The Female Style Icon Collection
And the treats keep on coming! Star Fever Agency has today announced the release of another eye-popping Collection into Theo King stores: Introducing the highly-exclusive Style Icon Collection.
With only a strictly limited number of pieces per icon competition to own a piece of fashion history is expected to be fierce where only the daring win fashion favor.
To give your Star that boost in Fame or Lame popularity to hit the magazine headlines & the chance to win this Collection’s Who Wore It Better? Competition (keep an eye on the forum for entry) find the perfect outfits & accessories to style their look & get people talking.
All this excitement gave all of us at Hot Gossip a great excuse to peek through the fabulous & varied looks of 10 women who have shaped the way we think about fashion & style today. We’ll take a look at the men later in the week!
Sienna Miller arrived at the MET Costume Gala with not only hottie Jude Law in tow but this asymmetrical navy and black Emilio Pucci gown. Having turned the world on with her free-flowing brand of boho chic (she’s among the key culprits behind everybody and their mother wearing tunic tops and tucking their jeans into boots) Sienna switched style lanes to sex kitten and left the wannabes in the dust. Of course, by the time the rest of us catch up she’ll have moved on to her next fashion incarnation.
No style icon collection would be complete without the effortless elegance of the ever-feminine Audrey Hepburn. Despite the classic ‘My Fair Lady’ dress on offer Audrey WAS the little black dress, as she made it famous on the big screen. Women from all over the world use this little closet staple for gala’s, black tie events, weddings and more, paying homage to Audrey’s unique sense of style. Simplicity is the key for this look and by putting bold jewellery with it, you can’t go wrong. 
Madonna’s ground-breaking and often controversial Blonde Ambition Tour in the 1980’s brought pop fashion up to iconic status using designers like Jean Paul Gaultier to help complete her image. From hair to layers and bangles Madonna was the original trendsetter and her influence still echoes today with her signature bodysuits being copied by Lady Gaga.
Princess Diana showed that being part of the British Royal Family meant less dressing like a ‘frump’ and more glamourous princess. The Princess captivated America when she danced with Hollywood actor, John Travolta, at a gala dinner at the White House in 1985.
Twiggy was a British model in the 1960’s who broke the mould by capturing the new wave of freedom in music & fashion. She made loose A-line one piece dresses, flat shoes & fake eye lashes the ‘It’ look for women. Twiggy also introduced women to short cut hair and wearing reformed suits (such as button down shirts, ties, and vests) like men, showing both masculinity and feminism in her own unique way.
Playing on her ice cool reputation and timeless grace, Grace Kelly wore an Edith Head designed dress of the palest blue in 1955 to receive the Best Actress Oscar for The Country Girl. From her early days as a Philadelphia Society girl, to Hollywood stardom and princesshood as the wife of the Prince of Monaco her eternal style, sophistication and substance has had style lovers captivated for generations.
The bright pink strapless Satin dress that Marilyn Monroe wore in the movie “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes” was auctioned off last month and was expected to fetch between $150,000 & $250,000. Maybe it’s the bombshell, sexpot persona or the natural flair that she carried herself with. Or maybe it’s her perfect hour-glass figure and penchant for stylish, designer pieces that border on the subtle to the downright scandalous but her glamour still captures our imaginations.
We all know SJP better for her alter-ego Carrie Bradshaw defined fashion in the 90s but the actress herself as grown into a style icon of her own always carrying the latest fashion and making it her own. SJP attended the 2006 MET Costume Institute Gala with her good friend, the late Alexander McQueen, in which the pair wore fantastically daring, matching tartan designs. 
The British Fashion Awards late last year saw singer-turned-fashion designer Victoria Beckham bring out her inner vamp by dressing in this floor-scraping, long-sleeved gown (with jewelled shoulder) from her own Spring 2010 collection which gave a nod to the gothic trend. Victoria sure knows the power of a LBG (Long Black Gown).
Another often-forgotten fashion icon was Debbie Harry (or Blondie as she was known) who was the queen of customized clothes. What better way to own couture! She even looked great wearing a pillowcase and red electrical tape!
So there you have it you lucky, lucky people: The Female Style Icon Collection! We’ll take a look at the men next! But don’t delay because once they’re gone, they’re gone & in someone else’s wardrobe forever!






The Rabbit Hole