Friday 28 May 2010

Naomi loves little black vintage dresses

When did your obsession with LBDs begin?

As a child I developed a fascination with Morticia Addams... and then of course, I watched Breakfast at Tiffany’s.

How many LBDs do you own?

I generally have around fifty vintage LBDs at my pleasure!

Which is your favourite LBD?

I fall in love with many of the LBDs that pass through my shop (littleblackvintagedress.com). One of my favourites was a 1950s layered lace shift dress. The cut was perfect and it fitted like a dream. I was sad to let that one go.

Whose LBD-style do you admire?

Victoria Beckham wears the LBD perfectly every time.


Why will the LBD never die?

Although clichéd, it really is the one fashion item that makes every woman look and feel amazing – if it’s right, it will never let the wearer down.

When did you set up littleblackvintagedress.com and why?

I set up Little Black Vintage Dress in 2008. I had been selling vintage for the previous five years and wanted to find a niche within the market. I was getting bored sifting through mountains of super bright 70s polyester dresses and wanted to concentrate on the dresses that I loved the most.

Where do you source your LBVDs?

That would be telling...

How often do you update your shop?

I try to update my shop on a weekly basis, however at the moment it’s looking emptier than it ever has! Must get out dress hunting...

What's your favourite decade for style?

This is a tricky one! I would say there are elements of every decade that I appreciate. But in terms of culture and style I would go with the late 50s/early 60s.


Do you ever wear other colours?

Actually, as much as I’d love you all to believe I spend each day looking effortlessly chic in one of my many LBDs, I lead a far less glamorous life which involves wearing jeans and t-shirts – a little bit more practical when running around after two kids.

How do you feel about the LWD trend? Will you be setting up another shop?

Hmmm, white is a bit too innocent for me! I’ll stick to the black.

Raid Naomi's vintage little black dress collection at www.littleblackvintagedress.com

Thursday 27 May 2010

Chocks away - the A/W aviator jacket trend


The fashion world is in the grips of military mania. Lace-up combat boots are toughening up floaty dresses this spring/summer, seeing Doc Martens enjoy a resurgenece in popularity, and designers have taken inspiration from navy uniforms to inform one of the season's most written-about trends - nautical.

But while heavy greatcoats and cargo pants continue to feature in autumn/winter collections, designers are looking to the sky for the next target in their military operation - aviator styles.

Flying jackets were spotted on the catwalks of Burberry Prorsum, Topshop Unique and Pringle of Scotland during February's Autumn/Winter 2010/11 fashion weeks, prompting the fashion press to hail the style as 'the next big thing' in outerwear.


So, what makes a jacket one that Amelia Earhart and Tom Cruise would be proud to wear? A leather outer, a rich shearling lining and buckle details are the three things to be looking out for.

For a directional look, wear with tapered cargo trousers - check out the US celebrity craze for skinny Houlihan pants - and lace-up boots and soften with a feminine lace or sheer top in khaki or earth tones.

Cost-wise, you're looking at about £80 to £250 on the high-street, although you may pick one up second-hand for around £50 if you're willing to root around the flea markets.


Never one to miss out on a key-item trend, ASOS are already in there with a leather and sheepskin-effect aviator jacket at £110. Next also have some lovely soft leather flying jackets coming in as part of their A/W military/aviator collection.

IMAGES: Burberry and ASOS and Next.

Tuesday 25 May 2010

Shark sleeping bag

Just how cool is this plush shark sleeping bag? I think that would be 'very'. The prototype for the Chum Buddy was hand-sewn in Texas by 19-year-old Kendra Phillips, who has been looking into ways of producing the design on a larger scale to meet international demand.


The sleeping buddy will set you back around $200, but I wouldn't like to think how much postage and packaging to the UK would bump up that price.

H & M's paisley print sleeping bag - part of the Fashion Against Aids collection - may be more practical for the festivals, but this would make hangover days so much more fun.


