Showing posts with label handily made. Show all posts
Showing posts with label handily made. Show all posts

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Post is lacking in graffiti



Cardigan: Target
Dress: eShakti
Boots: Target



I'm back! Yaaaaaaay! To clarify about my extremely long week, it seems that since receiving my acceptance letter from grad school, my life has been insane! I was in Asheville on Tuesday, Columbia on Wednesday, Charlotte and Chapel Hill on Friday, and a whirlwind tour of northern Virginia and Richmond on Saturday and Sunday. On top of that a big work program on Thursday and a department meeting on Monday have kept me from a) being well rested and b) actually doing anything regarding matriculation at said grad school. Eep! The outfit above is actually from the big work program, which went very well so yay.



Necklace: handmade
Top: Target
Jeans: American Eagle
Boots: Target
Face: sour

Here's what I wore today (thanks S. & E. for the phone shots!). This is a riding in the car/eating brunch/really tired so I'm wearing flared jeans tucked into my boots kind of outfit. And this mug says "South Carolina" on it and has a bunch of the iconic things of SC inside the letters. My senior year roommate bought it for me what must be at least three years ago, and she gave it to one of our other friends to give me, because my roommate now lives in Utah. We finally got together this weekend and our mutual friend remembered to bring it! Totally cool, right? And by cool I mean silly and silly is right up my alley, but you already knew that. See you tomorrow!

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Saturday School: the constellation cardigan

I've received majorly positive feedback (thank you so much by the way--you're all incredibly sweet!) on my how-to-ish posts recently, like my scarf tutorial and the reveal of my constellation cardigan, based on this cardigan from Anthropologie. So I thought I'd try incorporating a monthly series called Saturday School (clever, right?) of me helping you do stuff! So the inaugural Saturday School tutorial is how to make the constellation cardigan yourself.



Don't you love my awkward laughter? I also had to film this twice because the first time I did it I played it back and I had cut off my own head. That's talent right there.

Does anyone have any suggestions for what they'd like to see Saturday School cover in the future? Hair, colour theory, pattern mixing? Please suggest, and enjoy!

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Steak me home tonight



Cardigan: Target, embroidered by me
Skirt: handmade
Tights: Target
Wedges: Shoe Carnival



So first let's talk about this cardigan, because I'm too proud of myself not to. A few weeks ago I saw this cardigan on Anthro's website, and I thought WHOAMAZING. (My brain always flows from word to word like that.) Then I saw the price tag--$118--and I thought NOFRIGGINWAY. Then I thoguht about it for a moment. Why not just make the thing myself? I had a navy blue cardigan I wasn't wearing a whole lot and a ton of embroidery thread in my sewing stash. So I hopped to and here we are! I used some interfacing as backing and it looks amazing. Two people have already asked me to make versions for them!



Beyond that--have you watched Happy Endings yet? Because I am dying for some Steaktanic right now. I'm also glad that this show exists because it reminds me of how much I have to look forward to in my early 30s. Like...uh, living with my best friend, owning a food truck and being terminally single.



Or maybe if I'm lucky I'll pretend to be Jewish and 27 so I can find a guy on JDate while my best friend's fiancee will dump me at the wedding and run off with a roller blading guy. No, really, you need to watch this show.

Sunday, September 18, 2011

A promise this way



Top: Anthropologie
Skirt: handmade, pattern Simplicity 2512
Booties: Enzo Angiolini



On Monday I'll tell you all about the insanity of my weekend, but I really want to get serious for a hot second and discuss the Anthroholic scandal. Because it's important to clarify, contemplate, and learn from the situation. I've never had any interactions with Anthroholic, aside from being a reader and being in her Anthro reader outfits compilations a couple times.

First, I'm appalled. I honestly can't believe that someone with enough clout to be popular in the Anthro blogging world (a tiny but devoted one) could be so scheming, but as time goes by and more women come forward it's becoming clearer and clearer that in all likelihood, Kim knowingly took money without rendering her services valid and, as my friend A. said, essentially used others as a line of credit. I don't feel bad for her or pity her situation, especially as it has happened before; I feel terribly for the women (and men!) she misled who had to spend so much time and money to receive nothing but lies and denial in return. (No one loses 50+ emails. No one.)

