“I want you to know how deeply I wish to translate those ideas into images, just to quiet down the turmoil of my brain.” (in a letter to Ingrid Bergman)
- director Roberto Rossellini, birthday remembrance #botd
@ineedmoreties / ineedmoreties.tumblr.com
“I want you to know how deeply I wish to translate those ideas into images, just to quiet down the turmoil of my brain.” (in a letter to Ingrid Bergman)
- director Roberto Rossellini, birthday remembrance #botd
[DIETRO LE QUINTE]
- Specialty store -
#DIETROLEQUINTEMinamiAoyama
#JOHNLOBB #ジョンロブ
#CesareAttolini #アットリーニ
#SantaMariaNovella #サンタマリアノヴェッラ
#NapoliSuit
#Jacket #Pants #Shirt #Knitwear #Tie #Suit
#DIETROLEQUINTE #ディエトロレクイン
#StealthWealth #CesareAttoliniNapoli
Warner Baxter (March 29, 1889 – May 7, 1951)
pmedica
Alexander Nurulaeff. Dandy Shoe Care.
The Cap!
Gary Cooper was born on May 7, 1901 💕 #botd
Crockett and Jones. Amidé Hadelin. Spier and Mackay.
Douglas Fairbanks Jr. (December 9, 1909 – May 7, 2000)
By no means the last straw
The Ign Joseph collection plays with the Panama to produce the leisurely fedora style and the semi-formal Coke or bowler. Not the last straw, but a dash of colour, to divert the sun‘s rays on hot and active days.Grass is perhaps one of the least appreciated plants on the planet- at least for those who don‘t eat it. Real cricket is played on it. So are the Championships at Wimbledon. Unfortunately the ubiquitous ball cap is far more frequently taken under the burning sun- even at that tradition paved venue.Grass however is indispensable for solar protection and stylish attention. The grasses of Ecuador are woven to make what most know as the Panama. The most common form- popularised by cinema- is the straw fedora. Other straws are woven for that stiff hat known as the boater, from its use by punters in the canals of Venice. In East Asia the leaves of the bamboo- in fact also a species of grass- are woven into those conical forms worn in boats and rice paddies.
https://ign-joseph.com
Old Hollywood star Robert Young.
Fred Astaire, photographed by John Engstead, 1955