pasdetrois January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 Quote I also did not appreciate the gasps of shock when Nancy revealed her age on the runway. I thought Nancy could have handled the situation a bit better. She was ingratiating and kind of pandered to the moment. It felt a little desperate to me. 1 7 Link to comment
BookThief January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 The one guy who has conversations with himself mentioned probably the one designer I've recognized on the show in a while--Gordon Gartrelle! "Maybe if you tuck it in a little..." "It's tucked into my socks!" 15 9 Link to comment
Samwise979 January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 (edited) When Sergio first said he was worried about the self taught designers I thought he meant it as, if the self taught designers are good enough to get in the same show as his professionally trained ass then he needs to watch out for them! Silly me. He actually meant they should be worried they're not trained and they're in competition with his perfect self. I HATED the jeans outfit. I mean, LOATHED it. I do like Chelsea though. And love all her glasses (I'm an optician). I was really underwelmed with this runway. I didn't really like any of it. I'm surprised Tyler was in bottom 3 though. His wasn't that bad compared to some of the others. He should have been safe. Edited January 3, 2020 by Samwise979 12 Link to comment
Popular Post Snewtsie January 3, 2020 Popular Post Share January 3, 2020 I wonder if Karli's dagger eyes were real or were edited in. Her initial reaction was shock & awkward laughter at the brazenness of Tyler's question, so I'm not entirely convinced she went from that to immediate contempt. Her narrowed stare could have been from listening to another designer explain their outfit. It appeared to me that he was trying to lighten the moment with humor while defending his look - but it really was terribly inappropriate of him. Regardless of who she is married to, that's her personal life and it has nothing to do with the challenge he was designing for. She married into a notorious family which has never embraced her as being good enough for them. I feel for her, and I suspect his remark hit a nerve. In any event, it was really bad form of him. I'm not sad to see him go because he never really designed anything that can be called Fashion, he was consistently resistant to Christian's advice, and he seemed overly focused on criticizing other designers and/or outfits. There is a lot he could have learned if he had just opened himself up more. 28 Link to comment
Popular Post SuburbanHangSuite January 3, 2020 Popular Post Share January 3, 2020 13 hours ago, hoodooznoodooz said: I love Shavi. I love the way he spoke about his grandmother. I love that they took apart well-constructed garments and put them back together. I love how he handled the criticism. I love him too! Can we see more of his two-way conversation with himself? And did he say something about having a "Gordon Gartrell" moment?! BWAHAHAHAHAHA. LOVE!!! 31 minutes ago, Ms Blue Jay said: I actually really prefer Christian over Tim. Tim has sabotaged many designers to the bottom. I never really liked Heidi either. She likes things short and tight. Okay, great? It's not exactly helpful to the designers, though. I never could have imagined it when Christian was a contestant because I didn't care for him AT ALL on his season. But I have done a complete 180 on him. He's smart, thoughtful, tough when warranted but really, really funny. Tim Gunn jumped the shark for me years ago. Please, if there is a Project Runway God listening: Can we have a self-taught designer win the whole thing this season? Sergio and his pattern-making superiority complex can go scratch. 36 Link to comment
Popular Post Yours Truly January 3, 2020 Popular Post Share January 3, 2020 (edited) 14 hours ago, QQQQ said: I hate it when I thank people and they respond, "No problem!" (I'm talking about workers just doing their regular jobs). I guess it's better than completely silent transactions though... I never understood this. I say everything but you're welcome. Sorry not sorry. Too me it sounds so stuffy and condescending especially if it's something that really isn't any trouble or a part of my job description or what have you. And even more so as a worker because in my mind I'm thinking along the lines of it's an entitlement you have as a customer so "you're welcome", to me, suggests I've provided you with something I didn't necessarily have to and that just simply isn't the case in a work situation. I can appreciate the negative sentiment but really am a bit put off with the idea that it's somehow an offense to NOT specifically say you're welcome. However I do agree that in Christian's case his "you're welcome" in this sort of environment is very gracious. Edited January 3, 2020 by Yours Truly 25 Link to comment
