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The Lucky Guide to Mastering Any Style: How to Wear Iconic Looks and Make Them Your Own

The Lucky Guide to Mastering Any Style: How to Wear Iconic Looks and Make Them Your Own

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Authors: Kim France, Andrea Linett
Publisher: Gotham
Category: Book

List Price: $30.00
Buy New: $18.17
You Save: $11.83 (39%)



New (37) Used (11) from $18.17

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 14 reviews
Sales Rank: 776

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 312
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.8
Dimensions (in): 8 x 6.5 x 1.2

ISBN: 1592404022
Dewey Decimal Number: 746
EAN: 9781592404025
ASIN: 1592404022

Publication Date: October 7, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Similar Items:

  • The One Hundred: A Guide to the Pieces Every Stylish Woman Must Own
  • How to Have Style
  • The Lucky Shopping Manual: Building and Improving Your Wardrobe Piece by Piece
  • Domino: The Book of Decorating: A room-by-room guide to creating a home that makes you happy
  • Shop Your Closet: The Ultimate Guide to Organizing Your Closet with Style

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
On the heels of the fabulously successful Lucky Shopping Manual comes the complete handbook for creating a great look based on ten iconic styles packed with more than 450 color images.

With a circulation of 1.1 million, Lucky magazine has taken Americas most dedicated shoppers by storm, offering real-world advice and first-rate finds. Now the Lucky experts show how to put it all together in an inspiring collection of ideas that go beyond the basics and yield endless innovation for year-round reinvention.

Based on the techniques used by fashion designers for years, The Lucky Guide to Mastering Any Style features ten versatile archetypes that can be customized to fit varying moods, personalities, and body types. Applying these enduring styles to a dazzling spectrum of possibilities, The Lucky Guide to Mastering Any Style deconstructs each look, with components including clothes, shoes, accessories, patterns, and colors. Just as designers use swatches and images to spark creativity, readers will have access to hundreds of photographs from style setters. Must-haves for every closet, foolproof instructions, profiles of real-life Lucky Girls, and money-saving Lucky Breaks make this the indispensable resource for complete chic.



Customer Reviews:   Read 9 more reviews...

3 out of 5 stars A Picture is NOT Worth a 1000 Words   November 19, 2008
I loved the Lucky Shopping Manual and was extremely excited when they released a new book on style. The Lucky writers take you through 10 iconic looks from Euro Chic to Bohemian and attempt to teach you how to achieve these styles. The pictures are fantastic, and I loved the outfits they created.

However, I felt like they should have described certain aspects of the style more. At the start of each style, you get a small blurb about what they consider the style to be (emphasis on small) before they proceed to telling you what the essential pieces of the look are and how to buy them. I would have liked to have seen more discussion of WHY they chose those pieces as essential to the look.

As other reviewers noted, the looks they create are for young, thin, boyishly shaped women (except for the bombshell section). I could understand not necessarily discussing body types or age if they explained the rationale behind their choices. Then, the reader could take the reasoning behind the look and curtail the pieces to their age, body, and lifestyle. For example, instead of a crisp white button-down in the American Classic section, a busty woman may choose a crisp white wrap top to recreate the look for her figure.

I'd recommend checking the book out from the library and enjoying the visuals. Also, if you examine the outfits they created long enough (sounds bad, I know!), you'll start to understand the idea behind the look and maybe how you can make it work for your life. More descriptions would have been a much better editing choice though!



5 out of 5 stars Calling All Fashionistas   November 17, 2008
Just as with Lucky Magazine I read this terrific book cover to cover and then went back over it again several times so as not to miss a single tidbit. The photos, the styling, the real-women examples of each particular style, the clothing and accessories suggestions were all spot on. Identifying how to put together the look I'm after is what makes "The Lucky Guide----" more than worth a place close to my closet!


4 out of 5 stars Really Good, BUT...   November 15, 2008
 3 out of 3 found this review helpful

This is not so much of a review as a brief rant: I love Lucky Magazine and "The Lucky Guide to Mastering Any Style..." is an excellent book. However, not everyone in the world is 25 and size 0. Please, please, please throw the rest of us a bone. Why are most of the fashion icons -- who are aging every day just like the rest of us (unless they have already died) -- shown only in the halcyon days of their youth? I can understand showing a photo that shows a clearly defined moment in style, but must all of these moments have occurred under the age of thirty? If I cannot appeal to the fashionistas sense of fair play, I will appeal to their sense of finance. I looked adorable in hopsack at the age of 25, and it was a good thing because I didn't have the finances to purchase much of anything else. I can afford something better now and just where the heck is it?


4 out of 5 stars real life style   November 11, 2008
What I really like about Kim and Andrea and Lucky in general is how they are open to alot of interpretations of style, and they really promote individual expression. What's really funny is that after I spent some time looking at the book when I go shopping I start categorizing all the things....bohemian, CA casual, american classic, and the ubiquitous, what the heck is that?


1 out of 5 stars More Confusing than Anything Else   November 10, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

The first Lucky book, their shopping manual, was very good. It was good enough that I bought this book sight unseen. I wish I hadn't wasted my money on it because this one confuses me more than it helps. The lists of "essential pieces" for each look are long and very specific. I'm left wondering if I need a two-button beige blazer to achieve a certain look. Could I get a three-button brown blazer? Or would that ruin my plan? This guide also seems geared towards the very thin and wealthy, much more so than the manual. I do not recommend this book. At the very least, look at it in a bookstore before purchasing it.


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