Welcome, fashion enthusiasts, to the dark and dazzling side of haute couture! Brace yourselves for a titillating countdown of the top 10 dresses that defy logic, defy gravity, and quite possibly defy the laws of attraction.
Get ready to question your taste and chuckle your way through fashion’s hall of fame.
These costumes demonstrate that creativity can strike everywhere, even the kitchen and the woodshop. Here are a handful of the round-up’s highlights:
1. Beijing-Suitdress by Li Xiaofeng
The dress has been entirely made of Ming and Qing Dynasty blue and white porcelain. A silver thread is used for sewing the parts together.
2. The Bubelle Dress by Philips
The Bubelle Dress is designed by Philips and works by monitoring physical changes associated with different emotions, such as stress, arousal, or fear, which affect the body’s temperature and sweat levels and generate the light that changes the pattern and color of the dress.
3. The Video Dress by Hussein Chalayan
Hussein Chalayan created dresses with an interlining of 15,000 LED lights that display videos, such as a time-lapse of a rose opening and closing. The dresses made their debut at the Milan Design Fair.
4. The Tax Form Dress by Britt Savage
While most tax protestors this year were holding “tea parties,” Britt Savage opted to express herself in a unique way. She chopped up her tax forms, braided them together, and produced a wearable piece of art. The project began as a dress to wear on stage with her band and lasted approximately a month.
5. The Phonebook Dress by Jolis Paons
Jolis Paons created this apparel using phonebook paper for the Creative Process. Jolis doesn’t know how to sew, but she loves fashion and crafts her masterpieces in an unconventional manner.
6. The Birdcage Dress by Kasey McMahon
Kasey McMahon made this garment out of wire and other unusual materials.
7. Natural and Floria dress by Nicole Dextras
Camellia, Lilac, Yucca, and Laurel were used to make this garment. Flower pots, Kale, thorns, and hemp thread were used to make this outfit.
8. Toilet Paper Dress
Anyone who has attended a bridal shower has almost certainly constructed at least one wedding gown or veil out of toilet paper. It’s a fairly tough material to deal with, but when done right, the results can be stunning!
9. Cream Puff Dress
Valentyn Shtefano made his wife’s wedding dress out of cream puffs and caramelized sugar, taking over 2 months to make and using 1,500 puffs. The dress weighed only 20 pounds. Millions of women love cream puffs, but few would want to be a croquembouche.
10. Chocolate dress
Paco Rabanne, a well-known Spanish designer, created this chocolate masterpiece.
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