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Showing posts with label hair. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hair. Show all posts

Monday, March 16, 2015

What I wore today: 03/14/2015 (Rhymes with Orange)

Orange outfit: Anthropologie coral embroidered pencil skirt, silk chevron blouse, suede ankle boot, shaved side undercut hairstyle

Last week, I got a small section of my hair buzzed off. I've wanted to do it for so long, I had to finally take the plunge, and I'm really happy with how it turned out. It makes me feel like a total badass. Plus it's subtle enough that it's really easy to hide for those more conservative days (like Monday to Friday). Props to my amazing stylist Ivette for suggesting to make the section not too high so I wouldn't hose volume and could wear it in a variety of ways. 

I guess something about my new haircut and the warm weather we've been having made me wear orange and mix prints. Sometimes you feel quiet and sometimes you feel loud. 

Orange outfit: Anthropologie coral embroidered pencil skirt, silk chevron blouse, suede ankle boot, shaved side undercut hairstyle
Orange outfit: Anthropologie coral embroidered pencil skirt, silk chevron blouse, suede ankle boot, shaved side undercut hairstyle
Orange outfit: Anthropologie coral embroidered pencil skirt, silk chevron blouse, suede ankle boot, shaved side undercut hairstyle

Ankle boots – Target
Pencil skirt – Anthropologie
Silk blouse – Anthropologie
Cardigan – Anthropologie
Necklace – DIY

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

What I wore today: 12/02/2014 (Patches)

Patches outfit: skinny jeans, partial-lace-up frye knee-high boots, Topshop blazer with elbow patches, chambray button-down, cashmere pashmina scarf, braided belt

This may be the last you'll see of my red hair. I've really enjoyed it (and I may come back to it), but I've gotten this notion in my head that I want to try blonde for the first time, and now I'm really excited about it. The trouble with hair color is that (unless you're Nymphadora Tonks) you can't change it absolutely every day to suit your mood. There are still some mornings when I wake up and wish I were brunette again, and I'm sure I'll have blonde mornings when I wish I were redheaded, but, right now, most of my days are filled with a deep, desperate desire to go blonde. 

As for this outfit, it's really a classic winter uniform kind of look for me, bundled up but still keeping some semblance of shape. A few years ago I got really into belting blazers after seeing a lot of French women do it, and I remembered recently how much I love this little accessorizing trick. It's the perfect thing for winter because it keeps cold air out (especially if you knot a scarf around your neck and tuck it in) and adds a bit of interest to a simple outfit. 

If there's one thing that defines my personal style it's classic pieces with interesting details. This outfit is super basic, but I think it's still interesting because of the belt, the boot laces, and the elbow patches on the blazer. Ryan bought this blazer for me at Zara in Soho when we went to New York in October, and I wore it on my first day at my new job last month. I think it's lucky. The patches hide just out of my eyesight so I forget about them, and then, when I catch a glimpse of them, I remember that I'm wearing a lucky blazer.

Patches outfit: skinny jeans, partial-lace-up frye knee-high boots, Topshop blazer with elbow patches, chambray button-down, cashmere pashmina scarf, braided beltPatches outfit: skinny jeans, partial-lace-up frye knee-high boots, Topshop blazer with elbow patches, chambray button-down, cashmere pashmina scarf, braided belt Patches outfit: skinny jeans, partial-lace-up frye knee-high boots, Topshop blazer with elbow patches, chambray button-down, cashmere pashmina scarf, braided belt
Patches outfit: skinny jeans, partial-lace-up frye knee-high boots, Zara blazer with elbow patches, chambray button-down, cashmere pashmina scarf, braided belt

Boots – Frye
Jeans – Gap
Shirt – Anthropologie
Blazer – Zara
Scarf – Nordstrom Rack
Belt – Forever 21

Friday, October 10, 2014

Unintentional Tomboy: A Tale of Hair Woe


We didn’t have a lot of rules when I was growing up. My mom liked to let us make our own decisions, and this philosophy expanded to the realm of haircuts. My brother had a rattail until he was ten. My hair, if you can believe it, was even worse.

When I was around five, I decided that I was sick of my bobbed hair hiding my pretty earrings. Most girls my age didn’t have their ears pierced yet, and I liked to show off. Growing my hair long enough that I could tie it up in a ponytail would have been a good solution. An even simpler and more elegant fix would be to simply tuck my hair behind my ears. But, as a five-year-old with very little knowledge of the world outside my family's half of the duplex we called home, neither of these options occurred to me.

