Showing posts with label teal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label teal. Show all posts

Saturday, 15 January 2022

On the 6th Day of Christmas...

... this blogger gave to thee...
... six fancy dresses...
... five gold things!..
... four FX plushies...
... three midnight magnets...
... two tricks and treats...
....a tale of lovely lore.


It's traditional 6th Day post time, and as I did last year, I'm going for six dresses from movies which feature Christmas, New Years Eve or just evoke memories of the holidays for me. But while it would be lovely to just look at fashion through the past century of film, to challenge myself I've tried to find some dresses which I think compliment the original or seem like a modern iteration of these classic movies styles...

... wish me luck and I hope you enjoy some pretty dresses and me talking gibberish about movies.


White Christmas (1954)
Vera-Ellen as Judy Haynes
(Costume Design by Edith Head)

It seems almost like a cheat to start with White Christmas (1954) when I already featured it in this last year, however, costume designer Edith Head included so many amazing dresses in this movie, I could probably put a new one in every year without trying too hard. No foreshadowing there for next year! 

But unlike last year, I'm not focusing on Rosemary Clooney as Betty Haynes, I'm actually looking to her sister Judy, played by Vera-Ellen.


"The best things happen when you're dancing" is probably one of the most iconic song and dance routines performed in the movie, showcasing Vera-Ellen's dancing alongside Danny Kaye in a beautiful pale pink chiffon cocktail dress, which shimmers as she dances and most importantly moves with her, enhancing her performance.


It's a dress which is made for dancing, it's made to move, and float and enhance her elegant motions, but that movement is one of the most important aspects to this dress, it should look like it's floating with you, not against you.  (And don't think I'm not eyeing up Clooney's blue dress for next year!)

R to L: Strawberry Sherbet from Chotronette 
Pink Mid-Waist Long-Sleevede Halter Dress via Comstrilly
Dusty Pink Tulle Gown from DesignsByAlexxandra on Etsy

Pink, check. Sheer, check. Floaty, check. My criteria are very obvious in my choices.

The Strawberry Sherbet dress from Chotronette is simultaneously the dress which would be the hardest to dance in, but also the one I really desperately want to see dance and move and swirl and floof and... I'm a nut for their dresses, but honestly this one I just want to see someone dance in and all those layers dance with them.

The middle dress from Comstrilly, is probably the closest match to the original dress designed by Edith Head, from the balloon sleeves to the length, as soon as I saw it I was sold, it's just Judy's dress without the neckline, which though I know it was a signature of Vera-Ellen's style, I never really loved. 

Then dress three, by Etsy seller DesignsByAlexxandra, is what I'd see as the modern equivalent, visible boning replacing ruching and off the shoulder tulle sleeves seeming more modern than the original dress, but still in a similar guise. Again this is a dress that I think would move really nicely.


Link || White Christmas (1954) || IMDb || Wikipedia || Rotten Tomatoes 
Link || Strawberry Sherbet Dress from Chotronette
Link || Dusty Pink Tulle Gown from DesignsByAlexxandra on Etsy



Edward Scissorhands (1990)
Winona Ryder as Kim Boggs
(Costume Design by Colleen Atwood)

Skipping forwards by nearly forty years we're entering the realms of Tim Burton and the pastel macabre world of Edward Scissorhands (1990)...


It's a classic twisted romantic fantasy about Edward (Johnny Depp), a man created by an inventor, who gives him scissors for hands, a bold and ridiculous choice even as a temporary measure, which as the films title suggests, becomes permanent after the inventor dies. Years alone in his fathers crumbling Gothic mansion, Edward is found by Peg Boggs (Dianne Wiest) and she brings him home to live with her family, including her daughter Kim (Winona Ryder), who Edward instantly falls in love with, though not everyone in their little pastel neighbourhood feels the same.


The scene I'm taking inspiration from is right at the end of the movie, while Kim is dancing in the falling snow created as Edward carves a piece of ice into the angelic likeness of her. But when he's surprised by Kim's boyfriend - who is not a fan - he accidentally cuts her hand, bloodying her dress. It is this iconic - kind of hideous - drop waist, off the shoulder ivory dress that I want to find and give a modern twist.

R to L: The Rainbow Sequin Puff from Selkie
Nikki Rose Off The Shoulder Sweater Dress from Tobi
ASOS EDITION Mini Smock Dress in Embroidered Sequin in Mint via ASOS

You're not imagining it, there's a jumper dress in the mix as a representation of the classic Kim Boggs dress, but hear me out. To me when I look at this dress I see the off the shoulder neckline, the slumpy, almost ruched sleeves and a slightly more winter appropriate version of her dress. It doesn't fully make sense, it might not work for you, but for me, as soon as this Tobi dress came up in my searches, I knew I wanted it in my list, because to me it makes sense because other than being knitwear, it's the correct and slightly modernised silhouette.

