As planned, today we went to the Museum of Decorative Arts and Design in Old Riga to visit the Alexander Vasilyev collection exhibition "From Mini to Maxi. 1960s Fashion." There were not too many people, so everything could be calmly viewed, read, studied, and photographed.
The lace that is so characteristic of D&G - but this time not the fatally black and freely falling kind, rather the airily white and vintage white. Floral prints, because the more flowery the better. And something from the flower-power era as well.
Hearing the name Coco Chanel, every woman can unfailingly name at least two of her timeless creations - the little black dress (created in the mid-1920s) and the perfume ("Chanel No. 5"). But this time I want to talk not so much about her biography or achievements in fashion, but about the philosophy of Coco Chanel, which is, of course, reflected in her work.