Showing posts with label vintage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vintage. Show all posts

Monday, May 28, 2012

Gettin' Jiggy Wit It

Thanks, Will Smith, for making my day twice, in completely unrelated ways.

This first – this quote from an interview with Parade:
"We let Willow cut her hair. When you have a little girl, it’s like how can you teach her that you’re in control of her body? If I teach her that I’m in charge of whether or not she can touch her hair, she’s going to replace me with some other man when she goes out in the world. She can’t cut my hair but that’s her hair. She has got to have command of her body. So when she goes out into the world, she’s going out with a command that it is hers. She is used to making those decisions herself. We try to keep giving them those decisions until they can hold the full weight of their lives.”
I love how much he wants to empower his kids. I love that he's trying to create individuals who learn how to make actual choices. And I love that he wants his daughter to be a strong woman, who doesn't just replace her dad with a partner one day.

And secondly, for this moment on the Graham Norton Show (thanks for the tipoff, Karen):



Yeah, I sang along too.

Also note: I can't think about Will Smith anymore without thinking of this stellar Grantland article Bill Simmons wrote about a year ago called "The Movie Star", about how Will Smith is the only true movie star working today, and how that has been his dedicated goal above all else. It really is a fascinating look into how success works, and how Smith was able to essentially game the Hollywood system. I mean, the mere fact alone that I remember an internet article from a year ago speaks to its potency.

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Thrifting in Detroit

As you already know, I LOVE my Michigan shopping, especially when you can spend the afternoon in a handful of second-hand shops and flea markets and emerge with everything your heart desired for under $10. EXCEPT, one thing I had to leave behind was a piece that I know I've seen before but I barely have words to describe. Anyone who can help me with this gets 5 points. Picture like a balaclava but with the whole face uncovered, and a circle of faux fur around the top. I tried looking it up online but I'm having no luck, especially because I'm searching for a fashion balaclava with fur. Any recommendations? The closest thing I can find is this, but it was nicer, I swear.

via the loveship

On to my real finds, I got some great printed pants, and an anorak/rain jacket very similar to the one that I gave away last year.

These are so so soft, highwaisted, and less shapeless when I'm wearing them.



These are just like DUNGAREES! Workin' pants, you know? 

A little baggier, these pants have the most gorgeous print. 

Here's the print. 

I feel like I'd buy anything Misty Harbor. I love the plaid on the inside. 


And I also scored this beauty from Target, after falling in love with it online.

Also comes with a belt so it doesn't just look like a chic pillowcase. 

You know what else I got? This:


First time somoa eater here! They were caramelly and coconutty and delicious. They were everything.

And this:


Which is wonderful and never loses its flavour. All together it was a very successful trip south of the border.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Thrifted life: Candelabra from Moore's Pharmacy


Maybe it's because I watched Beauty and the Beast too many times as a kid (okay, and an adult) but I have this obsession with candelabras. I have several that hold one candle each—most of those I got from my grandparents, garage sales, and the like. This is my favourite candelabra by far: it holds three candles, it's perfectly tarnished, and it comes with a great story.

Have you ever passed the place on Bathurst just south of Dupont on the east side of the street? It looks like an old junk shop that hasn't been open in years, and technically that's the truth. The old sign still remains, "Moore's Pharmacy," (ed note: although now I think it's being covered up??) and no other name for the store is visible. When Amanda and I lived together, right near Bathurst and Dupont, we would stake out this place and gaze in the windows. It was never open, even though we walked by on different times each day. We did notice, however, that the buildup of mail would be picked up once in a while, and the display in the windows would be slightly altered.

It was a rainy Wednesday night when I got a text from Amanda, in ALL CAPS, telling me that the store was open. She had gone in and looked around, she said, and it was fantastic in there. I hopped on a bus to get there—it might be my only chance!—and forced Dan to come with me. But what we found in the store was not exactly what I had been expecting.

The door was slightly ajar, and we walked in and looked around. Stuff was piled up everywhere, and the only walking space was little aisles made in between the rows upon rows of junk. I say junk not in a condescending way—my mind was racing and I couldn't believe my luck. Who knows what treasures could be buried in this shop! I called out a tentative hello, and from behind one of the piles popped the head of an old man. Little did I know that I would be listening to him talk (and acting as a mannequin for his old clothes) for the next 45 minutes.

I was super curious about the history of the shop, which he said he had owned for many years but had let slide in the past few: he had a sister and a mother who had been ill. He was opening up every Wednesday evening, and hoped to start regular hours again soon. He said he worked in the fashion industry as a young man, and his passion for the clothes in his shop certainly showed: he had no problem getting in my personal space to lay across my shoulders fur stoles, bejewelled vests, and silk scarves. This guy was getting really into my personal space. I couldn't tell whether he was a practiced old-time fashionista or a creepy old dude. Dan looked on in horror.

Every piece in the store had its own history and meaning to owner. Many of the items, especially those in the front window, were pieces that he was not ready to part with. I made it out of there with this candelabra and a black silk T shirt that I was too scared to try on. I feel like I paid for the item less with my hard-earned money than I did with my time and patience.

I don't mean to knock the store—it was certainly an experience that I will never forget, and I really do wish him all the best. An old man in a junk store sounds kind of like a kindred spirit, but this guy was operating on his own level. I probably won't go back, but I would suggest to anyone interested to check out the store for themselves. But some advice: if you're going in, make sure you have lots of time, and don't mind being fondled. 

Friday, December 23, 2011

Must Watch: The Star Wars Holiday Special

If you're looking to kill some time wrapping gifts or wait out the clock during what must be any office's most boring day of the year, allow me to make a humble suggestion. Treat yourself to a viewing of the Star Wars Holiday Special.

It was only broadcast once – on November 17, 1978 – and pretty much everyone involved has spent that last 30 some-odd years pretending it never existed. The only copies that still exist have that grainy, sunsoaked saturation of aging VHS. Thankfully we have the internet, or this gem may have been forever lost to the annals of time.

Yes, that is Harrison Ford, Mark Hamill and Carrie Fisher reprising their roles. Yes, that is the first appearance of Boba Fett. Yes, that IS a 10 minute long conversation entirely in Wookie without subtitles. YES, THAT IS BEA ARTHUR SINGING. I swear, I get a contact high just watching this thing.

Fuck the newly remastered Blu-rays – this is the only Star Wars special I'll be watching this holiday season.




On an entirely serious note, happy holidays you beauties you. It just warms the cockles of my heart that you guys read what we do here on Burgundy Girls, and that's the best gift us gals could hope for.
Hope this season's a wonderful one.