But of course I've flanked it with two glittery dresses. You can't escape the shine on Kim's dress, so it made sense for glitter and sequins to appear and these two puffy, smock dresses from Selkie and ASOS, again, just kind of called too me, and partly because of the way they've been photographed. I can see Ryder spinning in the snow Edward's creating, moments before it's splattered with her own blood... which is the only part that I think is missing.

A little bit of me wants some sort of beaded blood splatter like Julien Fournié featured in his Haute Couture S/S collection circa 2011...


... but I'm feeling extra, and I think a brooch or necklace that looks like like a glamourous bejewelled blood splatter would be the perfect Christmas accessory. No? Just me?


Link || Edward Scissorhands (1990) || IMDb || Wikipedia || Rotten Tomatoes 
Link || The Rainbow Sequin Puff from Selkie
Link || Halloween Haute Couture via The Midnight Hours
Link || 2010 Juillet Collection - Premier Hiver via Ambraude Univers



The Long Kiss Goodnight (1996)
Geena Davis as Samantha Caine/Charly Baltimore
(Costume Design by Michael Taylor)

At Christmas, in amongst the classic movies we love and hours of Hallmark hell, sometimes you need a good old fashioned action movie. One of those for me is The Long Kiss Goodnight (1996).


Samantha Caine (Geena Davis) is a school teacher, girlfriend and mother, and eight years earlier from the start of the movie, she washed up on a beach, pregnant and with no recollection of her previous life. 
Suffering from amnesia and wanting to know about her past, she hires Mitch Henessey (Samuel L. Jackson), a private investigator to uncover anything he can about her life before. However, during the festive season, Samantha gets into an accident, hits her head and starts to discover skills didn't know she had, and all of a sudden her past catches up with her and her memory returns, revealing her to be Charly Baltimore, a CIA assassin.


It's quite the transformation, from happy smiling suburban mum with long curly red hair to bleach blonde assassin in an outfit that is akin to that of John MacLean in Die Hard (1988). There's also not a lot of dresses in the movie once Samantha becomes Charly, but the last one we see her in before the switch is flipped is actually a slip, an undergarment, but it's probably one of the most iconic moments in the movie, so it's the one I've chosen...

L to R: Charm Me Gold Satin Cowl Neck Midi Dress from Tobi
Ivory Hearty Dress from Teuta Matoshi
STEELE Corset Slip Dress in Ivory from ASOS

Okay, it's two silky slip dresses (one from Tobi, the other from ASOS) which were ever so popular in 90's and have been making a come back once more, and isn't it just terrifying when the items of clothing you remember as a kid start to make a return to fashion? *shudder* I also included a Teuta Matoshi dress, with the corset boning on the outside, giving that underwear as outwear appearance and thus a little bit more of a formal approach, which while not really being a look-a-like for the original dress, is in my opinion is kind of the modern equivalent. In the end it's a structured underwear top with a tulle skirt and I'm here for it, but also just obsessed with Matoshi's brand and the effortlessly beautiful, classic and whimsical dresses she creates. 

Sorry, not sorry, but this won't be this designers last appearance in this post.


Link || The Long Kiss Goodnight (1996) || IMDb || Wikipedia || Rotten Tomatoes 
Link || Ivory Hearty Dress from Teuta Matoshi



Bridget Jones's Diary (2001)
Renee Zellweger as Bridget Jones
(Costume Design by Rachel Fleming)

When the next movie came out, I loved it, I'd even go as far as to say it was one of my favourite movies as a teenager, as well as being one of my favourite books. Starting as a newspaper column, the Helen Fielding character became a phenomenon, spawning four books, three movies, short stories and a return to its origins as a column in the paper. My love for this character even meant that when the last weekly editions of the series were published in the Independent in 2005/6, I would stop at the newsagents on my walk to university, and buy a copy, because I wanted to know where the story would go and if the main character would get her happy ending. 

Bridget Jones's Diary played a big part of my growing up and I figured I had to add it to the list, since so much of the movie takes place at Christmas.


When I read the books and watched the films as a teenager, I would love to say I didn't realise how much Helen Fielding had based the story on Jane Austen's classic Pride and Prejudice, but it would be a lie, I wrote my higher English paper on the subject. It didn't stop my loving it, in fact since at the time Pride and Prejudice was my favourite book it only made it easier to get into. Though I have to admit I didn't realise until now that the second book, The Edge of Reason, was essentially based on Persuasion, which I would probably now classify as my favourite of Austen's novels.

