Let’s face it. Fashion blogs are everywhere. We look to experts to find advice on what’s in, what’s out, and how we should feel about fashion. Surprisingly though, as much as we see blogs about tops and dresses and the one accessory you “must have” - we don’t see many about denim, the one thing we’ve been wearing since the beginning of time.
Fashion writers Jane Herman Bishop and Florence Kane of Vogue have created an editorial fashion site geared specifically towards denim trends. It’s called “Jean Stories,” and it features everything from beauty blogger denim advice to stories from it’s very own followers.
Bishop and Kane sat down with Vanity Fair to spill their guts about their favorite denim trends right now. One of the denim lines we carry at jb and me was featured in this particular piece - the Citizens of Humanity Corey Crop! The Corey Crop is adored for its boyfriend-like style that isn’t a high or low rise, but rather a flattering middle.
If you’re like us and prefer your jeans a little higher than you wore them in high school, but don’t quite want to hide your belly button, then stop in jb and me and we will show you styles like the Corey Crop, that will flatter your specific shape and style.
For more on Bishop and Kane’s denim blog, Jeans Stories, click HERE.
To read the article featured in Vanity Fair, click HERE.
What movie was that from? I’ve GOT to watch it! Your post reminds me of somnihteg I’ve been thinking about. Death and resurrection. Christians believe that everyone person that’s ever lived will be resurrected and face judgement. I was watching a show on the Discover or the Science channel about death and burial customs in various cultures throughout history. Wow.If one considers all of the various ways that various cultures have disposed of their dead over the centuries, the idea of a mass resurrection becomes, well, hard to believe. Some cultures bury, some cremate, some mummify, some send off into the water (where presumably the body is eaten), some feed their dead to animals, some burn them to various deities, etc, etc. So, with all of these customs, especially the burnings and feeding to animals, what is going to be resurrected? Pooh? Really. Think about it. A resurrection is easy to believe if you live in a culture that just buries their dead, but once you look a little outside your culture, it becomes a little harder to accept.Scott
By Ana on December 23, 2015