The world cupped: The inside story of the bra
It rarely sees the light of day but the upscale bra is the most tested, sweated over and highly engineered piece of clothing of all.
It rarely sees the light of day but the upscale bra is the most tested, sweated over and highly engineered piece of clothing of all.
French fashion icon Jean-Paul Gaultier opened up a new front in the battle over bras Wednesday with “Free the nipple” slogans in his Paris haute couture show. The flamboyant designer
Royal warrants are the official mark given to suppliers to Britain’s royal family and often offer a major commercial boost for companies.
My 2017 challenge: Wear more color. Studies show that wearing color lifts your mood. How do I know this? I studied myself in the mirror while wearing every colored item in my wardrobe, and I laughed. Mission accomplished. Granted, I laughed because I looked like an idiot, but who cares? (Maybe my mom, but then she’s already invested a lot in me.)
My newfound enthusiasm for fitness has naturally seeped into my shopping habits. This was evident last Saturday when I went to yoga with a friend who saw me whip out not just a water bottle, but also a yoga towel and gripping gloves. As with any hobby, once you get into it, you’ll discover that there can be an endless amount of stuff to buy.
In a long-awaited fusion between hot-blooded hormones and cold-headed engineering, a Japanese lingerie company has produced a bra they claim will only unlock when the wearer is really in love.
A revolutionary discovery is rewriting the history of underwear: Some 600 years ago, women wore bras.
The latest in global fashion, beauty, and culture through a contemporary Filipino perspective.
COPYRIGHT © LIFESTYLE INQUIRER 2022