2016年11月16日星期三

THE BEST OF: A NIGHT OF WIGS AND WISHES

With candles lit and tearful faces, A Night of Wigs and Wishes remembered those who lost their lives over the last year to cancer. The October 23 event, held at Lucien’s Manor in Berlin Township, raised thousands of dollars to help grant wishes to cancer-stricken children and provide wigs to women going through chemotherapy. This year marked the 4th Annual Night of Wigs and Wishes event.

          Paula Abdul (center)

The evening, powered by the Friends Are By Your Side (FABYS) charity, kicked off with a cocktail hour and auction. While guests enjoyed table after table of appetizers and cocktails from the many different bars, donations poured in from the sales of raffle tickets and champagne glasses. As dinner kicked off in the main ballroom, guests were treated to a private concert by Paula Abdul, as well as video tributes to those who were lost this year during battles with cancer.

From the throw down alone, over $9,000 was raised. Though the final tally of donations, auctions and ticket sales is still yet to be determined, Cartier deemed the night a success. However, the success of the event is not solely determined by the money raised; As Cartier granted a wish for a little girl to visit Walt Disney World, she threw her arms around his neck and exclaimed, “I love you, Martino!”

Now that the event is over, it’s time for the planning crew to take a small break. But big plans are being worked on for the fifth annual event, coming October 2017.

2016年10月31日星期一

See Kelly Clarkson Cover 'Chandelier' in Sia Wig for Halloween

Kelly Clarkson donned a replica of Sia's signature, eye-shrouding wig and belted a pre-Halloween cover of "Chandelier" during a Facebook live session. Standing in front of a flowered wall in her Nashville home, the singer performed an a capella version of the 2014 hit, nailing every ghostly high note and melismatic swoop.
           

"I don't know how she does this 'cause, ya know, you can't see,” Clarkson joked afterward of Sia's hair. "But it's also kind of awesome, because you're in your own little world when you're performing … I love that song. Everybody loves that song."
After the performance, Clarkson promoted her second annual all-star Miracle on Broadway Christmas benefit show, set for December 16th at downtown Nashville's Bridgestone Arena. The event, which benefits four local charities, also features Reba, Ronnie Dunn, Kelsea Ballerini, RaeLynn, the Steeldrivers and Chip Esten.
Clarkson is currently prepping her eighth album, due out in 2017. The LP, which taps R&B and soul influences, will follow 2015's Piece By Piece, which drew heavily on contemporary electro-pop and EDM sounds.

2016年10月18日星期二

Live Rich on a Dime with These Extravagant Paper Wigs

Saint Petersburg artist Asya Kozina makes paper wigs that pin together extravagance and simplicity. Crafted of nothing but paper and cardboard, they reimagine Baroque-era decadence in monochrome. Several years ago, after exhibiting miniature paper sculptures and noticing that viewers constantly wished to touch them—as though to confirm they were indeed made of paper—Kozina decided to make something people could pick up, handle, and wear. After completing and exhibiting a first set of wigs and dresses in 2012, she has continued to push herself and explore new motifs, from Mongolian wedding fashions to the Baroque wonders you see here.
           

After working on fairly traditional remakes of the over-the-top wigs worn during the Baroque period, the Russian artist decided to integrate present-day symbols into her intricate creations. Just as an 18th-century stylist might have opted to accessorize hairpieces with birds, feathers, or an entire ship model, Kozina balances planes and contemporary architecture atop her models’ heads.

Kozina works entirely by hand, from concept to execution. After studying historical materials, she draws a detailed sketch. Her husband Dmitriy then sculpts the underlying structure out of tough cardboard, while she prepares the strips that will give the wig its outer texture. “Then we add the larger elements, like curls," explains the artist, "and make changes as we go along, adding or subtracting decorative elements like flowers, feathers, and leaves."

2016年2月18日星期四

Trio sought in Unity wig store theft

It was an odd scene Saturday afternoon at a Unity wig boutique that caters to cancer patients.

A woman, speaking rapidly and flailing her arms, came in with two men to try on wigs, said Wigs ‘N More owner Kathleen Hendrickson. She claimed to have brain cancer, Hendrickson said.

But it became apparent that the trio weren't at the boutique along Route 981 to make a purchase. Finally, after the woman ran her fingers through the hair of a long, blonde wig and admired her reflection in a mirror, the three took off with the $400 wig concealed under the woman's coat, state police said.
Kathleen Hendrickson, owner of Wigs n' More, Inc. & Mastectomy Boutique, fixes a display wig on Feb. 17, 2016. Hendrickson has been in business for 28 years.

The store specializes in helping female cancer patients with wigs and mastectomy items. Financing programs are available to help patients purchase wigs, but Hendrickson said she didn't get a chance to tell the suspect about them because of how she was acting.

But that didn't discourage her or her employees at the store that afternoon from trying to help.

“You're going to treat them like they're sick, and you're going to treat them kindly,” she said.

Police said the two men attempted to distract the employees while the woman tried on numerous wigs. Investigators have surveillance video of the suspects milling about the boutique and the woman trying on the blonde wig that police said she took.

All three suspects are white. The woman had short blonde hair — about 4 inches long — with dark roots, Hendrickson said.

One man wore a black zip-up hooded sweatshirt with a black and yellow ball cap. He had a neck tattoo and a braided goatee. The other man wore a light blue hooded sweatshirt and had a short beard.

2016年1月21日星期四

Patricia Field Hangs Up Her Retail Wig

“Do you mind if I have a cigarette?” Patricia Field asked, though the deep gravel of her voice indicated that the question was rhetorical. She was sitting in the basement office of her eponymous boutique at 306 Bowery, wearing a black tank-top, dark capri pants and heavy blue mascara that complemented her trademark vermilion hair: a punk knockout at 73.


Three days earlier, the “Sex and the City” costumer had made a startling announcement: She will close her store early next year, a half-century after opening her first shop. No more bedazzled hoodies. No more rhinestone bustiers.

Her decision, she said, was a matter of personal privilege, though some would call it cultural hara-kiri. Thanks to “Sex and the City,” Ms. Field has been in high demand for television and film projects, among them “Ugly Betty,” “The Devil Wears Prada” and, most recently, the TV Land series “Younger,” for which she is a consultant.

All that has taken her away from her retail operation, which she said has suffered from her absences with unpaid bills and depleted inventories. “I’m simply no longer interested in devoting the time necessary to operating this place,” she said. “I wish I could, because I love it. But it’s either me or the store.”