The most fun, newest, and most interesting blogs from PLEIN PUBLIQUE.
Last year I was at the annual summit (fancy word for "Top") of THE NEXT WOMEN for the first time; a meeting organized by & for female entrepreneurs and enterprising women. At the time, I wrote the column "Entrepreneurial Girls" - a piece to which I received many nice & cool reactions. Enough reason for team PLEIN PUBLIQUE to visit this year's edition too. To network a bit, to participate in the "us knows us" game and also just to catch up (yes, we will remain women and we will not deny that).
Team PLEIN PUBLIQUE went on an excursion (How cute ... excursion ...) to the Kunsthal in Rotterdam for a lecture and exhibition about none other than Peter Lindbergh *. "Peter Who?" You think. Maybe that is not a name that you recognize immediately, but you definitely know his work. Peter Lindbergh is the fashion photographer who is partly responsible for the creation of the concept of Supermodel. Supermodels like in Linda Evangelista, Naomi Campbell, Christy Turlington and so on. Yep!
Het Bretonse shirt is nu terug als sweatshirt en je treedt hiermee in de voetsporen van James Dean en Kurt Cobain.
De geschiedens van de Bretonse streep is al zo mooi, maar na niemand minder dan Coco Chanel is de opmars van de Bretonse streep een feit;
Blood, sweat and NO tears! I personally recorded this melodious and ass-kicking slogan from the mouth of none other than Neelie Kroes. Neelie flattened the room with this statement. But is it true? Read on to find out.
The history of the turtleneck. The turtleneck is a phenomenon that PLEIN PUBLIQUE is very familiar with. Very on-trend, lovely to wear and armed with a more than interesting history. Did you know, for example, that the turtleneck was already worn by knights in the early Middle Ages? Namely to protect their delicate necks against the chafing of the chain mail.