TexasGal January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 I just remembered Nancy's awe at the tiny waist size of her model. "I must have measured her wrong!" Made me laugh. 2 minutes ago, Yours Truly said: I never understood this. I say everything but you're welcome. Sorry not sorry. Too me it sounds so stuffy and condescending especially if it's something that really isn't any trouble or a part of my job description or what have you. And even more so as a worker because in my mind I'm thinking along the lines of it's entitlement you have as a customer so "you're welcome", to me, suggests I've provided you with something I didn't necessarily have to and that just simply isn't the case in a work situation. My go to at work is "of course, that's why I'm here." 2 1 8 Link to comment
Pj3422 January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 5 hours ago, Koalagirl said: Brendan must think he’s the second coming of Michael Kors. He is no Michael Kors. Yes, but thank heavens he’s no Zac Posen. 6 9 Link to comment
Pepper Mostly January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 (edited) 18 minutes ago, TexasGal said: I just remembered Nancy's awe at the tiny waist size of her model. "I must have measured her wrong!" Made me laugh. Me too! I had a 23 inch waist once upon a time. Though I'm nowhere near as tall as Karlie. Couldn't get that waistband of Nancy's anywhere near my waist these days. 30 minutes ago, Snewtsie said: She married into a notorious family which has never embraced her as being good enough for them. Which is hilarious since I don't think Karlie has ever done time in prison. Unlike at least one of her in laws. I say "no problem!" all the time. Sometimes I shorten it to a jaunty "no prob!" Has there ever been a winner who didn't go to fashion/art/design school? Edited January 3, 2020 by Pepper Mostly 13 Link to comment
Fellaway January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 Wow. That was completely underwhelming. I didn't think Tyler's was the worst, but he's been consistently bad all along, so I'm okay with his ousting. Victoria's wouldn't have been in the top three if I'd been deciding - I thought it was a hot mess, actually. - but I'm coming up empty on who I thought should've won, so whatevs. I didn't like anything on that runway. It showed a complete lack of creativity to me, so many looks interchangeable and forgettable. Kind of a metaphor for this season, alas. 10 Link to comment
caitmcg January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 41 minutes ago, ElTVaddict said: Tyler was eliminated because he mentioned her family. I assumed Tyler was going to go when I saw his outfit on the runway, and pretty much knew when he landed in the bottom three, so I don't think that was the reason at all. He'd been at the bottom more consistently than any designer there so far, and hadn't assimilated any of the judges' feedback. 14 Link to comment
Eulipian 5k January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 14 hours ago, BusyOctober said: I’m still watching...recorded so I can FF thru ads. I just had to jump on here to say that was the neatest, cleanest, most organized Good Will store I have ever seen! My guess is some PA’s and junior assistants to the PA’s were sent to a real Good Will to load up a truck with racks of stuff, then set up “the store” <<wink wink>> in some recently vacated retail space I kept freeze-framing to see the background but I'm sure that is the Goodwill in downtown Brooklyn not too far from their workspace; it is neat and spacious. 3 Link to comment
Popular Post Empress1 January 3, 2020 Popular Post Share January 3, 2020 45 minutes ago, Yours Truly said: I never understood this. I say everything but you're welcome. Sorry not sorry. Too me it sounds so stuffy and condescending especially if it's something that really isn't any trouble or a part of my job description or what have you. And even more so as a worker because in my mind I'm thinking along the lines of it's an entitlement you have as a customer so "you're welcome", to me, suggests I've provided you with something I didn't necessarily have to and that just simply isn't the case in a work situation. I can appreciate the negative sentiment but really am a bit put off with the idea that it's somehow an offense to NOT specifically say you're welcome. However I do agree that in Christian's case his "you're welcome" in this sort of environment is very gracious. I was today years old when I learned that there are different schools of thought re: how you should acknowledge people who thank you. I mean, I do sometimes think being thanked for doing the job I'm paid to do is unnecessary (to quote Don Draper, that's what the money is for), but I'm never going to complain about it because it's just someone trying to be nice. (And there are times when "thanks" in email form from someone higher up the food chain means "do what I say" and isn't actually thanking anyone for anything. "Please use the correct TPS report cover sheet. Thanks.") I say "you're welcome," "sure," "no problem," "of course" in response to "thank you" and had no idea that people I was responding to might feel some type of way about it. 6 20 Link to comment
