Showing posts with label BCBG. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BCBG. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 1, 2025

Wedge Pledge: On the Pink of Possibility

Dress: Nine West, Kohl's

Bag: Zulily

Rose: Hobby Lobby

Bag: Betsey Johnson, Macy's

Top: Nine West, Kohl's

Purr-ple Paradise Necklace

Bag: BCBGeneration, DSW

Sunglasses: Betsey Johnson, Zulily

Unicorn: Target

Years ago, I read a magazine article proclaiming pink to be the most versatile color.  According to the writer, the hue is simultaneously retro, tropical, and futuristic.  I loved that, easily picturing sweater sets, hibiscus blooms, and cyberpunk minis in the Day-Glo shade.  Because pink makes anything seem possible.  And when it's turned up to its full, look-at-me wattage, it's especially hard to resist.

So I thought of that when I wore these fits.  And it put a little spring in my step.  Well, except for when I strapped my wedges too tightly and suffered an excruciating commute.  Now I'm in pursuit of shoes that don't mangle my metatarsals.    

But that, ahem, misstep aside, it was was a feel-good fashion kind of day. 

Sunday, March 25, 2018

Insects Appeal Served up Spot: Spring Has (Sort of) Strung


 Fabulous Felt Foliage Barrettes

Elegant Arachnid Necklace

Dress: Xhilaration, Target
Tank: Worthington, JCPenney
Shoes: Delicious, Zulily
Bag: Xhilaration, Target



Top: Decree, JCPenney
Skirt: Modcloth
Shoes: BCBG, Macy's
Bag: Glamour Damaged, Etsy
Sunglasses: Party City
Barrette: The Tote Trove

Springtime means spiders.  (Sure, Halloween means spiders too, but this isn't about that, so stop back in October.)  Even if on this year the first day of spring found creepy crawlers crushed under a snowbank.  Luckily (Wait, luckily?  Am I really lamenting that spiders and their ilk will be fashionably late this season?  No.  What I'm really, ahem, ticked about is the delay in sunshine and warm weather, not the stalled appearance of eight-legged losers.  Because I find insects only one rung below ice on the season-related nuisance ladder.).  Luckily But (there we go) spring also means things that are ladylike.  Like flowers and bows and tea parties.  

So, I've got a rep from each camp here in Elegant Arachnid and High Tea Helen.  (There's Fabulous Felt Foliage, too -- but she's just an interloper.)  Despite my aforementioned disgust, there's something beautiful about the anatomical design of those we more often than not stomp with our Skechers.  That's why I was so taken with the silver- and gold-tone bee, spider, fly, and beetle in the brilliant bib of Elegant Arachnid.  (It's not braggy for me to say it's brilliant because I didn't carve these critters from metal my own self; that honor goes to whomever supplied them to Hobby Lobby.)  It was so detailed and gorgeous that I felt compelled to surround it with botanical blue-green beads, showcasing each insect as a magical mistress of her own enchanted forest.  You know, as opposed to bathroom floor roadkill.             

Then there's Helen.  I can see her now in her floral dress, white gloves, and beribboned hat, delicately sipping Earl Grey from bone china at her aunt's garden party.  Trying not to fall asleep as Mitzy McNeal yammers on yet again about her sciatica, she feels something whisper-soft on her arm.  She looks down, expecting to see an errant daisy petal or maybe even a runaway strand of her own auburn hair.  But instead there's a tiny spider, black and agile as it darts with precision across her pristine white skin.  She opens her mouth to squeal, but no sound comes out.  She looks at Mitzy, but her companion is oblivious to her plight, prattling on about how she can't even water her prize roses anymore, the pain is so agoniiiiizing.  Helen picks up her napkin, poised to cover the intrepid trespasser, and is about to go in for the kill when she pauses.  Because there's something appealing, regal even, about the arachnid.  Maybe she's read Charlotte's Web one time too many, but Helen is struck that this spider might be more than just another web-spinning sucker.  Maybe it has hopes and dreams, or little bitty baby spiders at home.  Gently, she sets the napkin back on the table.  Then she brushes the spider from her arm, watching as it falls past the wrought-iron tabletop down to the lush carpet of green grass below.  

