that face the city’s young designers often come down to exactly that — whether they have the money to participate in the fashion cycle or not. If Cottongim has a final word of advice for young designers, she’d tell them to get a corporate position to understand how a company works. “You can’t think ‘I can just be creative and do what I want,’” she said. “This is the fashion business, so go learn the business.”

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“You’re at the fun table,” said a friendly stranger. Two seats over from him sat model Grace Hartzel — “Gracie,” as he called her — chewing and chatting with what looked like blue Saran Wrap tied in a bow around her neck. At a different table in an adjacent room sat Olivier Zahm, founder of Purple Magazine, taking a picture of his date, who was parting her red blazer to hold up a “Reserved” sign in between her breasts. Narcissa had at least two fun tables that night.

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“Sex and fashion has always been related to me,” said Zahm, referring to the theme of the latest issue of Purple, the cause for last night’s celebration. He would occasionally be interrupted by friends and his new photographer, who he joked was “a disaster” after concluding that she was inebriated. “The digital revolution built such a possibility for pictures ‘cause everyone is a photographer, everyone has a camera, everyone is taking photos. And that relates to fashion and to [the] sexual life of everyone.”

Zahm has been laying low this fashion week, attending “two or three shows,” including Proenza Schouler and Calvin Klein, which he thoroughly enjoyed.

“I think it’s good Calvin Klein becomes modern again,” he said. “In Paris, we love Calvin Klein…Calvin Klein, Paris, there’s like a connection. It’s a good connection…New York is the door to America.”

As dinner was served, Kim Gordon, Chloë Sevigny, Terry Richardson and a smattering of models helped themselves to beet salad, chicken, bass and octopus, though the last of these was somewhat controversial.

“I’ve always wanted a pet octopus,” said a friend of Hartzel’s, explaining why she didn’t want to eat the appetizer. And with that, the fun table’s buzzkill was revealed.

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Consider Sophie Theallet’s spring campaign the follow-up to the open letter she penned in November. In it, she vowed not to princess prom dresses First Lady Melania Trump based on her husband’s xenophobic, racist and sexist campaign rhetoric — and encouraged other designers to do the same.

Theallet’s spring campaign, titled “World Citizen,” is a celebration of diversity, for which the designer cast a range of actresses, musicians, dancers and a news anchor to illustrate her point. The 13 women include Neve Campbell, Rossy de Palma, Blanca Li, Gretchen Mol, Drena de Niro, Corinne Bailey Rae, Sarita Choudhury, Chynna Rogers, Candice Huffine, Shirleen Allicot, Adesuwa Aighewi, Adepero Oduye and Selah Marley.

They were shot in two series by two photographers with very different points of view — Henry Leutwyler, who shot National Geographic’s January “Gender Revolution” cover, and Tiziano Magni, Theallet’s long-time fashion photography collaborator.

“The cast is people I love, they are friends to the house of Sophie Theallet and they are people who wear my clothes all the time,” said Theallet. “But more than that, they represent a diversity of every woman, every color. This is life. This is the world that we live in.”

“So you have Corinne Bailey Rae, who is a singer, with Adepero Oduye, who is a fantastic actress. … Chynna Rogers is from that young generation of rappers. She’s strong and full of tattoos and has her own voice in rap music,” said Theallet.

Asked about her open letter, and how she feels about the industry’s reaction now that Trump is in office, Theallet said she preferred not to dwell on the letter. “I don’t really want to comment. I think it’s pretty clear where I stand in the letter. I’m glad to see that the fashion community is taking a stand now. I think this is fantastic,” she said. “The most important thing for me is to concentrate on spreading my message, to show diversity. That’s why my campaign is called World Citizen, because you see the all types of beauty in every woman. It’s very human. That’s where I stand.”

The campaign is also a great way to see Theallet’s spring collection — for which she opted out of showing during fashion week, and will not return in fall, either. “To show during fashion week, there are a lot of things to do to make it happen,” she said. “As an independent designer, I prefer to concentrate on doing a more intimate collection. … I don’t have a big team. I prefer to take my time and concentrate on the know-how.”

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Social media was captivated by a 150-year-old wedding mermaid prom dresses that had been lost after a dry cleaners went bust.

Tess Newall, who had worn her great-great grandmother's dress at her wedding in June, posted a plea on Facebook to help find it, which was shared more than 300,000 times.

Luckily her dress was found but what is the appeal for brides of choosing a dress once worn by a relative? Three women explained why they had ditched trawling the bridal shops for the perfect dress in favour of a borrowed gown.

'Different and special'

Kate Ridgway, from Stockport, made the decision to wear her grandmother's wedding dress in 2014.

"I remember it from when I was a child," said the 27-year-old. "I always knew nan had kept it and I tried it on for dressing up, but back then I thought it was a horrid lacy thing."

However, when she got engaged to her now-husband Stu, Joan Chatfield, known as "Nanny Chat", asked if she would like to wear it on her big day.

"I was heavily pregnant at the time, so I couldn't try it on," said Kate. "But she had always wanted me to wear it."

Then, three days after Kate's eldest son was born, her nan passed away.

When she travelled down to Sussex for the funeral, her mother handed her the box with the vintage wedding dress from 1951, and everything fell into place.

"When I tried it on, it fitted perfectly," she said. "I had it cleaned but I didn't have to do anything else to it.

"I had tried on brand new wedding dresses and I had fallen in love with one, but this felt different and so special.

"It meant so much to us as a family for me to wear it and, as you can imagine, it made for a very emotional day."

London-based digital designer Emily Clark also hopes to start a tradition of her own by using her mother's frock for her wedding this October.

The 33-year-old said her mother's dress, which was first worn in 1980, had played a big part in her childhood.

"I used to dress in my mum's wedding dress from the age of five or six to - if I'm truthful - until I was 15.

"It's one of a kind, it's a dress you wouldn't be able to find now and you wouldn't be able to replicate."

The dress was bought by her grandfather, who died last year. She said the dress would act as a way of commemorating him at her wedding to fiance Andrew Stewart.

The dress is currently being altered, and when she heard that Mrs Newall's had gone missing at the dry cleaners she says she "did panic".

She added: "I just think it's wonderful that they've had it returned."

'Close relationship'

For Rachel Cohen, from Edinburgh, the discovery of her grandmother's dress in the loft spurred on the idea to go retro.

"I knew there were dresses up there amongst a lot of random stuff," she said.

"I even found one mermaid prom dresses uk which much have been from a previous generation, but it just couldn't have been worn."

However, the one Granny Marie Waterston wore in the 1930s was in superb condition and perfect for Rachel's special day.

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