Friday, September 30, 2011

Friday Frocks | Vera Wang Mobile Showcase


Guess what ladies...this weekend only, White by Vera Wang will be going mobile!! This exclusive showcase will be on move in Manhattan districts and neighborhoods from midtown to downtown, including Times Square, Bryant Park, Union Square, Rockefeller Center and Columbus Circle. Hurry out now and see the gorgeous bridal and bridesmaid dresses from the Fall 2011 collection!

Once you spot the truck, be sure to tweet a picture to @davidsbridal with #WVWinyourcity for a chance to win a $200 gift certificate to David's Bridal. Two gift certificates will be given away each day!

Enjoy!!

Friday Frocks | All Things Glitter & Glitz | Wedding Dresses

Happy Friday!! I wanted to share with all of you the Elie Saab collection of amazingly gorgeous glitter & glitz wedding dresses! The nude and blush pink hues pair perfectly with all the sparkles. Aren't they stunning?!

xo

Moschino s/s 2012 details


Click below to  discover the show in detail then watch the full runway




Jackets are the things I liked more at Moschino show. They are so bold and heavily decorated and the hippy leather jacket is so funny! It can be a good idea to give a personal touch to our leather jacket cutting from another fabric simple shapes and then sewing them onto the jacket!


Moschino's accessories: funny hats and big head decorations, a lot of trimming details for bag, look how small is the snakeskin bag compared to the model hand! 
Enjoy the full show below


Thursday, September 29, 2011

Milano fashion week: my report:



Today I'm here to tell you I went close to the source of style and fashion, where all the trends come to life: this year I had the incredible opportunity to take part to the extraordinary and glamourous Milano fashion week. I had the chance to attend some of the hottest shows and to snap a few pictures of streetstyle fashion. You can imagine how exciting it was: I had a big smile on my face all the time. Below you'll find some of the pics I took and during the next few days I'll review in detail the shows.
Moschino

Spain is the inspiration, women becomes toreadores with heavy embellished jackets, sensual mujeres with flowers headbands and cowgirls covered with fringes. The hippy, painted leather jacket is a tribute to the playful creativity of Franco Moschino.

 
The photographers in front of the runway ready to snap the model looks
Here the competion for a good spot is fierce and when the show is about to start they all scream: "get out of the way!" to everyone in their trajectory and "brava!" to the models that esitate a little before turning around allowing them to snap a good picture.

Antonio Marras

still color block but in matching tones

see through: another keyword of the next spring summer

aren't these furry pointy shoes cute? I think they're more wearable compared to those by Alexander Wang fall 2012 
a poccible diy: a small piece of fur could be glued onto a clip to create an on/off fluffy embellishment for shoes

Etro

A view of Etro show scenery, a white space interrupted by colored pillows in a variety of different patterns!
Veronica Etro inspiration were the twenties and their flapper dresses but there's nothing retro on the runway, the clean lines of the roaring years are taken to the present and made alive by a countless number of beautiful patterns: colored,beaded and black and white. All the dresses become tridimentional with fringes that move as the models step forward.

The Saddest State of Affairs

OK, I'm going to be way out on an island, all by myself, with this opinion. I'm going to be far more alone than any of my opinions on Vladimir Guerrero.

I am not happy that the Orioles knocked the Red Sox from the playoffs last night.

Hear me out...

Firstly, last night was an incredible night of baseball. Putting on my MLB fan and amateur baseball analyst hats, it was amazing to behold. But as an Oriole fan, I couldn't get caught up in the big game atmosphere.

What was in it for the Orioles exactly? They were essentially deciding which of our AL East rivals made the playoffs. And we all got excited about that? Again, as a baseball fan, amazing stuff. As an Oriole fan...what do we take away from that? It's like sitting on the floor and begging for the scraps of Boston and Tampa's big game moment. This was not a big game for the Orioles. The difference between 68 and 69 wins is absolutely nothing. We were just living vicariously through good teams. And I couldn't help but being a little depressed by that state of affairs.

This is all we got out of it: Boston fans are obnoxious and we got to send them home with their tails between their legs. A short term thrill, I'm sure. "Yeah, Boston! This is our house! We ended your season! We get the last word for a change!" Awesome.

But even if you cared one way or another how the Rays/Sox playoff race turned out, I would make the argument that Oriole fans should have preferred Boston in the playoffs.

