BRSKY is the Style.

The Couture of Michael Cinco

Michael Cinco is a formal couture and wedding gown designer whose fashion has mostly been showcased in Dubai. All the photographs featured here are from his 2007 – 2009 collections. I couldn’t locate any information about his personal life or what inspires his work, but I think it’s unique and exotic. In some ways, many of his gowns remind me of those designed by the famed Alexander McQueen.

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Lle Naa Vanima, Sarah Balliet

Sarah Balliet is the electric cellist, pianist, and elvish blond in Murder by Death, who released their fifth studio album, Good Morning Magpie, in April. I am intrigued with her style, which includes colorful dresses and hair pins, and with her musical talent, which adds an orchestral dynamic to the band.

Listen to the songs Good Morning Magpie and You Don’t Miss Twice from the new album. +Continue Reading


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Nature Looks Good on You

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Tycho a.k.a. ISO50: Featured Music, Style & Art

Scott Hansen is a California-based musician (Tycho) and artist (ISO50) who collaborates on the iso50.com blog with: Jakub Alexander, who runs the Moongadget record label; Alex Cornell, who is a student at The Academy of Art in San Fransisco; Sam Valenti IV, the founder of Ghostly Records International; and Beamer Wilkins, who runs a software firm and creates electronic music instruments.

Hansen describes his view of design as, “the search for efficiency. Efficiency in conveying a message, efficiency of form. In this way I see some of my own work falling into the category of design, while some of my other work falls under the umbrella of illustration. With the more illustrative pieces my primary goal is to create something beautiful or striking in a visceral sense. These goals remain intact when I create a purely design-driven piece, but there is the added goal of minimalism and efficiency which constrains the process and limits the content. It is these constraints that force us as designers to reveal the core of the idea we are trying to express and to seek the most direct route to it.”

We unanimously agree at Brasky that Hansen’s music, style, and design is excellent, though he makes it clear on his blog that he doesn’t want anyone to take his work too seriously.
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55 Photographs of Alice in Wonderland Inspired Costumes & Fashion Shoots

Alice in Wonderland Costumes & Fashion

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Annie Clark is a Doll

Annie Clark is a multi-instrumentalist and the lead singer of St. Vincent. I love vintage and indie-type dresses, so I am very partial to her style.

The following video below is from a beautiful live performance that took place on KCRW’s Morning Becomes Eclectic during February of this year.
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Zooey Deschanel Breaks My Heart

Zooey Deschanel is known for her role in 500 Days of Summer, and for her music project with M. Ward, She & Him… but she’s also got style.

Why do let me stay here?
All by myself.
Why don’t you come and play here?
I’m just sitting on the shelf.

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35 Steampunk & Neo-Victorian Costumes & Outfits for Women

Guys and girls alike can enjoy this collection of 35 Steampunk costumes showcased by geeky model girls.
View the Steampunk Community to find more photos like these.

Winter Steampunk Outfit

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Anna Sui’s “Urban Hippie” Fall 2010 Collection

Annui Sui is an American fashion designer whose Fall 2010 collection was recently showcased during New York Fashion Week.

She described this collection as highlighting a “witty layering of vintage prints shot with shimmering metallic thread; deco tulips, cubist flowers, woodblock peonies, chrysanthemum paisleys, floral fireworks … often in my signature combo collages.”

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A Tribute to Alexander McQueen

In lieu of posting the usual ‘weekly fashion finds’, we’d like to pay tribute to Alexander McQueen, whose designs won him the British Designer of the Year award in 1996, 1997, 2001, and 2003.

Pictured left is the ‘Oyster’ dress from the Spring 2003 collection, which is now on display in the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

From the Met’s blog: “The premise of Alexander McQueen’s spring/summer 2003 presentation was of a shipwreck at sea and a consequent landfall in the Amazon. Critics lauded McQueen for his designs because they retained the theatrical and transporting impact of the presentation but also yielded wearable and desirable fashions. The ‘Oyster’ dress, while dramatic in its sweep and red-carpet authority, benefits even further by close examination. As Women’s Wear Daily noted, ‘Fabulous though this presentation was, the clothes are better up close, revealing a mind-boggling degree of creativity and work.’ Attached to a beautifully fitted and boned corset, the voluminous skirt is comprised of hundreds of graduated layers of ivory organza. Like a mille-feuille pastry, each layer both conforms to and detaches itself from every other layer of silk. With a post-modernist’s irony and deconstructivist’s preference for worn effects, the silk is left with an unfinished, raw, cut edge. Elsewhere on the gown, silk chiffon is conscientiously pieced and applied to create a slightly matte surface to the bodice and left unfinished as it extends at the shoulders to curdle along its edges like kelp or skin after an exfoliating burn.”

The Oyster dress is only one of several stunning designs by McQueen, who recently passed away on February 11, 2010.

He is also known for his zany ensembles for music artists such as Björk and Lady Gaga.

In memoriam of McQueen, Björk wrote:

“i would like to thank you for all your inspiration
it was so important to me to get to work with you and your team
a real mashup of fertile minds
it was vital to my development
i’m grateful”

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