Read an interview with Kendra on Rex Features.

Sunday 23 May 2010

Car boot sale booty

So, we did it. We woke at 6.00am on a Sunday morning and dragged ourselves and a few suitcases full of loot up to our local car boot sale - this is the only time I wish we could drive/had a car. We didn't do badly, coming away with around £25 profit and a nice batch of sunburn from our £6 pitch.

Annoyingly, we didn't manage to shift many books or magazines, the heaviest items to haul back to the flat, and the heat paired with the indecisiveness of our potential customers brought out the Bernard Black in Irish - at one point I thought he was going to tell the young boy thumbing through his copies of SFX and Empire to "get a job" or perhaps inform him that our stall wasn't a library, mate...

Fortunately the reminder that his own mother used to leave him to amuse himself in bookshops, in which he never bought a thing, prevented confrontation with disgruntled parents, though there were a few angry old man/bulldog growls from him when punters disturbed our DVD display.

Of course, as our early morning motivation had granted us entry to the magical world of car booty, I had to make the most of it, meaning I had to spend my profit on trinkets and old things. But really cool trinkets and old things...


My most exciting find was a working Roberts RM20 radio, apparently produced between 1976-1983. I've been looking for a classic one for an age since I resigned myself to the fact that I couldn't justify treating myself to a new retro-look Roberts. However, I imagined I'd have to spend a bit more than £6 when I found one.

The radio is the perfect addition to the bar - the iPod speakers weren't really of the right era - and helped provide a suitable soundtrack to my afternoon of gardening. You can't beat 'greatest hits of all time' on Gold and the comforting tones of BBC4 on a Sunday afternoon *TURNING INTO MY PARENTS*.


I've also been on the hunt for eclectic charm bracelets on eBay and Etsy of late, but as I'm only in the market for costume jewellery, wasn't prepared to cough up many pennies. So I was very pleased to find a woman selling off her collection for £1 a pop. We now have teddy bears, hearts, Disney characters and a host of more traditional good luck charms, oh, and a rather special amethyst gold cuff - £1 from another stall.


My other two finds were a WW2 propaganda poster - now taking pride of place in our bathroom - for 50p and five cute checked and polka dot cake plates at 20p each.




I feel that I was quite restrained - I could have bought twice as much - and I'm very happy with my haul. That's me car-boot-saled-out for another few months though...cue sigh of relief from Irish...

Thursday 20 May 2010

Print this

Prints are fun. With a blank canvas, creative types can transfer whatever's in their head - cats on bikes, parachuting squirrels - onto whatever's in front of them. Brill. T-shirts are a good canvas, yes they are, and I cherish my psychedelic rabbit print Luella t-shirt and another that features a happy dog with the words 'Love - Top breeders recommend it'. But, alas, I don't really have the right shape for t-shirts.

Jersey material is unforgiving around the midrift and stretching over my - can I say ample? - bust makes me look like some kind of wannabe cheerleader. What was that girl called in Scream who met her end by garage door? She may have gone out with Marilyn Manson in real life... The look makes me think of her, anyway.

So, in conclusion, the t-shirt = not my favourite. Canvas bags, however, well, no one can look bad wearing one of those. And, of course, they're much prettier and environmentally-friendly than the ol' plastic.

Etsy is a gold mine for quirky printed totes and here are five that make me smile (and also sing "cat on a biiiike, cat on a biiiiike" to the dramatic tune of A Fifth of Beethoven). Happy times.

$10, MisNopalesArt
$8, happyfamily
$10, emandsprout
$10, MisNopalesArt
$10, MisNopalesArt

Wednesday 19 May 2010

Car boot sale - sellers' guide

He doesn't know it yet, but I'm thinking of dragging Irish to a car boot sale early Sunday am. Now that the mornings are bright and there's warmth in the sun, it seems like the perfect time to get rid of all those unwanted books, CDs, clothes and all that other random sh@t that has taken over our flat since the last time we had a clear-out.

