FABULOUS FAKES Giacca Is Hard To Find. A a r 4.' 4s, ‘‘ i`; AS1 • , 4t.,/v; 74 s... •"" ' Deliberately. 0 •i' • , , 4 , ft.....,',4„, '* " ' kl':*. . t, ,i4n,'4,1- '1,,,',...' ,'tst`i .- '—' Lk 4 q ....', ;-•v.,; .:- . : 4 ■ 4). t ,, ,‘ 1 A. z...1,;:i",:;/, . A.;. .-.1,,, ! ' r , , =-. , , - `'''' ,,444*,fti ,s,14 "Iv ,-,, : '..*.,) a' But to those who always seem to know the best places to shop, it's a favorite stop. Fun, Creative, Women's high fashion. An entire store filled with fashion coordinates for any season. What makes Giacca Special? They design, create, and manufacture everything you see. Visit today and see what the secret's all about. Located next to Capital Drugs in the Franklin Plaza in Southfield. 358-4085 • M-F 10-4, Sat. 10-3 29107 Northwestern • Second entrance from 12 Mile FOR THOSE WITH DISCRIMINATING TASTE .. IT ONLY LOOKS EXPENSIVE .. . TRUE FAUX JE LRY 280 N. Woodward, In The Great American Building Birmingham • llchigan • 433-1150 52 IN STYLE Diana and the Duchess of York, Sarah Ferguson. Not long ago, Audrey Hepburn refused real gems and opted for Lane's ersatz baubles for a Blackgama fur ad. His glitzier products have been worn on Dynasty, Falcon Crest and the daytime soaps, too. Strikingly attired in a Dijon mustard colored suit, fashioned by his London tailor, and accented by a black shirt and pale yellow silk tie with red polka dots, the outfit looks better than it sounds. It is precisely the sort of ensemble that has earned Kenneth Jay Lane a place in the International Best Dressed Men's Hall of Fame. His faux jewelry has also garnered honors and awards, among them the (industry's highest but now defunct) Coty American Fashion Critics Special Award for "Outstanding Contribution to Fashion." He has created jewelry for Diana Vreeland for the Costume Institute exhibits at New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art. Other awards have come from Neiman-Marcus, Harper's Bazaar and within the industry itself. The late New York Tribune fashion columnist Eugenia Shepard wrote in 1963 that "Kenneth Jay Lane's rise in the costume jewelry world has been nothing short of a comet." Since that time, with the exception of a few not too spectacular business years and the sale of his business to the Kenton Company and subsequent buy-back, Lane has pretty much remained at the helm of the costume jewelry business. How has he worn his success? There are assorted opinions about this but one thing that has undergone great change since his Detroit departure in 1952 is his accent. Why, it sounds almost British. And