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i noticed this a bunch yesterday while half watching the inauguration...lots of

folks in the stands and on stage in dead animals

sad

 

 

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/01/19/washington-brings-out-the_n_159179.html

 

Washington Brings Out The Fur

 

Huffington Post | Annie Groer | January 19, 2009 02:18 PM

 

 

--

Read More: Inauguration Style, Style News

Fur is back. Big time.

 

The high glam factor of Barack Obama's inauguration, and the city's brutal cold

snap seem to have given many revelers license to come out of their pelt-packed,

politically-incorrect closets swathed in the hides of creatures great and small.

 

At last night's inaugural ball hosted by TheRoot.com and the Washington Post, DJ

Biz Markie--he of the enormo physique--wore an ankle-grazing black mink

greatcoat, size 62 long, as casually as if it were a bathrobe.

 

" I like my fur. I have, like, 15 of them: three minks, three sables, two

chinchillas... " says the unapologetic Beat Box regular on the " Yo Gabba Gabba "

kids' TV show.

 

Designer Dianne von Furstenberg came to the same soiree at the National Museum

of American History sporting vintage monkey fur, which is black, shiny, coarse,

very long and poker straight. " I've had it 40 years, so it's been dead a long

time. " she explains. " Sometimes I tell people it's nylon. "

 

L.A. comic Michael Colyar chose a full-length raccoon for Sunday's jazz brunch

thrown by Essence Magazine and Perennial Sports and Entertainment, one of six

furs he owns.

 

" They all died from acid reflux, " Colyar solemnly swears.

 

And the bleat goes on.

 

Story continues below

 

Katrina Peebles had two fur coats at the National Portrait Gallery unveiling of

Shepherd Fairey's original, iconic Obama graphic: a lush Russian sable that her

husband--Miami and DC real estate developer Donahue Peebles--gave her when their

son was born 14 years ago, and a mink swing coat with a zig-zag hem and blood

red lining that she'd loaned to a shivering friend from Florida.

 

 

Katrina Peebles envelopes her husband Donahue, in her sable coat.

 

Peebles concedes she " felt bad " wearing her Galanos mink to the National Zoo

with her daughter, a place, after all, where the animals are supposed to feel

safe in their own skins.

 

" I knew it was anti-green. But it was just so cold, " says Peebles, who owns a

half-dozen furs worth $400,000. (She prefers that all big gifts from hubby come

from furriers, not jewelers). Then she adds: " I do eat red meat, but I do a lot

of things for kids. "

 

Bush administration Chief of Protocol Nancy Brinker topped her gray suit with a

woven shawl of indeterminate taxonomy. With the deft diplomacy required by her

day job, she called it " re-grow-able...It's not a pelt. It's shorn. " She also

carried an aubergine mink purse, and wore a black overcoat lined in something

brown and fluffy.

 

It isn't just boldface names who are piling are on the furs. All over town,

revelers are bundling up in fur jackets, coats, vests, hats, scarves, cuffs,

muffs, boot-tops and stoles..

 

And where there are folks in fur, there is PETA, People for the Ethical

Treatment of Animals, which scored a few raid-paint hits on hapless-ballgoers at

Bill Clinton's 1997 inauguration.

 

Last week they chose an inaugurally-slow Thursday to stage an extremely public

act of charity (are there any other kind these days?) just blocks from the White

House.

 

At a table in Farragut Square, a media mini-scrum checked out the giveaway of

used fur coats to homeless women who'd been driven across town by staff of the

shelters where they seek refuge. As cameras rolled, the women, some with

children, pawed through the piles, trying on the most promising. Several of them

happily left with a warm coat. Even a homeless man or two got lucky, said Ashley

Byrne, PETA's campaign coordinator. The gents fit into castoffs from some very

large ladies.

 

The inventory comes from remorseful fur owners who donate them to PETA for use

as agit-props in its traveling anti-fur-crusade-cum-street theater.

 

The coats range from cheap ratty rabbit (marketed in some quarters as " lapin, "

which is French for bunny) to the occasional mink with the requisite satin

lining and elaborate monogramming.

 

Over the years, PETA has painted, burned, buried, or cut up for use as animal

bedding all those tax-deductible wraps. Nor did this batch escape alteration.

 

PETA marked the linings and sliced holes in the skins to minimize resale

" marketability " while retaining warm-ability. This ensures " that people who

weren't homeless wouldn't have any incentive to want one, " say Byrne.