The trouble is that I'm a bit of hoarder, as is Irish, so we need to purge ever once in a while, and car boot sales can be a fun way of doing this - no really.

After the last time we conjured up our inner market traders and sold our wares, 'two for a paaawnd', I wrote a guide of tips we picked up along the way for a, now defunct, site called More Than Living. These have served as useful reminders for me, and may just help you out too.


Make sure sets are complete - avoid any unhappy customers or no-sales by ensuring that all the parts of a set are kept together. If you're missing a part, make this known to buyers.

Spare change - as many car boot sale items go for under £5, make sure you have plenty of change for those awkward 'how much is this? £1. Sorry, I've only got a fifty' customers.

Take the kitchen sink - unless you love getting up at 6am on a Sunday morning, a car boot sale is a once-every-few-years event, so make sure you're loaded to bursting with unwanted goods. Those items you don't sell can be dropped off at a charity shop on the way home or later in the week.

Get there early - Getting up at the crack of dawn is worth it when greeted by cash-happy car boot vultures on arrival. These people are often professional eBay sellers who want first dibs on your loot and will pay the best money.

Do your research - Visit a car boot sale in the weeks leading up to your sale to get an idea of realistic selling prices.

Be ready to haggle - Haggling is an essential part of the car boot sale experience, so get used to £5 being shorthand for £3 and offer discounts on multiple items. However, it's wise to take a second to think your patter through; otherwise you may deliver such gems as '£5 for the two or £2 each', as a seller on our neighbouring pitch proposed last time.

Be prepared - In order to make standing in a car park for five hours as comfortable as possible, wrap up warm, take a flask of hot tea or coffee and pack a fold-up chair - just make sure it doesn't get sold.

Let it go - You've brought all this stuff to the car boot sale because you don't want or need it anymore, so don't start getting sentimental when it comes to selling it.

Stay till the end - The general aim of a car boot sale is to sell as many items as you can, so when the sale nears the end, reduce your prices or offer everything for one set price to shift some stock.

Don't go home with more than you came with - Car boot sales are a great place for sellers to pick up a bargain too, but make sure you don't just replace old clutter with new.

Image by Flickr user net efekt

Sunday 16 May 2010

Pretty things

A few things I've liked of late
Italian erotica books from the 1970s - street market in Rome, 1 Euro each.
Bird settee - Boden press day, not for sale.
1960s sun dress - Ebay, £7
1970s hostess plates - Spiral charity shop, Brighton, 50p each.
Floral hairdryer - Cupid & Grace, £25.99.
Apple print deckchair - Next, £25.

Thursday 13 May 2010

Vintage fashion feast

It's no secret that I'm a little bit obsessed with styles of the past so I'm super excited to be looking forward to not one but two major vintage fashion events this summer.

Frock Me! vintage fashion fair

The famous vintage fashion fair 'Frock Me!' branched out from its home at Chelsea Town Hall to set up shop (or stalls) down in Brighton earlier this year, and returns with over 70 exibitors of vintage goodies on 6 June.


The fair is the brain child of Matthew Adams, who studied Costume & Theatre Design in the 1970s and started selling vintage fashions and accessories at the, now defunct, Swiss Cottage Market in 19798. He went on to set up the popular Stables Market in Camden and started the first vintage fashion fair in Kensington Town Hall in the mid 1990s, later moving it to Chelsea in 2004 and changing the name to Frock Me (no relation to the C4 show).

The fairs have proved a massive success wherever they are based, as have the associated tea rooms, selling the obligatory cupcakes and afternoon tea on dainty kitsch china.

I can't believe I missed the two in Brighton earlier this year but have added the up-coming event in my diary as one not to be missed and will no doubt be going back in October and November for another vintage fashion fix. At just £4 entrance (£2 with NUS), how could you resist?

For those in London, the next Frock Me! fair is on 23 May.