The knee-jerk reaction to the Red Sox collapse is that this will be a devastating blow to the organization. A death blow. A failure that will result in a changing of the guard and a decline of the team into mediocrity. I would love for that to be the case but that's probably not going to happen.

Boston fans are not clamoring for the heads of Terry Francona and Theo Epstein. Nor is the Boston press. While acknowledging that this collapse was really, really horrible, measured responses are being seen in most corners. No one in the Red Sox management seems to be in danger of being forced out.

Josh Beckett, Carl Crawford, Kevin Youkilis, Adrian Gonzalez, John Lester, Dustin Pedroia, Clay Bucholz and Jacoby Ellsbury are all coming back. They have prospects popping up all over the end of year Top 20 lists over at Baseball America. This is not the end of the Boston Red Sox. Win or lose, they will fill some holes, resign some guys, heal their injured and be right back among the favorites to take the division in 2012.

Tampa is a formidable organization but they have an Achilles Heel...they have no fans.

Even as dreadful as the Orioles have been, they have outdrawn the Rays 3 of the last 4 years. If the Rays start going to the playoffs on a regular basis...could the fan base start to gel? If you think battling the Yankees and Red Sox is tough, imagine the Rays with a decent source of cash flow. One of the best farm systems in baseball coupled with the cash to keep some of it? Scary.

If we had done this to the Yanks, I could see it being a bigger blow. With the new ownership, heads may have rolled in the Bronx. And they are an aging team with a fair, but not great, farm system. The Sox aren't going anywhere, not yet. The Orioles have enough hurdles to surmount without the Rays being perennial contenders too.

So I don't see the Rays as a fell good story. They aren't cute and cuddly to me. They are a threat. A sleeping giant. They are like Gremlins before they get wet. And I want to crush them like a bug before they become dangerous.

Perhaps I'm wrong about all this. Maybe this will hurt the Sox more than I realize. Maybe the Rays will always have cash flow challenges, no matter how much they win.

But I don't want to look back years from now and realize this game was the turning point that opened the door to a decade long Tampa Bay baseball dynasty. So I hope the Ranger sweep them, in humiliating fashion, right back to the Gulf Coast where they belong.

The Outrage of Racially Priced Cupcakes


More on that disgusting, evil, mean, and hurtful bake sale at Cal Berkeley. Look, it caused all of those poor students to faint from a mass attack of the diversity vapors. Those left standing, (see the ones with the signs?) had to be taken to the hospital to have their outrage levels checked.

From Heather McDonald:
And like all such previous bake sales, it triggered a storm of ludicrously clueless outrage....

Gibor Basri, Berkeley’s vice chancellor for equity and diversity, could have served a valuable role here by pointing out that the bake sale was obviously a parody of racial and gender preferences, not a criticism of students themselves. Whatever one thinks about the issue of preferences, he might have said, such political theater belongs to Berkeley’s once-revered tradition of free speech. Instead, Basri chose to stoke the melodramatic self-pity of today’s college students. “A lot of students, especially students of color, read [the bake sale] as placing a higher value on white students,” Basri told the New York Times. Basri, in other words, obeyed the ironclad script for all such minor perturbations in the otherwise unbroken reign of campus political correctness. That script requires that the massive campus-diversity bureaucracy treat the delusional claims of hyperventilating students with utter seriousness. Students in the ever-expanding roster of official campus victim groups flatter themselves that by attending what is in fact the most caring, protective, and opportunity-rich institution in the history of the world, they are braving unspeakable threats to their ego and even to their physical safety.
Well, what do you expect from a guy named Gibor?

My favorite character from the piece is the female student who was outraged because "queers" were left off the Young Republicans satirical pricing scheme. How dare they. Here she is making her case...



I mean, really...

Boeing Bonging?

The feds raid Boeing Helicopter looking for drug dealers, arrest 35 suspects. The plant is unionized so isn't this an unfair labor practice? The NLRB needs to look into this.

All Things Glitter & Glitz | Wedding Cakes

Hi all! I just had to share these absolutely gorgeous wedding cakes for our glitter inspiration week! What do you think? Not only are they super shimmery and sparkly, but they also look very elegant and chic.  I bet they are delicious as well! I love all the cakes, but especially the ones with the crystal embellishments. How pretty! Which is your favorite?
Details:
Enjoy!

