MANILA.
Imelda Marcos--wife of the late Filipino dictator Ferdinand Marcos--launched a
jewelry line on Saturday which she described as "both worthless and priceless,"
but would entitle the buyer to a piece of the glamorous former first lady.
Called
"The Imelda Collection," it includes earrings, necklaces, bracelets,
brooches, pins, combs and even cuff links made from a combination of glass beads,
gemstones and gold-plated chains.
Many
of them feature images of butterflies and shoes, trademarks of the 77-year-old
widow. During her heyday at the height of power of her late husband, Imelda was
called the "iron butterfly" for her ability to get her own way.
Following
her husband's ouster in a popular revolution in 1986, she was found to have collected
1,220 pairs of size 8 shoes.
Speaking
to a crowd of mostly women at the seaside Philippine Plaza Hotel, she described
the collection as "both worthless and priceless."
"Worthless
because it comes from worthless materials, but it is priceless because it is the
creativity that's coming from the soul of human beings to bring out what is beautiful
and what is God in them," she said.
Marcos,
known for her shopping sprees abroad while her countrymen wallowed in poverty,
said the one-of-a-kind pieces came from her old accessories and clothes, mixed
with newly bought stones and other materials.
She
said the idea for the collection came from her 23-year-old grandson, Martin "Borgy"
Manotoc.
Each
piece carries a message from Imelda saying the item is "guaranteed to tarnish,
fall apart, maybe even disintegrate. When this happens, just be Imeldific! Be
ingenious and find ways to put it together."
Many
of the items were recycled from things Marcos picked up on her travels, while
others were fashioned from items the government failed to seize after the family's
fall from power.
Their
prices, however, were not for ordinary Filipinos. A hairpin made of olive jade,
fresh water pearls, antique French glass, Austrian crystals and woven glass beads
with white gold-plated chain was priced at P5,800 (US$116, €91), about half
a month's salary for an office employee.
A
necklace made from a vintage brooch, glass beads, cat's eye gem stone, fresh water
pearls, orange calcite and ribbons cost 15,600 ($312, €244).
Liza
Ilarde, editor of JetSet, a travel and lifestyle magazine, said the collection
was "in tune" with the current trend in accessory design of mixing semiprecious
stones with found objects.
"Personally,
some of the pieces are not to my taste although, I'm sure if I look hard enough,
I can find something that I'll like," she said.
Astrud
Crisologo picked up a P7,000 ($140, €110), gemstone-ringed brooch with a
picture of a young Imelda "to wear and to keep." She said she would
have paid more for it.
"She's
an icon and I love her. I have to own a piece of her. This is a piece of history.
It's pop culture," she said. |