The story is Pride and Prejudice set in 90's London, and our Lizzie is Bridget (Renée Zellweger), who is starting the year determined to improve her life, stop smoking, lose weight, get a nice boyfriend, stop fantasising about her cad boss, Daniel Clever (Hugh Grant) and start writing a diary, to keep her on track. But first she has to get through her mothers turkey curry buffet (including the hideous outfit her mother has requested she wear) and her first, less than perfect meeting with Mark Darcy (Colin Firth). 


I had to do the hideous 1970's floral vest, skirt, shirt outfit. I had to give Bridget, this character that brought me such joy as a teenager, something better, even if she still cocked up her first meeting with the guy who would later tell her he liked her, "just the way you are"... which I think everyone wants to hear, at least once.

R to L: Avery Dahlias Gown by Teuta Matoshi
Autumnal Flowers Gown by Teuta Matoshi
Eldora Tapework Lace Dress from Phase Eight

So it's makeover time for Bridget, and I'm giving her something that hopefully her mother would approve of, isn't too risqué or mumsy, and Mark Darcy would definitely turn his head at, but will not, under any circumstances, make her look like she's wearing a carpet. I've kept it floral, I've kept it red and black and only one of them is definitely too much for a turkey curry buffet, but maybe a little better for the Meryton or Netherfield Ball.


Link || Bridget Jones's Diary (2001) || IMDb || Wikipedia || Rotten Tomatoes 
Link || Avery Dahlias Gown by Teuta Matoshi
Link || Autumnal Flowers Gown by Teuta Matoshi
Link || Eldora Tapework Lace Dress from Phase Eight



Rise of the Guardians (2012)
Isla Fisher as Toothiana (Tooth Fairy)
(Concept Art by Daniel McGraw & Lead Image Finalising Artist Anthony Meschi)

Not technically a Christmas movie, though Christmas plays a big role, Rise of the Guardians (2012) I'd class this a general holiday movie, and Toothiana, the Tooth Fairy, is next to get a makeover, though she's pretty glam already...


Rise of the Guardians (2012) has become a film that I expect to see at Christmas. Probably early in the morning, in place of The Muppet Christmas Carol (1992) or Father Christmas (1991), the films I watched as a kid, waiting for my family to be as awake as I was. And though I miss the yearly watching of my childhood Christmas favourites, I have no problem with Guardians taking their place. It's an incredibly lovely film and I will admit to crying every time I watch it, which when it's Christmas morning and you're trying to get your makeup on, isn't ideal. Waterproof mascara for the win!


Toothiana, the Tooth Fairy (voice by Isla Fisher) is one of the main characters in the film, alongside the Easter Bunny (Hugh Jackman), Santa Claus (Alec Baldwin) and the Sandman (Sandy doesn't talk, he communicates through sand symbols above his head - I dare you not to love Sandy). The group dragoon Jack Frost (Chris Pine) to fight to keep children believing in them and stop Pitch Black (Jude Law) from creating a dark, cold world where children don't believe in any of them, or the magic that belief in these deity brings, and stop the joyous light that it brings from going out.


Based on William Joyce's books series The Guardians of Childhood and The Man in the Moon, the film is lovely, and if it's on at Christmas (or any time during the year) it's definitely worth a watch. 

But now to Tooth, who is a hyperactive mixture of sweetness, as she collects teeth to store a child's precious memories, and also maniacally creepy about teeth to the point of being a tad scary. Design to be part human, part hummingbird (with her tiny mini fairy/humming birds, including Baby Tooth), she is shown covered in shimmering feathers of blue, green and gold, which is one hell of a look for daily wear, and the one I've chosen to interpret.

R to L: Nostra Mint Gown by Teuta Matoshi
Emerald Feathered Haute Couture Gown from the Flamingo Collection by Malyarova Olga
Mixed Sequin Tuxedo in Topaz Blue from Nessy Dress

Finding something which switched from gold to green to blue wasn't really possible, so I went for glitz and feathers and I think Tooth would be pleased with these choices. 

So, as an alternative to three sequined or shiny jumpsuits, I'm suggesting a Teuta Matoshi mint green gown which may not be the most practical for gathering teeth from under the pillows of children, but would make for a very fancy date night dress with Jack (who Tooth has a massive crush on). Then there's this insane feathered Malyarova Olga couture gown which, if Tooth Fairies are crowned, surely this must be Toothiana's coronation dress? I mean, it's edged with rows of green ostrich feathers and looks like a princess dress in the best way possible! 