What did occur to me, and what I asked my mom for directly, was to cut the hair above my ears short, to show off my earrings, while allowing the hair at the back of my head to stay long. That’s right, at age five, I essentially invented the mullet.

Parallel evolution, the phenomenon by which species from disparate lines independently develop similar traits (such as the dorsal fin seen on both sharks and dolphins) has no stronger supporting case than the fact that, in the early ‘90s, Billy Ray Cyrus and a five-year-old girl in Toledo both independently decided to get the same haircut.

When I asked for a mullet–not by name, of course, but all the same–my mom didn’t hesitate. “The girl makes her own decisions!” she proudly proclaimed to the hairdresser. I had a mullet for the next two years.

This boyish look was made all the more butch by the fact that a large portion of my wardrobe was comprised of hand-me-downs from my brother. Passing me on the street, strangers saw a child of indeterminate gender sporting a mullet, boy’s painters jeans, a buffalo plaid flannel shirt, and a dinosaur sweater. Upon closer inspection, they noticed the pearl studs shining iridescently from earlobes revealed by such a practical haircut. My gender confirmed, they no doubt smiled to themselves thinking, This new generation is so self-aware. That sweet little girl already knows she’s a lesbian. How wonderful. She’s going to grow up and wear Birkenstocks.

My mullet met its long-overdue end when, at the age of seven, I decided to grow out all my hair as long as it could grow. Influenced no doubt by my best friend Josephine, an eight-year-old natural blonde who wore belly shirts and had hair so long she could sit on it, I asked my mom for her advice.

Unfortunately, she was a true believer in the old wive’s tale that trimming your hair makes it grow faster. And so, with the best of intentions, she brought me along to my brother’s hair appointments, and I got a “trim” (which, let’s be honest, usually amounts to nearly a full inch off the ends) every 6-8 weeks. 

While the hair above my ears was allowed room to grow out and blend into the rest of my do, these frequent trims left my hair chronically above the shoulders. “My hair just doesn’t grow fast,” I explained to people who questioned why I had short hair if I wanted long hair so badly.

Around that time, the highlight of each month (apart from the frequent salon trips, of course) was the arrival of American Girl magazine. After carefully cutting out the paper doll included in each issue, I would turn to my favorite feature, Heart to Heart, which consisted of short bits of commentary from several readers on a single topic. 

One month, the topic was “being different,” and I decided to write my own commentary. Having missed the submission deadline, I settled for the idea of composing my commentary on my dad’s word processor (the machine, not the software) and pasting it into my copy of the magazine, along with a current headshot, of course.

On the topic of “being different,” girls had written about everything from race, to disabilities, to being the new kid in school, but I, with the characteristic self-importance typical of seven year olds, knew My Hair Problem was just as serious as cultural insensitivity or paraplegia. My commentary went as follows.
I have short hair. When other girls see it, they sometimes ask, “Why do you have short hair?” I tell them, “My hair just doesn’t grown fast,” but they don’t understand. They think I want to have short hair. But I don’t. I hate it. My friend Kristen had long hair, but she wanted to have short hair, but her mom wouldn’t let her get it cut short. One day, Kristen accidentally got her mom’s round brush stuck in her hair. She just wrapped up all her hair in the round brush. She said she thought that was how you curled your hair. My mom thinks Kristen did it on purpose, and I guess she’s right because Kristen’s mom had to cut the brush out of Kristen’s hair, and now Kristen has short hair.

Here I inserted a hand-drawn illustration of Kristen making a painful face and tugging at the brush buried deep in a tangle of her hair. Staring at the headshot I’d pasted beside the illustration, I sighed and thought, I wish there was something I could do to make my hair grown long.

Little did I know, there was something I could do. Or rather, there was something I could stop doing. It’s pretty simple, if you want your hair to grow, for the love of God, stop cutting your hair. But, I was seven, and I still labored under false delusions that my parents had access to some hidden truth about the world, and that I should always heed their advice.

Eventually, I grew old enough to suspect there might be a connection between the incessant haircuts and the fact that my hair stayed short. I asked my mom to stop taking me for such frequent haircuts, and watched as my hair grew like I never knew it could. That was the first time I can remember thinking that my mom might not always know what’s best.