 

This week PETA volunteers--some of them clad in raccoon, fox and rabbit

costumes--will leaflet fur-swathed humans about the error of their ways. " We

realize people have no idea how these animals suffer, how they are beaten or

electrocuted or skinned alive, " says Byrne. The hope is that education begets

donation.

 

To spread the word in downtown gridlock, PETA has bought ads on 20 DC pedi-cabs,

those rickshaw-derived vehicles pulled by strapping young bi-peds.

 

It's not clear what kind of reaction the protesters will elicit as Obama

supporters dress and redress for multiple events that include church services,

mass outdoor gatherings, black-tie balls, casual receptions, cocktails parties,

and on and on and on.

 

To be sure, millions who love this president love all God's creatures:

designers, models, celebs, wanna-bes and just plain folk who to the

PETA mantra that " Fur Is Dead. " These folks who may have zero tolerance for

anything made from animal products, leather included, and who may go so far as

to insist on cruelty-free silk. Others have made nuanced calculations about what

works for them.

 

Sandra Nelson, a registered nurse from Gainesville, Va., is s a quiet convert.

 

" I love real fur but once you get a puppy it's hard to wear it anymore. Besides,

they make coats now that look so real, that are so warm and that are

affordable, " she says, fighting the cold in a black Albert Nipon coat lined in

thick polyester.

 

Lawyer and government contractor Tiffany Brown of nearby Potomac, Maryland wore

a striking, floor length 1940s faux leopard that was cut like a hostess gown:

" It's high-style and not real. I love that, " she says. However, she also owns a

fox jacket her father gave her.

 

 

Tiffany Brown

 

Tangela Lamptey is another paradox, a fur-wearing vegan. But the Altanta-based

Continenal Ailines flight attendant is totally thrilled with the yummy pink

sweater, woven much like Brinker's shawl, that she found on a run to China.

 

" I bought it because I like it, and I liked the fact it wasn't real. But I also

brought my grandmother's mink to Washington because I was afraid of the frigid

weather. "

 

" Fur is still popular, but it's not hot, " says the Washington Post's Robin

Givhan, winner of the first Pulitzer ever awarded for fashion writing. " It's not

something that was on all the runways the way it was a couple of years ago, when

Dolce and Gabana did a whole collection of fur skirts, dresses and handbags. But

it's definitely still alive and well and it's still a healthy industry. "

 

Well, maybe not that healthy, given the current economy and the last couple of

warmish winters, though certainly not in AIG or Chrysler territory either.

 

" Fur is suffering the same fate as luxury apparel, but it's been a very cold

winter, and across the country our retailers report getting calls from people

going to the inauguration, " said Keith Kaplan, who heads the L.A.-based Fur

Information Council of America.

 

The Obama presidency, he notes, comes amid a shift in consumer demographics.

 

" African-American women have been representing a larger volume of fur sales

because of growing affluence in the community, and because of the effect of that

whole urban look, for men, too. It's the bling thing. " In 2002, says Kaplan,

fewer than 17 percent of fur buyers were African-American. By 2006, the figure

had jumped to nearly 27 percent.

 

PETA continues undaunted, despite last year's apparent failure to rehabilitate

chronic serial fur-wearer Aretha Franklin.

 

In return for paying $19,000 in back taxes that the diva owed in late March,

thereby saving her Michigan home from the repo man, PETA wanted her to forsake

fur forever and give the group every last one of her over-the-top coats.

 

" Oh yes, Aretha and her golden sable, " chuckles Kaplan. " She has quite a hefty

closet but she turned them down. "

 

 

" Will we ever get to the point that we realize that we will be more secure when

the rest of the world isn't living in poverty just so we can have nice running

shoes? "

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Oh dear!

 

, fraggle <EBbrewpunx wrote:

>

> i noticed this a bunch yesterday while half watching the

inauguration...lots of folks in the stands and on stage in dead

animals

> sad

>

>

> http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/01/19/washington-brings-out-

the_n_159179.html

>

> Washington Brings Out The Fur

>

> Huffington Post | Annie Groer | January 19, 2009 02:18 PM

>

>

> --

------------

> Read More: Inauguration Style, Style News

> Fur is back. Big time.

>

> The high glam factor of Barack Obama's inauguration, and the city's

brutal cold snap seem to have given many revelers license to come out

of their pelt-packed, politically-incorrect closets swathed in the

hides of creatures great and small.

