Word: bairds
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Additionally, the pool is so well realized that other visual elements of the production have trouble keeping pace. The costumes, designed by Lucy W. Baird ’10, are nice but a little plain, as are the non-pool set pieces. In a show where everything is about a certain mood—a magical, lighthearted spiritual openness–anything that seems clunky can weigh down a scene. This clunkiness is noticeable every time a moment of overwrought choreography distracts from the scene, or whenever Zimmerman feels the need to pause and tell the audience exactly what...
...History of Landscape Development John R. Stilgoe. As he stalked the makeshift catwalk, the lower level of The Crimson teamed with last minute activity. Thea S. Morton ’06-’08 was taping, Kathleen H. Chen ’09 was pinning, Lucy W. Baird ’10 was chatting with her model, and Alexandra M. Hays ’09 was... nowhere to be found...
...Baird faced the tribunal next. Her wrap dress was inspired by “the original metropolis”... Ancient Greece? The judges were particularly wowed by her craftsmanship and praised the “pure form” of her ensemble. The main attraction for Mueller, however, was not form or function, sexiness or metropolicity, but rather the striking colors and utility of the dress...
...After intense deliberation—basing decisions on creativity, craftsmanship, “je ne sais quoi,” sex appeal, and metropolocity—the judges declared the unanimous winner: Lucy “Goddess of Design” Baird...
With three lectures, a section, a punch event and a problem set, time looks tight for Lucy W. Baird ’10. “I have literally 3 hours if I want to sleep, and I do,” says Baird, who came in fourth in last fall’s challenge. But she isn’t sweating the time crunch. Baird sets off for Chinatown minutes after receiving her theme and the allotted 24 dollars. She heads straight to her favorite fabric store, and deftly navigates the cramped aisles in search of anything dark blue?...