There was Bowie - with his captivating peepers and covetable powder-blue suit - a man of the future.
Searching for what I call "trashy bass" - a broken-sounding reverberating fog-horn bass - I found Bowie, looking futuristic, singing from the past "Life on Mars".
And I did find the trashy bass too - on Bowie's Fame and around 1:39 Marty Robbins Don't Worry, not quite twang - a bit static-fuzz - but it's sticking with me... that fat dapper tie, the striped shirt, the suit of baby-blue.
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2D to 3D: Artist Room Studies, Jennifer Hawkins Hock
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Monday, November 4, 2013
Thursday, October 24, 2013
November: "No Butterflies, No Bees".
November always brings to mind Art of Noise... ahead of their time. Find their Opus 4 - for a futurepast moment, courtesy of Thomas Hood - 1844.
There are a few more futurepast moments to be had. Merely select the futurepast link within the Labels cloud and prepare for a bit of time travel. You might also try the paper time travel link.
There are a few more futurepast moments to be had. Merely select the futurepast link within the Labels cloud and prepare for a bit of time travel. You might also try the paper time travel link.
Monday, September 30, 2013
Toile La La Automne Hiver 2014 2015 Highlights.
Inspiration: A half-moon in a charged atmosphere, glowing golden hours, twilight silhouettes, primordial nature, cloud formations like ship sails and smoke, the silver and gold of winking stars... the equality of shadows... all the good and Romantic Souls. Toile La La details here.
From the Toile La La A/H F/W 2014-2015 Romantic Souls Collection:
From the Toile La La A/H F/W 2014-2015 Romantic Souls Collection:
Fleur - Toile La La Romantic Souls A/H 2014-2015 Collection. |
ZiZi - Toile La La Romantic Souls A/H 2014-2015 Collection. |
Fleur - Toile La La Romantic Souls A/H 2014-2015 Collection. |
Model - Bat, wearing Toile La La rooster-hen toile - A/H 2014-2015. |
ZiZi - Toile La La Romantic Souls A/H 2014-2015 Collection. |
A/H 2014-2015 cross-body mail satchel in grey, with brass-gold fittings. Toile La La. |
Twilight Silhouette toile wrap-skirt, Romantic Souls A/H 2014-2015. Toile La La. |
Bat, wearing peach candy-floss wig and pin accessory. A/H 2014-2015 Toile La La. |
Shoe-boots, Fleur's own. A/H 2014-2015, Toile La La. |
Vintage Gold Dancing Slippers, ZiZi's own. A/H 2014-2015, Toile La La. |
Romantic Souls A/H 2014-2015 inspiration, glowing golden hours - July 2013. |
Saturday, September 28, 2013
Excercise Visualization, Description, Imagination.
My daughter tells me about ASMR - autonomous sensory meridian response... she thinks it sounds like me... so I decided to make the most of it with this exercise:
ASMR, synaesthesia, senses which happily interact... call it what you will - I like description.
ASMR, synaesthesia, senses which happily interact... call it what you will - I like description.
Wednesday, September 25, 2013
Environmentally Dressed.
With the onset of the twentieth century, artists and thinkers began to discuss concepts of attire... ideas of blending-in versus standing-out. One belief was that everyone should dress alike socially - relegating self-expression to the home environment. Taking that thought further, there were also experiments in having attire match decorative motifs within the home.
I like the concept of matching attire and home furnishings... which seems - harmonious and consistent. This would require a clearly-established and committed sense of self, I think - to align oneself with a particular style and stick to it.
Now returning to the concept of dressing uniformly within a group - we see this quite often... teams dress alike, people dress rather regionally, and to some extent - even people asserting their sense of self-expression sometimes achieve similar end-results. Dressing for formal occasions, men - more often than women - tend to have a unified appearance.
From a hotel window my husband and I recently observed an odd example of uniform dress... herds of young women in towering heels and tiny bandage-tight dresses teetering, trotting, and stumbling along the sidewalk on their way to and from the clubs.
But today - because it's a wintry fall day - chilly, rainy - grey and green... and there's more of the rain and cold and grey to come... I decided to try this: when the weather is dull and overcast, I plan to wear one little cheerfully bright accent - a sunny yellow scarf or hot pink lipstick or red socks... just for the happy effect it might produce in other people. Then, when it's sunny and bright - perhaps the rest of the crowd needs to see a bit of cool blue, or might benefit from a minty fragrance passing by.
