Imelda rides again, opens jewel collection
Date: Wednesday, November 29 @ 10:18:19 CST
Topic: Vol. XVI, No. 01


MANILA-Former first lady Imelda Marcos, notorious for an extensive shoe collection and eye-popping jewels accrued under her husband’s dictatorship, is launching a jewelry collection she “recycled” using castoffs from her old wardrobe, according to the Associated Press.
The AP story continued:
Marcos, known for her shopping trips to ritzy shops in New York while the country wallowed in poverty, made the one-of-a-kind pieces from her old accessories and clothes, mixed with newly bought stones and other materials.

Her daughter, Representative Imee Marcos, said that unknown to many people, her mother shops for trinkets and accessories at flea markets, and keeps earrings with a missing pair or brooches that have some missing stones.

Using her own glue gun, scissors or pliers, Imelda “can combine them with her vintage items in a way that comes out beautiful," Imee said during a promotional photo shoot that journalists were invited to.

The 77-year-old grandmother and widow of Ferdinand Marcos took time out Monday to talk to reporters in between hectic photo shoots for brochures that will launch “The Imelda Collection” of fashion jewelry later this month.

Lying on a divan in a Manila hotel’s seaside garden, Imelda was clad in gossamer top with a butterfly design and black pants for the photographs. For the brochure, she modeled several chunky necklaces, rings and bracelet sets, some made with fake tiger eye stones.

Pointing to a set of matching earrings and brooch made of blue imitation tiger eye stone she was wearing, she told reporters, “This thing I wear now is something I recycled."

Imelda said the jewelry collection was the idea of her grandson Martin “Borgy” Manotoc, who was directing the photo shot.

Manotoc, Imelda said, told her, “You are creating beautiful things, like jewels from practically garbage."

The collection will be officially launched Nov. 18, most likely in Manila.

The first designs to be shown to the public are the accessories and the jewelry and will “not yet” include shoes, her daughter said. But a close aide of the Marcoses said there are plans to expand the collection to include shoes, clothes, and maybe furniture.

Describing how the collection came to be, Imelda recalled, “One day my grandson came to me and said, ‘Mama Meldy, I would like to use your collection to tell the world the real Imelda and the spirit of my grandma.’ “

“What we are selling is not something valuable, but ... it is something invaluable because it’s only beauty that can feed the spirit," she continued.

“Even Plato said God is made real in what is beautiful,” she said.







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