Raising Cain

Dan Henninger suggest giving Herman Cain a serious look for president.
When Mr. Cain talked to the Journal's editors, the most startling thing he said, and which he's been repeating lately, was that he could win one-third of the black vote. Seeing Herman Cain make his case to black audiences would be interesting, period. Years ago, describing his chauffeur father's influence on him in Atlanta, Mr. Cain said: "My father gave me a sense of pride. He was the best damn chauffeur. He knew it, and everybody else knew it." Here's guessing he'd get more of this vote than past GOP candidates.
I always thought the first black president would be a conservative. I was wrong. Maybe the second black president will be. I'd be proud to vote for him and so would millions of other white people after listening to his prescription for getting the country back on the right track.

And you've got love this:
In 1986, Pillsbury sent the 41-year-old Mr. Cain to turn around their Godfather's Pizza business, headquartered in Omaha. The Herman Cain who arrived there April 1 sounded like the same man who roused voters last Sunday in Florida: "I'm Herman Cain and this ain't no April Fool's joke. We are not dead. Our objective is to prove to Pillsbury and everyone else that we will survive."
If come next April, Mr. Cain is still in the hunt for the GOP nomination, it won't be no joke. If he can school Bill Clinton during his effort to sell his wife's failed healthcare bill (as he does below), just imagine what he'd do to Obama.

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Strange Justice

Robert Strange, the Southeast Delco school janitor who was falsely accused of aggravated assault on an 11-year-old, is getting on with his life.

My print column is up.

Here he is in unhappier times...


From the column:
He got unemployment and a job counselor. He went on CareerLink, worked on his resume and sent it out to dozens of places. Wal-Mart was the first (and only) responder. He starts back to work in two or three weeks.

“It’s been tight, but we’ve always been frugal,” he said. “No car loans, no credit card bills. We keep it simple.”

He thanks his mother for raising him like that.

“We grew up hard. I was raised on ‘nothing’s ever promised.’ If I can’t pay cash right then and there, I leave it there until I can afford it.”
What debt-ridden America could learn from Robert Strange is a lot.

All Things Glitter & Glitz | Shopping Guide

In continuation of glitter wedding inspiration, we are bringing you a shopping guide to help recreate the look! Shop Lela's Style and find inspiration for bridesmaid dresses, wedding jewelry, wedding accessories and even luxury wedding invitations by Lela New York! I love the crystal bangles, and the glittery bonbons are such a cute wedding favor! What do you think? Are you loving this sparkly wedding trend?


Details:
1. Emici Bridal
2. Rachel Gilbert
3. Tejani
4. Confetti
5. Exclusively Weddings
6. BHLDN
7. Exclusively Weddings
8. St. Erasmus
9. Nilah
10. Nuage Designs
11. Bedazzle My Bonbons
12. Lela New York
13. Sephora
14. Bobbi Brown 
15. Bedazzle My Bonbons
xo

Discrimination for Me but Not for Thee

At Berkeley, College Republicans satirize affirmative action and demonstrate the perniciousness of racial double standards with a bake sale charging different prices based on ethnicity and gender. It's an oldie but a goodie.

The response from campus liberals, progressives, and left-wing radicals was, shall we say, predictable. They were outraged. Or pretended to be. Chants against racism and sexism came forth. So did anonymous and empty threats of violence. The local media showed up to cover the event and got plenty of footage.

All and all a great success on the part of young Republicans to get their message out.

And yet, the New York Times runs this headline: "A 'Diversity Bake Sale' Backfires on Campus" It didn't "backfire" at all. The event may have offended some people but that was the point. It got the other side to reveal the stupidity and racialism of their own position.

Here's some video of the event.

Why Conoco and Sunoco Couldn't Make a Go of It

Energy analyst John Kemp explains why Sunoco and Conoco have had such a hard time turning profit at their Philadelphia, Marcus Hook and Trainer refineries. It has to do with the old plants' inability to handle any product other than expensive "sweet, light" crude.

Because of the expense of buying it, profit margins are much thinner. In the midwest and elsewhere, plants can handle heavier crude that requires more refining. Plus the oil they get, from Canada and elsewhere is less easy and more expensive to export.

Writes Kemp:
The best way to understand why Marcus Hook and Philadelphia are such terrible assets to own is to look at a snapshot of the crudes they were processing in June (the latest month for which detailed data is available) compared with other refiners across the country.