I like the concept of matching attire and home furnishings... which seems - harmonious and consistent. This would require a clearly-established and committed sense of self, I think - to align oneself with a particular style and stick to it.
Now returning to the concept of dressing uniformly within a group - we see this quite often... teams dress alike, people dress rather regionally, and to some extent - even people asserting their sense of self-expression sometimes achieve similar end-results. Dressing for formal occasions, men - more often than women - tend to have a unified appearance.
From a hotel window my husband and I recently observed an odd example of uniform dress... herds of young women in towering heels and tiny bandage-tight dresses teetering, trotting, and stumbling along the sidewalk on their way to and from the clubs.
But today - because it's a wintry fall day - chilly, rainy - grey and green... and there's more of the rain and cold and grey to come... I decided to try this: when the weather is dull and overcast, I plan to wear one little cheerfully bright accent - a sunny yellow scarf or hot pink lipstick or red socks... just for the happy effect it might produce in other people. Then, when it's sunny and bright - perhaps the rest of the crowd needs to see a bit of cool blue, or might benefit from a minty fragrance passing by.
Monday, September 23, 2013
The Head-In-the-Clouds Wig.
Bebe Bouton wearing the head-in-the-clouds wig. Toile La La. |
Raveling threads from the sewing room are the origin of this fetching wig worn by Bebe Bouton. Most of the head-in-the-clouds wig comes from a dove blue-grey duvet cover sewn over the weekend. Bebe - and Bat, another Toile La La model - appear in a candy-floss petal/peach wig in the Romantic Souls F/W 2014 fashion show here.
Tuesday, September 3, 2013
Bantock's Books.
If you're a die-hard, dyed-in-the-wool lover of digital books - you really need to open up the page-after-page-turning kind of book created by Nick Bantock... his Griffin and Sabine ones are some personal favorites. It would be impossible for you to open - there, on your digital version - Bantock's mysterious envelopes and to inspect the folded correspondence within.
Friday, August 30, 2013
The Scent Museum: Smeller's Delight Part 1.
Sniffing everything under the sun in a search for something wonderful - and feeling olfactorily frustrated - has culminated in an idea for a museum to delight smellers like me.
Since I'm imagining this - I suppose the idea can be fantastic and out-of-the box - without considering feasibility. Let's imagine you visit this museum:
The grey, stone exterior of the museum is not flashy, the only hint to the interior being a concrete walkway displaying sunken floral and herbal impressions... shadows or whispers of fragrant components. There's a tranquil fountain, surrounded by neutrally-scented grasses and trees.
Upon reception, you receive a necklace-contraption which works like a hummingbird's beak, but fits over your nose - and a map. Aroma rooms are designated by origin - Floral, Wood, Herb, Spice, Fruit, Animal (or similarly appropriate classifications) and feature numerous smell-sampling stations.
To obtain a scent, you - the sniffer, don your hummer's-beak and press it against a tiny rubber portal-spot (some conditioner bottles have these rubber seals, which open when squeezed... but in this instance, the fragrance beak penetrates the seal).
I have also imagined the smell-sampling stations being built like mix-and-match candy bins, outfitted with magnetized lids and with vacuum and release buttons to retract or emit scents.
However you want to envision obtaining the scent... follow that idea from room to room - sniffing away at whatever intrigues you. The idea here is that The Scent Museum is not affiliated with any certain perfumers and therefore is not promoting specific perfumers, but is instead educating the public nose and stimulating the common and collective imagination.
Even more scientifically - The Scent Museum might equip you with simple and non-invasive monitors that register your response to smells you experience during your visit - and upon journey's completion... you receive a print-out, which you can present at a mixing counter - where it is possible to purchase a completely personalized essential aroma that defines and delights you.
The Scent Museum would - at least, to me - be the fragrance-lover's equivalent of Roald Dahl's Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.
Since I'm imagining this - I suppose the idea can be fantastic and out-of-the box - without considering feasibility. Let's imagine you visit this museum:
The grey, stone exterior of the museum is not flashy, the only hint to the interior being a concrete walkway displaying sunken floral and herbal impressions... shadows or whispers of fragrant components. There's a tranquil fountain, surrounded by neutrally-scented grasses and trees.
Upon reception, you receive a necklace-contraption which works like a hummingbird's beak, but fits over your nose - and a map. Aroma rooms are designated by origin - Floral, Wood, Herb, Spice, Fruit, Animal (or similarly appropriate classifications) and feature numerous smell-sampling stations.
