Fashion & Jewelry

Reviewed by: 

Shoes is an amazing and extensively researched volume that speaks only to the subject of shoes.

Reviewed by: 

You may be able to speak to the subject of “it” bags from this year’s fashion cycle, but can you speak to the subject of why and which was the “it” bag of the 16th century until the present day?

Reviewed by: 

Greg Foley and Andrew Luecke have assembled a story that has been told before but never quite like this.

Reviewed by: 

There are few if any who would argue that Cristobal Balenciaga was the epitome of fashion if not the greatest designer who ever lived.

Author(s):
Editor(s):
Other Contributors:
Reviewed by: 

“the quintessential coffee table book that is nothing short of spellbinding.”

Author(s):
Reviewed by: 

We as readers and followers of fashion are accustomed to seeing a familiar roster of names associated with the great and vaunted publications of the ’60s, ’70s, and ’80s.

Author(s):
Genre(s):
Reviewed by: 

Without question Gonzague Dupleix has written a how-to manual for men who wish to dress, present, and conduct themselves appropriately in any and all situations, no matter how far afield.

Reviewed by: 

There are sins of omission as well as sins of commission within this book.

Reviewed by: 

Bravo to Elisa Goodkind and Lily Mandelbaum for proffering both a “manifesto” of sorts as well as compiling a celebration of the independent spirit when it comes to how we present ourselves to the

Editor(s):
Genre(s):
Reviewed by: 

Anglophiles and fashionphiles unite! Literally.

Reviewed by: 

Many a book on the subject of London and its contribution to men’s fashion has been written and expounded upon, but few have found a truly unique way to tackle the topic and stay the course.

Reviewed by: 

Ines de la Fressange is a fashion phenomenon who started as a runway and print model, morphed into the face and muse of Chanel and Karl Lagerfeld, became a French icon when she “gave” her face to t

Author(s):
Genre(s):
Reviewed by: 

The first thing that the reader will encounter is that there is a bit of a disconnect between the title and text.

Author(s):
Genre(s):
Reviewed by: 

Warning: Readers beware!

“There are as many ways to define fashion as there are approaches to understand it . . .”
—Pamela Golbin

Reviewed by: 

This is an exuberant and effervescent book that stretches beyond just shoes designed by Manolo Blahnik.

Author(s):
Genre(s):
Reviewed by: 

There are a multitude of adjectives that this reviewer has used to describe books of this genre but in my memory there has been one that’s glaringly absent, and it is only three letters . . .

Author(s):
Genre(s):
Reviewed by: 

Call this the one-volume encyclopedia that centers around one specific article of clothing: the T-shirt—everything you ever wanted to know about a T-shirt and even what you didn’t even realize you

Reviewed by: 

Sharon Schwartz and Laura Sutton have bestowed upon fashion readers a book that few could find fault with; Eisenberg Originals is the story of the Eisenberg family and the legacy that they

Reviewed by: 

London Uprising is as much a geography/real estate lesson as it is the story of the rise of the British fashion industry in its current state.

Reviewed by: 

Unquestionably, Yves Saint Laurent and Christian Dior are eternally and inextricably coupled in fashion history since it is a well known that YSL took the reins when Dior passed.

Author(s):
Genre(s):
Reviewed by: 

"The reader is transported to an exquisitely curated view of the Dior archive . . ."

Author(s):
Genre(s):
Reviewed by: 

In the world of high jewelry (haute joaillerie or alta gioielleria) it is a rather well known fact that the French have always maintained a leading, if not, starring role.

Reviewed by: 

This is the kind of fashion tome that has a distinction all its own within the genre of fashion books.

Reviewed by: 

A new year brings still one more book focused on the heritage brand of Dior but the real question is whether or not the main attraction is the brand or the brilliant illustrator whose images inhabi

Author(s):
Other Contributors:
Reviewed by: 

“This is a celebration of style in its purest sense.”

Pages