November 8, 201312 yr Thanks JazzyJas !! Lovee the outfit Last year she also looked so beautiful in vsfs12
November 9, 201312 yr Thanks JazzyJas !! Lovee the outfit Last year she also looked so beautiful in vsfs12 You're welcome love
November 9, 201312 yr OMG, love the outfit, so perfectand her body looks better than ever More Source
November 9, 201312 yr Thank you so much for the diligent VS uploads!! Also, AAAAAAAAARGH!!!!! She looks amazing. I was really hoping she'd be in Snow Angels. Only thing I'd change is that I wish she'd dye her hair a bit lighter for the show. And maybe the panties a bit because you can see her nude underwear underneath. If she wears those in the show, you'll be able to see them. If she doesn't, that could be awkward for her. This sounds so cool (below), I guess it's like this year's equivalent of Cameron Russell's Swarovski outfit? Yay, Lindsay! The costume was made to precisely fit Ellingson from a 3-D scan of her figure, while 3-D computer printing technology was used to create the geometric filigree characteristics of the design’s snowflake motif, which will be encrusted with millions of illuminating Swarovski crystals.
November 9, 201312 yr Lindsay tends to get great outfits for the shows and the trend is continuing. Hopefully the other outfit(s) she receives are just as nice.
November 9, 201312 yr certanaly i'm gonna love the snow angels segment , the outfits that i can see look so simple gorgeus
November 9, 201312 yr I always wished they would do another snow segment like they did in 2006 and now they are. I can't wait. Lindsay looks AMAZING!
November 9, 201312 yr EXCLUSIVE: Victoria’s Secret in 3-D This is a new way to make a garment that’s never been done before,” explained Shapeways industrial designer Duann Scott from the heart of the brand’s Long Island City factory. He’s talking about 3-D printing—the process by which a pulsed laser cuts through layers of heated powdered materials (such as nylon, powered plastic, sterling silver, gold, even sandstone) to create computer-calculated shapes and designs. Shapeways is one of a handful of companies bringing 3-D printing, a technology traditionally used by architects and engineers, to the public market. In the past, it has been used to create everything from hearing aids to museum interiors; Dutch designer Iris Van Herpen was one of the first to apply the process to wearable items. Now, Victoria’s Secret is introducing 3-D-printed designs—just in time for its big fashion show on November 13. “It’s exciting that we get to use this—we’ve never done it,” related Victoria’s Secret collection design coordinator Sarah Sophia Lidz. “It’s the first time, and it will be perfect for this section, too. It’s called Snow Angels, and it’s really a nod to the iconic Victoria’s Secret theme, with beautiful white wings inspired by snowflakes, snowfall, frost, the northern lights—there’s a lot of Swarovski.” The 3-D-printed item in question is a Swarovski Crystal-encrusted corset, modeled to look like a snowflake, encasing the model Lindsay Ellingson’s body. It was designed off a full-body scan to fit Ellingson exactly. “We’ve seen some 3-D printing in fashion, in the haute couture in Europe. So it’s been very rigid things, very artful things, but nothing that’s been nice to wear,” added Scott. “This is the first piece for a mainstream brand—with a focus on the elegant, sensual form—not just rigid and stiff and alien-like. It’s wearable.” The corset debuts exclusively above. As for what’s up next in the 3-D sphere, Scott offered, “We’re seeing an evolution in the materials that we can use in 3-D printing.” As more and more designers turn to 3-D printing, more and more pliable fabrics will be developed. “But the interesting thing about 3-D printing and design is, traditional fabric is either a stitch or a weave, and maybe a chain mail in there, but with 3-D printing, we can do all three of those simultaneously, in one garment, in one material,” added Scott. “So there are new ways to control the way the fabric falls and reacts to the body. There is lots of room for evolving the garment.” —Ashley Simpson
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.