Scarves Scarf Of The Day 2020 - Which Hermès scarf are you wearing today?

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My very best wishes to everyone for the New Year to all SOTD regulars, occasional posters and newcomers alike :party: .

The SOTD 2021 thread is now open and ready for business:



The new theme commences tomorrow (3 Jan - whenever your time zone gets there) but there's no reason why you can't post earlier if you want.
 
beautiful! Hadn’t seen this before.

such wonderful icy colors.


Oh darn! I am just too slow to check this thread! I knew this one!

also loved your gingko scarf. we have a big ginkgo in front of our house. It has just started dropping its leaves. My favorite time is when we have a solid yellow carpet of the leaves...
I have never been able to decide on a CW for me of this scarf..View attachment 4927389View attachment 4927393
There is a navy CW you might like, but there is a lot of gold.
 
I feel rather guilty that you looked so hard :amazed: as it’s probably impossible to guess unless you happen to be familiar with the CSGM version.
You see, technically it’s Annie Faivre’s Le Paradis duRoy:
View attachment 4927854
Don’t see the tricksy statue?! That’s because it appears on the top part of an additional decorative border that seems to only appear on the CSGM:
View attachment 4927861
:biggrin: Mystery solved :biggrin:
Oh, I love the CSGMs that add a border and don't just blow up the design! (Venezia has a cool added border. others?). This is fantastic!!
 
so wonderful with you dress - fab pairing!
I feel rather guilty that you looked so hard :amazed: as it’s probably impossible to guess unless you happen to be familiar with the CSGM version.
You see, technically it’s Annie Faivre’s Le Paradis duRoy:
View attachment 4927854
Don’t see the tricksy statue?! That’s because it appears on the top part of an additional decorative border that seems to only appear on the CSGM:
View attachment 4927861
:biggrin: Mystery solved :biggrin:
oh. my. gosh!
You’ve stumped us all!
F4AFF3C7-4394-4B07-8E12-BE7D3ABA5F05.jpeg
(this photo is not Coco, but my DS3s - it is so joyful - it expresses true happiness!)
Most of your scarf riddles are much too difficult for me, but I do enjoy it! One from my part:

View attachment 4927951
erm... uh... hrmmm. .. I don’t have any idea!
What a beauty Croisette!
 
Oh, I just love it worn with argyle! It really compliments the tattersall border elements :love:
[/QUOT]
Thank you, turfnsurf!

so wonderful with you dress - fab pairing!

oh. my. gosh!
You’ve stumped us all!
View attachment 4928035
(this photo is not Coco, but my DS3s - it is so joyful - it expresses true happiness!)

erm... uh... hrmmm. .. I don’t have any idea!

What a beauty Croisette!
Thank you, Cookie!
 
Definitely “need” that! I was too late to name Les Boxes, but :heart: it & that birdie sneaking a drink.

Thank you, Turf!

Nice scarf! I would have never guessed that one

Thank you, Anna! This is a shade of red that I love.

Hooray!
I‘m having a glass of Champagne instead, but Coco is beside me. :heart:

Champagne with a pal is an even better way to celebrate your triumph!

this is a great scarf, Redbirdhermes, and the combination with the grey sweater is spot on!

Thank you, Agrume! Hermes scarves lift any sweater up to a higher level.

Love this in red, RBH!

Thank you, Croisette! This raspberry red with burgundy is awesome. It seems most of the recent reds are sort of orangey, so I love it when I can find the right shade in a beautiful design on the secondary market.

Speaking of the secondary market, I got some scarf mail yesterday. I expect that this won't be difficult for most of you to solve, but I want to wear it today, so here goes. Where can this frightened parrot be found?

20201211_223538.jpg
 
Most of your scarf riddles are much too difficult for me, but I do enjoy it! One from my part:

View attachment 4927951
voyage de Pythias?
Thank you, Turf!



Thank you, Anna! This is a shade of red that I love.



Champagne with a pal is an even better way to celebrate your triumph!



Thank you, Agrume! Hermes scarves lift any sweater up to a higher level.



Thank you, Croisette! This raspberry red with burgundy is awesome. It seems most of the recent reds are sort of orangey, so I love it when I can find the right shade in a beautiful design on the secondary market.

