Monday, July 26, 2010

Please Not Now!

Last week on my day off I was looking around for a movie to watch and I stumbled upon a Brigitte Bardot movie I hadn't seen yet. I spent the next hour and a half laughing and being totally delighted by the wonderful screwball comedy, Please Not Now!. Bardot absolutely sparkles in this fabulous comedy about a model whose boyfriend runs off with an American woman. Bardot's jilted character, Sophie plans to win her man back by killing the woman competing for his love. Aided by a handsome fellow who is madly in love with her, she sets out to win back her old boyfriend, unaware that she would fall in love with someone else. The film is stylish, funny and Bardot's comedic genius is so dazzling! I thought Bardot's overall look and fashion in this film is stunning and the nude dance scene was something quite exciting as well! This film oozes hilarity, style and sensuality and I loved every second of it!


















Thursday, June 24, 2010

The Ever so Stylish Scissor Sisters

Yesterday morning as Jeremy and I were driving to work together, I put the Scissor Sisters album Tah-Dah in the CD player to infuse our morning commute to Lexington with some energy and funk. After I had finished singing along to I Don't Feel Like Dancin', Jeremy and I started to wonder aloud about how long it had been since the Scissor Sisters had last released an album and I expressed my hopes that maybe they would soon remedy the situation with a new release.
After work last night I hopped on the computer to investigate and what would you know, not but three days ago there newest CD, Night Work was released! In absolute rapture and bliss, I watched the new music video for a new song called Fire With Fire, which totally rocked my socks off!

The 80's synth sound of the new album promises to be different from the earlier 70's disco and pop sound they captured so well in Tah-Dah. It felt a little strange and totally exciting that I had been listening to them and just wondering what they were up to now, only to find out hours later that I didn't have to wait any longer for a fresh dose of Scissor Sister magic! I cannot wait to get my hands on this CD and I am sure it will be my new favorite thing of the year.

What I love so much about the Scissor Sisters is that they are so cool, stylish, and funky all at the same time and no matter how crazy they might seem or look, they are brilliant and totally fun to watch, listen to and look at. Their incredible sense of style comes across in there music and photos, and it makes their often extreme looks seem totally individual and enviable.
Long live the Scissor Sisters!

Friday, June 11, 2010

Grey Hair



A couple of years ago I started contemplating what it would look like if I dyed my hair a pretty shade of grey or at least got some cool grey highlights. I got the idea when I saw Stacy London's noticeable grey streak on TLC's What Not To Wear. I watch the show off and on and sometimes Stacy's grey streak is super obvious and sometimes it is non-existent. I wondered if it was natural or intentional. I started to ponder the general stigma and dread generally associated with grey or white hair and I couldn't figure out why most think of it as a curse or something to hide. I am starting to prematurely grey and I thought about what I would do when it became more noticeable. I love certain shades of grey and I am quite interested in possibly experimenting with it next time I go to the salon. Not one to typically jump on board with new trends, I had mixed feelings when I saw that grey hair was a major feature at the Chanel Spring/Summer 2010 Haute Couture runway collection. I felt like if I did it now then I would look like I was just following a trend and I HATE that idea, but at the same time, it was kind of cool to see my train of thought validated by someone else! I am starting a new job next week and office attire is required and unnatural hair color is against the code, but isn't grey technicly a natural shade? I am very seriously considering doind some grey, but I am still debating how much and where to put it. There are a lot of different options and I want to mull over my options carefully, and I might even go for the temporary dyes at first. I will do an update post with pictures after I get it done! I am very excited and I hope it works out like I want it to!




