Monday, September 28, 2009

Ruffle neck dress



With the high waisted pants project at a disappointing standstill I'm sussing out the reality of producing a dress like this Aunt Judy frock from the sensational Heidi Merrick. I've blogged about her before mostly because I want to be her. I love the details and how timeless it looks. I feel like my kindergarten teacher and my present self all belong in this dress. I have the fabric, I now need to merge some of my vintage patterns together to attempt this project. I have got to be due for a sewing success story. I'm teetering on the edge of a grudge against the sewing machine.



Thursday, September 24, 2009

I'm just saying...

I love banners and I have been happily making them for any event this side of a weekday, for some years now. They are cheerful, uplifting and retro all at the same time. I am currently inspired by the simplicity of this little banner (via simple lovely) and a message that is so pitch perfect that I can barely stand it. Don't you just love the obvious truths?

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Tuesday Look: Kristjan

I work with a lot of brilliant fashion innovators. Make up artists who know whether the brow of the moment is actually Brooke Shields or Frida Kahlo, hair colourists who make it their business to know whether dark roots are hot or not and stylists who hold the answer to whether it's a curling iron or flat iron you seek for Fall '09. I love these colleagues. They are smart, talented and wickedly good conversationalists. They're good at parties, they shop well, smell good and enhance self esteem for a living. They are my style meccas and in a life that is too busy for current, they are my short cut. Kristjan Hayden is one of those fabulous stylist/make up artists who does pretty hair and even prettier make up and his work is turning up in all the hottest fashion pages and on the heads of the NY and LA set when they are gracing the T-dot.

He is pictured here on a shoot with model Eva Shaw in a sexualité tank by Sebastien Tellier for AA, and J Lindeberg shorts. The glasses are Retro Super Future and they are just that. I love this effortless look and the way he is as photo ready as the stunning model.

This Tuesday Look is a reminder that as we prepare for a new season of must haves, shorn locks and the right matte or gloss, you should get in a chair at the make up counter or the salon and prepare for good conversation and the cheat sheet to fabulous. Kristjan and others are waiting to share.

Saturday, September 19, 2009

Saturday is off to a lovely start


In the summer months we see a weekend in the city as a type of penance for the moments spent on the island. As the weather cools down we start to appreciate the city Saturdays for the gift of getting things done, seeing friends, birthday parties and the like.

I woke early this morning after a busy week, excited about all that today could mean. Finishing the rag doll for a new precious baby, tidying Georgia's room, giving everyone new bed linens, watering and weeding the garden, vacuuming the drywall dust from the patching done in our house this week or painting the picket fence that is finally installed. Cutting out the mock up of the high waisted pants that I'm dying to make, making shepherd's pie for dinner.

We started the day with pancakes on the front porch in sweaters and if nothing else happens today apart from the beginnings of a good Globe crossword, I will feel like it's already a perfect day. I hope you're having a nice time in your world. Happy weekend!

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Tuesday Look: Mad Man

I seem to have a myriad of marketing and communications people in my world. Friends who work in media, arts and communications and one of the most successful of these ad men is Ron. He's pictured here (courtesy of iphone) at the Tuesday evening (thus the late post) birthday celebration for the mutually loved, photographer Greg.

Ron is the president of the chic integrated marketing firm Focus Ad Inc. His client list includes heavy weights like HMV, H&M and Second Cup. In our circle he is known for innovation, curiosity, good humour, snappy duds and a trophy wife. The Don Draper of our crew.

Last night he turned up at Watusi on Ossington for the fete in Diesel jeans, American Apparel Tee, Paul Smith shirt, Jay Lindberg belt, hat custom at Big it Up, statement watch by Panerai and the show stopper, Barney's NY x Chuck Taylor All Stars in cream patent leather.

Tuesday Look is the dapper Ron who makes success and style both look easy.

Thursday, September 10, 2009

My breasts are absolutely normal thank you very much.

Hypochondriosis is not the right word for it but let's just say that I have an elevated sense of awareness and insecurity about ailments (big and small) and their likelihood to kill me in the near future.

In the delicate post-partum period following the birth of my youngest son, I started to see issues related to my body with relative hysteria. It wasn't that there weren't actual symptoms or even actual issues because through thorough (and I mean thorough) investigation, genuine maladies were uncovered. But the prevailing issue was anxiety and this impacted greatly any sense of reassurance that would come with normal test results. Results from two CT scans, one MRI, multiple neck ultrasounds, dozens of blood tests, more ultrasounds, x-rays, three fine needle aspiration biopsies and the list goes on.

And then you notice progress. What once was a state of paralyzed terror had evolved into a moderate reaction to symptoms. A response that might actually be considered similar to that of a normal person. I found a lump in my breast in the early summer and did as I always do when I find anything a notch up from a hang nail, and I booked an appointment with my GP. I should say that I did have the experience as a tween of watching my adoptive mother battle and eventually lose the fight with breast cancer so I was a bit worked up waiting to see my doctor. She wasn't alarmed but expressed concern and booked me in for a mammogram.

The appointment took some months to get and when I followed my usual protocol of calling incessantly to seek a cancellation, I was met with the reality that women don't typically cancel mammograms at the leading breast cancer screening hospital in the country. So I, like many other women waited. I just waited. This may not seem like an act of heroism to you but I assure you that it represents significant progress. Further evidence of this betterment is that when they found something on that mammogram and my doctor called to tell me that they wanted to do an ultrasound and a possible biopsy, I was still able to eat my lunch.

