Friday, July 31, 2009

Weekend Reads: Links to the Strange and the Beautiful

Last weekend was magnificently relaxing! This weekend I hope to mix in some socializing, too! What adventures do you have planned...??
  • I really want to swing on a swing-set!
  • I am going to visit some estate sales.
  • I have a wine-tasting on Saturday -- featuring California wines!
  • I finally hope to watch "Factory Girl," which has been on my movie queue for ages.
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Here's a little link-love for ya...


♥ Check out Joan Jett's rock-n-roll inspired fashion at Refinery 29.

♥ Love words? You will adore We Make Words blog.


Collector's Weekly is an amazing resource for collectors [or wannabe collectors].

♥ Hollister and Porter Hovey -- the New Antiquarians featured in the New York Times.


Color Palette Generator: an addictive tool!

♥ A new Topshop line based on horror films? I can totally dig it.


The Female Gaze is an amazing exhibition at Cheim and Read Gallery in NYC, featuring art by women, of women.

♥ Learn about the talented artist Amanda Spicer on Progress on the Prairie.

Photography by Lady Hawarden: Girls Embowered

Willows whiten, aspens quiver,
Little breezes dusk and shiver
Through the wave that runs for ever
By the island in the river
Flowing down to Camelot.
Four grey walls, and four grey towers,
Overlook a space of flowers,
And the silent isle imbowers
The Lady of Shalott.
~from Tennyson's Lady of Shalott




I am completely mesmerized by the Victorian photography of Lady Hawarden: her images are eerie, intimate, and at-times bold and provocative. The women and young girls in her photos often look you straight in the "eye," as if challenging your right to behold them...or they languish in sensual ennui, waiting for something or someone who will never arrive...



Lady Hawarden was the wife of an aristocrat, and she lived a rather secluded life in Kensington, England with her large family. She is most famous for her sensuous, loving portraits of her daughters, which she began taking around 1857.



Her use of natural lighting, elaborate costumes, and mirrors evoke a kind of feminine fantasy-land, a re-enactment of myth, history, and romantic yearning. But, they also provide us with a picture of the quietude of female love, intimacy, and the listlessness of the privileged woman's domestic life.



Lady Hawarden used wet-collodian plates of various formats to create striking portraits of her girls. Her ‘studies’, as she called them, were exhibited in 1863 and 1864 at the Photographic Society of London, where they won praise and, in 1864, a silver medal. She became a full member of the society in 1863.



As one critic put it, it was difficult not to think of Tennyson's "Lady of Shalott" as one saw these pictures. In his poem, the Lady was imprisoned in a tower, and she could only see life indirectly, using a mirror. Unable to experience the real world, she had to recourse to weaving tapestries of the inverted image. The story of Lady Clementina Hawarden is very similar, for she was a prisoner of Victorian conventions, and sought to express herself using photography [from A History of Photography].







Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Things You Never Knew You Needed Until Now...

Bon Voyage Block Print by Shyama Helin


White Chocolate Cherry Cupcake Truffles from The Fancy Lady Gourmet


Red Flora Fabric Branches by Jane Joss


The Second Empire Pet Bed by Your Highness Pet Beds


Scandal and Roses print with frame from Tilly Bloom


Tea Pot Terrarium by Dew Garden Crafts


Raffia Fedora by Onnesti


Carved Rose Necklace on Rockett St. George


Dotty Tree Plates by Ninainvorm


Lace-up Ballet High tops by Spiro Creations

Monday, July 27, 2009

Honest Scrap

Happy [albeit sleepy] Monday! Wow...I am so behind on my comments, my tags, and my awards. I am going to try and catch up starting NOW. The beautiful and always-eloquent Ana at On Dressing Up gave me 3 [!!!!!!] awards and a tag. I really hit the jackpot on this one...and I've posted my five choices of bloggers to pass the "Honest Scrap" award on to below...