Tea time, free time, no parlor for this fly.  

Thursday, June 15, 2017

Pop Goes the Princess: Horseplay on the High Seas


Top: Bisou Bisou, JCPenney
Skirt: Material Girl, Modcloth
Shoes: BCBG, Macy's
Bag: Nordstrom
Bow: The Tote Trove
Sunglasses: Brigantine beach shop
Yellow bangles: B Fabulous
Jelly bangles: Target
Watch: Rumors, JCPenney

Seahorses vs. Unicorns Charm Necklace

Pretty Parfait Mushroom Purse Charm

Pop stars and royalty aren't all that different.  Both are cloaked in glamour and drama, just as both are pumped up public figures.  Indeed, here in the good old U. S. of A. we revere singer-songwriters more than any queen mother monarch.  And why not?  Whether dealing in iTunes or edicts, music notes or raging moats, or Jimmy Choos or glass slipper shoes, heavy is the head that wears the crown (or, in the case of chart toppers, industrial-grade hair extensions).  

The same is true of seahorses and unicorns.  Not the glamour thing or the stress thing, but the tenuous, forged-for-the-purposes-of-this-post connection thing.  Both are enchanted equines (at least semantically speaking), and both have been immortalized as My Little Ponies.  (If you don't believe me, or at least that I believe me, then mosey on over to this post touching upon seahorses and their terrestrial counterparts.  Hay, this isn't my first rodeo.)  Which kind of sort of but not quite explains the aesthetics behind this Seahorses vs. Unicorns Charm Necklace.    

The "vs." implies that they're fighting, but I like to think that they're friends.

Sunday, April 16, 2017

Some Bunny Loves Peeps . . .






Jeepers Creepers Where'd You Get Those Peeps Peepers Sunglasses 

Top: DKNY, Macy's
Skirt: H&M
Shoes: BCBG, Macy's
Bag: Xhilaration, Target

. . . and that some bunny is me.  I didn't color eggs this year, but I have been, ahem, dyeing to show off my growing plush Peeps collection.  A couple years back I bought the pink, yellow, and blue bunnies, and this year I added the green, purple, and orange ones.  I couldn't help myself.  They're cute, they're sweet . . . not to mention tasty (or at least the candies that came with them were).  Hey, if it's wrong to collect stuffed animals of stuff that you love to eat, then I don't want to be right.

That said, I sprang them from their hermetically sealed baggies, where they live, ironically, in an old Tote Trove business card-filled Easter basket the rest of the year, and had a little photo shoot.

First up, the classic Warhol:  


Next, my kind of Easter bonnet:


And finally, an adorable Peeps in Pajamas Little Golden Book and baby plush Peeps for my even more adorable new nephew.  Because I insist on introducing the marshmallow magic of Peeps to the next generation:


In non-Peeps (but still Easter-y) news, I was in Kohl's last week when I saw a pair of suits that give the ones from Dumb and Dumber a run for their funny:


They're polyester, which is, as you know, my own personal miracle fabric.  Why the world insists on turning its nose up at something that never wrinkles or fades will forever remain a mystery to me.  Also, it's affordable!  The jacket, pants, and tie are just $79.99, and if you have a coupon (and come on, who doesn't?), it's even cheaper.  Splashy and flashy, these suits were made for the grand marshal of the Easter parade. 

That said, I hope your bunny trail leads to greatness.  By which I mean kick-ass outfits, drama-free family dinners, and seconds on banana cream pie.