So today when I arrived for this follow up appointment at what I think is the greatest places to go when there's a question about your breasts: The Princess Margaret Hospital, I felt pretty calm and only started sweating when they called my name. In I went to the darkened room, got globbed with warm gel and had my breast probed. After one technician, and two radiologists all stared and stared at the tiny black and white screen the last man holding the probe looked at me and said "You're breasts are perfectly normal." I prefer to think of them as "small and mighty" or "unique" but if it's a radiologist talking, that's the sexiest thing he could have possibly said.

Turns out I have milk ducts that are enlarged by recent years of continuous breast feeding and that has created the dense, lumpy node that showed up on the mammogram. But all of this is really to say that with breast cancer awareness month ahead and many heros doing the incredible Weekend to End Breast Cancer Walk this weekend, take a moment and think about your breasts, the facilities that service them and the thousands of women who are praying right now that they'll hear something reassuring about their "normal" breasts.

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Tuesday Look: Valentino Inspiration

After another short week of vacation and a glorious weather system, the universe is buckling down in back to school, back to basics, back to business mode. Sigh.

All we can really do is forge ahead and the best way that I can think of to do that at this time of year is to create a mental story board of what the Fall/Winter 09 fashion season is going to look like in the humble confines of my non closet with my even humbler of budgets.

As a pick me up, Ramona and I ventured out at lunch for one of our favourite excursions: VV Boutique (aka Value Village). I scored three beautiful blouses from the 70s and 80s with and without shoulder pads. I'm feeling blouses and high waisted trousers this season. The stunning Valentino number to the left retails for a cool 3G's via Bergdorf's. I've been rooting around tonight through my vintage patterns and have found a perfect pants pattern that should formidably do the trick. Tomorrow's lunch excursion is going to be the fabric store and tomorrow night's activity is sure to be me looking at the working materials for greatness and wishing I had the energy to do something Valentino-esque with them. I'll keep you posted. What are you wearing this season?

Thursday, September 3, 2009

To the Island

I meant to share this photo earlier. It was a Tuesday Look from my vacation and the subject is Maya (pronounced like the month with an a at the end-keeping the interesting names tradition alive). The Island attracts an interesting band of characters and their guests are equally colourful. Maya is a make up artist from Brooklyn who had the most chic fashion sense that it confused me (a good sign). The pineapple was our lunch dessert and the day as you can see from the bay was perfect.

We're heading back there now and before I go I wanted to tell you that the expectant hipsters had their beautiful son Noel Jack Alexander yesterday afternoon and they look like a couple of very happy campers.

So before any sign of a cold front moves in, get out there and do all of the things you said you would do this summer and haven't and at 5:30 p.m. have a cold glass of your pleasure and toast to the fortunes that we all share.

Have a great weekend.


Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Letter to Summer:

Dear Summer,

There is something so beautiful about your late August light. I'm sorry that you're leaving. I have enjoyed you this year. I am so happy to have had two full weeks to explore the glory of our special Island with my children. I'm happy to have this week to get my tasks done and then head back to the Island for one more romp still in your sights.

I'm sorry that weren't around much this year and that people said such mean things about you. It took me a long time to love you but I'm happy to say that since I met the not husband who is a huge fan of yours, I have loved you too. This year especially.

Thanks for shining sun down on me while I read my September Vogue and learnt about what I'm going to wear when you are officially gone. I don't know if you've heard but for the second fall/winter fashion season in a row people will be granted permission to wear their summer shoes with tights underneath. I will think of you every time I look down at my feet and have to pretend that I can see my pedicured toes like I can now.

Thank you for the rain that made our new sod (free from our neighbours) grow and grow and grow and made my geraniums and petunias and marigolds huge and vibrant.
Thank you for the spectacular thunderstorms that made Otis seek cover trembling under the blankets and that made us remember great Nicholas who would cry his labrador cry and try to climb in the bed too. Thanks for the pelting sound of the rain on the tin roof. I love that you kept us guessing and made us carry umbrellas and SPF.

I have enjoyed the gloriousness of the feeling of reaching for a sweater for the first time in months. I love the resolutions that I make in the late summer and the lists of fall clothes I want to buy/make can be found on my desk, next to my bed, in my purse.

Thanks for only making it necessary for us to turn the air conditioning on a few times saving the whole world a few kilowatts. Thanks for being good weather every time I really needed it.

Don't believe all of those things that people said, you did just fine, you were perfect. I accept you just as you are. Have a good winter in Australia, I'll see you next year.

When we see each other again: I will be wiser and will have had my hair coloured ten times and cut twice, my kids will be taller, Graydie won't sound like a baby or be nearly as blond, I will have had surgery and had questions answered, the great, amazing, lovely Yasmin will be a mom, Ramona will have made her beach house even more spectacular, Ginger will have lost another key on her macbook and made her new house a place of wonder and happiness, Shelley will have done her many traditions, Martha will have had her hands full as Kate began to move move move, Laura will have made us laugh about how much she hates the winter and needs a hot vacation , Tricia will have taken another risk, Greg will have finally played road hockey, Stephen will be overwhelmed by all of the winter clothes that he forgot about.

And we will come together many times and celebrate and be further recessed or recovered and be sad and happy and say hello and good bye and wish that summer were here again.

Many thanks and much love,

L
Related Posts Widget for Blogs by LinkWithin