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Does This Mesh With Your Style? It Meshes With Mine!

Sunday, January 20th, 2008
By Twistie

Ah, how I love a good evening bag! If one chooses well, it can remain an active part of your accessory wardrobe for decades, whatever the vagaries of Dame Fashion or your personal figure changes. The key is to choose something you truly love that can stand the test of that time in both construction and design.

I can think of nothing that passes (and possibly surpasses) both tests for me as well as a mesh evening bag. The subtle shimmer of the metal, the cool elegance, the strength, and the way they have been admired for well over a hundred years by people of taste mean this is an investment well worth making when you find one that calls to you in a siren song of desire.

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And now for something completely different

Friday, November 16th, 2007
By Francesca

Usually, on Fridays, Francesca discusses shoes. But today she has beautiful handbags on the brain. Lovely clutch bags whose prices even Francesca cannot justify, but are they not simply wonderful to gaze at?

Dolce & Gabbana

Stuart Weitzman

Michael Kors


Isabella Fiore

Francesca says: siiiiiigh

Happy weekend!

xoxo, Francesca


Treat Yourself with Kid Gloves

Thursday, November 8th, 2007
By Plumcake

If you’ve opened a single magazine or seen a single fashion campaign, you know that gloves are having a major moment. So why not seize it? They’re chic, fun and a great accessory with which to make dramatic gestures (my one fondest wish is for some man to get fresh with me while I’m holding gloves because so help me God I stay up nights DREAMING of smacking some louche gent across the face with a pair of dainty white gloves) Plus they can transform a boring outfit dress into something transcendent.

The ivory pair couldn’t be more classic but check out the other colors! They’re all handmade in Italy, unlined (which I prefer) kidskin, available up to an XL and remarkably inexpensive. Here are some of my favorites. Too darling!

Mint!
The mint shade is just slightly unusual, they’re pastel but not precious.

Ochre!
If you’re going to wear a fabulous shortie glove, WEAR a fabulous shortie glove. Go for the drama!

Robin!
Wouldn’t these baby blues be perfect for a picnic in London’s Regent’s Park with a mod mint green shift a big pale yellow hat and even bigger white sunnies? Love. Them.


Workin’ the delicate jewelry

Tuesday, November 6th, 2007
By Francesca

Our internet friend Maggie writes:

I am a size 14/16, hourglass shaped person with some big shoulders. I recently bought a thin, silver chain, with three, small silver circles/open globes (it’s three circles together to make a globe shape) on it. It’s beautiful, but very delicate. I worry, that this necklace is lost on my linebacker upper body. So, my question is, can we big girls wear delicate jewelry? How do we pull it off?

It is a good rule of thumb that something small will make everything around it look bigger by comparison. So indeed, the Big Girl must be careful when wearing the Tiny Jewelry.

However, it can be done. The second rule of thumb is that something in the outfit must be proportional to the Big Body. If it is not the jewelry, then it must be the clothes or the hair or the coat or the bandanna or something that will keep admirers from saying “Whoa, Nellie, I never realized that her boobs were that huge!”

With a delicate necklace, there are a couple of ways one can do this.

One could wear the Blouse or Jacket of Solidity — something in a sturdy fabric or in a bold color or bold print — something with a neckline that will allow the little globe charm to peep through — and allow the necklace to disappear somewhat into it, and peep out flirtatiously every now and then. You could then wear the somewhat more noticeable silver earrings, or, if you have Hair of Some Volume, little silver studs.

Since Maggie has large shoulders, she could experiment with trying bold colors and patterns in her skirts and pants — creating equal interest on the bottom as the top — and downplaying the upper half.

Another way to approach it is to wear the Very Simple Clothes so that the tiny jewelry will be more noticeable — for example, a strapless black dress for fancy evenings — and equally tiny earrings, but then it is important, when one is a Big Girl, to do something with the hair that will lead others’ eyes up to your face (you know, the face that is so beautiful, Aunt Muriel always said so). For example, with that strapless dress you could put your hair into a complicated upsweep, or hold it away from your face with a headband on which are silver or jeweled adornments.

The point is, we cannot pretend that we are  Tiny Little Girls who can get away with an eensy-weensy dress AND eensy-weensy accessories. When the shoulders or the boobs are large, we must always remember to include some pizazz somewhere to balance our features.

Finally, Francesca wishes to check — just to make sure — that Maggie’s new necklace chain is a flattering length? As Francesca can say from experience, it is important that the necklace not accentuate one’s double chin and sloping lack-of-neck.

A flattering chain length  for most large women is one which puts the charm just close enough to the cleavage that the face and neck are elongated, but not so directly in between the boobs that one looks, eh, not like a woman of dignity. But of course that is for you to decide.

Have fun!

xoxo, Francesca

P.S. the necklace in the photo is available here.







Disclaimer: Manolo the Shoeblogger is not Manolo Blahnik
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