Leggings Alert: part two!

September 10, 2009 at 2:23 pm | In Fashion | Leave a Comment

The horror show of girls wearing leggings continues.

Yesterday I saw a pair of artfully ripped leggings.  WTF!  How many fashion don’ts do you have to cram in an outfit!

Stop this crime against fashion before it gets any worse!  Join me in the fight against leggings!

A Girl’s Guide to the 21st Century: Tip 6

May 6, 2009 at 6:01 pm | In A Girl's Guide to Life in the 21st Century, Fashion | Leave a Comment

Leggings are not pants!!!

This verdict comes from no lesser a source than Ms. Blair Waldorf, and no one effs with B.

Serious, why put yourself through the fashion mistake of wearing leggings as trousers?  No one looks good in leggings.  Even supermodels look a bit fat wearing them; mere mortals simply look ridiculous.

If you insist on wearing leggings, you can get away with them if you wear a pair under a mini-dress or a very long t-shirt.  The key is to have your top covered until at least the point of your mid-thigh.  Anything shorter is an outrage.

REMEMBER: Tights heighten every body flaw you have and you can see your underpants through them, so make sure you are well covered.

Doubly REMEMBER: Do not be like the girl I saw on the bus today: she was wearing TIGHTS with a t-shirt that stopped at her waist.  You could tell she was wearing flowery underwear.  I felt nauseous.

UNDERWEAR ON PUBLIC TRANSPORT = NASTY!

Cruel Summer

July 28, 2008 at 1:50 pm | In Fashion, Life, Television | Leave a Comment
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I believe Bananarama got it right.  It is indeed a cruel summer.  In fact, I would say summer is the cruelest time of year. 

I didn’t always feel this way.  When I was a child, I couldn’t wait for school to be over and the summer to begin.  It meant two and a half months of freedom; going swimming, watching soaps and MTV and having play-dates during the week not just on Sunday afternoons.  In my teenage years, the summer got even better.  Not only did I have two and a half months watching soaps and MTV, but I could go out on weekday nights and not just on Friday and Saturday night.  I always thought summer would be my favourite time of year.

Things changed once I got to university.  Although I hated school, I loved university.  I loved all my classes.  Okay, I hatedliterary criticism and 20th century poetry, but they were blips in an otherwise blissful class schedule.  I was in Paris, and it was a particularly good time to be an American in Paris.  The dollar was really high against the franc, so could spend money without a care.  I went shopping nearly everyday.  My wardrobe nearly burst it was so full.  I had steak dinners and champaign every week, if not most days.  It was a really decadent time, kinda of like the 20’s but without the jazz music.

Anyhow, that made the summer seem to be a bit of a drag.  Not that I wasn’t happy to see my family, I was, but I had to work over the summer.  I worked fulltime at the Pottstown Public Library.  While I look back now and realise it was a really great place to work, at the time it seemed fantastically dull compared to life at university.

Summer for me has been a disappointment for me since.  There have been a few okay ones.  The summer of 2003 was pretty good and pretty memorable, but on a whole they have been drab and dull.  It has slowly made me realise what a rip-off season it is.

First there is summer television.  No matter what country you live in, it’s dreadful.  What do tv execs think we are doing?  The entire world can’t all be on vacation at the same time, and contrary to popular belief, very few of us are  outside enjoying the nice weather.  This is because there isn’t any nice weather. 

I grew on the East Coast of the United States.  It’s miserable there.  It’s hot, and it’s humid.  If you attempt to go outside, or go anywhere that doesn’t have air-conditioning, you will melt.  Literally.  You melt and die.  I’ve seen it happen.  I now live in England.  It never gets above 65 degrees.  It rains nearly all the time.  It’s the middle of July and you still are walking around with an umbrella wearing a heavy overcoat.  As you can see, neither environment is suitable for outdoor frollicks.  So why won’t they give us nice things to watch on the tv since we can’t go outside?

Then there is the clothes.  They are hideous.  They are in really awful colours – usually lime green and brown.  They have odd spangles and fringes on them.  They manage to make the most reed-thin, waif-like girl look like a watermelon.  I can count on the fingers of one hand the number of people who look better wearing less clothing (Josh Holloway being first on that list).  The rest of us look much better hiding under layers of sweaters and winter coats.  In England, summer clothes are particularly stupid because it never gets warm enough to wear them, but all the stores still sell them.  My husband claims they are sold to people vacationing in a warm climate.  I do not believe this.  I believe they are bought by mad people hoping beyond all hope that this will be the year England has a summer, and they will be able to wear flip-flops and tanks without catching pneumonia.

