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Pucci Prints


    Pucci clothes always remind me of summer. During the 60s and 70s-the designs were brightly-colored, effortless, comfy, and audaciously patterned. Pucci experimented with many different materials suited for his trademark sportswear. Typically, he used nylon because it was easy to maintain and resistant-and helanca which could be stretched to up to five times without losing its shape (there were also many pieces made of jersey). Pucci was inspired by Hippie style for cotton djellabas-the Arab influenced pyjama trousers.
    Using geometric prints, Pucci drew his color palette from natural and exotic landscapes of the Cote d’Azur and Mediterranean islands. The designs were meant to evoke a youthful and practical style that could be worn all day.
    George Barris
    Gian Paolo Barbieri
    Bert Stern
    Barbieri
    Lumachi
    Horst
    Franco Rubartelli
    Steven Meisel
    Alessandro Mossotti
    Rubartelli
    Pucci's Palazzo
    Irving Penn
    Horst
    Sandro Morricone
    Rubartelli
    Barbieri
    Pucci and his daughter
    Vogue 1964
    Mossotti
    Sathoshi
    Acapulco 1966
    1966
    Barbieri
    Henry Clarke
    (Assouline, Conde Nast Publications, Inc., Emilio Pucci Archives)

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