Showing posts with label Pop-Culture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pop-Culture. Show all posts

Monday

The Rich and Boring Need Not Apply...

Great article on the rise of Todd Selby in the NYTIMES.

...Mr. Selby’s online gallery is also indicative of a trend toward a rawer, more photojournalistic approach to interiors, a movement typified by indie design magazines like Apartamento or the interiors blog Homebodies, which are less interested in the faux perfection of shelter magazines than in the effluvia of everyday life. The spaces actually look lived in because they are.

Saturday

The Wedding Sheet



I came across the concept of the wedding sheet in Josephine Ryan's French Home last night. I'm getting married in the Fall, and I'd never heard of this tradition, so I did a little bit of research.

It is referenced as both a French and Italian tradition, where the bride is given an ornately embroidered wedding sheet in "fil de lin" linen as part of her trousseau. On the morning after the couple's first night, the tradition states that the couple will hang the sheet out a window to show their family and nosy neighbors that the bride was indeed a virgin.

My guess is that if they are still being given on the occasion of a wedding, the second, more public part of the tradition has fallen in favor.

I came across this site, Fleur d'Andeol, which sells impeccable antique wedding sheets and other fine linens. Worth bookmarking for sure.

Wednesday

Pop-culture leaves...

Loved this little "study in leaves" in the New York Times. A fun Sunday afternoon crafts project if you ask me. See the whole series here.

Thursday

Guilty Pleasure, So Guilty

I can't help it. It's so wrong. But I'm posting it anyways.

Overexposure- Let's Talk About It



Barack Obama is getting a lot of flack for last Sunday's media blitz. The critique from most parties? The office of the President is one of prestige, and by offering himself too easily to the masses he will desensitize us to his presence, and most of all his message. Said Peggy Noonan on This Week with George Stephanopoulos,"It's boorish, and it makes people not lean towards you but lean away from you."

These are my thoughts EXACTLY when it comes to the oft-mentioned GOOP, a new online venture of Gwyneth Paltrow's with the tag line "Nourish the Inner Aspect". The company's product is a weekly newsletter geared towards easy and healthy ways of eating, exercising, dressing, and traveling, under the categories of "BE, MAKE, GO, GET, DO, SEE".

It's a really cool idea. And no one would care about the recipes, the exercise regimens, the travel tips if Gwyneth wasn't the one dishing them out. Alas, my critique of GOOP is not GOOP itself, but of Gwyneth and her new role in my life (an overly dramatic statement but hear me out).

I used to worship Gwyneth in the ways that we all idolize move stars that we hope to emulate in looks, demeanor, lifestyle, you name it. She lived the dream-life. Part of the attraction was that her lifestyle was essentially non-attainable to little ol' me.

Now that the distance between us is so short, and I read weekly about the realities of how she stays thin, her detox regimen, how much she loves wheat-grass, and her favorite maternity outfits (which, actually would still be way out of my reach financially), I'm sort of getting sick of her? And frankly, the health food things is bordering on obsessive.

I don't want Gwyneth to be the new Oprah, or god-forbid the new Tyra (I think just vomited in my mouth). And she wouldn't, her style is too different, too subtle, which is probably why she's doing her thing online, and not on daytime T.V.

All I'm saying is that, now that I've got her secrets for a life well-lived, I'm less interested in her life. I just want her to be the fairy tale again. And while I'm at it, can someone just rewind the tapes back to "Change has come to America"? The podium has a way of giving me goosebumps that the chair next to David Letterman can't.

The Season for Mad Men

I'm writing a little piece on Mad Men/50's fashion for a paper here in West Palm called The Coastal Star. The perk was that I got my hair and makeup done and got to dress up all house-wifey. It was DA-BOMB. Check 'er out.


Aretha's Inauguration Hat


It was friggin' awesome and now they're making a t-shirt with a picture of her wearing it. It's an alternative way to commemorate the occasion. Get 'em while they last.

Sunday

New Eileen Fisher Ad Campaign





...And the smart award goes to......Eileen Fisher!

Did anyone else see this on the back inside cover of today's NYTimes Magazine? My friend Claire and I have been saying, in secret, how we kind of LOVE Eileen Fisher and now it seems, Eileen Fisher has caught on. I guess over-sized linen dresses and sweaters used to be a middle-aged woman thing, which would explain EF's decades old ad-campaign targeted to the woman whose has "confidently gone gray", so to speak.

This new ad campaign indicates that they are changing their market. For example, I don't know a single middle-aged Eileen Fisher-ish woman who would sit all thugged out in black ankle boots and a hoodie like above...

Friday

Take a Moment for MJ

Honestly, I had sort of forgotten what an incredible performer Michael Jackson was since in the last ten years I've only associated him with small children and that one Law and Order SUV episode that was clearly inspired by his latest child molestation trial.

The guy was incredible!!! Check out this tease he puts on in Tokyo in 1987. I'm dabbing my brow by the time it hits 55 seconds.

Monday

Fmr Sen. Sam Nunn on Meet the Press (No, Really)

I just want to give a shout out to former Sen. Sam Nunn (D-GA) for spicing up his wardrobe on yesterday's Meet the Press: crayola-ish, hot-red tie matched with the baby blue button-down and the BROWN jacket.The nuclear threat out of Iran and North Korea is fascinating, and the color combo in Sen. Nunn's wardrobe made his comments just that much more enjoyable yesterday. Here's to personal style...

P.S. David Gregory looks really bad in HD.
P.P.S. If I had styled Nunn's look I would have added some tortoise shell glasses to complete the look, duh.



Oliver Peoples, Emerson El Mirage Tortoise Eyeglasses.