Yours Truly January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 7 minutes ago, Empress1 said: I was today years old when I learned that there are different schools of thought re: how you should acknowledge people who thank you. I mean, I do sometimes think being thanked for doing the job I'm paid to do is unnecessary (to quote Don Draper, that's what the money is for), but I'm never going to complain about it because it's just someone trying to be nice. (And there are times when "thanks" in email form from someone higher up the food chain means "do what I say" and isn't actually thanking anyone for anything. "Please use the correct TPS report cover sheet. Thanks.") I say "you're welcome," "sure," "no problem," "of course" in response to "thank you" and had no idea that people I was responding to might feel some type of way about it. I know right? I wasn't today years old and knew this was a thing but I never understood it. Kinda comes across as a bit ungracious actually if you ask me. <shrug> 10 Link to comment
Ms Blue Jay January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 (edited) There have been a few viral tweets about Boomers hating Millennials' way of saying "No problem" in service roles. To me it's kind of classist, to be honest. A lot of people in service roles get paid minimum wage, and it's kind of disgusting to pick apart how they respond to you saying thank you. I agree that it is a sense of entitlement that allows people to demand a certain response, especially from service workers. "No problem" is colloquial, kind, and not to be taken personally (IMO). If you Google "thank you no problem Boomers Millennials" you'll see lots of articles about the topic. Even from linguists, etc. https://www.ledger-enquirer.com/news/local/news-columns-blogs/tim-chitwood/article237462144.html https://didyouknowfacts.com/why-young-people-say-no-problem-instead-of-youre-welcome-and-why-older-people-hate-it/ Edited January 3, 2020 by Ms Blue Jay 7 8 Link to comment
Eulipian 5k January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 I thought Karlie's reaction to Tyler was very boss. She simply reminded him that the challenge was 'her going to Paris' not going to dinner or Cape Cod. Why would he cover her up like in that washboard turtleneck like she's 60 years old? Interesting that they didn't show Christian mentoring Victoria. She was so proud to show any and every one how she used the pant legs to make the jacket sleeves. I'm sure he would find that not very original, lol. 1 7 Link to comment
Eulipian 5k January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 1 hour ago, SuburbanHangSuite said: Please, if there is a Project Runway God listening: Can we have a self-taught designer win the whole thing this season? Wasn't that Anya from Trinidad? But heh, she didn't self-teach herself how to sew. 9 4 Link to comment
Aulty January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 There was a rumor a few months ago that this is going to be the last season of PR because Karlie was too busy with other stuff. Back then I was wodering whether those rumors were planted to give someone an edge for contract negotiatons. Maybe the producer's decision to broadcast that Kushner comment had something to do with it too? On another note: the models this week weren't great walkers, were they? 1 2 2 Link to comment
dleighg January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 4 minutes ago, Aulty said: On another note: the models this week weren't great walkers, were they? oh yeah! I noticed that also! Some of them looked very clunky, and not just the poor girl whose skirt was so tight that when they showed her silhouette at the screen, it looked like she was crossing her legs to keep from peeing! 4 4 Link to comment
Gloriosa January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 (edited) I sure didn't miss Alan, even though I liked him - too much talk and too much show for my liking - and I don't think I'm going to miss Tyler either. I kind of liked him, but he was way too fond of giving his opinions. Now if Devlin can just get over himself with being too precious to scrounge through Christmas decorations and the Goodwill store before he gets eliminated too, maybe I won't have to tell my TV to shut up so much. I think the suits were a good base for creating new garments, but kind of wish fewer people had used them. I think they probably had better fabric than some of the other items in the store. Edited January 3, 2020 by Gloriosa 5 Link to comment