In June, the United States imported 285.9 million barrels of crude oil. The weighted average sulphur content was 1.71 percent while the average API gravity was 28.34 degrees, according to company-level data published by the Energy Information Administration, the statistical arm of the U.S. Department of Energy.
Given the scarcity of high quality crudes with low sulphur content and high yield of premium products, as a result of the war in Libya and North Sea maintenance, most refiners focused on acquiring the cheapest and sourest oils their refineries could handle to maximise margins.

But struggling Sunoco imported 4.95 million barrels for Marcus Hook with an average sulphur content of just 0.17 percent and API of 36.8 degrees, much sweeter and lighter crude than other refiners. It also brought in 8.96 million barrels for Philadelphia with an average sulphur content of 0.18 percent and an API of 33.42.
Unable to reduce the sulphur content or crack heavier molecules more aggressively to wring more valuable light products from its crude, Sunoco's buyers were forced to chase some of the most expensive crudes in the market.
There are other reasons but those seem to be the most salient.

Interestingly, Joel Kotkin writes in Forbes that when it comes to where America's best jobs will be coming from in the future, they're in oil, gas and coal. When it comes to job growth over the last five years...
... the biggest growth by far has taken place in the mining, oil and natural gas industries, where jobs expanded by 60%, creating a total of 500,000 new jobs. While that number is not as large as those generated by health care or education, the quality of these jobs are far higher. The average job in conventional energy pays about $100,000 annually — about $20,000 more than finance or professional services pay. The wages are more than twice as high as those in either health or education.

Nor is this expansion showing signs of slowing down. Contrary to expectations pushed by “peak oil” enthusiasts, overall U.S. oil production has grown by 10% since 2008; the import share of U.S. oil consumption has dropped to 47% from 60% in 2005.  Over the next year, according to one recent industry-funded study, oil and gas could create an additional 1.5 million new jobs.
So how ironic is it that one of America's greatest growth industries is failing in our own back yard? Very. But it helps to know why.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

The Cain Scrutiny

GOP Presidential Candidate Herman Cain wins the Florida straw poll. Dorothy Rabinowitz quotes my friend (and hers) Wallingford's Alan Kors and his amusing observation:
"So, the 'Tea Party racists' in a Republican straw poll chose the self-made black Herman Cain -- mathematician and successful businessman -- son of a cleaning woman and a janitor, as their choice of nominee for the presidency of the United States. Well! What a bigoted group, what a caste society!"
Heh.

Rabinowitz credits Cain's "unfailing capacity to speak as though from a core of fire deep inside him. An irresistible strength -- as is the mordant humor he brings to the battle."

Maybe its time to take off our bedroom slippers and put on our marching shoes for Mr. Cain?

There Goes ConocoPhillips

The oil company has announced it will be shutting down its Trainer refining facility and looking for a buyer.

According to Bloomberg:
Conoco said it will also sell pipelines and terminals associated with the Trainer refinery. The company cited weak demand, pressure from imports and the cost of meeting regulatory requirements for its decision to immediately idle the refinery.

“Demand is going down, there is tremendous underutilization and excess capacity inside and outside the United States,” Chirichella said. “There won’t be a gasoline shortage but I would expect more stuff from Europe, from the Caribbean, the Midwest and the Gulf Coast.”
Ugh. This isn't good. It means fewer jobs for local workers and, in the long run, higher gasoline prices for the rest of us.

Tuesday Shoe Day | All Things Glitter & Glitz | Wedding Shoes


I am absolutely loving this glitter wedding trend...especially found in wedding shoes!! What do you think? Aren't they are all so pretty? I love the glittery gold bow on the Kate Spade pumps and the Valentino pumps are so classic and chic. And what about the Judith Leiber clutches...aren't they gorgeous?!Glitter & Glitz

Details:
xo

Why Do You Think They Call it UPPER Chi?

The Upper Chi board of commissioners thought it would be helpful to survey local residents about what they think about their own and surrounding communities.

It seems Lower Chi took it on the chin.

Also known as Gaspariville, Lower Chi was described by its neighbors as having “too much crime and drugs, congested, dirty, too urban, unkempt, noisy, a lot of poverty and Section 8 housing, economically depressed, dirty oil refineries nearby, poor housing, a lot of people on welfare, and as a ghetto.”

So last night, Upper Chi political leaders went down to a public meeting in Lower Chi and abjectly apologized for their residents' opinions.

