Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Coach Factory Sale

Squeeeee! About a month ago I heard from a friend of the Coach online Factory Sale.

www.coachfactory.com

After signing up to be placed on the random sale list, I kinda forgot about it.

Until yesterday.

A pretty little email came declaring, "The Coach Factory 48-hour online sale starts tomorrow. Your exclusive email invitation will arrive by 4 pm EST tomorrow."

This morning:

9:30 am nothing.
10:14 am nothing.
11:31 am EMAIL ARRIVES.

11:46 am I calmly yet rapidly boot my computer, log into my email, and follow the glorious link to the 2-day sale. Seven bags have already sold out.

I can't decide between a red patent leather satchel, or a black leather bag. Both are marked down from $358 to $125.30. I go safe with black leather.

Which means in six days a new bag will be coming for me.

I am posting this in case you've never heard of the sale. It was fun!

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

La Belle Époque


Remember in the 80's, when fashion regurgitated much of the Edwardian era's concepts and threw them up (or out) into the mainstream? As a child, my Easter outfits came complete with a parasol, bonnet, gloves and dainty laced socks. I don't know if it's from growing up in the 80's, but the Belle Epoque look has become dated. In recent years we've worked to streamline everything from our homes to our shoes to our fashion.

Beautiful things like lace, doilies, shawls, bed jackets...they've all been quietly stored in linen closets. Except for weddings. I guess because weddings can always be a bit over the top in terms of accoutrements.


I still feel the overall excessiveness of La Belle Époque is dated. In our current economy, walking to the grocery store dressed to the nines would be insulting to some, and confusing to most. A mink stole would seem bizarre, even at the opera.


All of that said, part of me is studying this era with an appreciative eye. I think the lines are unique and underused. The layering these women employed creates a stunning effect. Also meaning their heaters could run a little less come early fall.



Lace stoles are still lovingly hand-knit by incredibly talented fiber artists. The cost of quality, luxury yarn pushes the value of these garments into the heirloom category. They still capture the essence of past golden ages.


Some women from this era still appear quite fashionable by today's standards, proving that in our postmodern sensibilities there is room for a little of every past. Carefree beauty is timeless and forever de rigueur. Also often elusively French...

photo

Have you ever purchased patterns from the Decades of Style pattern company? I purchased two a few weeks ago. One is the Girl Friday blouse, a highly stylized 50's beauty that everyone I know has swooned over. The other is a 1920's tunic shirt. I am excited about it, and adore examples women have made on Pattern Review. My friends, the hubs and kids all seem less enthused. Last weekend my sister just stared at the pattern drawing. Blankly.

Which left me wondering if my home sewing mind had stepped too far away from mainstream fashion. Or if I cared.


This led me to wander aimlessly through the inter webs for these beautiful images. The pictures don't make it magically 'ok' to dress in this particular vintage fashion. They don't nullify our societal norms, making me suddenly more or less normal. I don't even think they validate my pattern choice.

Perhaps this is presumptive, but these snapshots create an emotion, don't they? Feelings can't exactly be bottled. Though I think they can be channeled as inspiration. That's where I'm at with la belle epoque.

photo



Monday, November 21, 2011

Year-End Self Inventory

Human nature seems to insist we annually take stock of our progress. I'm a classic under-finisher. Let me explain: for me the creative process of becoming or making far outweighs the finished product. Meaning there are many in-process ideas, projects and goals hanging around the corners of my house. Once something is complete, the 'art' of it is done for me.

This makes me concerned emotionally that I seldom complete anything of value. Sometimes I surprise myself when I look back over a year, though. I see that, in spite of the remaining incomplete things, I manage to get a whale of a lotta stuff done.

Sewing


I hound bookstores, trolling over the craft sections for new sewing books. I know that, technically, I must be hitting my stride because suddenly all those how-to books look the same. How many aprons, draw-string bags or stadium blankets does any given person really have rise to make in a single lifetime?

Into next year, I want to continue learning more couture sewing techniques and terms.

Organizationally, I joined patternreview.com and stored all of my patterns by category. No more digging through boxes to see what patterns I own, or realizing I now own 2 copies of a favorite pattern.

The hubs gifted me with a dress form for my birthday, so really I think I'm all set with tools and bells & whistles.

Production-wise, I completed fewer garments this year than in any of the last six. But they are projects I took my time with and worked hard to complete well. It feels better to finish well than to work at a mad dash, doesn't it?

Sewing is a part of our history, and it's one I want to see preserved and passed on to future generations. For our family, I want to be a small part of that.