Kaiju Ballet January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 I was rooting for Tyler to pull out a surprise top three, because of the "helpful"/sarcasm advice he was getting. (And also because he seemed like Tyler was genuinely helpful to others when he could be) I had absolutely no idea about Karlie's personal life, so when Tyler made his remark I had a WTF moment on several levels. TBH, the only time I care is when it's directly related to a challenge (as in last season's Nina's story about wanting to get into fashion while she was still in Colombia) and even that's a bit of a stretch (don't remember the other judges). I agree that it was a desperate attempt of Tyler's to be bitchy-cute-bonding but it only shows a total lack of situational awareness. Christian said to him pointblank that Tyler kept ignoring his advice, so it was surprising (and sad) that Tyler expected to be the Siriano Save. The editors had some fun with that, drawing out the suspense as to whether Christian would blow his save on someone who's been clearly out of sync with the judges expectations. I like Nancy, and I flove the fact that she graduated design school in her sixties and has been rocking it ever since. It was smart of her to avail herself of Carla's expertise, but I think she may have come off like she did last episode, when she was hammering away at the ornaments, unconcerned with how it was driving everyone else around her batty. I thought of the stylist's eyeroll to the camera as a response to that, and not that Carla had an attitude. (I did appreciate that the stylist's suit was perfectly tailored for her) There's a reason why I avoid Goodwill in NYC and only shop in the Goodwills in other states. Maybe the other Goodwills also have a sign that says "curated" like this one did, but the prices for clothing are actually kind of ridonk, sometimes twice as much as it is outside of NYC. Plus, anything with a recognizable label (better material) is either specially priced even higher, or already purchased by people who specifically haunt thrift shops for vintage or branded items for resale. At least they were given 45 minutes to shop. The whole thing about designing on the car ride over--aside from the motion sickness thing (which I also share) --is what led to the multiple re-constructed jacket garments. Finding blazers/men's suits is about the one thing that one can count on --or jeans. I hated the all denim outfit for this challenge. This to represent American design in Paris? (The top was cute, though) Love her eyewear, praying that's the only design sensibility she shares with Miss Sunshine. I did laugh that the representative of American design that won came from one of the most recently American designers. 1 5 Link to comment
little black cloud January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 There was no joy in Tyler that I ever saw. He came off to me as perpetually sour. For that reason alone, I'm glad he's gone. 14 Link to comment
dleighg January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 3 minutes ago, Kaiju Ballet said: the prices for clothing are actually kind of ridonk, sometimes twice as much as it is outside of NYC. Yeah I did a double-take when the employee said the jeans were 19.95 (I think)? That's a lot for a used pair of "dungarees" (as my late grandfather would say). 5 Link to comment
Empress1 January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 36 minutes ago, Aulty said: On another note: the models this week weren't great walkers, were they? There was one where I thought exactly this, that her walk was terrible. I can't remember who it was though. (There was another where I thought "Her breasts look amazing.") 2 Link to comment
laprin January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 17 hours ago, bencr said: There is a meanness to this show that I just don't like, and I always feel a little tense after watching. That's all I have to say. Were you a viewer back when Michael Kors was a judge? How about Isaac Mizrahi on Project Runway Allstars? Now they were mean. Brandon Maxwell is a pretender. His comments sound like someone that is trying too hard to be the next Kors or Mizrahi. 1 10 Link to comment
hookedontv January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 The Good: Karla Welch, my goodness what a breath of fresh, composed, put-together air compared to crazy Marnie and her ridiculous top knotted style (and skeletor face, IMHO). The Bad: No Swatch. *hopes for a trip to Mood next episode* The Ugly: Most of the runway garments. I was shocked how much they liked the head to toe denim look. I still don't have a handle on the designers' names, so I will refrain from commenting except that I was not blown away by the runway. 18 Link to comment
