Thursday, April 29, 2010
New arrivals ... divine vintage 50s print dresses
Prada has just done a Vintage Print collection so I thought I would make a composite of some of my recent arrivals at vintageclothing.com.au.
The amazing thing about these wonderful dresses is they have never been worn and some still have the tags attached. Also a lot better priced than Prada.
Saturday, April 17, 2010
A lifetime of memories
Description taken from the Harper Collins website
Charlotte Smith has had more than her fair share of fabulous dresses and adventures. Born in Hong Kong and raised in the United States, she lived life to the full in London, Paris and New York before falling in love with Australia and discovering she had inherited a priceless vintage clothing collection from her American Quaker godmother, Doris Darnell.
Then the boxes started arriving, with more than three thousand treasures dating from 1790 to 1995, from originals by Dior, Chanel and Balenciaga to a pioneer woman′s daintily mended best dress.
But when she unearthed her godmothers book of stories about the dresses and the women who wore them, the true value of what she had been bequeathed hit home. This wasn′t a mere collection of beautiful things, it was a collection of life. Women′s lives. Tiny snapshots of our joys and disappointments, our entrances and exits, triumphant and tragic.
This is a book for any woman who knows a dress can hold a lifetime of memories.
My own mother died recently and nothing evokes her memories like her clothes that I have hanging in my wardrobe. She was 82 and very stylish. She had the most beautiful hair and never missed her weekly hairdressing appointment. We loved talking clothes and watching old movies together while drooling over the amazing fashions. She still had her fantasy clothes and one particular dress I listed on Ebay in a moment of madness. Mum never wore it but loved the thought of wearing it. I didn't think it would sell as it wasn't getting many lookers and I thought 'great it's not going to go' but right at the end it sold. It was pretty hard folding that dress up and sending it off but I hope the buyer gets as much enjoyment out of it as my mother did.Tuesday, April 13, 2010
More on tulle ... tulle glorious tulle
The name of this gorgeous fabric originates from the French town of Tulle, pronounced tool, at some time in the 1700s. Knitting a fabric with hexagonal meshes, the French made this lightweight and delicate looking fabric.
Tulle is made from cotton, silk, rayon, nylon, wool, polyamide, polyester and lurex. Cotton and silk are my favourites.