To obtain a scent, you - the sniffer, don your hummer's-beak and press it against a tiny rubber portal-spot (some conditioner bottles have these rubber seals, which open when squeezed... but in this instance, the fragrance beak penetrates the seal).
I have also imagined the smell-sampling stations being built like mix-and-match candy bins, outfitted with magnetized lids and with vacuum and release buttons to retract or emit scents.
However you want to envision obtaining the scent... follow that idea from room to room - sniffing away at whatever intrigues you. The idea here is that The Scent Museum is not affiliated with any certain perfumers and therefore is not promoting specific perfumers, but is instead educating the public nose and stimulating the common and collective imagination.
Even more scientifically - The Scent Museum might equip you with simple and non-invasive monitors that register your response to smells you experience during your visit - and upon journey's completion... you receive a print-out, which you can present at a mixing counter - where it is possible to purchase a completely personalized essential aroma that defines and delights you.
The Scent Museum would - at least, to me - be the fragrance-lover's equivalent of Roald Dahl's Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
The Seven Dwarves of Beauty Products.
Stinky, Greasy, Rashful, Skanky, Clumpy, Sticky, Yucky: Assessing an assortment of eye pencils, lipsticks, and perfume - I realized how these descriptions could very well be the names of a new set of dwarves - The Seven Dwarves of Beauty Products... except for none of these dwarves are good to have around. The Seven Trolls of Beauty Products.
How much money do we spend on little beauty/fragrance odds and ends hoping to enhance our appearance/aura and delight our mates... and how many of those beauty treats feel - instead - like a merchandising trick. There are pencils that drag the skin and tingle the eyes, shallow shimmer sprinkled thinly on the surface of the lipstick or shadow, fragrance that lingers and becomes invasive - like a bad guest, colors that look promising in the container - thinning or morphing once applied. Stinky, Greasy, Clumpy, Sticky, and Yucky make themselves known right away - but Rashful and Skanky, are even a bit sneaky too.
Maybe Skanky is the worst of these beauty trolls. In hoping to look or smell chic, you try something different - and realize later - the effect is quite the opposite... what you thought was shimmer is instead chunky glitter... or the fruity fragrance casts a spell of fermentation.
Stinky, Rashful, Skanky, and Yucky most frequently appear at fragrance counters, but have not yet frightened me away - so persistent am I in my pursuit of sniffing out the perfect scent. Here's a typical session... spritz, wave, sniff - floral alcohol... spritz, wave, sniff - floral alcohol... spritz, wave, sniff - alcoholic fruit... spritz, wave, sniff - fruity floral... spritz, wave, sniff - citrus floral... spritz, wave, sniff - floral vanilla - and so on, until - I bid farewell to Stinky, Rashful, Skanky, Yucky and the entire department of fragrance. Where are Edgy, Advanced, Mysterious, Mesmerizing, Intellectual, Responsible, and Absolutely Great when we need them?
How much money do we spend on little beauty/fragrance odds and ends hoping to enhance our appearance/aura and delight our mates... and how many of those beauty treats feel - instead - like a merchandising trick. There are pencils that drag the skin and tingle the eyes, shallow shimmer sprinkled thinly on the surface of the lipstick or shadow, fragrance that lingers and becomes invasive - like a bad guest, colors that look promising in the container - thinning or morphing once applied. Stinky, Greasy, Clumpy, Sticky, and Yucky make themselves known right away - but Rashful and Skanky, are even a bit sneaky too.
Maybe Skanky is the worst of these beauty trolls. In hoping to look or smell chic, you try something different - and realize later - the effect is quite the opposite... what you thought was shimmer is instead chunky glitter... or the fruity fragrance casts a spell of fermentation.
Stinky, Rashful, Skanky, and Yucky most frequently appear at fragrance counters, but have not yet frightened me away - so persistent am I in my pursuit of sniffing out the perfect scent. Here's a typical session... spritz, wave, sniff - floral alcohol... spritz, wave, sniff - floral alcohol... spritz, wave, sniff - alcoholic fruit... spritz, wave, sniff - fruity floral... spritz, wave, sniff - citrus floral... spritz, wave, sniff - floral vanilla - and so on, until - I bid farewell to Stinky, Rashful, Skanky, Yucky and the entire department of fragrance. Where are Edgy, Advanced, Mysterious, Mesmerizing, Intellectual, Responsible, and Absolutely Great when we need them?
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
How the Bicycle Improved the Lives of Women.
