History of yolanda childrens wear design
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FASHION FLASH: Once upon a time at Yolanda's ...
The Event Center at Yolanda's, an extensive emporium for brides in Waltham, will host a trunk show of Kirstie Kelly's Disney Fairy Tale Weddings Collection through Saturday.
For each Platinum wedding gown sold, $125 will be donated to the Make A Wish Foundation. The Platinum gown is a trumpet style with a fitted bodice in the Kirstie Kelly Disney Fairy Tale Weddings Collection.
Yolanda's is located at 355 Waverley Oaks Road, Waltham. For more information, call 781-899-6470 or go to www.glamour@yolandas.com.
Sassy seniors
On Tuesday, Nov. 27, at 10 a.m., seniors from the Callahan Center in Framingham will model Janska fashions.
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Janska makes comfortable clothing for people, regardless of age or ability. Traditional set-in sleeves may be difficult to put on and removed for someone with shoulder problems or arthritis, so Janska company founder Jan Erickson has created st
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Fashion Forward With Yolanda Sealey-Ruiz And Olivia Ruiz
[theme music fades in]
Haeny Yoon:
Welcome back-
Nathan Holbert:
We're here.
Haeny Yoon:
to a new episode of Pop and Play.
Nathan Holbert:
Another Pop and Play. Another week for you, the listener. Another month, couple days for us, the hosts.
Haeny Yoon:
This is an epic episode because it's-
Nathan Holbert:
It's epic.
Haeny Yoon:
The one that I've been waiting for for a really long time.
Nathan Holbert:
Yeah.
Haeny Yoon:
I almost gave up on it, but then Joe, our producer, was like, "I feel like you've been so into it. You have to do it."
Nathan Holbert:
I'll admit, I'm impressed by your stick-to-it-iveness, your tenacity, and also your ability to make me do things that make me extremely uncomfortable. Excellent work on that as well.
Haeny Yoon:
Excellent. Excellent. Okay.
Nathan Holbert:
What is the topic that you've been dying to do?
Haeny Yoon:
I've been dying to do a topic on fashion as an intergenerational ar
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Yolanda’s: 35 Years in the Making
NEW YORK — What started more than 35 years ago as a woman selling wigs from the trunk of her car to cancer patients has developed into a $5 million ready-to-wear business.
Wigs and free coffee were big draws when Yolanda Cellucci opened Yolanda’s in 1968. But there was also a small rack with 13 dresses from the likes of Victoria Royale, Mollie Parnis, Pauline Trigère and Oscar de la Renta. Over the years, Cellucci fine-tuned the mix with hard-to-find labels and new categories.
Outposts for Mr. Tux, KaBloom florists and Montilio’s bakery were the most recent additions to her 27,000-square-foot store in Waltham, Mass., and a jeweler fryst vatten on deck. But the one-stop-shopping concept is not new to shoppers who have a kurort, juice bar, hair salon, fitness club, swimming pool, a children’s department, day care and limousine rentals at their disposal.
She tends to lean on lines that customize, such as Atelie Aimee, a brida