hoosiermommy January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 17 hours ago, breezy424 said: Sorry. She's married to a Kushner. He's a long time democrat. I don't think Tyler did anything wrong. Like it or not, she's part of that family. No need for the dagger eyes. Wait. There's a Melanie? The blond. Loved the stylist. Can't stand Sergio. There were some pretty bad designs. I wished Nancy won because......I just like her and her design was great and she's a woman who is 'older' and had the courage to start a new career. You choose your spouse, not your in-laws. Maybe Karli was smart enough to know that alienating a section of the audience by insinuating politics was unwise. Just think if you were judged based on your in-laws (or in this case in-law in-laws). We don't know the entire Kushner family, we know two people who are public figures. Maybe, all these people who are "politically correct" (Sergio's chiron description that practically has to be two lines long to describe his wokeness) could focus on, you know....fashion design? 8 Link to comment
hisbunkie January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 19 hours ago, Straycat80 said: Somebody needs to tell Sergio he’s not the mentor, Christian is. I continue to be surprised at how disrespectful some of the contestants are of Christian. Even when he is consistently correct, they still doubt and challenge him. 14 Link to comment
carrps January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 17 hours ago, BlackberryJam said: I also like Dr. Couture, Delvin. He seems like he’s running as fast as he can from what he perceives as his trashy roots. He also apparently just likes working and being quiet with himself. I wasn’t fond of his look this time, but I like his personality. I can really understand this. When you come from poverty, it's not "fun" to play at being poor. It feels too much like tempting fate. One foot over the edge, and you're back in the trash. 12 hours ago, ElectricBoogaloo said: I didn't like Victoria's look at all. To me it looked like too many elements thrown together into one outfit. Do you really need a blazer with a belt with side cut outs with banded arms with an asymmetric skirt with mutton sleeve shoulders? Yeah, Victoria's was another Big Fat No from me. Heh, the 80s show next week...made for her? 2 hours ago, Ms Blue Jay said: There have been a few viral tweets about Boomers hating Millennials' way of saying "No problem" in service roles. Oh, I'm sure the commentators are using any old fodder they can find for the generation wars, but I'm a boomer, and I've always said "no problem." Rarely say "you're welcome." 11 Link to comment
BlackberryJam January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 As a person whose horrific in-laws hated her guts, I kind of feel for Karlie on that front. Dinner with my in-laws or jumping in a frozen lake naked ten times? I go for the lake every single time. Tyler's outfit was dull and not fashion. It was a sexy librarian outfit from an 80s video. It wasn't Martha's Vineyard or East Coast. And that wasn't the brief anyway. I truly want more Delvin talking heads because he's on to Sergio. I enjoy some of the designers, but I'm a bit sick of Victoria. She's getting too much air time to be interesting. 1 21 Link to comment
Lemons January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 4 hours ago, Ms Blue Jay said: That's funny. I prefer "No problem" over "You're welcome". I think this is regional/cultural/generational or something, not sure. I'm always thrown off when someone says "You're welcome" because I'm so used to hearing "No problem" or "Any time". Why do I need to be told I'm welcome? That's already assumed. "No problem" is just a person trying to be nice as possible and it always tickles me when people get upset over it. I think it's a bit much to pretend Karlie is some trapped victim in a marriage she was forced into. There are pictures of her and "the Kushners" that can be easily Google'd. She knew the family she was marrying into. I don’t like “no problem”. If I say thank you to, say a server in a restaurant and they say”no problem” all I can think of is “what would make you think that I thought you doing your job would be a problem?” 2 hours ago, Aulty said: There was a rumor a few months ago that this is going to be the last season of PR because Karlie was too busy with other stuff. Back then I was wodering whether those rumors were planted to give someone an edge for contract negotiatons. Maybe the producer's decision to broadcast that Kushner comment had something to do with it too? On another note: the models this week weren't great walkers, were they? Why would they need Karlie for the show? She is totally replaceable. No talent. 13 Link to comment
