At River Oaks District Boutique, Pink Ladies Toast Rodeo Season and Spring Style

Jenny Antill
At River Oaks District Boutique, Pink Ladies Toast Rodeo Season and Spring Style

Natalie Steen, Marina Larroude, Lindsey McClain, Jamie Coulter, Sheridan Williams

SOME OF THE city’s most fashionable femmes ushered in a new season at La Vie Style House in River Oaks District.


Brand founders Lindsey McClain and Jamie Coulter, along with a group of hostesses that included Marina Larroude, Sacha Fruchter and Stephanie Pilevsky, welcomed VIPs to their pretty-in-pink boutique touting a new spring line and exclusive Rodeo collection. Dallas-based La Vie Style House, known for its colorful, vintage-inspired, one-size-fits-all items like caftans and wraps, opened its second storefront (and first in Houston) in October.

Among those spotted shopping with pink cocktails in hand: Reagan Bregman, Elizabeth Swift Copeland, Frances Moody Buzbee, Sheridan Williams and Teressa Foglia, who just opened her own hat shop nearby in River Oaks District.

Whitney Kuhn Lawson, Kathryn Swain, Amber Elliott, Frances Moody Buzbee

Ashley Tucker, Marina Larroude

Mae Nixon

Marina Larroude, Lindsey McClain, Jamie Coulter, Sheridan Williams, Natalie Steen

Teressa Foglia

Savannah Hall

Sacha Fruchter, Stephanie Pilevsky

Capera Norinsky, Lucie Harte

Meredith Maxwell, Sherry Maxwell

Courtney Elizabeth, Tay Briscoe

Reagan Bregman, Lindsey McClain, Sheridan Williams

Style

Robert Clay, Dana Barton, Bobbie Nau and Tony Bradfield

DINNER ON THE stage is always a special privilege for arts patrons — and the annual Houston Symphony Wine Dinner and Collector’s Auction, served on the stage of the Jesse H. Jones Hall for the Performing Arts, was arguably even more spectacular than usual. After all, in addition to the uniquely striking setting, Symphony supporters also were treated a multi-course meal by chef Aaron Bludorn, paired with wines chosen by John and Lindy Rydman and Lisa Rydman Lindsey of Spec’s Wines, Spirits & Finer Foods.

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David Robertson

AS HOUSTON SLOWLY recovers from last week’s severe derecho, it is strangely serendipitous that on May 25 and 26, a little over a week after that unexpected drama, the Houston Symphony will perform composer John Adams’ critically acclaimed Nativity oratorio El Niño, named after the 1997 meteorological phenomenon and precursor to what we now refer to as “weird weather.”

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