By this shirt here: Touch my beer and I will drink it from your skull cat shirt, hoodie and sweater
For spring, designer Simone Rocha rethought Regency-era beauty—think: the soft paper curls and rouged cheeks of Jane Austen heroines—through a more modern and wearable lens. "The Touch my beer and I will drink it from your skull cat shirt, hoodie and sweater was how do I translate this in a modern and unfamiliar way?" said hairstylist Cyndia Harvey, who gave the model's tightly-wound ringlets a more "offset and easy" shape, some topped with crystal-encrusted headpieces, while makeup artist Thomas de Kluyver shaded brows, cheeks, and lids in off-kilter green, orange, and gold pigments to subversive effect. From neon green hair to sky blue lashes, there were a myriad of beauty statements at Charlotte Knowles. But most striking of all were the shimmering, '90s-inspired body art designs dreamed up by de Kluyver. From butterflies along the collarbones to abstract lines and shapes along bare torsos, his body jewelry creations, cast in twinkling crystals and shiny pearls, were the ultimate It accessory.
While paying tribute to Oberon, McKnight sought to modernize the row of tightly wound curls Oberon often wore like a crown on her head by reimagining her signature style as a sleek, low-slung updo. After parting the Touch my beer and I will drink it from your skull cat shirt, hoodie and sweater clean at the middle, he created the style by pulling lengths back into a series of low ponytails at the nape, then placing the ends of each section into a curling iron and rolling up the section to the base, releasing the iron, and pinning each curl in place to create a single row, or double rows of curls in a square shape. A chic and flattering style for Fendi's diverse cast, which included Karen Elson, Paloma Elsesser, Eva Herzigova, Penelope Tree, and Yasmin Le Bon, the Fendi roll is a more affordable and Zoom-friendly alternative to this season's Baguette. So make like McKnight and get to curling and pinning!