Snewtsie January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 3 hours ago, Pepper Mostly said: Which is hilarious since I don't think Karlie has ever done time in prison. Unlike at least one of her in laws. Truly. I feel for her. These people are shockingly despicable. 7 Link to comment
Mondrianyone January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 19 hours ago, Mindthinkr said: Victoria just doesn’t like small people. Ok then. Isn’t she small? Don't be mad at her for that. At first I also thought she'd said "small people," but it was so odd that I rewound and read her lips (also had on closed caption). What she really said was that she didn't like "slow people." Which, being from NY, I sort of understand, although I've grown kinder about it over the years. 😴 15 hours ago, LotusFlower said: Yea, we sorta do. The saying really only applies to our families. So you would choose not to marry someone you loved and who shared your values, not his family's, because of what other people in his life had done? It might be an easier choice in some respects, but that's a big price to pay. I would like to know one bit of knowledge that Sergio possesses that nobody else does, a pearl of unmatched wisdom that would die along with him if he didn't share it. Just one. 3 6 Link to comment
Popular Post hoosiermommy January 3, 2020 Popular Post Share January 3, 2020 4 hours ago, Ms Blue Jay said: I actually really prefer Christian over Tim. Tim has sabotaged many designers to the bottom. I never really liked Heidi either. She likes things short and tight. Okay, great? It's not exactly helpful to the designers, though. There was that one season of Project Runway: Something Or Other (it was two teams with mentors) and Tim was a bully to one of the odd female designers on that show. He joined the other designers in ganging up on her and ever since then, I felt Tim could take a flying leap off my screen because I don't like mentors who play favorites. And maybe it's because I am not in fashion, and maybe it is because of editing, but I rarely understood half of what Tim was trying to accomplish with his advice. It all seemed to boil down to "think about what you're doing" (as if the designer wasn't thinking before?) or "do better!". He never seemed to give actionable advice. Christian is able to provide constructive advice and it seems to me to be clear and actionable. 4 hours ago, ElTVaddict said: So why marry one. Tyler was eliminated because he mentioned her family. I knew from the beginning of the season she had just married into the family. I am eternally grateful that my husband loves me more than he dislikes my sibling and my sibling in law. I find it odd (and disingenuous) to think that so many people think that they should abandon the person they love because their loved one's family may not be all that they want. 4 hours ago, Snewtsie said: I wonder if Karli's dagger eyes were real or were edited in. Her initial reaction was shock & awkward laughter at the brazenness of Tyler's question, so I'm not entirely convinced she went from that to immediate contempt. Her narrowed stare could have been from listening to another designer explain their outfit. It appeared to me that he was trying to lighten the moment with humor while defending his look - but it really was terribly inappropriate of him. Regardless of who she is married to, that's her personal life and it has nothing to do with the challenge he was designing for. She married into a notorious family which has never embraced her as being good enough for them. I feel for her, and I suspect his remark hit a nerve. In any event, it was really bad form of him. I'm not sad to see him go because he never really designed anything that can be called Fashion, he was consistently resistant to Christian's advice, and he seemed overly focused on criticizing other designers and/or outfits. There is a lot he could have learned if he had just opened himself up more. Tyler was in a state. He thought he had a good design and I think the judge's opinions came out of nowhere. Some people think they are much cleverer than they actually are, and I think Tyler's comments were his attempt to laugh off the criticism and it turned out to be in extremely bad taste to essentially tell a judge what could easily be understood as, "I know you're here because of who you're married to, not your own talent." I am not surprised he was cut. Historically, we've been told that each week the contestants start with a blank slate and each outfit is judged on