You don’t turn to a style guru like Ellen V. Lora when you’re seeking advice on playing by “the rules.” Toronto Blue Jays Baseball Pride Field Shirt As you’ll know if you’re part of her army of Instagram followers, the Los Angeles–based creative director and blogger behind Pure EVL is just as likely to be spotted in a neon-lime bomber as she is a floaty floral dress, and we’re not sure we’ll ever match her knack for effortlessly mixing unlike prints (though rest assured we’ll never stop trying). But if you’re looking to make getting dressed in the morning, well, fun again, Lora’s exactly who you want to talk to. “I’m that girl who will wear her faux-fur coat in the spring,” she tells us, reassuring us that we actually don’t have to banish the entirety of our winter wardrobes to the land beyond the wall (aka the back of our closets) as warmer weather edges its way into the forecast. We implored the blogger to turn her attention to H&M’s fittingly bold new Divided collection, and then we stepped back to let her work her magic… Lora’s retro-inspired spring take on the Canadian tuxedo has us itching for festival season: Expect to see us wearing this as we edge toward the stage to catch headlining acts all spring and summer long. The blogger’s relaxed double-denim look feels very ’70s and very rock ’n’ roll, which makes perfect sense, given that Lora cites Bianca Jagger as one of her biggest style influences. “She wore the clothes—the clothes didn’t wear her,” the blogger says of the icon whose notable fashion moments include the off-the-shoulder dress she wore while riding a horse(!) into Studio 54 and the plunging blazer–and–high-waisted skirt combo she sported while wedding the lead singer of The Rolling Stones.
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French fashion brand Lacoste, Toronto Blue Jays Baseball Pride Field Shirt 80 years young in 2013 are paying tribute to their founder René Lacoste by taking his most notable invention; the L.12.12 polo shirt, into the future. In the mid-20s, tennis legend René Lacoste manufactured his own shirts to withstand the heat on American tennis courts, essentially inventing the L.12.12 polo shirt. He signed each with the crocodile emblem, marking the birth of a new genre of clothing and a new way of communicating. 1933 saw industrial scale production of the L.12.12 polo shirt; L for Lacoste, 1 refers to the Cotton Petit Piqué fabric, 2 to the Short Sleeve style, and 12 to the number of prototypes made before René Lacoste gave his approval. Yesterday; 12/12/12, Lacoste unveiled a film featuring the polo shirt in the future where textile technology has no limits.
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