Tuesday, May 27, 2014

What I wore today: 05/21/2014 (Ginger and Clover)

Ginger and Clover Outfit: Modcloth cream lace "Grace Yourself Dress", Free People lace "Daisy Lane Ankle Socks", Free People open leather Jeffrey Campbell "Cast and Crew Ankle Boots"

So, I'm a ginger now! I decided to do something new with my hair, and I love the way it eventually turned out, but it was quite a nightmare getting here with a few missteps along the way. 

First, my stylist dyed my hair a dark oxblood color. Then, trying to correct it, she dyed it bright orange. I gave up on her, bought some brown dye and applied that on top of the orange to bring it down into the realm of realism.

I really like the way it looks. Unfortunately, since it's a Frankenstein's monster of a color, I doubt I'll be able to find a way to dye my roots to match when they come in, so I'll probably have to go back to brown pretty soon. 

Oh well, I'm just trying to enjoy it while it lasts. 

I've worn these boots about 5 days a week since I bought them last November. A few months ago, I bought these lace socks, and decided they are PERFECT with the boots so I bought two more pairs. When I love something, I really love it. 

Ginger and Clover Outfit: Modcloth cream lace "Grace Yourself Dress", Free People lace "Daisy Lane Ankle Socks", Free People open leather Jeffrey Campbell "Cast and Crew Ankle Boots"
Ginger and Clover Outfit: Modcloth cream lace "Grace Yourself Dress", Free People lace "Daisy Lane Ankle Socks", Free People open leather Jeffrey Campbell "Cast and Crew Ankle Boots"
Ginger and Clover Outfit: Modcloth cream lace "Grace Yourself Dress", Free People lace "Daisy Lane Ankle Socks", Free People open leather Jeffrey Campbell "Cast and Crew Ankle Boots"
Ginger and Clover Outfit: Modcloth cream lace "Grace Yourself Dress", Free People lace "Daisy Lane Ankle Socks", Free People open leather Jeffrey Campbell "Cast and Crew Ankle Boots"
Ginger and Clover Outfit: Modcloth cream lace "Grace Yourself Dress", Free People lace "Daisy Lane Ankle Socks", Free People open leather Jeffrey Campbell "Cast and Crew Ankle Boots"
Ginger and Clover Outfit: Modcloth cream lace "Grace Yourself Dress", Free People lace "Daisy Lane Ankle Socks", Free People open leather Jeffrey Campbell "Cast and Crew Ankle Boots"

Cream lace "Grace Yourself Dress" - Modcloth
Lace "Daisy Lane Ankle Socks" - Free People
Jeffrey Campbell open leather "Cast & Crew Ankle Boots" - Free People

signature color

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Baby Bangs Inspiration

Baby Bangs inspiration

Lately, I've been feeling the need to change up my hair, and not just because my bangs prefer to spend their summers plastered to my forehead in a flat mass of sweaty grossness.

But I don't want to stop having bangs. Enter idea: get baby bangs! It's been one of those ideas that won't stop pestering me. I'm a little worried about how they'll look and how easy they'll be to style, but I think I'm going to go for it.

In looking online for inspiration, I've discovered that the way to keep them from looking too retro, severe, or Girl-with-the-Dragon-Tatoo-ish, is to get punky jagged bangs rather than straight-across Bettie Page bangs.

The first time I noticed jagged baby bangs was in the early '00s when Phoebe got them on Charmed. At the time, my brain could barely conceive of them as intentional, much less enviable. But times have changed (it's what they do) and I'm totally feeling the look now.

What do you think?

signature color

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

What I wore today: 01/22/2013 (Texas Tux)

Texas Tux Outfit: Ombré chambray shirt, skinny jeans, brown leather boots, maiden braids, Lauren by Ralph Lauren "Winslow Satchel" bag

As I mentioned here, layering this necklace over a collar buttoned up all the way has become one of my favorite little details to spice up a simple outfit. And you can't get much more simple than denim on denim. (See some of my other Canadian/Texas Tuxedos here & here)

As for the braids, I periodically get obsessed with maiden braids and I've been on a major kick recently. In fact, I learned the other day that my hair is actually long enough to do a whole wreath (not just over the top as I'm wearing here). I've been waiting for this moment since I was 8 years old and saw Leia's braided wreath in The Empire Strikes Back for the first time. I must say, I feel like I've accomplished something big.

I think I'll try to shoot a tutorial soon. 

