Tag Archive for fashion

Charity Fashion Show!

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Back in November, I had the chance to  be part of something really exciting. My friend’s boss, Ceri Davies, is raising money for The Stroke Association by climbing Mount Kilimanjaro. As a part of her fundraising, she organised a fashion show and asked me to be a part of it!

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The show included pieces from local Cardiff-based boutiques Seren, Looby Loos, Rouge and Ushi, as well as pieces from Ceri’s own collection, named Errol’s Muse. It was an honour to have my work shown alongside professional boutiques and Ceri’s amazing pieces!

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But of course, I could hardly do it alone! I’m lucky to have some very lovely ladies as friends who were willing to help me out! Big thanks to Karina, Justina, Claire and Leonie, who all looked amazing! We all got properly pampered, with our hair and makeup done by professionals. Vintage was certainly the overall theme for the show, with some of the boutiques showcasing vintage pieces, and this was reflected in the hair and makeup, with loose curls, red lips and lashing of eyeliner being the uniform of the evening.

I even went for a vintage feel with the music, choosing some Puppini Sisters for us to strut down the catwalk to!

All in all, it was an awesome experience; while I didn’t begin sewing to pursue a career as a designer, there was a certain buzz to seeing my creations on show. It really gave me an incentive to try and get my sewing back on track. But above all, I helped Ceri out in raising money for her cause.

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If you want to sponsor Ceri’s mammoth trek up Kilamanjaro, then please do head to her JustGiving page!

Also, big thanks to Leah Tew for letting me steal the lovely photos she took – check out her website here.

NEW NEW NEW

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Language is my thing. It could be down to having had my entire education conducted through the medium of Welsh, meaning that I’ve been bilingual since about the age of 3/4, or perhaps I’m just wired in such a way that languages just appeal to me!

Perhaps this is the reason why Zoe’s post on the Colette Patterns’ blog on the Language of Fashion so appealed to me. I would give it a read, it’s a really interesting and thought-provoking commentary on an issue perhaps you haven’t considered before; I certainly hadn’t! Zoe writes about how her personal lexicon changed as she progressed through her Fashion Design Course:

…I discovered material was also called fabric. In fact, the lecturers, tutors and technicians there seemed to have their own foreign tongue. Like infants learning to talk, through emersion, repetition and reinforcement  we students also began to adopt many of these words. Material became fabric. Photos became images. Magazines became sources (this was largely pre-internet)

Later in the article, Zoe speaks about when she felt the line had been crossed from a trade lexicon to ‘the fashion-speak satirised in ‘Absolutely Fabulous’, linked to well-worn fashion journalist phrases such as ‘must-have’ and something being ‘important this season.’’

These phrases are ones I’ve been giving much thought to lately, especially with the volume of magazines I’ve been buying in the past month, what with back and forth trips to Swansea. As a rule, I don’t tend to buy many ‘girly’ magazines, and gossip magazines are a big no go for me, so if I fancy something easy to read on the train, I tend to gravitate towards the many fashion weeklies that the U.K has to offer. Emblazoned on the front covers:

‘493 SEXY SUMMER LOOKS, NAILED – The perfect holiday wardrobe’

‘105 HOT NEW BUYS’

‘Love Your Shape Fashion : New Figure-Fixing Trends’

‘New’ seems to be the word to use. (Don’t get me started on the Figure Fixing bit, I think that’s for another post…) I noticed that us Brits, especially in comparison to Germans and possibly most Europeans, are completely OBSESSED with ‘new’ fashion. We want it NOW and we want it CHEAP. This attitude is the very reason that places like Primark exist. There was a girl in my school who couldn’t stand to wear the same dress twice on a night out.

However it’s easy for me to seem judgemental; I’m just as much a part of this culture as the rest of the U.K. If  I didn’t love pretty clothes, then I probably wouldn’t be sewing in the first place. On the other hand, I’m not fond of how what’s ‘must-have’ and ‘important’ one season, is considered ugly and useless in another. I may love pretty clothes, but I wouldn’t call myself a trend hopper. In my opinion, the people who stand out the most are the ones who aren’t slaves to the ever changing whims of the fashion industry.

What’s so wrong with wearing something old, something loved, something that’s ‘out of season’? Not to mention the conundrum of what exactly happens to clothes that aren’t sold; where do they go when the time comes to make new for something ‘new’?

Perhaps the reason this is all bothering me so much, especially with regards to the fashion weeklies, is that in the course of giving my future plans a good old think, I’ve decided that I’d like to pursue a career in journalism, so the possibility that perhaps one day I could be writing about the HOT NEW TRENDS bothers me somewhat. What do you guys think? I’d love to hear your thoughts on any other points in Zoe’s article as well!