Rocco Gaspari gracefully accepted the "We're Sorry" on behalf of his community.
“There was a mistake made and this is a lesson that everyone needs to learn,” Gaspari said. “It was a human error and that’s what we were taught, that when we make a mistake we have to own up to it. We know there were some things out of your control. Linwood, Marcus Hook, Trainer and Boothwyn should never have wedges put in between them. You being here tonight puts this thing to rest. I accept your apology and this is the end of it.”
As for bringing an end to the crime, drugs, and welfare, etc., they're working on it.

Obamacrats Woke the Bear

Jonah Goldberg sez:
In March 2010, liberal columnist Peter Beinart argued that, for decades, Democratic politicians treated America's innate conservatism like a slumbering bear: If you make no sudden moves and talk quietly, you can get a lot done. But if you wake the bear, as Democrats did in the late 1960s and early '70s, the ursine silent majority will punish you.

But Obama promised to change that. He was tired of the timid, almost apologetic talk. He was going to be an FDR, or at least a Reagan for liberalism. He was going to "fundamentally transform" the country. And to those who counseled that Democrats can't govern that way, Obama and his followers responded with shouts of "Yes, we can!"

You might think it was those shouts that woke the bear, but that's not what happened. After all, Obama enjoyed stunning popularity when he entered the Oval Office.

No, it wasn't words but deeds that roused the beast. The poorly crafted, deeply partisan stimulus was like a sharp stick to the bear's belly. But it was "Obamacare" that ended the hibernation.
Read it all.

I Am Scarnatus!

Republican State Senator Joe Scarnati remains an obstacle to privatizing the LCB. He wants action on his own political priorities before he'll join his fellow Republicans on a liquor deal.

In fairness, trading a higher tax on gas drillers for liquor reform wouldn't be a bad deal for Pennsylvanians, if that's what it takes.

Joe Goes Rogue in "The Rogue"

Joe "Fatal Vision" McGinniss inadvertently trashes his own book on Sarah Palin before it is released.

Begging for help from a well-known Palin-hater, McGinniss writes:
Jesse, if you can put me in touch with people who are willing and able to substantiate any of the above, now is the time to do so. Otherwise, I hope you won’t complain that there are no startling new revelations in my book. My publisher and I think it’s damning enough without airing the family’s dirty laundry, but because Sarah’s hypocrisy about her family is one of the things that galls me most, I’d like to be able to publish facts in regard to a) through f) above, but I emphasize facts. Not malicious speculation or third-hand rumors relayed by those who hold a grudge.

For any or all of those who’ve told you they’ll speak out, but not yet, now is the time. My book represents the last best chance to put the truth about Sarah in front of the American people in a documented, verifiable way. But I need facts that I can rely on. I didn’t live this long and work this hard over so many decades to wind up as AlaskaWTF between hard covers.
In the end, according to the reviews, McGinniss never did get the facts and went with the malicious speculation and third-hand rumors.

He must have needed the money awfully bad to have sacrificed what little reputation he had left as a writer. Sad, really.

UPDATE: Palins threaten legal action.

DIY idea: open back blazer

 via Vogue

A boring blazer,a pair of scissors and lots of beads are the ingredients to copy this look from Berlin: a city that always inspires for clean and young designs.

Un blazer di cui vi siete stancate, un paio di forbici e molte perline sono gli ingredienti per replicare questo look che arriva direttamente da Berlino:una città che ispira per il design dalle linee semplici e giovani.

Monday, September 26, 2011

All Things Glitter & Glitz | Wedding Inspiration

This week we are sharing all things glitter and glitz wedding inspiration including dresses, shoes, cakes, invitations and much more! This is such a beautiful wedding trend, who doesn't love all things that sparkle? I love the sequined dress, and the glittery "Mrs." chair decoration is such a cute idea! I also LOVE the chair covers from Nuage Designs, aren't they stunning?! What do you think?



Details:
Glitter Makeup via Greige Design
Glitter Dress via Skim Milk
Glitter Candles via The Glitter Guide
Bridal Portrait via Shannon Nicole Smith via Emmaline Bride
Chair Decoration via Rowell Photography
Glitter Dresses via Ruffles & Sequins
Wedding Cake via Cake Art Studio
Table Setting & Chairs via Nuage Designs
Dessert Table via Bedazzle My Bonbons

xo

Media Bias on Parade, Then Quantified and Analyzed

At Opinion Journal's Notable Quotable: Dilbert creator Scott Adams writing at dilbert.com, Aug. 30:
Is it my imagination, or has the liberal wing of the media's attacks on conservatives turned into a bunch of cheap gotchas involving nitpicked analogies and quotes taken out of context? Perhaps it has always been this way and I never noticed until this year. Or maybe I'm spending too much time reading The Huffington Post. Maybe you can help me sort this out.