Food

Culturally, this is something we women give ourselves permission to obsess about way. too. much. The hubs and I have been vegetarians for about a year and a half now. Switching to vegan is something I hope to accomplish for about 70 to 80% of meals. We're nowhere near that yet.
It takes some discipline to make lifestyle changes. While reaching my goal health-wise may be years off, it feels good to take steps that direction. Eating wholesome foods is somehow physically relaxing. They are calming to the system.

Hooping

I don't look awesome hooping. But I do have fun with it. Probably enough said.


We've made our own hoops out of irrigation tubing and electrical tape. My favorite one is filled with water and covered in a grip for a tennis racket.

Hooping is fun for everybody.


Travel

You literally would not believe
A: how many miles we put on our car each month
B: how familiar my children are with hotels
C: how much energy it takes to complete a day trip
D: how joyful it is to hear discovery from the back seat
E: all of the above

From Mr. Hobbs Takes a Vacation. Love this movie, and James Stewart. Of course.

One of my priorities in life is to show my kids the world. As much of it as possible. Local stuff. Far-away stuff. Foreign stuff. History. Arts. Geography. It all overlaps out there on the road.

We've gone far. But not too far:


Self Worth

This is a risky topic, with several inherent flaws. I don't care all that much about a big path to self-actualization. However, significance and value are both important. As a mom, it's hard to remember that.

I have a degree in psychology, so I think about my life often. Analyzing is fun. I just feel that life is more fulfilling when a person is able to lift others up instead of themselves. It's not easy. Nor is it human nature. Within a family, it is absolutely essential.

People write blogs for many reasons. Some are commercial, some for self-aggrandizement, some for exploration, and others for journaling. The motivations are probably limitless in breadth. So why am I writing, sporadically at best?

This blog isn't overly personal. It doesn't delve into heavy topics. The Refinery exists to remind me that life can be beautiful in simple, seemingly mundane ways. Is it full of meaning of life stuff? No. The posts remind me that accomplishing little things can bring unexpected joy.

Looking back over a year or two is like seeing tiny markers that allow my memory to be pricked. I smile remembering what I was doing last January, or how I felt the day I created a profile on Blogger.

Not that this defines my contentment. It affirms it. That's very satisfying.


Thursday, September 22, 2011

Fall Palette

I've been fabric shopping lately. Online mostly. Which can yield a few unusual surprises in color, texture and design once seen in person! Ostensibly I am shopping for fall fabrics, however in the back of my mind I want these pieces to fit into a versatile travel wardrobe. This should carry into mid-Spring.

You know about travel wardrobes: those ambiguous piles in suitcases that are supposed to come out wrinkle free and go with anything else you packed. So far, they've been something of a pipe dream for me. I always travel with an iron. Or steamer. Or both.
I love this Sing Me a Song dress from ModCloth.com Maybe I will pull out a vintage crochet book and start working on a collar.

So far I like Navy, Chartreuse, Grey/Steel/Silver, Blush Pink (nearly a neutral, nearly a peach), Coral-Orange. Maybe Seafoam and a Light Mud color, too. Black. It's a requirement.

Fabric-wise, I am in love with luxe textures. Velvet, velveteen, silk, silk charmeuse. For comfort I ordered some grey flannel (that looks curiously formal) for a soft jacket. A blouse in a flowy pink/peach would feel very feminine.

Accessories! I am finishing up my final skeins of glace yarn, making them into a sumptuous neck scarf. Have you seen these flowers from Anthropologie's wedding site, BHLDN.com? I'm thinking of making one into a brooch:

These are a steal at $10.oo

I have several silk scarves which I hope to pull out and wear more regularly this year. If you have spare time just laying around, I double dare you to search You Tube for scarf tying ideas. There went 20 minutes.

On the cold front, I have a red velveteen swing coat cut out. It has bracelet length sleeves with a slight bell. Currently, I have more coat patterns than fabric with which to make them.

Not on your life. Source.

Is it just me, or does travel make you want to feel more formal? Put together. Decisive. Something about visiting a place far away and exotic makes me more daring in my clothing choices. It also makes me want to slim down. But that's not really anything new :)



Sunday, July 10, 2011

Kombucha

Kombucha (comb-boo-cha) is this drink I've heard about for a couple years. I have ignored it until now for a few reasons:

1 - What the heck is it?
2 - It seems like a trendy hipster thing.
3 - I didn't know how wonderful I would feel after drinking it.

Now I know all about this ancient fermented tea. Its benefits are as long as my arm. Probiotics. Enzymes. Amino Acids. Antioxidants. Polyphenols. Antibacterial and antifungal properties. Vitamins B1, 2, 3, 6 and 12. B12 is a big deal to vegans...it doesn't occur naturally in plant foods.