Hoppy Easter :)    

Sunday, June 26, 2016

Smurf's Up: New Wave Crave



 Hygiene Hijinks Necklace

Top: Kohl's
Dress: L'Amour by Nanette Lepore for JCPenney
Shoes: Chinese Laundry, DSW
Bag: Candie's, Kohl's
Sunglasses: Brigantine beach shop



Fabulous Felt Sweet Seashell Barrette

Blouse: Target
Dress: LC Lauren Conrad, Kohl's
Shoes: BCBG, Macy's
Bag: Xhilaration, Target
Sunglasses: Michaels 



Cool Crescent Necklace

Top: Arizona Jeans, JCPenney
Dress: Monteau, Marshalls
Shoes: Christian Siriano for Payless
Bag: Candie's, Kohl's
Sunglasses: Rampage, Boscov's



Tourist Trap Necklace

Top: Self Esteem, JCPenney
Skirt: Xhilaration, Target
Shoes: Payless
Bag: Candie's, Kohl's
Sunglasses: JCPenney


Brigantine's own Root Beer Barrel: one soda shop-sounding surf shop that keeps on rolling (at least, if the for sale sign out front is to be believed, until someone buys it).

A rolling stone gathers no moss -- but sometimes moss is mighty pretty.

Thanks to Ocean Spray, you can't say "crave" without thinking of that other "c" word -- "cranberries!"  This post is all about blue, pink, and the beach, with a splash of 1980s -- which is to say that it's like 95% of my other posts (even if The Cranberries are not only not new wave, but not from the 1980s).  It's got seashells, a surf shop, and toilets -- reminding us not to pee in the ocean.  Also, Smurfberries, perhaps the most magical (not to mention most animated) marriage of pink and blue, if only in abstract.

Ah, the beach.  Otherwise known as Mother Nature's prize box, it offers a boundless bounty of beauty, yielding every treasure that original hoarder The Little Mermaid could hope to squirrel away in her undersea cavern.  Unlike actual mothers, the beach is laidback when it comes to bringing things home, never saying, "You just got a dead crab carcass for your birthday, Bobby; put that back!"  Well, not unless she wages a hurricane.

In honor of the beach (and collecting), I made this week's stuff with souvenir shops in mind.  I'm sure you remember their wares, are perhaps even becoming reacquainted with them this weekend as you stroll through such spots with your own little ones.  Baskets of shrink-wrapped seashells, cheap sunglasses, and screen-printed tee shirts riotous with palm trees and dolphins crowd every aisle.  We have a few such establishments in Brigantine, and sometimes I like to walk through them, if only for nostalgia's sake.  But my favorite beach shop buy came from a store on the Ocean City boardwalk.  It was a plastic yellow scallop shell trinket box that I found enchanting because I thought it looked like it belonged to a mermaid (Ariel being my spirit Disney princess).  Sadly, I've since lost track of it; unlike my faux sumo wrestler trinket box, it never emerged from my parents' attic.  Sometimes I still think about it, and when I'm on the boardwalk, I peer at the passing shops and wonder if anything like it is waiting within.  I never check, though.  There's no point in trying to go home again when your home is already the beach.        

Wednesday, April 20, 2016

Moving on Up: Opening the Doris of Possibility



Crazy Colors Cuff

Fabulous Felt Desert Flower Barrette

Top: Self Esteem, JCPenney
Skirt: ELLE, Kohl's
Shoes: Qupid, Alloy
Bag: Delia's
Jacket: Bisou Bisou, JCPenney
Scarf: Mossimo, Target
Sunglasses: JCPenney



 Emerald Empress Necklace

Tee: Merona, Target
Skirt (tucked-in dress): XOXO
Shoes: BCBG, Macy's
Bag: Nordstrom
Sunglasses: JCPenney



Fabulous Felt Phone Barrette

Top: Self Esteem, JCPenney
Skirt: Candie's, Kohl's
Shoes: Betsey Johnson, Macy's
Bag: Call it Spring, JCPenney
Sunglasses: JCPenney

Some weeks ago, I mentioned that I was trying to buy less clothing.  Since then, I've decided to take my endeavor to the next level by not washing any of my clothes, either -- at least not until I run out (pajamas, underwear, non-colorful stockings, sweat clothes, and socks excluded).  Not, you understand, in a dirty bum kind of way (there's only so far I'll go for my art), but in a let's-see-how-long-I-can-keep-this-thing-going-before-I-end-up-in-a-muumuu kind of way.  So far it's been a month, and my closet's still full.  Not bursting, with dresses and blouses sticking out every which way like gas escaping from a buffet glutton, but comfortably full, like it just ate a delicious-but-sensible chicken dinner and isn't about to tempt fate by chasing it with a sundae.  This experiment has forced me to think about just how much stuff I have as well as how many more different ways I can wear it.  After all, if the yellow blouse that you usually wear with your green skirt is dirty, then you have no choice but to try a peach sweater or lavender tee.  On a deeper level, this whole thing has made me redefine my relationship with stuff in general, with the collecting of it, the gazing at it, and the making the most of what's there.

