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Aquaman Cologne - for Men - by Rochas |
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Aquaman Cologne for Men by Rochas,
This Fresh, Spicy, Woody Fragrance Is For The
Man Who Is Strong In His Body, Mind, And Soul, And Who's Quest For
Discovery Is Endless. This Inspirational Scent Is An Exuberant Blend Of
Sparkling Grapefruit, Green Leaves, And Warm Woods, And Is Refreshingly
Masculine And Adventurous. Find best price on Aquaman by Rochas, Aquaman cologne for men,
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Colognes by Rochas:
About Rochas Designer:
In the sometimes indeterminate world of fashion, Marcel Rochas was
determined and decisive. He operated with a business acumen and cultural
strategy (including the fashion designer as a conspicuous social mixer)
that caused him in the postwar period to doubt the continued vitality
and interest of couture—and to turn resolutely to his boutique operation
and lucrative fragrance business. His motto was "Youth, Simplicity, and
Personality," alternatively reported in the New York Herald Tribune (3
August 1948) as "elegance, simplicity, and youth," but it was in many
ways the characteristic of personality that differentiated Rochas from
other designers of his era. His initial fame came in the 1920s and
rested on his tailleur, accompanied with full, supple skirts.
In 1942, five years before the Dior New Look, Rochas had offered a new
corset to create the guépiére, or wasp-waist, anticipating the return of
the extreme femininity that enchanted him. Caroline Rennolds Milbank,
writing in her book Couture: the Great Designers (New York, 1985), said
Rochas and his skill were "characterized by a calculated originality."
Originality was very important for Rochas, if only as a sign of rights
and attribute of value rather than of real creative initiative.
In the 1930s, he was already selling ready-to-wear and made-to-order
clothes in his New York store. He claimed to have invented the word
"slacks" in the early 1930s, along with originating the idea to include
gray flannel slacks as part of a suit. In an era when women's trousers
were limited to extreme informality or recreation, Rochas trousers were
highly advanced if not revolutionary. His clothing was not cautious, and
for him "original" and "invention" were key words in the vocabulary of
selling fashion.
The wide shoulders of the 1930s were created by several designers more
or less simultaneously. He continuously played on the shoulders as a
sign of the feminine—a fall-winter 1947 evening gown, for instance,
invents broad shoulders through a capelet-like scarf attached to the
bodice. Bolero jackets of the 1940s were lighter in construction than
Balenciaga's inspirations direct from Spain; Rochas was more interested
in the effect of the enhanced shoulders to pad and to frame. Likewise, a
1949 robe du soir dipped to a bouquet of silk camellias at the bust, but
capped the shoulders and framed the face with a flaring lightness. In
other instances, grand white collars performed the same role and in
providing a sweet, portrait-like framing for the face.
In January of 1948, Women's Wear Daily reported of Rochas, "this house
is very modern but with the modernity which carries with it a tradition
linking it with the fashion picture of the day. There is always an air
of excitement in his collections which are designed to enhance the charm
of women." If Rochas' anatomical obsession was the shoulder, his second
favorite was the arm. He often embellished the sleeves in suits and
coats, and his coats from the 1940s, which tended to be voluminous and
drapey, were characterized by large sleeves. Loose blouson effects were
more than carried over into the excess of sleeves as well as an interest
in full backs.
Picken and Miller, in their book, Dressmakers of France (New York,
1956), stated, "Conscious of the changes in fashion, Rochas was the
first to give up his heavy burden of the haute couture collections and
to restrict his activities to his boutique which specializes not only in
accessories, but also in separates." Anticipating Cardin and the
marketing orientation of fashion and beauty, Rochas was a visionary.
Though his firm had quit creating fragrances during World War II, a
separate company, Parfums Rochas S.A. was set up in 1945 to handle the
burgeoning interest in perfumes.
Upon his death in 1955, Marcel Rochas had not fully achieved the
synthesis of design and marketing that would become the dynamic of late
20th-century fashion, but he had more than proven himself one of its
pioneers. His business was taken over by family members who concentrated
on developing fragrances. The Rochas name became synonymous with
intriguing and evocative fragrances for women and men throughout the
next several decades. The company was acquired by the Darmstadt,
Germany-based Wella AG in 1987, and went back into couture with the
hiring of designer Peter O'Brien 1990. Rochas couture remained
overshadowed by its ever-increasing fragrance line until the market was
flooded with signature scents. At the dawn of the 21st century, however,
Rochas was once seeking recognition for its apparel as it prepared to
show a spring/summer 2001 collection by O'Brien.
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