The post This Edible Shoe Was Made Out of Bread appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>“This is a vegetable toast with a focus on deliciousness! The parts are glued together with flour. Of course, these shoes are delicious to eat,” the artist writes in the Instagram caption. “Each part of the pattern is made of a different type of bread. When I baked them, the good smell spread throughout the room.”
Sasaki’s Instagram page has nearly 50,000 followers who enjoy her toasty artwork. Some of her previous pieces were inspired by famous artworks but most of them are original. She first started making toast art when the Covid-19 pandemic started and she was bored at home. She found it challenging to wake up early in the morning with not much to do, so she bribed herself with toast for breakfast. Eating art for breakfast sounds awesome, we have to agree!
The post This Edible Shoe Was Made Out of Bread appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>The post These Chunky, 70s Inspired Boots, Are Taking Over the Fashion Scene appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>“Nodaleto is the result of what I am, the aesthetic I like, what I was dreaming of wearing as a shoe addict,” said co-founder Julia Toledano Toledano in an interview with Flaunt. “My family heritage inspired the brand itself in a global aspect. Andalusia inspired the color of the brand, Tangerine, which I used in patent leather in my collection… between red and orange, love and happiness. For the minimalism aspect of the shoes, I like quality fabrics and architectural lines.”
“I’ve wanted to start a shoe brand for a long time,” she recalled. “Actually, it was my childhood dream! During my childhood, I was designing for myself only and didn’t go to a fashion school.”
But it took her some time to realize her dream. After initially going to law school in Paris and receiving a master’s in fashion journalism, she realized her true passion was shoes. “So I start doing some research of what I wanted… the name, the aesthetic, the line, etc…” she said. “And then decided to go to London College of Fashion to take classes on technical shoe aspects. I went to Italy to visit factories, then came back to Paris and started one year ago– the beginning of everything.”
Fuelled by her love for multi-artistic mediums, Nodaleto emerges as a creative label that goes beyond shoes, a gentle exuberance inspired by the iconography and architecture of the 70s. Well worth following on Instagram, if nothing else:
The post These Chunky, 70s Inspired Boots, Are Taking Over the Fashion Scene appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>The post Jessica Washick Designs Both Nails and Sneakers with Equal Passion appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>According to Washick, she started painting her nails in 2007 after an ugly break-up, and shared her nail art in her blog You Don’t Need A Man, You Need A Manicure. She went on to study fashion design in Parsons and now works as a Senior Color Designer at Nike.
“Prior to Nike, I gravitated towards women’s accessories, and designed them at Coach and Marc Jacobs,” she told HYPEBAE. “But I view nails as a built-in accessory so it’s all a part of the fashion world in my eyes. Whether modest or complex, nails are very much a part of the look.”
“With both nails and sneakers, you’re pushing boundaries within a confined, classic space that’s personal to a lot of people,” she explained. “They’re both blank canvases but you can’t do just anything. It has to be functional to some extent. It’s also a delicate balance of standing out but being relatively easy to wear. And I also love that people feel so passionately about both. They’re both unifying in that way.”
Take a look at some of her eye-popping designs (both trainers and nails).
The post Jessica Washick Designs Both Nails and Sneakers with Equal Passion appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>The post This Edible Shoe Was Made Out of Bread appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>“This is a vegetable toast with a focus on deliciousness! The parts are glued together with flour. Of course, these shoes are delicious to eat,” the artist writes in the Instagram caption. “Each part of the pattern is made of a different type of bread. When I baked them, the good smell spread throughout the room.”
Sasaki’s Instagram page has nearly 50,000 followers who enjoy her toasty artwork. Some of her previous pieces were inspired by famous artworks but most of them are original. She first started making toast art when the Covid-19 pandemic started and she was bored at home. She found it challenging to wake up early in the morning with not much to do, so she bribed herself with toast for breakfast. Eating art for breakfast sounds awesome, we have to agree!
The post This Edible Shoe Was Made Out of Bread appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>The post These Chunky, 70s Inspired Boots, Are Taking Over the Fashion Scene appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>“Nodaleto is the result of what I am, the aesthetic I like, what I was dreaming of wearing as a shoe addict,” said co-founder Julia Toledano Toledano in an interview with Flaunt. “My family heritage inspired the brand itself in a global aspect. Andalusia inspired the color of the brand, Tangerine, which I used in patent leather in my collection… between red and orange, love and happiness. For the minimalism aspect of the shoes, I like quality fabrics and architectural lines.”
“I’ve wanted to start a shoe brand for a long time,” she recalled. “Actually, it was my childhood dream! During my childhood, I was designing for myself only and didn’t go to a fashion school.”
But it took her some time to realize her dream. After initially going to law school in Paris and receiving a master’s in fashion journalism, she realized her true passion was shoes. “So I start doing some research of what I wanted… the name, the aesthetic, the line, etc…” she said. “And then decided to go to London College of Fashion to take classes on technical shoe aspects. I went to Italy to visit factories, then came back to Paris and started one year ago– the beginning of everything.”
Fuelled by her love for multi-artistic mediums, Nodaleto emerges as a creative label that goes beyond shoes, a gentle exuberance inspired by the iconography and architecture of the 70s. Well worth following on Instagram, if nothing else:
The post These Chunky, 70s Inspired Boots, Are Taking Over the Fashion Scene appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>The post Jessica Washick Designs Both Nails and Sneakers with Equal Passion appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>According to Washick, she started painting her nails in 2007 after an ugly break-up, and shared her nail art in her blog You Don’t Need A Man, You Need A Manicure. She went on to study fashion design in Parsons and now works as a Senior Color Designer at Nike.
“Prior to Nike, I gravitated towards women’s accessories, and designed them at Coach and Marc Jacobs,” she told HYPEBAE. “But I view nails as a built-in accessory so it’s all a part of the fashion world in my eyes. Whether modest or complex, nails are very much a part of the look.”
“With both nails and sneakers, you’re pushing boundaries within a confined, classic space that’s personal to a lot of people,” she explained. “They’re both blank canvases but you can’t do just anything. It has to be functional to some extent. It’s also a delicate balance of standing out but being relatively easy to wear. And I also love that people feel so passionately about both. They’re both unifying in that way.”
Take a look at some of her eye-popping designs (both trainers and nails).
The post Jessica Washick Designs Both Nails and Sneakers with Equal Passion appeared first on TettyBetty.
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