Texas Tux Outfit: Ombré chambray shirt, skinny jeans, brown leather boots, maiden braids, Lauren by Ralph Lauren "Winslow Satchel" bag
Texas Tux Outfit: Ombré chambray shirt, skinny jeans, brown leather boots, maiden braids, Lauren by Ralph Lauren "Winslow Satchel" bag
Texas Tux Outfit: Ombré chambray shirt, skinny jeans, brown leather boots, maiden braids, Lauren by Ralph Lauren "Winslow Satchel" bag
Texas Tux Outfit: Ombré chambray shirt, skinny jeans, brown leather boots, maiden braids, Lauren by Ralph Lauren "Winslow Satchel" bag
Texas Tux Outfit: Ombré chambray shirt, skinny jeans, brown leather boots, maiden braids, Lauren by Ralph Lauren "Winslow Satchel" bag

Ombré chambray shirt - Target
Necklace - J.Crew Factory
Brown Leather Boots - Journey's
"Winslow Satchel" bag - Lauren by Ralph Lauren

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Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Happy Halloween!

Happy #Halloween everybody! #pumpkin
A pumpkin I spray-painted with metallic paint for a cool decoration

Happy Halloween everyone! Halloween is my second favorite holiday (and was my very favorite as a kid; not because of the candy, but because of the awesome costumes my mom helped me make . . . and because I was obsessed with the idea of witches and magic and still am a little bit).

I'm not wearing a costume today, but I gave myself Halloween nails and chalked my hair just for fun. 

#Halloween #nails
Hair chalking!!! #color

Last weekend, I dressed as a flapper for a costume party. Ryan went as Aladdin and wore these really killer harem pants I made for him. (The photo just doesn't do them justice.)

Aladdin plays guitar - #halloweenparty
#halloweenparty
Halloween
Halloween

Tonight, I'm going to a Samhain celebration and ancestors dinner. I'm taking a big crock pot of my French onion soup to honor my paternal grandmother who passed away a couple years ago. I feel really grateful to have this opportunity to remember her and share stories about her with friends, especially since I was unable to go to her funeral which was out of town and coincided with my semi-fianals that year.

With Memé in Giverny
Doing watercolor with Memé in Monet's garden in Giverny when I was 14

With Memé in Langres
With Memé looking out over the walls of Langres, our ancestral home, on the same trip

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Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Fictional Fashion Icon: Alex from Flashdance

Fictional Fashion Icon: Alex from Flashdance

When it comes to fictional characters who've inspired fashion, this is a big one. After Flashdance was released in 1983, women around the world started cutting up their sweatshirts and t-shirts and wearing leg warmers.

The creators of Flashdance didn't mean to have such a big influence on fashion, and they certainly didn't expect to -- they styled Alex that way because she was a dancer and those are the kinds of things dancers wear: layers that can keep their muscles warm while still facilitating movement -- but people responded in a big way.

And while Alex's frizzy '80s perm might be horrifying to modern audiences, the impulse to take the scissors to your wardrobe after watching is no less intense 30 years later.

I might do a post sometime about dance's overall influence on fashion. Every generation or so, people pick up on something dancers wear, something they've always worn, and it makes it's way into mainstream fashion for a while, shifting and evolving and being reinterpreted.

Fictional Fashion Icon: Alex from Flashdance
Fictional Fashion Icon: Alex from Flashdance
Fictional Fashion Icon: Alex from Flashdance
Fictional Fashion Icon: Alex from Flashdance
Fictional Fashion Icon: Alex from Flashdance

But Alex's style didn't just stray from the mean when it came to her dance attire; she didn't look like an ordinary girl in her street clothes either. With her ripped painter's jeans, work boots, and military jackets, she dressed more like her fellow welders than an ordinary 18-year-old girl.

Fictional Fashion Icon: Alex from Flashdance
Fictional Fashion Icon: Alex from Flashdance
Fictional Fashion Icon: Alex from Flashdance
Fictional Fashion Icon: Alex from Flashdance
Fictional Fashion Icon: Alex from Flashdance
Fictional Fashion Icon: Alex from Flashdance
Fictional Fashion Icon: Alex from Flashdance

And, she seemed to enjoy fashion too, and to have fun with it, from the fancy dress she asks Hannah to make for her to the Tuxedo she wears for a fancy lobster dinner.

Fictional Fashion Icon: Alex from Flashdance
Fictional Fashion Icon: Alex from Flashdance
Fictional Fashion Icon: Alex from Flashdance Fictional Fashion Icon: Alex from Flashdance

...Umm, make that Tuxedo costume.

Always shocking, always individual, and still an influence decades later: Alex Owens definitely has what it takes to be called an icon.

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