Vintage at Goodwood festival

Vintage fashion plus music and food - what more could you ask for? The first of what is planned to be an annual event, the Vintage at Goodwood Festival runs from 13 till 15 August - the perfect timing for me to blag a ticket as a birthday present!

Over the three days in Chichester, acts old and new will perform on several stages dotted around the festival site, catwalk shows and fashion markets will exhibit vintage fashions and organic, free-range and ethical food and drink will provide shopping and dancing fuel.


Among the musical acts confirmed are Sandie Shaw, introducing her favourite female artists who will perform songs "that men sung that women should have", Motown legends Martha and the Vandellas and current favourites the Noisettes. Catwalk shows, running three times a day, will exhibit the creations of classic designers Ossie Clark, Mary Quant and Vivienne Westwood, to name but a few, and will be themed around such fashions as 'Mods vs Rockers', 'The British New Look' and 'Future Vintage'. And over 320 vintage fashion purveyors will be selling their wares at the fair.

When it comes to refreshments, afternoon tea will be available, the WI will host a 'largest and funniest-shaped vegetable competition - then baking said veg in pies - and classic ice cream vans will tootle around the site.

Oh, and there will be a classic-car boot sale on the Sunday. It just couldn't get any better!

Day tickets start from £55, with weekend passes at £135. You can also camp on the site, from £15 for your own tent to £1,000 for a gypsy caravan and £2,000 for a Hotel Bell Tent.

For more information on the vintage fashion events, click on the links below:

Frock Me!
Vintage at Goodwood

All images used taken from the Frock Me! and Vintage at Goodwood websites.

Wednesday 12 May 2010

Details confirmed for Brighton Fashion Week

The Corn Exchange has been named as the venue for Brighton Fashion Week’s catwalk shows.

Among the designers confirmed for the event, which will run from Wednesday 9 to Saturday 12 June, is Andrew Bannister, who honed his pattern cutting-skills on placement at Vivienne Westwood and launched his menswear collection at London Fashion Week in February 2009.


Joining him at the Couture Show will be one-to-watch designer Nikolo Bertok, Sarina Poppy, who uses silks, wools and vintage fabrics in her designs and Flik Hall, whose futuristic jumpsuits and body-con dresses accentuate the contours of the human form and are created with an eclectic mix of materials.


Playsuit Parlour, Ailsa, Orleans Designs, Ceci Tunn, Kerry Knowles, Kushion and Urban Chic are lined up to show at the ‘Ready to Wear’ event, where a market will feature stalls selling vintage and independent labels and accessories, free makeovers, goodie bags for the first 100 people through the doors and the chance to buy exclusive ranges from the catwalk.

For full events listings, times and ticket, visit www.brightonfashionweek.co.uk

Images: Flik Hall and Playsuit Parlour from www.brightonfashionweek.co.uk

Tuesday 11 May 2010

Check mate

Since Christopher Kane chose gingham as the material du jour in his spring/summer collection, high-street designers have also been looking to Brigitte Bardot's Lolita for style inspiration. Gingham sun-dresses have been popping up all over the shops, going down a more traditional route with light cotton checks, as opposed to Kane's boudoir-inspired chiffon, cut-out designs.


Track down original or hand-made fifties-style gingham dresses on ebay or etsy.com if you want one-offs, or check out Lipsy's sheer baby-doll to get Kane chic at cut-price. The dress has even won a fan in Laetitia over at top fashion blog Mademoiselle Robot .

New Look £28 Miss Selfridge £35
Dollyfrocks on etsy $79
My Frock Shop on ebay $34.99
Lipsy £50

Christopher Kane catwalk image: Style.com

Monday 10 May 2010

Rome: highlights and lowlights

Irish recently won a break to Rome, so at the weekend we jetted off for two nights in the Eternal City. We had a fantastic time and these are my highlights:

The history - it's free
Ruins, statues and churches are on every corner and on the grandest scale imaginable. While you could pay to get up-close-and-personal with the major landmarks, you don't need to. We saw some amazing iconic sites for free by just walking around the city and travelling on a hop-on-hop-off tour bus.