>

> At last night's inaugural ball hosted by TheRoot.com and the

Washington Post, DJ Biz Markie--he of the enormo physique--wore an

ankle-grazing black mink greatcoat, size 62 long, as casually as if

it were a bathrobe.

>

> " I like my fur. I have, like, 15 of them: three minks, three

sables, two chinchillas... " says the unapologetic Beat Box regular on

the " Yo Gabba Gabba " kids' TV show.

>

> Designer Dianne von Furstenberg came to the same soiree at the

National Museum of American History sporting vintage monkey fur,

which is black, shiny, coarse, very long and poker straight. " I've

had it 40 years, so it's been dead a long time. " she

explains. " Sometimes I tell people it's nylon. "

>

> L.A. comic Michael Colyar chose a full-length raccoon for Sunday's

jazz brunch thrown by Essence Magazine and Perennial Sports and

Entertainment, one of six furs he owns.

>

> " They all died from acid reflux, " Colyar solemnly swears.

>

> And the bleat goes on.

>

> Story continues below

>

> Katrina Peebles had two fur coats at the National Portrait Gallery

unveiling of Shepherd Fairey's original, iconic Obama graphic: a lush

Russian sable that her husband--Miami and DC real estate developer

Donahue Peebles--gave her when their son was born 14 years ago, and a

mink swing coat with a zig-zag hem and blood red lining that she'd

loaned to a shivering friend from Florida.

>

>

> Katrina Peebles envelopes her husband Donahue, in her sable coat.

>

> Peebles concedes she " felt bad " wearing her Galanos mink to the

National Zoo with her daughter, a place, after all, where the animals

are supposed to feel safe in their own skins.

>

> " I knew it was anti-green. But it was just so cold, " says Peebles,

who owns a half-dozen furs worth $400,000. (She prefers that all big

gifts from hubby come from furriers, not jewelers). Then she adds: " I

do eat red meat, but I do a lot of things for kids. "

>

> Bush administration Chief of Protocol Nancy Brinker topped her gray

suit with a woven shawl of indeterminate taxonomy. With the deft

diplomacy required by her day job, she called it " re-grow-able...It's

not a pelt. It's shorn. " She also carried an aubergine mink purse,

and wore a black overcoat lined in something brown and fluffy.

>

> It isn't just boldface names who are piling are on the furs. All

over town, revelers are bundling up in fur jackets, coats, vests,

hats, scarves, cuffs, muffs, boot-tops and stoles..

>

> And where there are folks in fur, there is PETA, People for the

Ethical Treatment of Animals, which scored a few raid-paint hits on

hapless-ballgoers at Bill Clinton's 1997 inauguration.

>

> Last week they chose an inaugurally-slow Thursday to stage an

extremely public act of charity (are there any other kind these

days?) just blocks from the White House.

>

> At a table in Farragut Square, a media mini-scrum checked out the

giveaway of used fur coats to homeless women who'd been driven across

town by staff of the shelters where they seek refuge. As cameras

rolled, the women, some with children, pawed through the piles,

trying on the most promising. Several of them happily left with a

warm coat. Even a homeless man or two got lucky, said Ashley Byrne,

PETA's campaign coordinator. The gents fit into castoffs from some

very large ladies.

>

> The inventory comes from remorseful fur owners who donate them to

PETA for use as agit-props in its traveling anti-fur-crusade-cum-

street theater.

>

> The coats range from cheap ratty rabbit (marketed in some quarters

as " lapin, " which is French for bunny) to the occasional mink with

the requisite satin lining and elaborate monogramming.

>

> Over the years, PETA has painted, burned, buried, or cut up for use

as animal bedding all those tax-deductible wraps. Nor did this batch

escape alteration.

>

> PETA marked the linings and sliced holes in the skins to minimize

resale " marketability " while retaining warm-ability. This

ensures " that people who weren't homeless wouldn't have any incentive

to want one, " say Byrne.

>

> This week PETA volunteers--some of them clad in raccoon, fox and

rabbit costumes--will leaflet fur-swathed humans about the error of

their ways. " We realize people have no idea how these animals suffer,

how they are beaten or electrocuted or skinned alive, " says Byrne.

The hope is that education begets donation.