Finally there are tourists.  Yes, I do realise that we are all eventually a tourist somewhere, but there is honestly nothing more annoying than a tourist in your hometown.  They walk so slow and drive so slow, and seem to take up tons of space everywhere.  They ask really obvious questions and always need directions.  I know I have done all of this in foreign cities, but it doesn’t mean I have to like it when it happens where I live.

Although I used to cry when the leaves started to turn and days started to get shorter, I now cheer.  Everyone will start to put their clothes back on, people will go back home and there will be things worth watching on tv again.  It also means that Christmas is getting closer, and Christmas time is genuinely the best time of year.

My life in sensible shoes

June 11, 2008 at 9:23 am | In Fashion, Life | 2 Comments
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I have never been a shoe girl. I never wanted to be Imelda Marcos with a closet full of a thousand shoes. When it comes to my fashion hang-ups, I have always been more about dresses and coats. I have more winter coats than it is feasible to wear in one season.
This is not to say that I have been entirely immune to shoes. I have had some gorgeous pairs in my time, like the wicked, four-inched, black-laced, platform heels I bought for the Winter Ball in the senior year or my cute red New Balance sneakers with bright-yellow, reflective N’s. For the most part, however, I have a simple philosophy of shoes. I buy a classic pair of black boots to get me through the autumn, winter and early spring. In the late spring and early summer, I switch to flip-flops.
This system suited me for years. Then, in the spring of 2005 a huge bump developed on my right foot. It was sore and angry looking. I thought I had broken a toe or something. I had tripped getting off the bus a few weeks earlier. I thought I had agitated the break by walking on it. A series of x-rays, one biopsy and one scan later, I learned that I hadn’t broken my foot. I had a giant cell tumour growing inside a bone and slowly eating it away.
It had to be operated on immediately. The surgeons removed a large section of bone along with the tumour. They patched me up using synthetic bone to fill in the gap they had left. My foot was left misshapen. My big toe was now considerably smaller than the rest and I still had an odd bump on my foot.
Flip-flops were no longer going to work in the summer. My foot was hideous and needed to be hidden away if I wasn’t going to scare small children. Fortunately, this was the year ballet pumps became a fashion staple. It was an answer to my prayers. They were comfortable, hid my ugly foot, looked reasonably summery and, best of all, they came in hundreds of glorious colours. I bought loads of them.
I was sorted for life, I thought. Until nearly one year to the day of my first operation, my surgeon discovered a new tumour. The next day I was back on the operating table. This was for a much more complicated procedure. They were going to remove the tumour and even more of the bone. They were going to cut a section of ligament in case it had been contaminated. They were going to take a bone-graph from my leg to place in my foot. It would be held together by a series of bolts and plates.
The recovery process took months as I waited for the bones and metal parts to knit together. When the plaster finally came off, I was pleasantly surprised. My foot was almost normal looking if you ignored the giant scare across it. However, even if it looked okay, my foot was never going to be the same again.
The ligament they cut meant that movement in my big toe would be limited. I was warned against running, jumping and any high impact exercise. There were other things that the doctors didn’t tell me about. When I stand for any length of time of I get foot cramp, and then there is the swelling.
Wearing my tiny, flat ballet pumps is no longer an option. After only a couple hours of wear my foot swells. Wearing any sort of heel is not an option. My toes can no longer bend to accommodate them. Wearing anything but the most practical, comfortable shoes leads to complications.
This has become my shame. I never coveted Manolo Blanik’s previously, but now knowing that I could never wear them, makes me undeniably sad. As I walk around shoe shops picking up pairs and checking to see how sturdy the soles are, I feel old. Do you know how difficult it is to find comfortable shoes that don’t make your feet look geriatric?
Stupidly, I feel much less sexy. My husband assures me this isn’t the case, but then I picture myself wearing a gorgeous dress with a pair of orthopaedic shoes. It isn’t pretty.
I have found some ways around it, wearing Doc Martins with black tight and a flowery dress looks punky and edgy and spares my feet. I have a few pairs of multi-purpose Clarks that go well with all my trousers and jeans, but killer heels and strappy sandals are out of the question. Somehow this makes me feel less of a woman. I will never be able to live up to the Sex and the City benchmark. In my mind I will never be utterly fabulous. There is a feminine ideal I physically will not be able to live up to. I won’t be able to trip the light fantastic. I would have to clump across it, and that’s just not good enough.

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