Book Review: Harper's Bazaar Great Style: Best Ways to Update Your Look




Book: Harper's Bazaar Great Style: Best Ways to Update Your Look
Author: Jenny Levin
A recent trip to the library yielded some really exciting fashion book finds that I will be reviewing and posting on in order as I read them. The first of the books I read through, and in a flash mind you, is Harper's Bazaar Great Style: Best Ways to Update Your Look. Although published 3 years ago, the book gives some great ideas for women of all ages on ways to liven and refresh their existing wardrobe. The book gives helpful hints on must have wardrobe staples, basics and accessories while providing photographs of celebrities demonstrating the style under discussion. Some of the fashions found in the book were not oh-so current, but it wasn't glaringly out of date, and the book has plenty of classic ideas and fashions that will never go out of style. The book begins with a chapter on building upon and adding to your basics and provides a ever so helpful reminder of the "Closet Essentials: The five pieces every woman should own" reference list. With tips on what to buy when calendar and tips on how to shop like an expert it gives women a real place to start processing their existing closets and assessing what needs to be added or subtracted. A chapter discussing the different forms of fashion and style aesthetics offers pictorial ideas for women to discover (if not already sure) what their style or fashion sense is so that they can better express it. For those who are a little unsure of how to dress appropriately for their age, Chapter 3 "Fashion at Every Age: Dress your best at all stages of life" is a really great tool for dressing your best for your age. The next chapter is all about how to dress to flatter your shape, no matter your size or height. This section of the book is particularly encouraging for those of us who feel like finding something to flatter or not so thin bodies is nothing but a battle, because it shows that you really can find clothes that flatter YOUR shape if you look carefully for clothes that flatter, accentuate your best assets and "allow clothing to be your ally". The rest of the book covers dressing for the office (which was extremely helpful for me, since I start my new job next week and office attire is required), dressing for evening, Casual chic and every-day wear fashion, a chapter devoted to accessories, and even a helpful tutorial on lingerie essentials. Over all, I thought the book was fun, helpful, the photos are always my favorite things to look at and reference and there were plenty of those! Not a bad little book to have lying around I think.

Sunday, May 30, 2010

Book Review: I LOVE YOUR STYLE



Title: I Love Your Style: How to Define and Refine Your Personal Style
Author: Amanda Brooks

A truly wonderful and unexpected gift from my oldest sister, Janet; I Love Your Style is a book I will forever cherish and return to again and again for fashion advice and shopping wisdom. I had never seen or heard of the book before I held that copy in my hands, so I was not sure what to expect. I was probably most expecting to read a book that promoted my favorite aspects of fashion by glorifying an unobtainable goal for putting together an elite, all-designer wardrobe. But, once I began to read it, I was mesmerized by the wisdom and creativity I found within its pages.

"There was still one store too intimidating, too fancy for us to approach: Chanel. Even as children we could sense the force field of pristine chic emanating from those interlocked C's." --Amanda Brooks

Born in Palm Beach in the 1970's, Amanda Brooks was the daughter of Stephen Cutter, president of the family's real estate firm and Elizabeth Stewart. Beatrice Bowry (once the director of the Clothes Institute at Filene's among many other fashionable things) was Amanda's grandmother and an "exceedingly stylish dresser" who is credited with influencing and instilling Amanda with a love for fashion.
Amanda has interned with fashion photographer Patrick Demarchelier "assisting on magazine shoots, designer ads, and album covers", she has worked as the assistant to the director of the Gagosian Garllery, helped Frederic Fekkai create a handbag line, and she was later brought on to assist Diego Della Valle as the creative director at Hogan (Italian accessories company). Perhaps most significantly, for about three years Amanda became the muse and creative director at Tuleh, a fashion label that "married all the aspects of" her "fashion personality at that time". Now a fashion writer and consultant Amanda is still indulging her fashion fantasies and her innermost style by embracing "all the possibilities" fashion has to offer.
Amanda has a long history of visiting thrift stores, flea markets, vintage boutiques and secondhand stores as well as the occasional high end or luxury designer purchases to create and build up her wardrobe. She is no snob and I really respect her self-assuredness and confindence in her style and shopping habits. A real fearless woman, Amanda shared some of her fashion triumphs and disasters with her readers in order to show that there is nothing wrong with taking risks and trying new things. The essence of what she was trying to convey is that you never know when a real leap of fashion faith will reward and surprise you which is why it is worth taking that risk in possibly looking foolish. Individual style is more important than simply following the trends and playing it safe.
The book covers 6 "distinct ways of dressing--classic, bohemian, minimalm high fashion, street, and eclectic--and four essential ways of shopping--basic, cheap chic, designer, and vintage". I would like to review each section of the book in depth and do some experimenting of my own in each area of style and shopping techniques. I would like to use this blog to springboard some of my trials and errors with the experimenting that I do. I will upload photos and write about how I pieced together outfits from my existing wardrobe mixed with some new purchases. I am very excited about breaking down the book layer by layer and adopting a whole new sense of style and how it works for me! I think that by doing this I will truly make some great new discoveries and I will be acting out exactly the same kind of open mindedness and innovation that Amanda Brooks so encourages. I hope that the next posts on I Love You Style might inspire others to go out and buy a copy of this book and do some experimenting also!

