This blog about Helsinki street fashion, my favorite blog ever, makes me want to go to Finland.
I love these outfits and the stories behind them and the explanations from their wearers.
23 February 2007, Vesa's Farewell Party at Rosegarden
Katri (23)
"The tit prints are self-made, maybe inspired by Hans Bellmer. The cat earrings I've had since the first grade. They are my all time favourites. The Dior glasses are the only "expensive" thing I'm wearing. I use red colour only for lips, shoes and carpets. I like to make things myself. It would be nice to create a new outfit for every day."
Monday, July 13, 2009
Sunday, July 12, 2009
Short Skirts
Over on the real blog, RaisaRobin is talking about which skirt lengths look good. She's of the opinion, shared by pretty much all stylists, that around knee-length looks best.
That's probably true, but I also think that shorter (and longer) skirts can look really good. Here are a bunch of examples on the short side (and one long one). I may do a separate long-skirt post later.
I think that the shorter the skirt, the more there's a need for a dark tight and a solid shoe to balance the look.
This one would look even better on someone who wasn't anorexic:
Fashion to Admire: Roller Derby
Over on the real blog, Deathmama recently asked about whose style you admire and imitate. I can't think of anyone in particular whose style I imitate, but there are lots of people whose style I admire.
One example: roller derby girls. I'm not saying that it's appropriate attire for the office, but there must be a way that us civilians could adapt some of this tough-chick sexiness for weekend outfits. Like a pair of engineer boots with some curve-hugging denim.
Or fishnets with tube socks. Definitely something I never would have thought of on my own.
One example: roller derby girls. I'm not saying that it's appropriate attire for the office, but there must be a way that us civilians could adapt some of this tough-chick sexiness for weekend outfits. Like a pair of engineer boots with some curve-hugging denim.
Or fishnets with tube socks. Definitely something I never would have thought of on my own.
Thursday, July 9, 2009
What Do We Want to Look Like and Why
This entire blog is going to be a reaction to my friends RaisaRobin and Deathmama's Why Get Dressed blog. Theirs is well-written; mine almost certainly won't be. (I'm already neglecting two other blogs.) I hope to include lots of pictures, though. In fact, that's the whole reason for me starting this blog. I can't include pictures in my comments on the posts.
In a recent post, RR poses the question "What do we want to look like and why?"
I don't think I have a real answer to that question. In fact, I think all I want to do in this post is defend a Jennifer Aniston outfit choice that RR described as desperate.
But I think she looks great. It might be trampy if she were wearing a skirt, but she's in a pair of short (and not that short) but otherwise conservative walking shorts.
Why did Jennifer Aniston get dressed that way that day, back on May 24, 2006? And did she accomplish what she wanted to?
I think she was bringing her California cool style to a likely sweltering on-the-verge-of-summer New York. She didn't want to look like she was trying to hard, and what's more casual than shorts? Yet she still looked put-together enough for national TV. And she wanted to show off her fantastic legs. I think her outfit was successful.
I'm often initially taken aback by the outfits of a 20-ish woman I see frequently. This woman, who is really pretty and awfully sweet, does not follow the no-more-than-one-slutty-item rule. Tonight she was wearing a tight, sparkly midriff-baring tank with ultra-tight skinny jeans with a lot of gold embellishments on the backside. Her eyes were dark with eyeshadow, her lips bright with lipstick, and she was wearing a Flashdance-style headband across her forehead.
And you know what? I thought the outfit looked great on her. Some might say she looked desperate. But I think she looked like someone who wanted to enjoy being a young, single woman out on the town on a warm summer night.
In a recent post, RR poses the question "What do we want to look like and why?"
I don't think I have a real answer to that question. In fact, I think all I want to do in this post is defend a Jennifer Aniston outfit choice that RR described as desperate.
But I think she looks great. It might be trampy if she were wearing a skirt, but she's in a pair of short (and not that short) but otherwise conservative walking shorts.
Why did Jennifer Aniston get dressed that way that day, back on May 24, 2006? And did she accomplish what she wanted to?
I think she was bringing her California cool style to a likely sweltering on-the-verge-of-summer New York. She didn't want to look like she was trying to hard, and what's more casual than shorts? Yet she still looked put-together enough for national TV. And she wanted to show off her fantastic legs. I think her outfit was successful.
I'm often initially taken aback by the outfits of a 20-ish woman I see frequently. This woman, who is really pretty and awfully sweet, does not follow the no-more-than-one-slutty-item rule. Tonight she was wearing a tight, sparkly midriff-baring tank with ultra-tight skinny jeans with a lot of gold embellishments on the backside. Her eyes were dark with eyeshadow, her lips bright with lipstick, and she was wearing a Flashdance-style headband across her forehead.
And you know what? I thought the outfit looked great on her. Some might say she looked desperate. But I think she looked like someone who wanted to enjoy being a young, single woman out on the town on a warm summer night.
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