But beyond that, something deeper cut into me as I watched from the sidelines as this disaster unfolded. Reading the comments, hearing how much money was lost and how many people were fooled, I (and A.) realised that we were all conned, not just the people who used the service. We were all tricked into believing things were normal and honest with Kim, and things really weren't. At all. For some reason I started to feel like burning my clothes and never setting foot inside a store again. The pursuit of pretty things has ruined Kim's reputation, it has crushed the Anthro blogging community, it has taken away a delicate balance of trust. Before this came to light, I had planned to order a couple bottles of my currently hard-to-find shampoo, and days later, I still haven't. I don't know why but I can't pull the trigger. It's like I'm suddenly over shopping, even when it comes to shampoo. Because do I really need special dandruff shampoo? (Okay, yeah, I do. Good point.) The only thing I've bought in the last week aside form food and gas is a disposable camera for a local art project.



Introspection after this issue overwhelmingly & explosively unfolded led me to realise that I shop too much. I do, I really do. I recently purged my closet (and I should've offered my clothing to whomever wanted it here before donating it to Goodwill! Duh, next time) and got rid of over 30 items I didn't wear, didn't like, didn't fit, didn't want, etc. But that's really not enough. I have a closet, I have a lot of clothing. I don't need much more to make it complete.

So for the rest of the year, I'm taking a vow to buy only the following things, which are the only things left on my list for a complete closet, which would be equivalent to two items per month:

    Black long sleeve knit/sweater turtleneck
    Cream skirt
    Red skirt
    18" gold chain
    Tie-neck blouse

And if it's not on this list, I don't need it. It's unnecessary. Just because I like something doesn't mean I need it. If I miss EBEW because I don't own an item, so be it. (This doesn't include clothing "emergencies", eg. needing a suit for a job interview or presentation. I don't plan on this happening though.) I have many pretty things and rather than focusing on that, I can focus on so many other things. I'll save time not looking at my Anthro wishlist, not sweeping all the online stores for whatever, not constantly on the lookout for the next pretty thing. I have enough going on in my life (grad school apps, curling, riding, working) that not being distracted my shopping will be good for me. This list doesn't include handmade items, but maybe I'll make a handmade red skirt and I can cross that off the list.

It's time to take a stand against myself, and here is where it starts. This outfit underscores that--my final purchase from Anthro for the year, this top (which I admittedly love and is amazingly comfortable & cute); my skirt, another handmade concoction that I love and cost a total of $19 to make; and my boots, which are ushering in a new season (fall, at least for now) and a new concept of style and how it operates in my life. Trim the fat, find the essentials, and move on.

Let's do it. And by let's, I mean me. You do whatever you want! But please, tell me what you think about the Anthroholic ordeal. Did you know about it? Has it changed how you look at shopping?

Monday, June 27, 2011

Miss thirty



Hair clips: H&M
Necklace: Antiques shop
Top: Target
Skirt: HAND FREAKIN' MADE
Heels: Nine West
Toes: Rescue Beauty Lounge Dead Calm



Everyone meet my 30th item in my 30 for 30! I feel like I could have gone with 29 items the whole way through, but I wanted to include a 30th because that's kind of the idea, isn't it? Today's outfit, by the way, is inspired by the Shah's flag of Iran. Book discussion tonight was of Persepolis, and it went really well! Thank you all for your graphic novel feedback earlier this month :)



After seeing this skirt on Pinterest, I died. And then I undied and vowed to make one for myself. Leanne's tutorial is exceptionally easy to follow and the most annoying parts for me were sewing together my lace (I couldn't find double sided lace! So I made my own) and installing the zipper. Man, zippers are annoying. Oh, and there was all the stabbing myself with pins, because I'm terrible at that kind of thing. being coordinated. But this is the first item of clothing I've ever made (not including sweet things like necklaces made of ribbon tied around my neck) and it was worth it. No pain no gain, right? I love it.



My dad said "huh, that's different" and my mom said "it's so cute!" This is my parents, ladies and gents. Fortunately my boss was appropriately blindsided that I made this skirt myself, "like, from fabric???", especially since I do not wave the flag about my sewing skills very often. I usually stick to shapeless things, like pillowcases and necklaces made of ribbon tied around my neck. And that one time I made a bracelt made of ribbon tied around my wrist. That was HARD. have you ever tried tying a bow with one hand? No thank you. That's why I need a boyfriend. Right?

naaaaaaaaaaaah