Lastly, I thought it might be nice to find her an outfit for work, a sequined tuxedo by Nessy Dress, to be exact, because if there's any real life equivalent to a metallic feathered jump suit, then it's this. Definitely work appropriate for a Tooth Fairy.


Link || Rise of the Guardians (2012) || IMDb || Wikipedia || Rotten Tomatoes 
Link || Nostra Mint Gown by Teuta Matoshi



The Age of Adaline (2015)
Blake Lively as Adaline Bowman
(Costume Design by Angus Strathie)

The Age of Adaline (2015) is the story of a girl who never grew up, or at least, never grew older...


Adaline (Blake Lively) died in the freezing water of the lake she crashed her car into, but fate intervenes in the form of a lightening strike, and from then on, she can't age, staying physically twenty nine with no explanation why. But immortality has it's downsides and a life on the run, changing her identity, never being able to fall in love and being cursed to watch= her daughter grow older than her, isn't the good life, and when a persistent and perfect man comes along, things get progressively more complicated.


I love this movie, it's aesthetic is beautiful, Blake Lively - who I didn't really rate until this movie - is great and this qualifies for me as a Christmas movie because Adaline meets Ellis (Michael Huisman) at a New Year's Eve party, which is when she wears this beautiful deep red velvet gown.

This custom made Gucci gown is a perfect choice of dress for this time defying character. It's silhouette is vintage, yet modern because it's a classic, the beaded adornments and small sleeves add age to the design but the cut outs allowing her to show a little flesh feel modern, and positively risqué and trend setting in 1945, when she's supposed to have first worn the gown. It straddles the time lines perfectly between 1945 and 2014, and sets Adaline apart from the other party goers, making her look like a woman out of time

In the film most of Adaline's clothes are vintage, having been carefully preserved by her from when she first purchased them and she proves that some things never go out of style and are always destined to come back.

R to L: A-Line Burgundy Balloon Sleeve Tulle Evening Dress sold by Anniebride via Storenvy 
Portia & Scarlett Deep Red Iris Sequin Maxi Dress from Little Black Dress
Diana Dress in Red Wine via Belle Muse

Finding an equivalent for this dress wasn't easy. Velvet dresses, which were incredibly popular two or three years ago, are now either simple slip dresses or old fashioned in completely the wrong way for Adaline's Gucci dress, they're too formal, too reserved, or simple and somewhat cheap looking. When looking for these dresses, I wanted something which straddled the line between modern and vintage.

Dress one, from Storenvy, I feel fits the bill, silhouettes have swung back towards that vintage a-line skirt over the past few years and as soon as you add shear sleeve you re-enter the world of White Christmas and the pink dress worn by Vera-Ellen. This burgundy dress feels like something Adaline would have stored away in her wardrobe from back in the fifties. The same goes for dress three, from Belle Muse, which brings in that more conservative higher neckline, but the cut outs and keyhole which keeps it a little sexier. It's possibly more reserved than Adaline's, but again, has that essence.

Finally I added the deep red sequin dress from Little Black Dress, which perhaps is a little too much for Adaline whose original dress, while straddling timelines, is one which makes her stand out because of how vintage she looks compared to the other women at the party, though not necessarily intended to make her steal focus. A full sequined dress would definitely steal focus and make everyone notice you, but silhouette and colour wise, it's actually one of the closer matches.

If you haven't seen this movie, or even heard about it, I wouldn't be hugely surprised, but I would recommend it if you like a little bit of romantic fantasy. My favourite part of this movie, bar Anthony Ingruber's spot on impression of a younger Harrison Ford, is when Ellis brings Adaline flowers. I won't spoil it for you, but it's one of the most delightful ways I've seen some bring another person flowers on film, only perhaps surpassed by the way it's done in Stranger Than Fiction (2006) when Harold Crick brings Ana, a baker, flours. Hint, Adaline works in a library...


Link || The Age of Adaline (2015) || IMDb || Wikipedia || Rotten Tomatoes 
Link || Diana Dress in Red Wine via Belle Muse


BONUS!

Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953)
Marilyn Monroe as Lorelei Lee & Jane Russell as Dorothy Shaw
(Costume Design by William Travilla)

You know I had to give you a bonus, mostly because you know I had way too many dresses/films to choose from and couldn't give this one up. 

But this one isn't a Christmas/Holiday movie I hear you shout! This is one of the cases when it is to me. Not only is Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953) one of my favourite movies of all time, but it also almost always comes on the TV - multiple times - at Christmas. I don't know why, but it does and I watch it every single time because try and stop me.