Speaking of the secondary market, I got some scarf mail yesterday. I expect that this won't be difficult for most of you to solve, but I want to wear it today, so here goes. Where can this frightened parrot be found?

View attachment 4928123
Never noticed the parrot. Pretty sure this is Grand Prix au Faubourg
 
Good afternoon Sherlock Scarfies!
No mysteries we solved today by me, but I might have one for you!
I had scarf mail this week too,
Though I suspect this will not be hard to solve.
Where might you find this blossom,
Can you resolve?
View attachment 4928132
Oh, oh, oh- I know this one!!
Pavement, yes?

SOTD inspired by @Croisette7 (though not with as much panache) l’Hiver en Poste in an elusive plum/purple colorway
8B49295C-EF9B-44C7-A655-7F32B05D2E0E.jpeg
 
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Here is my on theme scarf today. Kermit Oliver's Les Cheyennes.

I initially resisted buying scarves that depict people from another culture or seem to appropriate another culture. I broke that rule for Kermit Oliver.

Oliver's father's family were enslaved people, brought from St. Louis to work at ranches in South Texas. His mother's side of the family was white, of Irish and German American descent. His father was a cowboy, and Oliver was raised in Refugio amidst a blend Black, Hispanic, Latino, and white cultures.

Oliver majored in fine art and education at Texas Southern University, where he met and married a fellow art student, Katie.

A young Black man, Oliver was uncertain he would succeed in the art world and expected he would teach art. He did teach for three years, but in 1970 had a solo show at a major Houston gallery, earning a solid following.

Although highly successful, Oliver constantly felt like an outsider. In 1978, Oliver began working as a processor at a Houston post office.

In 1980, Hermes was searching for an American painter who could design a southwestern-themed scarf. One of Oliver's patrons, Lawrence Marcus, executive vice president of Neiman Marcus, was asked for suggestions. He immediately thought of Kermit Oliver and recommended him. Xavier Guerrand-Hermes, then president of US operations, visited Oliver at his home in Houston and was impressed by Oliver's work.

Guerrand-Hermes asked Oliver to select one of three subjects to paint: something southwestern, the history of Neiman Marcus, or a Native American subject. Oliver chose to illustrate a Native American subject, resulting in his Pawnee chief scarf, Pani la Shar.

In 1984 Kermit Oliver and Katie moved to Waco to care for Katie's grandmother. He continued to work for the local post office, painting little, only undertaking commissions and scarf designs.

Oliver had a strong Christian faith and a deep knowledge of the Bible. This, combined with his knowledge of the natural world, informed his art. Much of his painting is rich in symbolism, and he was influenced by Carl Jung's book, Symbols of Transformation. The cycle of birth, life, death and rebirth recurs in his work, which he sees as "painted collages."

Oliver's life took a tragic turn when one of his children, Khristian, who had fallen in with a bad crowd, was caught up in a burglary. Khristian, his pregnant girlfriend, and two other boys decided to break into a house. When the owner came home, he shot one of the boys, and Kristian then shot and beat the owner, killing him.

Khristian was sentenced to death, and over the next ten years, Kermit would paint to raise money to pay attorneys' fees. The art world rallied to support Kermit, and Hermes ordered fifteen additional color variations on existing scarves from Kermit for $500,000. (Hermes kept all the rights.)

While Khristian remained in prison, he and Kermit exchanged artwork. Like his father, Khristian often painted animals, and Kermit would challenge Khristian to replicate his compositions. On November 5, 2009, Khristian was put to death by lethal injection with both Kermit and Katie present.

Khristian's death has informed Kermit's art and his ideas about God and life.

I am wearing Les Cheyennes (reissued as Les Plumes de l'Ouest after they Cheyennes objected) today, designed by Kermit Oliver in 1993.

(Other Oliver scarves - dates according to Carre de Paris and piwigo - Kachinas, 1992; Les Ameriques, 1992; Faune at Flore du Texas, 1992; Pony Express, 1993; Les Mythologies des Hommes Rouges, 1994; Naturalia, 1994; Les Danses des Indiens, 1999; Madison Ave, 2000; Concours d'Elegance, 2002, Tsitsika, 2002; Le Canada, 2006; Marquis de Lafayette, 2007; La Vie Sauvage du Texas, 2014; Chefs Indiens, 2014)1212201107a~2.jpg
 
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