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About the Author

Image credit: Dita Von Teese Cannes 2007 By Mireille Ampilhac - originally posted to Flickr as Cannes 2007, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=8056830

Works by Dita von Teese

Associated Works

Advanced Style (2012) 117 copies, 5 reviews
Bunny Yeager's Darkroom: Pinup Photography's Golden Era (2012) — Foreword — 29 copies, 1 review
Femme Fatales #96/97 (Vol. 11 No. 5/6) — Featured Artist — 1 copy

Tagged

art (20) autobiography (3) B19 (2) bdsm (4) beauty (13) biography (8) books (2) burlesque (38) costume (3) Dita Von Teese (4) erotic (4) erotic photography (4) erotica (21) fashion (22) fetish (22) history (5) keep (2) memoir (6) non-fiction (42) photography (43) pin-up (14) pop culture (3) read (4) reference (2) sex (11) sexuality (7) shelfari-wishlist (3) style (6) to-read (33) vintage (4)

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

7 reviews
Some may see this book as purely as risque coffee table fodder. Others may try and use it as a manual for being like Dita von Teese. Most will just look at the pictures, I assume.

But this book is much deeper than it first appears. Importantly, it makes a point of exploring the two facets of the character of Dita (and she is a character, created like any fiction). Burlesque is currently fashionable, and that is the side of the Dita phenomenon that gets the most attention. But the fetish side show more is just as important, at least to Dita. By having both these facets in one book, you get the idea that sexuality and appeal has many sides to it. What is more, Dita shows that even if we take on a character or a persona, that character can be multi-faceted - Dita manages to be both cheesecake bombshell and dark domina.

This is actually quite liberating - which might surprise some. This is not a prescriptive 'to be alluring you must do x' type of book. Rather, it shows that allure can be found in almost any look, and it is really the attitude behind it that counts.

Oh, and there are lots of great pictures :)
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This is not your typical beauty book. It has elements of the typical beauty book: putting on makeup, hair care, skin care. But it’s also a bit of an autobiography of Von Teese, filled with photographs. Most of the photos have nothing to do with the written content, but they show Dita in her glory, and are great fun to look at.

By ‘eccentric glamour’, Dita is referring to going against the usual rules of beauty and doing what makes YOU happy, whether you look like everyone else or not. show more She wants you to find your own, personal, look- to make your mark on the world with your beauty. As someone who was wearing dark red lipstick in my teens when everyone else was wearing white lipstick (yes, I’m old), I can totally appreciate her attitude!

While Dita looks like an image from a fantasy, she’s actually down to earth. She’s in love with vintage and retro glamour, but does her own hair and makeup (including dying her hair every two weeks- she’s actually a blond!), uses mainly drugstore brands for skin and hair care, and works her ass off to keep her body in great shape. She’s busy all the time, not laying around eating bonbons.

She gives advice on diet and exercise, because beauty is based on good health. She covers everything from hair removal, fragrance, well-fitting undergarments, doing one’s eyebrows and putting on that wonderful cat-eye liner, the half-moon manicure, and how she does those fabulous retro hair styles. She even devotes a chapter to stage make-up, not that most of us will need that information. It’s still fun to read!

If you’re into retro looks this book is a must. If you’re looking for a basic beauty book with lots of cool photos, this book will work for you. It’s almost 400 pages of good stuff.
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I no longer wear stockings and skirts every day and my vintage hat collection is gathering dust (though I did just buy a tube of ruby red lipstick for the first time in ages) but I still adore Dita Von Teese. She is self-made in every imaginable sense of the word and yet she doesn’t come across as fake. In this lavishly illustrated (and mammoth) book she stresses that you can do this, too. You can find a unique style and milk it for all its worth. You can be eccentric and glamorous and show more confident. I lack the dedication to take it to Dita’s level, but I wouldn’t mind owning a copy of this gorgeous book so that I can flip through it once and a while with a cup of tea and fill up on the inspiration to squeeze some beauty out of life. show less
This is an oddly light weight fluffy book. It's written as a girly chat, and gives an odd, but interesting and engaging, mix of insights into Dita, fashion tips and the history of clothes, burlesque and the like.

Doubtless it won't be to everyone's taste, it deals with striptease, bondage and a pretty open (but light) chat about censorship, sexuality and the like, but I enjoyed it.

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Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
9
Also by
4
Members
664
Popularity
#37,984
Rating
4.2
Reviews
6
ISBNs
11
Languages
3
Favorited
1

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