A collection with a casual soul but a versatile attitude: inspired by the Seventies, it has a timeless vintage appeal, suited to any occasion or look. Inspired by the world of tailoring, echoed by the stitched pleat on the front, these alexandersmcqueenssale.com joggers in black technical jersey feature a tapered leg. "Miss Saucy," and the other half that makes up the "Shalamber" moniker.) Another "Ooooh!" escapes her lips when she comes across a photo of herself on the runway at Jil Sander's fall 1993 show. This zipped, regular-fit sweatshirt in dark blue technical jersey features a white grosgrain strip on the sleeves with blue stars. Black smooth calf leather Alexander McQueen Sale lace-up sneaker with a white McQueen Graffiti print. The sneaker features large flat laces and an oversized rubber sole. At Golden, we love taking our classics and reworking them all the time, always from a new angle. The youngest child and sole daughter in the Roy family, played by Sarah Snook, has become the sartorial centrepiece of the HBO drama, which doubles as a case study of the ultra-rich. A unique, timeless collection that encompasses the essence of Golden Goose, designed to remain with you every day and accompany your highs and lows, come rain or shine. White and black leather lace-up sneaker featuring an exploded pixelated print inspired by the McQueen Graffiti motif, and an oversized transparent rubber sole. Finished with an signature on tongue and heel counter. The sneaker comes with two sets of black shoelaces. The revelers wore painter's-tape blue iridescent "road gowns" paired with beaded, baby blue bikini bottoms and tropical-print head wraps. The Wish frontline wore four-foot-tall green bamboo-like poles that jutted into the air and were draped with coordinating printed fabric; they looked like sarongs blowing in the wind. The men wore a black netted jacket with blue sequin fringe with mesh joggers. She made A-line pinafores and popped turtlenecks under them, and came up with jazzy jersey colors in minimal shapes that jived with pop art. "The shop was constantly stripped bare," she wrote. "You will find duchesses jostling with typists for the same dress." They were clothes made for the flat-chested, narrow body-types of young people-a total revolt against the hourglass femininity that had dominated popular fashion since Dior's New Look of 1947.