Technotronica (Gucci Fashion Show - After Show Milano) Free DL
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Petko Turner - Technotronica Gucci's Youngster Academy '17 - After Show Milano Wild Style Deep Disco Electro House Music 2 CDJ900, DJM2000, TR808 synced, iPhone Jingles, Zoom H1 1881: Guccio Gucci is born in Florence. 1897: He finds work in the Savoy Hotel, London. In 1921 on the via del Parione in Florence, Guccio Gucci opened a store dedicated to luxury leather goods for horseback riding. These accessories, inspired by a refined esthetic particular to the British aristocracy, became widely popular allowing Guccio Gucci to open two new boutiques in 1938, one of which was on via Condotti in Rome. Throughout the 1950s, Gucci relied on the equestrian world that initially established him as a notable designer. Drawing inspiration from horse saddle straps, the designer matched contrasting colors in his collections, establishing Gucci’s iconic green-red-green stripe, which immediately went down well with customers. With the opening of new stores in Milan in 1949, and New York City and Paris in 1963, the fashion house gained prestige and visibility in the international fashion business. When Guccio Gucci died in 1953, the designer’s sons Aldo, Ugo, Vasco, and Rodolfo followed in their father’s footsteps at the head of the company. Branded with a new logo paying homage to the company’s founder—the double G—the fashion house continued to release iconic pieces throughout the 1960’s: the bamboo bag, the hobo bag, horse bit moccasins , and the Flora scarf designed by Vittoro Accornero on Rodolfo Gucci’s personal request for Princess Grace Kelly. Quickly renowned for its timeless collections, the Gucci fashion house obtained a wide clientele of celebrities from both Cinecittà and Hollywood such as Jackie Kennedy, Elizabeth Taylor, Peter Sellers and Samuel Beckett. The 1970s were marked by the fashion house’s entry into the Far East market. Boutiques were opened in Tokyo and Hong Kong and a new line was created at the heart of the company: ready-to-wear. In 1994, Tom Ford was named as creative director. For the next ten years, he built into the company’s traditional image a provocative and bold style that immediately echoed throughout the world of fashion. Pointed heels and low-cut dresses in jersey with metal detailing instantly became the symbol of Tom Ford’s seductive and glamorous vision. After Tom Ford’s departure from the fashion house in 2004, former director of the brand’s accessory line Frida Giannini was promoted to the company’s sole creative director in 2006. The designer reinterpreted the heritage that her predecessors established creating a fusion of past and present, of history and modernity.