>

> To spread the word in downtown gridlock, PETA has bought ads on 20

DC pedi-cabs, those rickshaw-derived vehicles pulled by strapping

young bi-peds.

>

> It's not clear what kind of reaction the protesters will elicit as

Obama supporters dress and redress for multiple events that include

church services, mass outdoor gatherings, black-tie balls, casual

receptions, cocktails parties, and on and on and on.

>

> To be sure, millions who love this president love all God's

creatures: designers, models, celebs, wanna-bes and just plain folk

who to the PETA mantra that " Fur Is Dead. " These folks who

may have zero tolerance for anything made from animal products,

leather included, and who may go so far as to insist on cruelty-free

silk. Others have made nuanced calculations about what works for them.

>

> Sandra Nelson, a registered nurse from Gainesville, Va., is s a

quiet convert.

>

> " I love real fur but once you get a puppy it's hard to wear it

anymore. Besides, they make coats now that look so real, that are so

warm and that are affordable, " she says, fighting the cold in a black

Albert Nipon coat lined in thick polyester.

>

> Lawyer and government contractor Tiffany Brown of nearby Potomac,

Maryland wore a striking, floor length 1940s faux leopard that was

cut like a hostess gown: " It's high-style and not real. I love that, "

she says. However, she also owns a fox jacket her father gave her.

>

>

> Tiffany Brown

>

> Tangela Lamptey is another paradox, a fur-wearing vegan. But the

Altanta-based Continenal Ailines flight attendant is totally thrilled

with the yummy pink sweater, woven much like Brinker's shawl, that

she found on a run to China.

>

> " I bought it because I like it, and I liked the fact it wasn't

real. But I also brought my grandmother's mink to Washington because

I was afraid of the frigid weather. "

>

> " Fur is still popular, but it's not hot, " says the Washington

Post's Robin Givhan, winner of the first Pulitzer ever awarded for

fashion writing. " It's not something that was on all the runways the

way it was a couple of years ago, when Dolce and Gabana did a whole

collection of fur skirts, dresses and handbags. But it's definitely

still alive and well and it's still a healthy industry. "

>

> Well, maybe not that healthy, given the current economy and the

last couple of warmish winters, though certainly not in AIG or

Chrysler territory either.

>

> " Fur is suffering the same fate as luxury apparel, but it's been a

very cold winter, and across the country our retailers report getting

calls from people going to the inauguration, " said Keith Kaplan, who

heads the L.A.-based Fur Information Council of America.

>

> The Obama presidency, he notes, comes amid a shift in consumer

demographics.

>

> " African-American women have been representing a larger volume of

fur sales because of growing affluence in the community, and because

of the effect of that whole urban look, for men, too. It's the bling

thing. " In 2002, says Kaplan, fewer than 17 percent of fur buyers

were African-American. By 2006, the figure had jumped to nearly 27

percent.

>

> PETA continues undaunted, despite last year's apparent failure to

rehabilitate chronic serial fur-wearer Aretha Franklin.

>

> In return for paying $19,000 in back taxes that the diva owed in

late March, thereby saving her Michigan home from the repo man, PETA

wanted her to forsake fur forever and give the group every last one

of her over-the-top coats.

>

> " Oh yes, Aretha and her golden sable, " chuckles Kaplan. " She has

quite a hefty closet but she turned them down. "

>

>

> " Will we ever get to the point that we realize that we will be more

secure when the rest of the world isn't living in poverty just so we

can have nice running shoes? "

>

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Share on other sites

I think it may be a backlash against the anti-fur protests. These things go in swings - it will probably die down again.

 

Jo

 

 

-

whitty__

Friday, January 23, 2009 3:50 PM

Re: fur sadly is back

 

 

I've noticed many more furs being worn in the shop where I work as well this year. I wish I could say something to them without fear of being fired (I hate my retail job, but can't find a better one in this region). I don't understand this phenomenon, especially because of the recession that we're in--most working-class families are struggling. Even if I werent' against fur wearing, I'd be embarrassed to wear it because I'd feel like I was flaunting my wealth to others. Maybe it's *because* of the recession that people are wearing them: to show others that they're not touched by the economic worries that the rest of us have. The incredible shrinking middle class is being replaced by buffers of fur coats and ostentatious displays of wealth to keep the working class in their place away from the privileged class. Yes, I'm feeling snarky today. , "heartwerk" <jo.heartwork wrote:>> Oh dear!>

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