Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Clark Little







I ran across Clark Little's work while blog-surfing recently (sorry, can't remember whose!) and was immediately captivated. I can't imagine having the ability to capture such whimsy in a photograph! They are simply other worldly. The conjure that same feeling I used to get, crouched in the back of my mother's armoir, waiting for the portal to Narnia to open. There's something so comforting in realizing other people dream the way you do, isn't there?

Photos: webdesignerdepot

Monday, August 2, 2010

Drink up, Baby

A friend's recent post about this:



Dom Perignon's Andy Warhol collection in honor of the artist's goal to drink 2,000 bottles of the elixir in the year 2000. I'll raise a glass to that.

Reminded me of this:



Karl Lagerfeld for Coca-Cola



Photos: Dom at Gearpatrol and Karl at Fashion Police

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Allergic to Magic

Do to the falling-apart-ish-ness of my life right now, I'm having a lot of trouble keeping on my big girl face at work.

This bebe, however, is quite composed recounting the terrible tale of crocodiles and evil witch powers that can make people "stay dead in heaven." I think if I had a little french nugget to lay on my belly and tell me stories, it would be much easier to face the day.

Once upon a time... from Capucha on Vimeo.



Found via Her name was Lola

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Radiolab

"Radiolab believes your ears are a portal to another world. Where sound illuminates ideas, and the boundaries blur between science, philosophy, and human experience. Big questions are investigated, tinkered with, and encouraged to grow. Bring your curiosity, and we'll feed it with possibility."
A good friend recently introduced me to Radiolab and I can't stop thinking about it. It's a live streaming show from WNYC and definitely one of the best public radio programs I have ever heard. The concept of the show is fantastically simple; they take an idea/theory/culturalism/whatever and have experts explain it from the points of varied scholarly fields. I can't even begin to do the show justice but I swear your mind will be blown if you give it a listen. Show topics range from parasites, laughter, race, to the musical qualities of language. I suggest going for a drive or sitting outside with a cup of coffee and giving your undivided attention; you won't be disappointed.

Radiolab New York has an online podcast.

Friday, July 16, 2010

On Turning 21



This birthday has been particularly reflective for me. I can't even begin to count the ways I have changed in the past three years; how the things I value most have slowly and sneakily morphed. I've come to place more importance on reputation, ethics, and living based on principle than I ever thought. And more miraculously, I'm coming to some sort of middle-way understanding of life; attributing any radical nature to immaturity and insecurity.

I'm in a relationship that I work for, that bears weight, that feels frighteningly important. It's the first one in which I have not allowed myself to lose my head, finding the loss of "self" scarier than any loneliness I can conjure. The sustainability of things (relationships, earth, money) is more a concept in my life than it has ever been as I'm sort of veering away from the hurriedness that is youth (though both of our tongues are dripping with promises promises promises). Not so much grasping in the dark at everything and everything.

I think what I have learned can be boiled down to this: I'm no longer so afraid of being let down by life. It's undulations, the waxing and waning of things, feel less jarring. I simply want to be good, feel good, do good, make good. Yes, I want to see the world, and wear pretty clothes and eat fine foods but I think, all of my other beliefs inevitably lead to those perks. It's a miraculous cycle.

It's hard for me to remember, sometimes, to sit back and listen to the Cicadas, to let life ebb and flow the way it should.

Photo: Grace Kelly

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Shop your Closet

In the face of a particularly blase economy, everyone's tossing about the phrase "Shop your Closet". This weekend, I gave both my blouse/pants closet and my dress closet complete overhauls and found the true meaning of the command. Organization really does make your clothes more fun; when I can see what I have, I feel like I have more to choose from. I even went so far as to buy clear storage boxes for all of my heels! I just couldn't stand the guilt I felt from gorgeous red suede Weitzman's moping around my bedroom floor. Now I'm having so much fun getting dressed in the morning which results in a put-together outfit, leading to a confidence boost, and directly resulting in me being way jollier thus nicer to everyone. Ahh the beautiful zen cycle of organization.

