Authentic handmade corsets and other fashion items are available for you in our online store but also in our shop in Tokyo.
Designed by Iuliana Mihut and manufactured in Japan, we offer high quality corsets, fully boned, with busk front closure and adjustable back lacing.
From luxurious evening wear corsets to everyday street wear style, all our designs are extremely comfortable and very stylish.

Like a shoe paparazzo, Toronto’s beloved Tommy Ton of Jak & Jil captures some of the world’s most beautiful heels in action. Zillions of women devotedly visit the site to catch glimpses of the worldly lives these shoes lead. If you are a footwear cyber-gawker you’ve probably noticed a new breed of heels has been on the streets over the last few years. Remember the gun heels by Chanel? The tea cup and Baroque heels from Miu Miu or the Balenciaga Sportiletto? Not only are the silhouettes outrageously sculptural, the new shoes have also reached obscene heights–last fall, Christian Louboutin told The Wall Street Journal that he was planning on releasing an 8-inch platform this year.
Surely the human foot hasn’t changed so much in the last five years, so what has lead to this extreme evolution shoes? In search of some answers, I headed straight to living shoe-pedia Elizabeth Semmelhack, the senior curator at Canada’s Bata Shoe Museum and author of Heights of Fashion: A History of the Elevated Shoe. And this is what she has to say:
“Partly I see this connection between the economic condition of the current period and the absurd footwear that is being created by designers and wonder if it is at all linked to the absurd footwear worn in the ’70s, ’30s and early ’40s, which were periods of economic downturn and war,” says Semmelhack. “I don’t know what the connection is, but I find it interesting.”
“It also seems that with the knock-off rate from China and other places that are able to translate couturier designs immediately to meet needs of the mass market, increasingly sculptural heels, exceptionally high heels, things that you might not really be about to knock off at the Payless shoe store level and make affordable, is part of that status.”
For that dose of prestige and exclusivity, women are evidently welcoming outrageous silhouettes and painful new heights as a means to distinguish their heels from counterfeits. How ironic that knock-off artists, the sworn enemy of the fashion industry, seem to be partly accountable for this explosion of creative designs.
By Connie Ng

If you’ve been counting your fashionable pennies these days, you’re not alone. I too have been weighing purchases before taking the plunge, neatly stowing away my impulsive self until this ghastly recession comes to a screeching halt. Ummm…when is that going to happen again? For me, going low budget doesn’t mean shunning designer wear altogether. In fact, I’ve decided to take a long-term view and avoid the bargain that never gets worn and invest in some workhorse pieces.
So, no better time for Calgary’s latest fashion duo, Leon Kang and Aly Velji to transform their cutting-edge boutique Smyth & Kang (610 1st St. S.W., 403-617-2406, smythandkang.com). And we’re not talking a simple facelift. After the closure of their flagship location on 17th Ave. earlier this year, Kang and Velji reinvented their (once) satellite store with a new focus on buying Canadian, giving Calgarians the opportunity to invest in the work of local labels.
“We discovered that some of the hottest designers are right here in Calgary and we want keep them here” says Velji, who is also the store’s artistic director. The collections include Project Runway Canada’s Adejoké Taiwo (adejoke.com), architect-cum-designer Lara Presber (larapresber.com), Braithwaite Wallets (braithwaitewallets.com) and a handful of other Canadian lines—making in Smyth & Kang the perfect stop for signature pieces that will help you survive the credit crunch.
By Bonnee McLachlan

The messy, wash-and-wear bedhead hair usually prominent on spring runways was replaced this season with subtly styled, softly textured, long and loose, healthy-looking locks. Models’ hair saw the heat of a blow-dryer, the better side of a Mason Pearson brush, the light touch of rollers (be they hot or Velcro) and the barrel of a curling iron. Most importantly, hair appeared to be moisture-infused and silky smooth to the touch with lots of healthy movement. “I wanted to bring sexiness and seduction to the looks. Not all of the models have healthy hair, so I used Bumble and Bumble Styling Lotion for a rough blow-dry, then a curling iron to gently create loose waves,” says Laurent Philippon, editorial stylist extraordinaire for Bumble and Bumble and architect of the free-falling hairstyles shown on the BCBG Max Azria and Moschino Cheap & Chic runways. With nary a split end in sight, the unfussy yet well-groomed coifs worn by models like Liu Wen, Kate Somers and Jourdan Dunn were the perfect complement to those über-luxe collections, while similar strands set off the soft silhouettes at Roberto Cavalli, Philosophy di Alberta Ferretti, Diesel, Ralph Lauren and Sportmax.
ROBERTO CAVALLI Spring 2009
Photography by Peter Stigter
By Adriana Ermter and Lesa Hannah



Male Corsets are Amazing they feel wonderful… you must get one.
All designs are extremely comfortable and very stylish.
Read more …MacCosmetisc.com



We know that you love hot trends and beauty tips! We love them too . This is why we take advantage of any opportunity and share with you the greatest secrets. Now, we will reveal 5 tricks that will make you hair, the number one star anywhere you would go!
1. Do not hurry in using the hair dryer when you want to get over with the wet hair. It is a quick method, but it harms your hair. Instead…using a towel to dry your hair is the solution that causes 0% damage to it! So, we recommend a little patient!
2. While you are out, shopping, walking, or whatever you do in the city, make time at least 1 time per month to see your hairdresser and trim your split peaks. It is a process that should take no longer than five minutes, but will regenerate your hair, giving it a healthy appearance.
3. You should not apply to styling products on wet hair! Leaking water is “washing” away all the benefic ingredients. Therefore, before you use gel or foam, dry hair with a towel, and then comb it with a large teeth comb.
4. There is a “water law”! When you prepare your hair for washing use warm water – it opens cells and allows washing in depth. When rinsing, however, things are exactly opposite: colder water will close the cuticle and will add brilliance to your hair.
5. The solution for tresses that stay attached to the scalp, leaving an impression of NO volume, is wearing curlers: use one or two big curlers in which you catch tresses as tight as you can, from front to back.
Our advice is to take good care of your hair and do not over exaggerate with painting it. Wear it as natural as you can, and enjoy your youth. Now, with these five tips, it will look greater then ever!






She is best known for her leading role as Carrie Bradshaw on the HBO television series Sex and the City , for which she won four Golden Globe Awards, two Screen Actors Guild Awards and two Emmy Awards. She played the same role in the movie with the same name, which was released on May 30, 2008.
Sarah J. Parker is a fashion icon and has become very influential in the world of fashion. In 2000, she hosted the MTV Movie Awards and appeared in no fewer than 15 different costumes throughout the show. She has also become the face of many of the world’s biggest fashion brands through her work in a variety of advertising campaigns. In August 2003, Parker signed a highly lucrative deal with Garnier to appear in television and print advertising promoting their Nutrisse hair products. In 2004, she fronted an international campaign by Gap, but her contract with the clothing giant was terminated in spring 2005 in favor of British soul singer Joss Stone.
And now, she is, for sure, a fashion icon for many of us. Her nonconformist way of dressing makes us curious about “How is that possible?!” Mix match and a great look. Take a peek!