Lorelei Lee and Dorothy Shaw (Marilyn Monroe and Jane Russell) are best friends and showgirls who are heading to Paris so Lorelei can marry her fiancé, Gus and have a little fun on the way. But they are unaware that Gus's father is having them followed by a private eye, to try and prove that Lorelei is a gold digger, since there's no way a beautiful showgirl would marry his son for any other reason. Dorothy, acting as her chaperon, is just happy flirting with the US Olympic team, who are also on the cruise, and trying her best to keep Lorelei out of trouble. Though that is both not easy and doomed to be unsuccessful.

Based on the novel by Anita Loos, it's a musical comedy that has always been one of my favourite movies, and the clothes... oh the clothes!


While there are some outfits which I am absolutely obsessed by in the film, two of the most iconic are probably Lorelei and Dorothy's orange and deep blue gowns, that they wear to dinner on the cruise, and were designed by William Travilla, who designed outfits for Monroe on not only Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, but How to Marry a Millionaire (1953) and probably Monroe's most iconic outfit, the pleated white dress from The Seven Year Itch (1956). He new exactly how to best show off the actresses figure and so these two dresses stand out, and not only for the bright orange colour.

R to L: Forever Shining Navy Sequin Halter Neck Maxi Dress from Club London
Love&Lemonade Backless Sequin Floor Length Prom Dress from Shein
Nox Anabel E377 Dress in Navy-Blue from The Dress Warehouse

Dorothy's dress ended up not being too much of a challenge, a deep blue sparkly halter neck gown being a staple in any era and today I found many, including these by Club London, Love& Lemonade (Shein) and Nox Anabel (The Dress Warehouse) being great interpretations of Russell's dress. Just throw on a faux fur grey stole and a vintage looking star brooch to your neckline and you're there, looking just as glamourous, dark and gorgeous as Jane Russell herself. But Lorelei's...

R to L: Dreamy Marigold Dress from Teuta Matoshi
Orange Gown from Valdrin Sahiti
ADYCE Neon Orange Bustier Bandage Dress from Shien

That bright orange, beaded, ruched, floor length fishtail dress was a challenge. Like with Adaline's dress, finding an orange dress that didn't look cheap wasn't easy, but I think I managed to find three with a little bit of that dresses essence in them. 

In the Teuta Matoshi Dreamy Marigold dress I think you get that figure hugging and enhancing silhouette that Marilyn was so well known for, but with a metallic copper finish instead of beading to give glitz to the already stunning gown. 

Jumping to the third dress by ADYCE (Shein), if you take off the fishtail from the original dress you've essentially entered the world of the bandage dress, which as a modern day classic in itself. Designed by Azzedine Alaïa in the 80's the bandage dress is most well known in the form of Hervé Léger's 90's interpretation, but looking at dresses such as Lorelei's it's easy to see where the inspiration for those bodycon dresses came from and so it's not a big leap to get from one to the other.

But I think the gown that I found at the eleventh hour, by Valdrin Sahiti is just perfect. No it doesn't have a fishtail, yes it lacks the beading, but can't you imagine Marilyn in it?


Link || Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953) || IMDb || Wikipedia || Rotten Tomatoes 
Link || Nox Anabel E377 Dress in Navy-Blue from The Dress Warehouse
Link || Dreamy Marigold Dress from Teuta Matoshi
Link || Orange Gown from Valdrin Sahiti (Image)
Link || ADYCE Neon Orange Bustier Bandage Dress from Shien


I genuinely find this a really fun post to create, which is why it always ends up taking me a million times longer to write up than I expect. It didn't help this year that I had too many films, too many dresses and a complete inability to choose between them, or from letting myself look for new ones the entire time I was writing the post.  

Every time I thought I'd found the right dresses, I found a new one or had second thoughts. I'm apparently quite fickle when it comes to picking dresses for fictional characters.

Anyway, it's still fun to play dress up, especially with characters and films that I have loved and enjoyed over the years. And I hope you liked them and found this fun, even if it's just looking at some pretty clothes, because I enjoyed it.

Now for some reason I'm really struggling to know how to sign off on this post so...

Happy Saturday! Part seven in a matter of hours... how many hours? 

..................................................................................
Listening: Ain't There Anyone Here For Love? - Jane Russell

Sunday, 12 January 2020

On the 5th Day of Christmas...

... this blogger gave to thee...
... five gold rings!..
... four favoured films...
... three rosy bubbles...
... two iterations...
... and a tale for tugging heart strings.