I think Joe put it nicely this morning when he said "Don't you feel good? You just can't tell what's wrong until you organize everything, and then you realize, you can relax." So true.

However: I do this thing every time I clean where I get overwhelmed with all the prints in my closet (my style in highschool/early college might be described as "funky bohemian" erghhh) and end up getting rid of EVERYTHING. Well, one big cardboard box and three garbage bags! I'll probably sneak back in my trunk and pull out a few dresses but...still...I'm proud!

The only problem is; I realized how few practical dresses I really have now. I have some fabulous silk numbers and short little cocktail dresses and sweet sundresses but I'm pretty lacking in the "go out to brunch with your parents" department.

Let's do a little dreaming:

Elizabeth and James, Safari Laurent Dress, Diani Boutique

Skies of Blue Dress, Dahlia, Modcloth


Silk and Wool Printed Dress, See by Chloe, Net-a-porter

Grand Island Dress, LA Made, Anthropologie


Printed Silk Dress, Anna Sui, Net-a-porter

I'm trying to stay away from crazy prints right now but I couldn't resist the Anna Sui. Look how sweet the back is!

I can do anything good.



I'm pretty sure everyone saw this forever ago but as Joe and I quote it at least five times a day, it just has to make an appearance here.

Friday, July 2, 2010

Dreamery








Joe called me with the tiniest voice this morning to warn me that he may be dying. We think he has the flu, as his whole family had it last week. His dying wish was "orange gatorade." Poor babe. I'm taking off work early so I can bring him a Chocolate Almond Blackberry Currant Liqueur Torte I made last night and some Echinacea blend. Whew. There's probably something horribly wrong with me happily sipping away at my fresh coffee and planning my dream wedding (don't worry, all, just for play...as Elizabeth Taylor said "All girls do!") when his last text said there was a "50/50" chance of him holding on long enough for me to get my paycheck and blow this Popsicle stand. But in just an hour or two I'll go home and scratch his head while we watch Casablanca and eat torte. I've never heard of an illness that couldn't be cured with such remedies.

The flowers are from Saipua, a soap and flower shop in Brooklyn that I can't wait to visit. Dress is gorgey porgey from Vera Wang and it is on sale pretty reasonably (if you're thinking in bridal terms) at Gilt group right now. Lingerie is the SWEETEST in the whole world, in my favorite weird wispy foamy green, by Marni, of course. It's available at net-a-porter. Also, HOLY CINQUE TERRE. I really need to get there. Southern Coast of Italy, put on some clean undies, I'm coming to town.

THE Bag


You are the one I have been waiting for.

Paris Two Ways from Ilemi

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Valentino does prom?


Ok, am I the only person that was immediately FREAKED OUT by how young the Valentino Resort 2011 poster baby looks? I know that it is simply an industry standard but this little girl just exudes "someone's child". I'm so distracted by it that I can't even concentrate on the collection (though what I did note seems oddly 90's; mint green lace?). I recently read an awesome Jezebel article on a sort of make-shift campaign both Anna Wintour and Michael Kors are on to get more healthy, adult, models on the run way. "Girls dressed up in their mother's clothes? Guess what, it's not attractive," Michael Kors quipped in an interview. I guess no one over at Valentino got the memo?

Everyday Opulence

Chanel Bocce Set at Chanel, $?


Luis Vuitton Beach Blanket at Luis Vuitton, $1,090

Chanel leather pillow at 1stdibs, $?

Martha Stewart for Kitchenaid, about $600 at Ebay (I NEED THIS.)


Hermes Beach Towels at Bluefly, $477

I am currently obsessed with things that are needlessly extravagant. It's so easy to be wooed by superfluity in fashion; it mocks itself with a seamlessly straight face. Luckily, my boyfriend is intrigued by the concept as well, so my constant dithering about how badly we need a Chanel bocce ball has yet to phase him. Part of the allure of such things is that they're so absurd they feel taboo, I think. My father would probably cry into his callused hands were I to express my dreams of owning a lawn bowling set that costs as much as a semester in college. But tra-la-la! It's the internet and the internet was made for dreaming. For more insanity, scour Chanel's website; you can get everything from a logo snowboard to fishing pole!