After researching Victorian times and trends in February of 2012, I wrote this post sharing the positive effect of the bicycle in women's lives near the end of the nineteenth century. Good reviews of Haifaa-Al Mansour's movie Wadjda have come to my attention recently - and therefore created a renewed interest in the role of the bicycle regarding women's history.
Reading the accounts of Susan B. Anthony, Frances Willard, and Charlotte Perkins Gilman - the most profound impression was this: The bicycle offered a sense of safety. Victorian women - on wheels - were enabled for the first time to speed past strangers they did not wish to encounter. Yes, riding a bike did require small changes to attire... a hem slightly shorter to avoid its getting caught in the bicycle chain... or some women opted for divided skirts or voluminous bloomers - but think of the sense of lightness the lifting of one small worry can create.
Now, riding my own bike and enjoying the fresh air and the improved circulation... I find it wonderful to know I share that same sense of lightness experienced by the first bicycling women long ago. Less worries, better health, more happiness... these are improvements that enhance the lives of the people we love as well.
Reading the accounts of Susan B. Anthony, Frances Willard, and Charlotte Perkins Gilman - the most profound impression was this: The bicycle offered a sense of safety. Victorian women - on wheels - were enabled for the first time to speed past strangers they did not wish to encounter. Yes, riding a bike did require small changes to attire... a hem slightly shorter to avoid its getting caught in the bicycle chain... or some women opted for divided skirts or voluminous bloomers - but think of the sense of lightness the lifting of one small worry can create.
Now, riding my own bike and enjoying the fresh air and the improved circulation... I find it wonderful to know I share that same sense of lightness experienced by the first bicycling women long ago. Less worries, better health, more happiness... these are improvements that enhance the lives of the people we love as well.
Wednesday, August 14, 2013
L'Heure d'Ete: Summer Hours Review.
Summer Hours, directed by Olivier Assayas, gracefully invites the viewer - like a guest - into the life of a family of older siblings who face - and deftly weigh - questions about values, connections, love, and continuity. In the home of their youth, the familiar art objects possibly mirror and record the ups and downs of the family. There are overall themes of the delicacy of life, longevity, effect, and simultaneity - with an examination of views regarding nostalgia, and a glimpse of interwoven beginnings and endings.
Of the same gentle, contemplative quality: My Afternoons with Margueritte, The Hedgehog, Moonrise Kingdom.
Of the same gentle, contemplative quality: My Afternoons with Margueritte, The Hedgehog, Moonrise Kingdom.
Tuesday, August 13, 2013
A Bookstack for the Future from Our Past.
Astonishing as it might have been for my university 80s-self to witness my present-self cinematically appearing in the college dormitory, were it possible - I would present the following bookstack to that self:
The Perfect Bookstack for the Fashionably Curious:
Dress and Popular Culture, Patricia Cunningham and Susan Voso Lab. Bowling Green State University Popular Press - 1991.
Fashion at the Edge: Spectacle, Modernity, and Deathliness, Caroline Evans. Yale University Press - 2003.
StreetStyle: From Sidewalk to Catwalk, Ted Polhemus. Thames and Hudson - 1994.
- Dress and Popular Culture
- Fashion at the Edge: Spectacle, Modernity, and Deathliness
- StreetStyle: From Sidewalk to Catwalk
- Why do styles shift in and out of popularity.
- Why are styles adopted by groups of people.
- Why do trends occur and sometimes reoccur.
- Why does being fashionable hold such importance for some people.
- Why is fashion often symbolic and not only functional.
Prologue:
Knowing now what I knew and loved then, I contemplate how to impress my 80s self. Past midnight, in the hallway of the dormitory - when everyone else is asleep - is when I will find myself sitting there in a silly oversized t-shirt reading too many assignments for one night - face coated in minty-sulphuric, green, beauty-clay.
The matte, black, stretchy pleather leggings of a few twenty-first century years ago will be just the thing to catch my eye. Those, I think - along with some over-the-knee, black leather riding boots. The rest won't matter. Long hair and double-pierced ears will be edgy enough to impress that person sitting there in her clay beauty treatment, growing out a mullet.
That self might recognize this self - perhaps critically... never mind that.
Scenario:
Me: Appearing in the doorway slowly and casually sauntering by, "It seems the studying will never end... I remember."
In response, a glance of surprise and scrutiny... also approval for the "look". It worked. I think I'm someone's visiting mother.
Me: "These books are perfect for you and hold answers to many of your questions. Read them between your assignments."
