Margaret Thatcher, Britain's first and only female Prime Minister, passed away earlier this morning of a stroke at the age of 87. As one of the first women to hold such a powerful political position in the Western world, Thatcher's political legacy will obviously endure for decades to come--but her fashion legacy, too, will have a lasting effect on female politicians. In many ways Thatcher's dress sense set the mold for how female politicians dress today: conservative, powerful (yet feminine) and above all, consistent.
Taylor Swift covers December's Cosmo and dishes about her past relationships... sort of. {US Weekly} Heidi Klum has cancelled her famous Halloween party in the wake of Hurricane Sandy. She promises to reschedule it as a "haunted Christmas." {HuffPo} Jessica Biel may have surprised us by picking out a sugary-pink wedding gown, but it turns out she also surprised herself. {The Cut}
When you think of actresses-turned-designers Angelina Jolie's name is not the first one that comes to mind. The Olsens? Sure. Emma Watson? That makes sense. But Jolie? Being Brad Pitt's partner, mother of an ever-expanding rainbow brood and her work as a U.N. ambassador stand out over her style (not that she doesn't look chic in those black drapey dresses). Nevertheless, Jolie is designing a jewelry line, WWD is reporting. The Tourist actress has teamed up with former Asprey CEO Robert Procop to create a line of statement jewelry. “These are pieces [Jolie] wears herself,” Procop told WWD of the collection, which includes "a pebble-size, pale green 353-carat beryl pendant, in a rose gold setting and worn on a chain of cushion shape beryl stones, and a graphic, tablet-shape 12.02-carat vivid green emerald ring set in rose gold." Jolie was reportedly inspired by "ancient tablet engravings" when she designed the ring (she designed a similar piece for Pitt).
Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie are celebrity designers now. They've been working on a capsule collection for Asprey for a year, which means that in betw
Georgia Peach: Just in case you don't have as massive a crush on Georgia May Jagger as we do, which is kind of inconceivable, here's a mini-portfolio