The Art Deco hotel
Although we were based away from the nicer parts of the city and there wasn't much going on in the area, our hotel itself was beautiful. Named the 'Art Deco', it very much lived up to its title, with period-style decor throughout. The staircase was grand, the lamps intricate and we had a lovely silk print, 1940's-style telephone and old radio in our room. The small details made our stay special.

The food
Who doesn't like pizza, pasta and ice cream? Fantastic for the taste buds, not so good for the figure, but hell, we were only there for two days so we pigged out. The quality cheese made the pizza melt in the mouth, the olive oil added delicate depth to bread and salads and just look at all that ice cream - yum. If you're going to indulge, try one of the many Blue Ice gelatos dotted around the city. Oh, and potato on pizza - a big yes.

The style
The stereotypes are true - men in sharp suits, half the city nipping around on chic scooters - "ciao" - and teeny classic-auto gems.

The lowlights

Like all big cities, Rome also has its bad points, which for me included:

The underworld - There were some very dodgy characters around the Termini and this put us on edge. Make sure to keep your bags close and closed and only take out with you what you need.

Tourist prices - 10 Euros for a watered-down cocktail in a plastic glass?! They saw us coming.

Extreme road rage - Road signs are treated as a rough guide in Rome - nothing to pay too much attention to - which leads to near-crashes as a matter of course, some very angry horn-happy motorists and nerve-wracking games of chicken each time you need to cross a road.

Thursday 6 May 2010

Johnnie b good

I’m becoming more disillusioned by fast fashion by the day. As I grow older and learn more about the fashion industry and consumer culture, I’m veering further from the cheap and cheerful and closer to the idea of investment pieces.

This is where brands like Boden come into play. Boden’s target audience is mums: Mums who like modern clothing that’s durable and not faddy, mums who dress their kids in head-to-toe Mini Boden, knowing that it will survive rough and tumble, and now mums who want to buy their teenage children good quality clothes that they’ll actually wear.
Enter ‘Johnnie b’ - Boden’s new youth brand. It’s been created by a new team of designers for the teenage market, and it’s great. The cuts are flattering, the prints current and the style timeless. And the best thing about the range? As a press girl at Boden’s autumn/winter preview proved, it fits twenty-somethings too. No longer does liking Boden make you feel that you’re turning into your mother.
My favourite pieces on display were a soft leather jacket – of which there was a lovely blazer version in the Boden proper collection – a cream prairie-style dress and red suede ankle boots: These alone create an outfit that could be rolled out time and time again.
The brand is obviously trend-aware – denim pieces were prevalent and a roll-sleeve grey marl jersey blazer hinted at Alexander Wang-inspired sports luxe – but all the designs are modern takes on classic pieces. Every wardrobe needs a few checked shirts, Breton tops and floral dresses. And my wardrobe definitely needs a bit of Johnnie b.

Monday 3 May 2010

She's Always a Woman - thank you TV advertising

As a general rule I don’t dislike ad music because it has appeared in an advert, but because it has been chosen for a particular type of advert in the first place. Adverts for mobile phones and small cars usually go for the twee lo-fi alt-folk that I like to call ‘dancing squirrel’ music and which knaws away irritatingly inside your head. No better are the vacuous dreamscapes used to compliment the ridiculous melodrama of perfume films.

When covers are used, it’s often an indication that the film-makers couldn’t afford copyright of the original; a new young thing putting a cool gloss on a song that wasn’t so much of a classic in the first place or a new young thing ruining a perfectly good song.

But there are always happy exceptions to the rules, and John Lewis’ choice of Fyfe Dangerfield’s ‘She’s Always a Woman’ to accompany their film of a young girl’s life in full is one of those. I’d never heard the song before, but the advert struck me immediately as one with sincerity – or at least well-executed simulated sincerity – and the song as one with bittersweet depth.