Which is, as luck would have it, a right nice tie-in for my discussion of Hello, My Name is Doris. Starring Sally Field as the outlandishly dressed hoarder with a heart of gold title character, Doris is about a sixty-something woman's burning, obsessive infatuation with her office's new, much-younger art director (John, played by Max Greenfield).  Or, at least that's what it's about on the surface.  In reality it's about a woman coming to terms with her mother's death.  Mild-mannered and imaginative, bow-bedecked, cat lady Doris is the thinking woman's Walter Middy.  Part librarian, part little old lady-little girl hybrid, Doris is utterly charming and the perfect foil for her hard-nosed, no-nonsense pal Roz (Tyne Daly).  She works as a data entry drone, slogging through her humdrum days by slipping into dream sequences starring her (sometimes shirtless) beloved, then at night retreating to her mother's clutter-choked, Staten Island homestead.  Even her name is old-fashioned, not to mention the moniker of one of America's sweethearts (one Doris Day).  According to her catty coworkers, Doris is a "weird, shy person."  It's John who steps up and defends her as a "good kind of weird," setting the stage for the friendship that grows between them.

Spurred on by vulnerability, boredom, and a visit to a self-help guru (a charlatan [Peter Gallagher] who endorses turning the impossible into "I'm possible"), Doris enlists Roz's teenage granddaughter to help her stalk, er, pursue John.  To that end, the film is filled with cringe-worthy, hide-your-head-under-the-pillow moments, many of which involve Facebook.  Yet it isn't long before Doris takes her mission offline and out into the world, ingratiating herself with John's basic yet likable girlfriend (Beth Behrs) and braving the underground music scene.  She's soon befriended by a circle of twenty- and thirty-something eccentrics who appreciate her eccentricities, too.  What's more, her yellow jumpsuit, rainbow visor, and acres of day-glo jewelry land her an album cover for John's favorite band, an indie electronica group called Baby Goya.  Yet despite all this new-found attention, getting closer to John remains her heart's desire.  Over dinner, the two trade romantic war stories, with Doris revealing that she was once engaged.  Her fiance was a journalist who got a job in Flagstaff, but she couldn't make the move, instead staying in New York to take care of her mother.  I couldn't help but wonder how much happier she might have been in Arizona, decked out in bright colors against the southwestern landscape.  Maybe she would've gotten a cool job or had a baby or mass-marketed her (albeit from a mix-except-for-the-blueberries) cornbread.  It's these countless what-ifs that render her tale as miles more moving than John's.  Up until this point their relationship has been lopsided, with John getting the sympathy. 

Directed by Michael Showalter (Wet Hot American Summer, The Baxter, "Michael and Micheal Have Issues"), this funny, sweet, sometimes hard-to-watch story is a commentary on ageism and sexism as much as on having the courage to let your freak flag fly.  Field is phenomenal as Doris, as convincing in her fears and foibles as she is in her epiphanies.  Despite the 30-year age difference, I identified with Doris, and not just because we have the same pair of Hue pink polka dot stockings.  As do we all at one time or another, I know what it's like to be different, to sometimes hold back and be afraid to do things.  

Bookended by the imagery of opening and closing elevator doors, Hello, My Name is Doris is about one woman's much-delayed social debut.  Doris begins as awkward and tentative, shrinking into the safety of her inner musings.  But by the end, she's claimed command of herself, embracing the power of pushing the buttons to determine her own destination.


Some cacti in honor of Flagstaff.