Should I be changing the titles of the series to just "on the  day..." given I've been so slow in getting them up and it's over a week past the end of the festive season? Or is that giving too many Ursula vibes? 


Just a thought.

Day 5 and we're onto jewellery, which apparently involved me getting on the struggle bus and staying on it for way too long. Or in other words, I find Day 5 a hard one, not just this year, but every year.

I'm obviously not an active jeweller anymore, and part of my not making and not being able to design things to make, is that I don't really look at jewellery on Pinterest, or blogs as often as I used too. This means that when it comes to Christmas and this particular post, I don't have a backlog of pins to search through, or websites I naturally gravitate towards to find cool or interesting jewellery to pass on.

"Pass the parcel. That's sometimes all you can do. 
Take it, feel it, and pass it on. Not for me, not for you, 
but for someone, somewhere, one day. Pass it on, boys. 
That's the game I want you to learn. Pass it on."
(History Boys, 2006, Alan Bennett )

The only point in writing these posts is to pass on information. The only reason to write a blog is to pass on information, opinion and hopefully enthusiasm for something you've discovered and want to share and potentially start a conversation about.

With jewellery I've been out of the conversational loop for longer than I care to admit.

It didn't help that my first attempt at this post ran into some obstacles and I had to start the whole process over.

But, when I was looking at my Pinterest board dedicated to this particular post, I finally noticed a little group of gold rings that just seemed to hang together and make sense. So here they are. Five gold rings from five jewellers who are mostly new to me...


(Set of Stacking Rings, 18ct yellow and red gold.)


There are three things I instantly love about this set of rings by Louise O'Neill, the first being that they're stackable. Ever since I was little, I've loved stacking, interlocking rings, something that I went into a lot more detail about on last years Day 5, when I waxed lyrical about my love for jeweller Wendy Ramshaw, and is something I'm always instantly drawn too when it comes to rings. 

Secondly is the colour. The ring is made of a combination of 18ct yellow and red gold, giving it a really subtle colour difference, which I think is just lovely, especially when it's in a matte finish as these are. I love a well done matte finish to a piece of jewellery, when you can see the delicate swirls from using sand paper or scotch brite pads... it's almost like the metal's covered in the beginnings of frost ferns. 

And thirdly, I really like the shapes and how simple they are. These are the types of shapes I always used gravitate towards making, even when in my head I wanted to be the person creating organic, naturalistic looking jewellery as with some of the others on this list. 

This is a chunky looking ring for sure, but there's something soft about it which I find really attractive and after pinning it to my Day 5 Pinterest board, I kept pausing at it and seeing things collect round about.  


Link || Louise O'Neill || Website || Instagram || Facebook 


(Gold, Blue & Violet  Ring, Brass plated with 16k gold matte finish, hand painted with special effects paint and pooled with resin)

Sometimes when I'm making up theses posts, I have way too many options, but no obvious way of linking them together and having it make sense. Obviously sometimes there is a theme, they all have a similar colour or technique in common, sometimes it's just the images/objects/themes organically coming together and somehow matching up until I've found a little group that makes sense.

This ring by Olya oBo, of oBo Creations on Etsy, was sitting close by to the Louise O'Neill stacked rings, and the soft matte gold, drew my eye from one to the other. I honestly do have a real attraction to matte finishes.

However with oBo's rings, the puddles of violet and blue within the rock pool like wells of the ring, which the listing says is the result of a a special effects paint sealed with resin to give it a three dimensional surface, was also of interest. The busy body creative part of my head is trying to work out what kind of paints would create those pearlescent bubble like cells, pushing the mica in the paint to create patterns. Maybe it's metallic alcohol inks or something like Daler Rowney's FW Pearlescent Ink, which, though they're acrylic, from memory had similar qualities. Even nail polish might give this effect.

But it's a mystery in the end. A pretty mystery.


Link || Olya oBo || Etsy || Instagram || Facebook 



(Ocean Treasure Ring Stack, Lost Wax Casting in 9ct Gold, with sapphire & amethysts)

Guess the link here? Yep, purple, blue and rock pools, original right? Ground breaking thinking there on my part!

The colour is the reason these lined up in my brain, but I love these organic, encrusted rings that look like they've grown out of the metal, like coral or lichen... I suppose I should maybe have added a Trypophobia trigger warning for this ring, knowing a lot of people really have an aversion to this kind of holey texture. So if you feel a certain way about holes, I'm sorry.

This stack of Ocean Treasure rings are by Ami Pepper, who bases all her designs on the shape and texture of shell which look to have grown around gemstones, in this case sapphires and amethysts. Each of Pepper's designs are hand carved out of wax and cast in precious metals (9-14ct gold) in a process known as lost wax carving.