10 Things You Might Not Know about Me:

  1. I used to teach English to Disney executives at the Disney headquarters in Sao Paulo, Brazil.
  2. After undergrad [long ago], I traveled alone to Europe for a month.
  3. One of my favorite meals is: chicken fried steak, mashed potatoes and gravy, green beans, and fried okra. Healthy!!
  4. When I was little, I collected locust shells [or cicada shells, according to where you live]. I had a bucket to put them in and would go around in the summertime, looking for them on trees and fences. I still can't help picking them up when I see them.
  5. In my younger days, I was completely gothed-out: Black everything, pale makeup, fishnets, vinyl, lots of piercings...you get the picture. Though I'm not quite that extreme these days, there are remnants: I'm still obsessed with Joy Division and I still love black [though just not head-to-toe].
  6. My first "grown-up" job was in NY -- I used to work as an indexer for the Modern Language Association. I wrote key-word summaries for academic texts; sometimes I would skim through as many as 30 books a day...it really took all the fun out of reading.
  7. I am a hopeless romantic, with a pessimistic streak. Needless to say, I often feel confused. Don't we all?
  8. I used to be married. And now I'm not. I feel very mature admitting to that.
  9. I really think it would be fun to be either a cabaret performer or a geisha...just for a week, to see what it would be like.
  10. I know all of the words to the songs from the musical "Oklahoma!"

Now, let's hear your honest scrap: Camp Comfort, Dramatis Personae, Into the Fray, Oh, Mishka, Cazimi Vintage.

Friday, July 24, 2009

Weekend Reads: Links to the Strange and the Beautiful

What's on your agenda this weekend? My plan is to not have a plan, natch! The past few weekends have ended up being a bit stressful for various reasons. I hope this weekend will be low-key...
  • I 'plan' to: eat a nice, healthy meal at The Local Table, and do some *light* reading [I've been obsessively pouring over all of Alexandra Stoddard's books].
  • I hope to: be able to spend several hours lounging around with my boyfriend and relaxing...maybe by the pool.
  • I need to: decide whether or not I can make a trip to NYC in August -- my birthday and my sister's birthday [she lives in Brooklyn] are both in August and we usually try to be together...
  • I wish: I had cable, so I could watch "True Blood" -- everyone is talking about it, and I feel so out-of-the-loop!
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Here are some links I've loved this week -- hope you love them, too:



♥ Wonderful, albeit slightly creepy animated videos of poets "reciting" their works at Poetic Oneirism.

♥ Another fabulous book list, this time from Paul Pincus [a man of exquisite taste]


♥ Lovely illustrations of American women authors by Alicia Traveria

♥ A stunning selection of vintage shoes at 1860-1960


♥ Gender reversals of famous literary works by artists Daniela Comani

♥ Top 2009 perfume picks so far on 1000 Fragrances


♥ Telling Tales is an incredible design exhibit at the Victoria and Albert Museum

♥ Two gorgeous men, bringing their own Street Etiquette to the world of fashion.

Thursday, July 23, 2009

“We go to a book as Narcissus went to the fountain, see ourselves therein, and are enamored”

It's been ages since I've done a full-on book wish list, and my birthday is creeping up, so I figured it was time! As Belle and Sebastian say, "Our aspirations are wrapped up in books..." Or, at least mine are at the moment. Here are some beauties I'm dying to add to my already-crowded coffee table:

The Sartorialist [#1 on my list right now!] by Scott Schuman

Sharp Suits by Eric Musgrave

Japanese Fashion by Toby Slade


The Swimsuit by Sarah Kennedy


Symbolism by Norbert Wolf


20th Century Fashion Ads by Heimann and Nieder

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Things You Never Knew You Needed Until Now...


Original portrait by Paola Zakimi


School Girl Dress-Up doll by Mimi Kirchner


Primitive Pantry Boxes by The Broken House


Wood iPhone docking station by Woodtec


Old-fashioned bicycle light box by Munstre


Taxidermy accessories from Reid Peppard


French notebooks from Urban Outfitters


Deco brass skeleton key necklace by Urban Heirlooms