Before I continue, I should note that my own views don't map closely to either the liberal or conservative camps. So I don't have a poodle in the fight. I'm just observing a trend.

Consider Rick Perry. He called Social Security a "Ponzi scheme." As analogies go, that's a good one. I believe I have used it myself. It's a colorful way of saying the math doesn't work well when the population of retired people greatly increases and the number of workers funding Social Security does not. Literally no one on Earth disagrees with the central point of Perry's analogy. But I keep seeing Perry's Ponzi scheme quote reported as if it were some sort of idiot misunderstanding or conspiracy theory or foreshadowing of evil. . . .

Consider Mitt Romney's quote in the context of taxes that corporations are people too. That quote was reported as if Romney is so out of touch with ordinary humans that he doesn't know the difference between an artificial legal structure and a living person. Only a robot could say such a thing! But of course his point is one that 100% of real humans agree with: Corporate profits flow into the pockets of employees and shareholders. I remember a time when a gaffe meant you were wrong. But apparently being 100% right isn't a defense if you're also a conservative.
Pretty good. But it's hard to believe that as keen an observer as Adams is, has never noticed the political bias of the mainstream media.

In a new book Left Turn, UCLA Prof. Tim Groseclose demonstrates how prevalent the liberal bias of the media is and how it tilts voting patterns left. Some 93 percent of the the Washington press corps voting for Obama. What's that tell you? Well, if ask a liberal they'll say it's because they're better-educated, wiser and more compassionate than the average citizen.

Despite the fact that readers and viewers distrust the media, it still has a strong effect on voters. According to Groseclose's analysis, it increased the national vote for Obama some 8 percentage points. How he arrives at that figure is quite interesting. Check it out.

No Joy In Birdville

Yesterday's Eagles game was a disaster. After failing to score a touchdown 1st and goal from the two on four tries, things looked ominous and they were. Bad defense. Bad offense and bad luck. Mike Vick broke his hand. Dog lovers cheered. Eagles fans wept. But the Birds have been 1-2 before and turned it around. Still, it doesn't bode well.

At least the Phillies finally won a game.

Ending It PRONTO!

PRONTO, the LCB's vending machine answer to selling wine in supermarkets goes the way of New Coke. My goodbye letter to the great, gleaming insult to human liberty and consumerism can be read here.

Sunday, September 25, 2011

What if sidereal space was a jewel?



The diamond is something perfect both for its brightness and cut. The necklace was born to emphasize the shape of a diamond, a stone bright as the stars. It is set at the centre with four mirrors reflecting its light around the space. They give a tridimensional dimension to the necklace and they look a little bit like solar panels.
The inspiration is both the sidereal space and the future. The bracelet is obtained with the repetition of a simple shape and it reflects all the rainbow colors when explose to the light.
What do you think of the result?


Il diamante è la perfezione: per lucentezza e taglio. La collana nasce con l'idea di dare risalto alla forma del diamante,una pietra luminosa come le stelle. E' posto al centro della collana con quattro specchi che ne riflettono la luce. Danno tridimensionalità alla struttura e l'aspetto di un satellite. L'ispirazione è sia lo spazio profondo che il futuro. Il bracciale è ottenuto come ripetizione di un elemento base e riflette i colori dell'arcobaleno quando è esposto alla luce. Che ne pensate?

 

the inspiration: satellites, shiny stars, the future,diamonds

Friday, September 23, 2011

Friday Frocks | Flash Sales!

Flash sales are becoming a popular way to get the latest fashion trends at great discounted prices.  But did you know that there were also sites that offered flash sales for your wedding day? The Aisle New York, along with many other sites like Ideeli, Gilt and Rue La La, are the places to shop for all types of fashion flash sales! The Aisle New York concentrates on brides, featuring wedding accessories, dresses and shoes! Here is a sneak peek of just a few things they offer, but move fast, most sales only last a day or so! Below is an example of some of the great deals you can find!
xo