I couldn’t get it out of my head, but after finding out that it was a cover of a Billy Joel song didn’t hold high hopes for the original. It’s pleasingly refreshing when my cynicism is proved unfounded.

Both versions of the song are beautiful, Fyfe’s more knowing but no less heart-felt – it could be his song – and Billy’s a charming discovery; innocent and folky, with a lovely flute accompaniment and of the 1970's singer/songwriter genre I’m so fond of.

It hasn’t made me want to shop at John Lewis - but I’m talking about it so that must be a win in itself - but it has made me add both songs to my current playlist.

Image: Fyfe Dangerfield

Sunday 2 May 2010

Love,want,need – the language of fast fashion

Love, want, need - a phrase central to the common ‘need desire’ language of the fast-fashion industry and the media. Created for the consumer.


Fashion is no longer just seasonal. It changes by the week, and even by the day, with the ‘fast fashion’ peddled by high-street mega-chains such as Primark central to the transient trends and enduring need culture. But it’s not just fashion that’s fast and fleeting; the instant and 24/7 nature of digital media also requires a continual stream of fresh content to keep readers interested.

So as publishers and brands become ever more dependent on each other to shift their products, they’ve developed a new language of ‘need desire’ which has been willingly adopted by young fashionistas – a status term itself a construct of this new idiom.

Shop, don’t buy

‘Love, want, need’, ‘must-have piece’, ‘shop the look’ - all phrases now in common use in fashion magazines, on fashion sites and fashion blogs are just a more sophisticated form of advertising, which has always been based on the creation of need and want.

‘Shop’ has become the verb of choice over the more appropriate ‘buy’, as shopping is considered a form of sport and an acceptable past-time - especially for the teenage girls and young women targeted by such messages. ‘Buying’, although it is essentially what shopping is, is too practical and, particularly during the recession, a word to be avoided.

But even in the financial crisis language was employed to maintain the need culture that the economy relies on: ‘Recessionista’ and ‘bargainista’ became common terms, adding status to and congratulating those who found a way to continue shopping throughout the hard times.


The language of love

The language of fast fashion is now just as widely used by consumers as the publishers and brands. They are, perhaps unknowingly, doing the job of the advertisers via new forms of word-of-mouth - on their fashion blogs, on social networking sites, on the high-street.

The idiom is emotive and passionate with words such as ‘crush’ and ‘lust’, once reserved to describe the emotional attachments of humans to other humans, now used to express desire for clothing and fashion accessories. It is as hungrily devoured by the consumer as the fast fashion items themselves – so widely utilised that girls don’t need to finish their sentences to be understood by their peers. “I love…” is attributed to objects of desire, as well as used as an expression of acceptance of another’s fashion choices. And where words aren’t required, making a heart shape with your hands expresses the same thing.


Fashion and content, sitting in a tree…

With everyone now a content creator, there is little difference between working on a fashion weekly and writing content for a brand – just maybe that there’s more variety of brands and products to promote in an ‘independent’ magazine. The fashion weeklies depend on the fast fashion industry to supply products to write about just as much as the industry depends on the weeklies to promote their products and help create the constant desire for the new.

Look magazine, for example, ‘Britain’s best-selling fashion weekly’, includes regular features ‘this week we need…’ and ‘fashion trends of the week’, and accompanies every calendar event with messages that the consumer needs to shop for it: ‘Your Bank Holiday Weekend Wardrobe Sorted’ shouts a headline on the front-cover of the most recent issue of the magazine. With a website to maintain the need for the new is ever intensified – reduced to hours rather than weeks - and such features couldn’t exist without fast fashion.

These would most likely have seemed ridiculous editorial concepts thirty years ago but it’s all advertising – just not as we know it.

Which other fast-fashion phrases have you heard? Do you use them yourself? Let me know in the comments box below.