"We women today have a lot on our plates. We want to look good, but do we really want to reinvent the wheel in a state of panic every time we have to find something to wear to a big meeting, a date, or an important party? Imagine how great it would be to face getting dressed with confidence and excitement instead of anxiety or boredom. Well, you can, and you can also have a lot of fun while you're at it." Amanda Brooks

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Kelley's Introduction

Hello all! My name is Kelley Avery and I LOVE fashion! My respect and adoration for fashion has been a steady and more of a recent progression. I grew up in a very large conservative, homeschooling family for most of my early life and during my childhood horses took the forefront of my every thought. I wanted to walk, talk, live and breath everything horses and my main aspiration was to be a horse trainer when I "grew up". My early ideas of fashion were mainly gleaned from the old movies that we would be allowed to rent from the library and although sometimes misguided, I saw a way of dressing that I wanted to copy in those films. Dress up was my favorite game or hobby and my imagination went wild during those times. I went through a phase of wanting to make and wear hoop skirts and my siblings and I would dismantle hangers and mold them into a hoop frame and drape them with any and every skirt we could get our hands on! My siblings and I had very active and elaborate imaginations and I we had to really get creative when trying to entertain ourselves. We were not a well off family and we had to make due with hand-me-down clothes and I hate to say it, but I look back at those days with more than a little embarrassment! We never went out to the movies, and shopping for clothes was a very rare luxury. Shopping for Easter dresses was the highlight event of every spring, and frills and bib collars abounded!
My few moments of true fashion inspirations or epiphanies occurred while watching the old movies from the library. I remember oohing and aahing over Ginger Roger's feather and satin dress in Top Hat with Fred Astaire.



I was also very influenced by how Myrna Loy dressed in The Thin Man series.
Even her night gowns were breathtaking!





My early influences were women of a different time and era and I still wanted to be and dress like them. Women such as Audrey Hepburn, Myrna Loy, Ginger Rogers,Grace Kelly, among many others, were the ones I wanted to emulate. I thought to myself: This is how all women should dress! When I was a teenager working at Talley Oak Stables pursuing my consuming love for horses and all things equestrian, my fashion was more of a non-entity. I was just concerned about dressing in comfortable and weather appropriate attire for long days spent at the stables and horse shows. I knew how I wanted to dress, but it simply wasn't practical for the life I was leading. But when I went out with friends to the movies and to the mall, I would put so much pent up energy into what I was wearing, and I wore heels anywhere I could outside of the farm. I started reading Vogue, Elle, and Lucky whenever I could sneak a look and I started to sketch and design gowns and fashion of my own making.
Ultimately, I can say that my style is always evolving and taking a more clear and decided form, but money has always been what truly holds me back. Until a few weeks ago, I had not gone clothes shopping for myself in over a year and I was itching to add some new pieces to my very sparse wardrobe. I typically shop clearance when I do get the chance to shop and I have been lucky enough to find some very great wardrobe staples in the bargain racks. Although I have big dreams for my closet, I can only take one step at a time, and right now, wishing, reading, sketching and developing my tastes is all I can do as far as fashion is concerned. This year I hope to find some real deals and steals for my wardrobe and my style transformation will take shape even more, I am sure. In the long run though, I have hopes of learning to sew and construct apparel so that I can start making my sketches become reality. I also have hopes of creating my own design label in order so that I can make and sell affordable fashion for women of every walk and lifestyle. My two main passions and career choices are fashion and film, and I hope to, in time, make them both a functioning reality!
This blog is the venue I have chosen to keep my creative juices flowing, and also as a place where others like myself can share and gain some fashion inspiration as well. So I hope that whoever stumbles upon this page might be able to appreciate and enjoy the fun and ever evolving world of fashion on a whole new level! I would like to use this blog as a way to collectively gather my many ideas and inspirations in one place, as a way to track my interests, and to learn and utilize a more efficient shopping technique and as a way to help myself transform my sometimes boring wardrobe into something entirely inspired and improved! I will share some trial-and-error ideas that have helped me become a smarter dresser and a more informed lover of fashion. So, feel free to comment or post some tips or tried and true dressing techniques that have helped you over the years! All input is welcome.