Click on picture and shop Hi, Guys! You know her all! The most fashionable woman on this planet - the fashion icon Miroslava Duma! We all adore her style and her sense for "somethingmoreanddifferent"! Well today we can shop together with her on OUTNET.COM! Enjoy and read the story about Mira. This short story with an interview with Mrs Duma is from Telegraph. co.uk. Who's that Girl? Miroslava DUMA The Polly Pocket-sized editor Miroslava Duma gives her verdict on the new Russian aesthetic. Miroslava Duma, or Mira to her friends, is one quarter of the glamorous troupe of women known affectionately as 'the Russian mafia'. Positively stalked by Tommy Ton and co, they have dominated street style blogs since they arrived on the scene a few seasons ago, conspicuous for their unbounded yet impeccable taste in high end designer wares. The chic clique comprises Ulyana Sergeenko, a fashion designer with a penchant for turbans who is garnering plaudits on the back of her well-received couture debut in Paris in February; Elena Perminova, model and wife of billionaire media mogul Alexander Lebedev; Vika Gazinskaya, also a fashion designer with a roster of haircuts to rival David Beckham and a love of vintage silhouettes; and Mira, the daughter of a Russian senator and founder of Buro 24/7, a fashion news website. "I didn't know what it was to be 'an instrument of propaganda' but I remember thinking, 'Why does it have to be like that?' I was too young to know the political implications but it was something rebellious deep inside of me. The department stores had such limited stocks of clothes - I was a huge fan of the Hollywood golden age, so I got my fashion fix watching movies featuring Katharine Hepburn, Cary Grant and Marilyn Monroe." The design industry in Russia since Perestroika has remained limited despite the huge influx of wealth, but tastes are changing. "Many young people are eager to get as far away as possible from stereotypes of Russian kitsch," Mira asserts. Where Russians would once revere international designers alone, choosing flashy labels and ostentatious furs, "now more and more celebrities want their cocktail dresses made by Vika Gazinskaya or by Alexander Terekhov," says Mira. "We've never had any history of fashion in Russia, but there has been a revolution of thinking. Vika, Ulyana Sergeenko, Nina Donis, Alexander Terekhov - they're all showing that Moscow has the potential to be a fashion capital." Mira's part in the revolution is less design-based. After a spell as an editor at Russian Harper's Bazaar , she realised that "the future belongs to web journalism." She founded Buro 24/7 , a website dedicated to fashion, art, architecture, cinema, music and style and is now a freelance writer. An Eastern European version is available by license, and there are plans for an English, Asian, French and Arabic version, and even Buro cafés and bars. We caught up with her ahead of Fashion Month. Describe a typical day My working day can't be limited to 12 hours. I'm in touch with our editors 24 hours a day because when it's bedtime in Moscow, where I live, it's afternoon in New York. I'll have a few business meetings - collaborations between Buro and other brands, advertising, new projects - and I'm constantly keeping an eye on the news. If I have some spare time, I'll visit exhibitions but I love to hang out with my family. My two-year-old son, my husband and my family are my priority. How do you get dressed in the morning? Donna Karan once said that if it takes more than 20 minutes to get ready you have some problems with your appearance. I totally agree. I can't understand women who open their huge wardrobes and say, 'I have nothing to wear.' How would you define the Russian aesthetic? Last year we were all obsessed with beautiful silhouettes and perfecting lines. All the Russian designers have different signatures, though; Vika Gazinskaya's outfits often resemble Cristóbal Balenciaga's early work, for example, but updated with modern graphics. Who are your favourite designers? There are so many, but I am loyal to Vika, Marni, Chanel, Phoebe Philo, Raf Simons, Ostwald Helgason, Proenza Schouler… What books do you have on your bedside table? I love classic Russian literature - Gogol, Leskov, Turgenev, Tolstoy, Dostoevsky. Lately I've become fond of American literature; I'm reading Hemingway in the original English and his writing style seems boyish. I like the tight, athletic prose of The Sun Also Rises. I like to read several books at the same time - I've been reading Anna Karenina by Tolstoy and also Afisha magazine, a special edition devoted to the history of Russian media, simultaneously. What do you do to relax? Some say yoga is the answer; as for me, I like to eat Toffifee caramel candies. What is your secret talent? I have an ability to enjoy every single moment of life. I cherish an hour spent with my lovely son and another spent writing an article; I am an optimist. Also I can fly like Batman. But that's another story. Who is Fashion Designer Oscar de la Renta? Óscar Arístides Ortiz de la Renta Fiallo (born July 22, 1932) is a Puerto Rican, Dominican American fashion designer. Born in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, De la Renta was trained by Cristóbal Balenciaga and Antonio Castillo, he became internationally known in the 1960s as one of the couturiers to dress Jacqueline Kennedy. An award-winning designer, he worked for Lanvin and Balmain; his eponymous fashion house continues to dress leading figures, from film stars to royalty, into the 2010s. De La Renta is particularly known for his red carpet gowns and evening wear. Source: Wiki Lovely Day!
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