In wordless response, I retreat to the dorm-room, leaving the books on my desk and ascend the loft bed ladder... thinking I've missed too much sleep - as I drift off, unaware - until tomorrow - of the messages to myself tucked among the bookstack pages.If that very short fiction left you in the mood for still more imaginary/fashion/time travel quick-fiction, your wish is granted here. Or, if you'd like more than just the bookstack - there are more books and movies here. More about 80s beauty and hairstyles here. An 80s fashion post with more about leggings here.
The Perfect Bookstack for the Fashionably Curious:
Dress and Popular Culture, Patricia Cunningham and Susan Voso Lab. Bowling Green State University Popular Press - 1991.
Fashion at the Edge: Spectacle, Modernity, and Deathliness, Caroline Evans. Yale University Press - 2003.
StreetStyle: From Sidewalk to Catwalk, Ted Polhemus. Thames and Hudson - 1994.
Tuesday, July 30, 2013
Toile La La F/W 2014 RTW Romantic Souls Fashion Show: The Review.
Ever-changing atmospheric displays, gardening, the music of George Frideric Handel, Dutch Golden Age paintings, laborers, and dreamers - all served as inspiration for the Toile La La F/W 2014 RTW Romantic Souls Fashion Collection, presented in the Tres Petit Trianon Flower Garden July 27 2013. Investigate collection concepts, view the show, learn about the fragrance, and see behind the scenes details here.
Emphasis is placed upon convertible or reversible garments - coats, jackets, and smocks designed to be worn forward or backward - and either over or under a wrap-and-tie skirt, or over cropped and flared trousers, or a 3/4 sleeve cropped Tuta. There's a convertible hat to be worn on the head or carried as a tote. Details such as a funnel neckline, a bateau neckline, and dolman sleeves lend interest to the simple cuts. Among the shades of blue, grey, and white - roses and rustic toiles appear. Gold and silver gleam in closures inpired by regimental buttons, or in punk-ish jumbo safety pins. Other accessories include belts inspired by the chatelaine and the obi sash - ruffs - 18th-century hanging pockets - Beehive Bonnet turbans - detachable lace cape-collars - cross-body mail satchels - and a large mother-of-pearl Full Moon brooch.
Emphasis is placed upon convertible or reversible garments - coats, jackets, and smocks designed to be worn forward or backward - and either over or under a wrap-and-tie skirt, or over cropped and flared trousers, or a 3/4 sleeve cropped Tuta. There's a convertible hat to be worn on the head or carried as a tote. Details such as a funnel neckline, a bateau neckline, and dolman sleeves lend interest to the simple cuts. Among the shades of blue, grey, and white - roses and rustic toiles appear. Gold and silver gleam in closures inpired by regimental buttons, or in punk-ish jumbo safety pins. Other accessories include belts inspired by the chatelaine and the obi sash - ruffs - 18th-century hanging pockets - Beehive Bonnet turbans - detachable lace cape-collars - cross-body mail satchels - and a large mother-of-pearl Full Moon brooch.
Toile La La F/W 2014 reversible funnel-neck duster, wrap-and-tie skirt, and chatelaine belt. |
Saturday, July 27, 2013
Toile La La F/W 2014 Romantic Souls RTW Pre-Show.
Meindert Hobbema A View on a High Road 1665, wikipaintings. |
Toile La La Romantic Souls Fashion show commences promptly at 1:00 EST... Open a new Art Fashion Creation Link at 1:00 to enjoy the presentation.
- Gorillaz. "Oh Green World".
- Ennio Morricone. "Two Mules for Sister Sara".
- Jean Jacques Perrey. "Aerology".
- Rolling Stones. "You Can't Always Get What You Want".
- Goldfrapp. "Ooh La La".
- Phantogram. "When I'm Small".
- Jean Michel Jarre. "E.V.A."
- sun-dried linen
- the scent of leather
- fresh-cut hay
- grass cuttings
- a bit of pine bark
- velvety green moss
- a bit of lavender
- hints of rose varieties
- patchouli
- clover
- sandalwood incense
- shavings of hickory nutshell
Toile La La F/W 2014 Romantic Souls Fashion Show.
Un Grand Merci a Vous Tous. Photography by Io Motofoto, Music by DJ OMnisonic, Staging/Styling by Meme, Assistant Chere Qui. For behind-the-scenes details, front row photos, more music, and other extras - see the fashion show Extras beneath the Pages link at right, in the sidebar.
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