I hadn't heard of velvet magazine until coming across these beautiful photos from the latest issue on Fashion Gone Rogue. I love the ethereal, psychedelic tone of this shoot. It's one of the most thoughtful and stunning editorials I've seen all season, and it manages to incorporate some wildly diverse trends (gothic inspiration, architectural shapes and ultrabright colors) in one stylistically cohesive series of images.
A quick Google search revealed many velvet magazines in the world--one is for "mature, non-scene" lesbians, another is an art and culture publication based in Greece--but this particular velvet is an Italian fashion title.
I would subscribe, but I can't decipher enough of the language to do so on the magazine's homepage. Alas.
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ss suit in the window. He
ss suit in the window. He invested his savings, bought thousands of yards of fine Turkish fabrics, and recruited the best tailors from his hometown.'Nine-piece special' for $400He still remembers his first customer, a US soldier who was so pleased with his suit that he brought in a dozen friends who ordered the same. The shop also sold handbags, jewelry, and ghd straightener
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T-shirts for a nonexistent Hard Rock Cafe Baghdad, but most customers were lured by Ozkan's $400 "nine-piece special": pants, jacket, vest, two shirts, tie, belt, handkerchief, and cufflinks.Nearly two months after the fire, Ozkan's newly relocated shop is beginning to buzz again. He says he's so in debt that he can't even go home this summer to visit his wife and three children. Still, old customers are making their way back to the Turkish Sew Shop, albeit