its own merits, I have never bought that a history of poor design isn't taken into consideration when the designer is on the bottom again and again. He had two criticisms of "too costumey" and then over-corrected to "too safe" and added a dash of "outside of the parameters" to top it off. 14 minutes ago, Lemons said: I don’t like “no problem”. If I say thank you to, say a server in a restaurant and they say”no problem” all I can think of is “what would make you think that I thought you doing your job would be a problem?” I find myself often saying "It's my pleasure" or just "my pleasure". I used to be upset that someone would assure me that it was "no problem" for them to help me because...of course it isn't. That's what you're paid do to. But as I've gotten older (Gen Xer), I've come to realize that what I really want is for someone to be polite and acknowledge my thanks. It's kind of like the Merry Christmas/Happy Holidays "issue". I try not to get upset when someone wishes me wellm even using words I wouldn't choose myself. 29 Link to comment
dleighg January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 7 minutes ago, hoosiermommy said: I try not to get upset when someone wishes me wellm even using words I wouldn't choose myself. exactly. I agreed with the comment earlier that it can sound like you are saying "it's no problem to do my job." But that's not the intent, so in real life I just let it slide off. It wasn't meant as an insult or as a rude comment, so no need to take it as such. I'm old, so I say "you're welcome" with a smile 🙂 11 Link to comment
ElectricBoogaloo January 3, 2020 Author Share January 3, 2020 3 hours ago, Pepper Mostly said: Has there ever been a winner who didn't go to fashion/art/design school? As I mentioned earlier, Anya couldn’t sew but she won her season. She did go to Parsons but she studied graphic and interior design (not fashion). 2 hours ago, dleighg said: I did a double-take when the employee said the jeans were 19.95 (I think)? That's a lot for a used pair of "dungarees" (as my late grandfather would say). The men’s suits were $19.95 (one of the designers asked an employee how much the suits cost and they also showed a sign with the cost) which I thought was a pretty low price for a jacket and pants! 26 minutes ago, Mondrianyone said: Don't be mad at her for that. At first I also thought she'd said "small people," but it was so odd that I rewound and read her lips (also had on closed caption). What she really said was that she didn't like "slow people." She definitely said slow, not small. This was when she was mocking Dr. Couture by telling him that she had finished her outfit before he did. She then said she’s a fast worker and she doesn’t like slow people. 7 Link to comment
carrps January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 I thought the suits were $29.99? I thought I saw a sign with that amount on it. 6 Link to comment
ichbin January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 4 hours ago, Pepper Mostly said: Has there ever been a winner who didn't go to fashion/art/design school? The first one that comes to mind is Anya from Season 9. I will never understand how that happened. 7 Link to comment
StellarJay January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 I guess I’m in the minority because I loved Chelsea’s high waisted jeans. They would have looked great on any long legged model. I agree they seemed too casual for the event. However as Nina said ( paraphrasing here) Denim is considered quintessential American. Nancy’s outfit was fun and flirty. I liked the sleeves on the winning design ( Victoria?) but am not a fan of asymmetric look. But her design seemed more appropriate for the occasion. 10 Link to comment
seacliffsal January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 I kind of liked Tyler's snarkiness in earlier episodes, but he lost me at the beginning of this episode with his "#justicefortyler" as he really seemed to believe he was much more talented than he is (he was lamenting the "costumy" comments from the judges). He also rejected Christian's advice, so he lost me well before he thought he was making an oh so clever jab at the host of the show. Which, no. Rudeness for the sake of rudeness is...rude. Like others, I did not like the all denim outfit for this challenge. I am surprised that the challenge to make an outfit for Karlie was a one day only challenge as I would think they would want the contestants to be able to make outstanding designs/outfits to represent the show. 17 Link to comment
Koalagirl January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 I wasn’t thrilled with Victoria’s winning look either, but when they showed the pics of Karli wearing it, with edgy hair and makeup, I got it. I just wished they showed a bigger photo to give us a better look. 10 Link to comment