Essentially the process is this. You carve your design in carving wax, then attach a sprue, a tube of wax to allow the molten metal to flow into your casting, and if you're doing multiple pieces at once, you then attach this sprue to a larger wax tube creating a tree like design. Next you put the piece into an metal canister and fill it with plaster before allowing it to dry. Once fully dry, the mould is heated and the wax burns away leaving the negative space where your carvings used to be. The mould is very carefully filled with molten metal, which flows into the cavities, cooled slightly, then quenched in water which cools the casting completely and disintegrates the plaster. The casting can then be removed from the sprue, cleaned, sanded, polished and perfected into a piece of jewellery.

It's a particularly good technique for jewellery such as Pepper's who carve their designs, as well as for casting multiples of the same element. Olya oBo's rings above also being a good example, as within their Etsy shop, they have multiple of the same ring in different colour stories, so having these cast will save them a lot of time and allow them to keep their selling price a little lower. This isn't always the case, but it can help. 

I really love this style of jewellery, and Ami Pepper is completely new to me and I'm into it. These genuinely look like it could just be growing from the edge of a rock pool and formed round about a ring and some pretty polished pebbles. I particularly love the little mussels she's carved because I think that it not only adds to the naturalistic feel, but sets it apart from other jewellers who make things in a similar style. They're really lovely designs.


Link || Ami Pepper || Website || Instagram || Facebook



Architectural Riveted Rings, silver, gold plating, spray paint (2015)


When I started collecting together, the obvious link between these rings and the others was the colour. Initially I mistook this for either anodised titanium (the process of colouring titanium using an electrical current in an electrolyte solution or a blow torch, the colour being dictated by the voltage or heat the metal is being exposed too) or anodised aluminium (a similar process by including sulphuric acid and dyes) but in fact, jeweller Ruth Laird uses spray paint to achieve the colour within her work.

By using spray paint on her very linear, architectural jewellery, around the edges it has been worn away in a really natural, weathered fashion which softens the look of the harsh edges and allows the metal to peek through. Meaning that as it's worn, as the metal polishes and tarnishes, the paint will (I assume) also weather further, like layers of old painted surfaces tends to do with time. 

I like that. I like that when jewellery is loved and worn, it changes. Every ding in a old ring, every scratch, it doesn't have to signify damage. Amber warms in colour with body heat and exposure to oxygen over time. Matte finishes can slowly polish. And this can signify life and love of an object. After all, people tend to hide away their jewellery in their boxes, in a drawer, it being too good to wear. Then they wear the things that have significance, even if they're not their most expensive and seemingly important items, they're the ones that live.

For me, in the little bit of my brain that still thinks as a jeweller, weathering means wearing. Wearing means something someone's taken time and love in making, isn't just sitting in a drawer not being worn. Wear your jewellery, and if you want to keep it in good nick, buy a silver polish cloth to give them a clean, I used them for final polishing and they're very effective. Or go and see if the original jeweller you bought from or one in your local area offer cleanings. But wear your jewellery, there's nothing sadder than it being sat unworn.


Link || Ruth Laird || Website || Instagram || Twitter || Facebook



 (Double Cluster ring, glass, silver, 9ct Gold, paint, fresh water pearls, ceramic transfer, wood)

Jed Green is our final jewellery, and another who's new to me, and there's something about the cluster of glass, gold, silver and pearls that I find really attractive in her Double Cluster ring.

While I love half of this design, I'm not daft over the black sprouting wires, I understand that they help to balance the ring, that they add darkness, it is however the glass discs with their silver centres which I find really attractive. And Green's use of glass within her jewellery which I particularly appreciate. There's a lovely texture it brings to her work, and to this ring.

Aside from rings of clustering glass, and ones that look like glass finial flanking the fingers, Green also creates terrarium rings, with glass, pearls, and metal growing within. Which depending on what's inside of the glass dome, are either incredibly whimsical, with pops of colours and obvious flowers, or dark and enveloping, like creeping weeds in a graveyard. And while the concept of a terrarium ring isn't necessarily new - you can buy fillable glass dome rings easily enough through Etsy - but these are unique, and feel less like a filled dome and more like a terrarium with something growing inside. 

With any of the designs from Green, it's the combination of metal and glass that really make them special. 


Link || Jed Green || Website || Instagram


I know this has taken forever for me to post. I definitely wasn't distracted by watching The Witcher and getting confused while writing this post. Mostly I just couldn't seem to get myself to work out how to write it... thus explaining why there's so much whittering. I do apologise for both that and my tardiness.