I try it completely by accident at my local health food store (I live in the middle of the country, so "local" means within a 120-mile radius). Thirsty, I weave my way over to the juice cooler. While contemplating the beautiful wrappers and benefits of aloe juice, apple cider, smoothies and the like, a hip thin gal reaches up and grabs her G.T. Dave's Synergy Trilogy Kombucha. She is decisive, intentional; no hesitation. Maybe I want to look like her. You know, really like I know what I want and what is in all these bottles. In truth, a Rosetta Stone would be helpful in my deciphering.

The cashier rings up my kombucha. No reaction from her. Is this drink not as bizarre as it seems to me?



The drive home is long. It is hot outside. Sunshine beating through the windshield makes me sleepy. I crack open my bottle. No, first I shake up the bottle and then read on the label that the contents are under pressure. It sits. Then I crack open my bottle. BAM! Energy! I could dance home. Pangs of pity for my husband as he sips and chews down aloe juice laced with pulp. It looks so chunky.

Back home, about a billion miles from kombucha in any direction, I decide I need more. The next evening the hubs, sensing my desire to explore this awesome drink more, drives me back to the store to stock up.

One problem immediately presents itself. Those bottles are nearly $4.00 each. They're not meal replacements, either. I google kombucha and learn it is fermented with a mother, known as a SCOBY (symbiotic colony of bacteria and yeast). These can be purchased online. They can also be grown from an existing bottle of raw buch (get with the program - call it buch or k-tea).

I did both. Somewhere in the continental U.S. my scoby is flying to me. Complete with starter kombucha and tea for brewing. But I'm a sap for science experiments. I love showing the kids how something grows (like, bacteria!).

Taking a bottle of DT Dave's Organic Raw stuff, I set out to grow my own.

I used a tea bag from each box to create my sweet tea.

Supplies:
1 12-cup coffee carafe, sanitized with boiling water
2 coffee filters and a rubber band
1 black tea bag
1 green tea bag
1 T. organic cane sugar
1 bottle G.T. Dave's Original Kombucha


All my stuff. The kombucha is hanging out in the carafe, sweet tea is cooling to room temp in the corning ware before mixing.

There are some great tutorials out there for making a scoby on YouTube. I used the directions on Food Renegade's blog. My purchased scoby is being shipped from the Happy Herbalist. It comes with dragon pearl tea (Mo Li Long Zhu). It is a blend of green and jasmine tea. That sounds smashing.

I'm officially obsessed with this healthy beverage. More to come as my colony grows.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Hula Hooping - My Troubleshooting

Hula Hooping is kind of a tricky deal.

I pulled my Hoopnotica travel hoop from its packaging and clicked it together. Child's play. A big gold circle with grippy-strippy pink tape. The hoop is innocent and bawdy at the same time. I like that it holds onto the 1950's crisp-clean past while simultaneously conjuring up an image of glitzy circus or burlesque performers.

This is just what my hoop looks like

Remember how I watched all of those YouTube videos of hooping? Some were graceful and others awkward; most were proficient. Nothing prepared me for how it felt to be inside a hula hoop this side of age 13.


Circles are chic. In my head I keep trying to think sophisticatedly, because I look ridiculous. Note to self: do not hoop anywhere near that full-length mirror. Yet.

Ok. I did manage about 7 rotations before my hoop flopped down past my knees, plummeting haphazardly to the floor. Seven is a good number. If we're talking about the seed of life design, or perfect numbers. Not when the goal is anywhere from 15 minutes to and hour.


Although the seed of life concept may not be all bad. It usually represents the start of something new. Like the Bible's seven days of creation. Hula hooping is nowhere near that hard. Hopefully.

Today I've more than doubled my initial results. There's hope. At least two different women whose stories I've scoured the internet reading took a couple weeks to get the hang of it. Instructional videos advise rocking front to back, but I have better success rocking also slightly side to side. Think Northwest to Southeast. And my feet have got to be wide apart, but still in a parallel plane. I can't make one in front of the other work.

Hooping in Crocs isn't as comfortable as being barefoot. Or wearing my Merrell barefoot shoes. That's just a preference thing...those Hoopnotica ladies are always barefoot.

So this is my initial reaction to hooping. I will keep updating week-to-week.




Friday, July 1, 2011

Vintage Pictures I Love


The thing about vintage style is that it will always be...stylish. Truly vintage; not 1980's vintage. I'm talking about a time when men and women dressed themselves more formally. Day gloves. Driving gloves. Hats. Suspenders. Nylons. Red lipstick. You see where I'm going.

Today I'm sharing some of my favorite retro images with you. I collect these pics in file folders on my hard drive - organized by decade. Which means I have no idea what the original sources were for most of these pics. Sorry.

The first four images come from the July, 1955 edition of Vogue magazine.




I especially enjoy the polka dots, plaid, and rows of buttons above.


No, but seriously. The placket of that shirt is amazing.