dleighg January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 24 minutes ago, carrps said: I thought the suits were $29.99? I thought I saw a sign with that amount on it. yeah the suits were $29.99. I thought I saw the reference to jeans price but couldn't find it on rewatching. And rewatching to check that I saw Tyler said he is "perpetually perched" whatever the hell that means. 11 minutes ago, Koalagirl said: I wasn’t thrilled with Victoria’s winning look either, but when they showed the pics of Karli wearing it, with edgy hair and makeup, I got it. I just wished they showed a bigger photo to give us a better look. it seemed like the outfit Karli wore had more midriff showing 1 Link to comment
Deskisamess January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 Tyler's outfit belonged on someone in Cape Cod in 1977. Those ruffles were very dated, and there was nothing new or fashion forward about that outfit. His mentioning her husband's family was just straight up bad form, especially considering their well known dislike of her. 14 Link to comment
DEL901 January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 19 minutes ago, seacliffsal said: I kind of liked Tyler's snarkiness in earlier episodes, but he lost me at the beginning of this episode with his "#justicefortyler" as he really seemed to believe he was much more talented than he is (he was lamenting the "costumy" comments from the judges). He also rejected Christian's advice, so he lost me well before he thought he was making an oh so clever jab at the host of the show. Which, no. Rudeness for the sake of rudeness is...rude. Like others, I did not like the all denim outfit for this challenge. I am surprised that the challenge to make an outfit for Karlie was a one day only challenge as I would think they would want the contestants to be able to make outstanding designs/outfits to represent the show. Tyler is trying to make it in a super competitive field in which personal connections can really help and he was rude ON CAMERA to the host. Not a smart move. 9 Link to comment
Pepper Mostly January 3, 2020 Share January 3, 2020 1 hour ago, carrps said: Oh, I'm sure the commentators are using any old fodder they can find for the generation wars, but I'm a boomer, and I've always said "no problem." Rarely say "you're welcome." Boomer here too. I've said "no problem! (or the aforementioned jaunty "no prob!") for decades. Other favorites are "my pleasure" "glad to help" "of course" "no worries". In Spanish and French the polite responses are "its nothing". 3 minutes ago, Deskisamess said: Tyler's outfit belonged on someone in Cape Cod in 1977. Those ruffles were very dated, and there was nothing new or fashion forward about that outfit. Hee! Jackie O's secretary maybe. It looked like it belonged in the steno pool. 1 15 Link to comment
SuprSuprElevated January 4, 2020 Share January 4, 2020 Though I prefer "you're welcome", I would never get in a twist over "no problem". The response that absolutely makes me cringe is "you're good". Thank you ignore feature. 3 Link to comment
Nordly Beaumont January 4, 2020 Share January 4, 2020 (edited) 6 hours ago, Yours Truly said: I say everything but you're welcome. Sorry not sorry. No problem! 😊 Man, I did not mean to start a whole thing! It was just an observation that Christian replies "You're welcome!" and my mom would like that. On that after the show thing Christian hosts, I was surprised to hear that Tyler only performs drag occasionally, his drag is mostly for fun. His comments seemed like he was trying out sass for the stage, like at the beginning when he said something about being "America's favorite bottom" oh, har har, Tyler. Edited January 4, 2020 by Nordly Beaumont 1 1 4 Link to comment
retired watcher January 4, 2020 Share January 4, 2020 9 hours ago, AttackTurtle said: I think Karlie prefers to be known for her own success and not her “married” name. Further, her husband is pretty liberal and when Tyler was making the “Kushner” reference, he was IMO referencing the Trump/Kushner wing of the family. I would be irritated if I were her too. I think he was referencing the fact that she was not invited to the Kushner's for many years because they did not think she was right for Josh. 4 Link to comment
PaulaO January 4, 2020 Share January 4, 2020 Did Jay McCarroll, season 1 winner, go to design school? I don’t remember him saying that he did. 1 Link to comment
chitowngirl January 4, 2020 Share January 4, 2020 5 minutes ago, PaulaO said: Did Jay McCarroll, season 1 winner, go to design school? I don’t remember him saying that he did. Jay studied at the London College of Fashion. 2 2 Link to comment
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