But I hope some of these designs were interesting to you, even if you just skim the nonsense I wrote and just look at the pictures, like a sensible person.


Merry belated Christmas and New Year! Part six "before the sun sets on the third day"...


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Listening: It's Been A Year - Greg Laswell

Wednesday, 30 December 2015

On the 6th Day of Christmas...

... this blogger gave to thee..
 ... six party frocks ...
... five gold rings!..
... four micro art forms...
... three tubby little cubbies...
... two fancy pens...
... and a lego man made of a tree.

It is the 31st of December and my iPad keeps bonging. It keeps bonging because my little sister knows what day it is and keeps sending me suggestions. She keeps sending me suggestions because it's dresses, dresses, dresses day!

So no wittering, here's six pretty (in my opinion) dresses...


'Harlow' Teal Black Lace Swing Dress from Lindy Bop, in all its beautiful lacy glory. I only discovered Lindy Bop this year and I've become completely obsessed with it's gorgeous retro inspired dress shapes and their plethora of vintage style printed fabrics they come in. While I've not worn a dress properly in years, I'd kill to wear vintage style dresses and swish about like I was Jane Russell or Grace Kelly. You can even buy petticoats to full poof out your skirt for that full retro glam look. I also love Lindy Bop all the more because their sizes run from six to twenty six, so no discrimination there for anyone! 
Every year I try and make up this list, I end up with at least half a dozen jacquard fabric dresses. This year being no exception, there were in fact fifteen on the list, but this was my favourite. I'm must drawn to that beautifully textured, woven fabric, to the point where I ignore all others. Blue Rose Jacquard Midi Prom Dress from ASOS, being a good example of this, with raised woven flowers and lovely combination of the black, blue and purple. It always looks like it's good quality, you can almost feel the weight to the fabric which always seems a little more worth the money, plus, the fact that around this time of year there are lots of metallic jacquard fabric dresses to be had, always seems very festive.
Maya Petite Star Embellished Maxi Dress from ASOS, is probably the most casual in shape of the six dresses, but those silver sequin stars make it really special. I'd probably try and wear this everyday like a crazy lady.
Polish Introduction Dress from Modcloth, is again going for that metallic equals festive mindset for me. It's Christmas/New Years, which means you can wear as much glittery, metallic, sparkly stuff as you can get your hands on right? That's the law?

That said, I'd get rid of the beaded bit on the belt, but that's just me. And I'm sure I say it every year, but damn you Modcloth for not having suppliers in the UK so I can spend all my money on everything you sell... also than you for not because I really don't have that kind of cash!
**Chi Chi London Floral Print Midi Dress from Dorothy Perkins, comes in three colours as far as I can see, an aqua, a pale pink and the silver. They're all lovely, but seeing it's Christmas and this dress is covered in pansies, I think the silver is the most wintry, though pansies and violas do flower in the winter, giving the garden a little colour so my argument is kind of negated. The silver dress does give you a pretty good opportunity to wear brightly coloured shoes though, which is lucky...
Frock and Frill Embellished Overlay Pencil Dress from ASOS, sequins and a grown up dress for our last dress. I say grown up, but that's mostly because it's a pencil dress and in my head grown ups wear pencil dresses and not so grown ups wear ones with big skirts in which to twirl in. Twirling is a good thing, at least in my book.

Now, I have to say that ASOS stepped up this year and trumped pretty much every other shop I looked at. Am I alone in being slightly impatient for the nineties fashion revival we've been doing through this year, to hurry up an end? I lived through the nineties, I survived the years of boxy tops and shapeless everything (and the shoes, we'll talk about that hideous revival tomorrow) and I have had no desire to relive it bar the grunge era of micro floral dresses, denim and Dr. Martens. Please, fashion world, could we please, please, please have longer tops and clothes that aren't entirely square?

And could we also please ditch pastels and get back to bright and jewel tones, just for a year? Pretty please with glitter on top?

Anyway, I hope you liked the dresses, does anyone have any favourites? If not they're all mine and I'm not sharing.

Merry Christmas! Part seven tomorrow...

Link || Harlow Teal Black Lace Swing Dress from Lindy Bop
Link || Blue Rose Jacquard Midi Prom Dress from ASOS
Link || Maya Petite Star Embellished Maxi Dress from ASOS
Link || Polish Introduction Dress from Modcloth
Link || **Chi Chi London Floral Print Midi Dress from Dorothy Perkins
Link || Frock and Frill Embellished Overlay Pencil Dress from ASOS

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Listening: Carol of Bells - George Winston
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