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Baby Haute





These little nuggets over at the uber-stylish Caramel Baby & Child are the epitome of my desired progeny. In about eight years, I will have my own little pouty lipped turban heads. I'm totally one of those people that ascribes to the fact that children are just smaller people and therefore don't want to be dressed like stoned clowns or walking billboards (AHEM DISNEY CORPORATION). Just because your person can't speak English very well doesn't mean they want to wear a bright pink Christmas tree skirt and a bow wobbling questionably on the top of her little bald head. Treat that babe with some respect!

Now, I know I'm (hopefully) a good 5-10 years away from procreation and ease and expense will come in to play and blah blah blah, but I think even then I will stick to my guns on this one. This doesn't mean I'll be nazi-fashion-mama; if my nuggets need weird squeeky light up shoes to fulfill their preschool fantasies, we'll talk about it. Until then, I'm picturing linen frocks sans pudding stains and blue eyed babes in bowler hats. Swoon.

Monday, June 28, 2010

Arithmetic Lesson

Perfect LBD


Chloe via theoutnet.com

Chen Karlsson


ChenKarlsson, as featured on Design*Sponge last Friday, is a design team "inspired by Scandinavian and Asian design traditions." I remember seeing their fantastic pendant lamps in the past and freaking out, promising myself I would invest in one when I'm living a lifestyle that doesn't require me to rape my piggy bank for quarters. Their hanging pendant lamps are perfect for housing your favorite tiny friends, and I love that you can easily change out the trinkets. I still insist on spending hours in the miniature doll-house section of the fair each summer, almost in tears over the tiny iron skillets and cross-hatched pies. Miniatures make me melt. ChenKarlsson's fixtures have a sort of terrarium feel, too! The also have the cutest fabric prints with little Chinese babies on them. Everyone knows how I feel about squishy-faced babes; when in Chongqing a few years ago, all I learned to say was:

"May I have a cold beer?"

and

"May I hold your baby?"

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Worry Muppet



You know how sometimes you're lodged between two loomingly brilliant decisions and the longer you toy with them the more you resent them in all of their opportunistic magnificence and you actually wish for one second that you were another moping little mussel hiding away in your small town shell?

And then you put on your big girl panties and make a decision.
And you can actually breathe.
And you run around in circles flapping your hands at your sides and screaming consonants because you realize that if you feel that comparatively free then it must have been the right decision.
And you feel like you can do anything because you aren't held down by your own silly worry Muppet that sits on your shoulder and bops his stupid disappointment head in your constant periphery.

YOU KNOW THAT FEELING?

SO DO I.

And I firmly believe it is inextricably tied to many, many, Margaritas.


Photo: We heart it.

Summer

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Obsessed


I literally want every single one of Alex Monroe's creations.
But the rings! The sweetness of gold with the organic twig texture is genius.

Love.

After all we are just a lunatic and a retard
clinging to one another in the wilderness.

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Dot your eyes



Today I saw a connect the dots puzzle for the first time in years and I remembered how much I truly loved them as a child. There was a certain sense of accomplishment in the end result of a perfectly round and smiley sun or a sturdy palm tree, for a kid who had about as much grace with a crayon as a humpback whale. I got to googlin' "connect the dots for adults" and 1)immediately decided that was a bad idea 2)giggled over the fact that these were common search terms.

Amongst the ethers however, I did find the beauty above. Apparently, this is the brainchild of artist Chris McAuliff who, according to ABC Austrailia's website, "invited 100 artists to decorate their own album cover of Neil Diamond's 1970 record, Shilo, which features a connect-the-dots image of his face."

I LOVE the internet.


photo via: swankola.com