Thursday, June 21, 2012

Windfall

Hello, friends! It's been a wacky couple of weeks for me. I've been working on lining up an assistant teaching job for next year at an elementary school near my house (my first full-time salaried job... ever!) and simultaneously been offered a keyholder position at my current workplace. Unfortunately, I'll probably have to turn the latter down, because I can't really picture myself balancing a full-time job, a part-time managerial position, classes, and sanity/creative output, although the part of me that worries about things like credit card bills tells me I should try it.

Anyway, a minor technical glitch with my sewing machine sent me off the rails for a few weeks. I'm a little disheartened by how easily I lose momentum for things - I certainly had no real excuse to stop sewing, but I guess I needed a little time off for my brain! In any case, I'm starting work on my mom's tiered skirt very soon, and I'll be trying some little creative side-projects soon as well. I got an unexpected "bonus" from work the other day, in the form of a bunch of defective dresses that had to be destroyed and thrown out:


Fortunately for me, "destroyed" apparently just means their tags are removed and they get a big slice up the back, meaning a fair bit of fabric is still intact. So when I saw these little beauties sitting sadly at the bottom of a trash bag in the back office, I rang up my manager ASAP and asked if I could take them home.


All in all, I ended up with nine of these gorgeous little patriotic treasures, so my mind is racing with possibilities for a lot of relatively small pieces of fabric. Unfortunately, the red strips on the bottom are the defective part: the color bleeds in the wash. My plan is to slice the red trim off first, and then see if I can wash it sufficiently on its own to set the color. One of my coworkers suggested vinegar as a way to make the color fast - does anyone else have any suggestions?

Did you say you wanted some fabric eye-candy photos? Because I took a bunch for you, so.
Any thoughts on what to do with all this stripey goodness? My mind went first to applique - I've been meaning to experiment with it on some other knit fabric I got, and I think I'll cut out some pieces and give it a whirl in the next few days. I also really like the idea of mixing up stripes into some kind of bizarre patchwork pattern, but I'm not sure what I'd do with it.

Mmmm.... visual disorientation...
One quirk about knit fabric that really intrigues me is its directionality - what would happen if I stitched two pieces of jersey together with their grains running perpendicular to one another? Or at a bias? Suffice it to say that I am excited by the idea of just having a bunch of free, pretty, high-contrast fabric to screw around with. This is where the "sewing" and "visual art" parts of my brain get to play in the sandbox together.

Also, these buttons. So many buttons!
Anyway, I'd love to hear your ideas for my special windfall. My mind is in a very creative place right now, so it's like that my next few sewing sessions will just be me messing around on the machine and making weird things before I really dig into my mom's skirt. So look forward to that, if you want!

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Fashion Distraction: Say No to the Dress

Hi folks! Sorry about the lack of updates lately. My sewing machine is on the fritz, and my life has been loopy with figuring out a new potential job and getting back into a lot of creative projects. Anyway, I will hopefully have the machine fixed soon so I can get back to sewing and showing you pictures of it, but for now I just wanted to pop in to comment on a silly little fashion thing I've noticed lately:


On the right, we have Marc Jacobs in a Comme des Garcons dress, some pretty badass black shoes with what appear to be diamond-studded buckles, and for some strange reason big ugly white boxer shorts. On the left, we have Seth Meyers appropriately making fun of this outfit by, you know, wearing it.

I love it when guys wear dresses.


I love it when they get attention for it.

I get it, Andrej, you're the most gorgeous person in the world. Stop lording it over me.
 But yeah, that look is just hideous. The dress is kind of cool, if not particularly flattering to the male figure. The white boxers just make it seem like a joke. Is it a joke? That would disappoint me, Marc Jacobs. Anyway, I guess part of a fashion choice (guys in dresses) becoming more acceptable, at least in the edgiest circles of taste, is that fashion choice being executed pretty poorly from time to time. I just hope that this look is an honest-to-goodness poor decision on the part of Mr. Jacobs, and not some kind of laugh at the expense of fashion freedom. If it's the former, at the very least, we'll have people looking at this hot mess and attempting to do a better job of it in the future!

Friday, June 1, 2012

Film Friday: El Laberinto del Fauno (Pan's Labyrinth)

Today, I'd like to get rolling on a new feature I've been planning for this blog since day one: Film Friday! On the occasional Friday on which I have the free time and the wherewithal to cobble together a big post, I want to investigate one of my favorite artistic mediums, focusing on the visual beauty and sartorial majesty contained therein. To start off this little project, I could not think of a better choice than one of my two all-time favorite movies (it's so hard to choose between it and Spirited Away): El Laberinto del Fauno, better known to American audience's as Pan's Labyrinth.


For those who have not yet borne witness this this truly incredible film, it is about a young girl named Ofelia (Ivana Baquero) who moves with her mother into the home of her new stepfather, the brutal fascist Captain Vidal (Sergi López), in 1944 in northern Spain. Naturally seeking an outlet for all the misery that surrounds her in this new place, Ofelia finds herself drawn into a world of fantasy in the form of a mysterious fawn (Doug Jones, with Guillermo del Toro's inimitable creature design) who assures her that she is truly a fairy princess, and that to be reunited with her parents she must complete three tasks to prove she has not become "mortal."

No pressure, though.
While basically everything in this movie is perfect in every way (I could go on at length about the music, the set design, the strength and complexity of its female characters, the way it toys with traditional fairy tale narratives, its historical context, etc. etc. etc.), I think it hinges primarily on its two greatest strengths: its overall visual coherence, and the performances of its three principal actors: Baquero as Ofelia, Lopez as Vidal, and Maribel Verdú as Vidal's maid Mercedes, whose struggles against him mirror Ofelia's "fantasy" adventures in ways that are at once as straightforward and iconic as a fairy tale plot device should be and so subtle and nuanced that I didn't even start to pick up on them until my third or fourth viewing. Needless to say, you have to go watch this movie right now.

Mercedes and Ofelia share some forbidden literature
But this is a fashion blog, so you want to hear about clothes, right? I shall now proceed to post screenshots of all the outfits I love from this film, along with a brief discussion of how each one fits into the larger visual motifs of the movie. Although I've really enjoyed browsing my DVD's collection of Guillermo del Toro's explanations of his various choices, his real brilliance shines through in the fact that you really don't need to listen to him to feel their impact. There are two worlds in this film: "reality" and "fantasy," and del Toro contrasts the two through color palette, costuming, lighting, etc. such that it is impossible to miss what sets them apart. So let's begin...


Here is the first time we see Ofelia, looking like a little poet with her beret and her book. The "real" and "fantasy" worlds in Pan's Labyrinth are distinguished with a simple color duality: warm (fantasy) and cool (reality). While this is a particularly warm shot for the "real world," I still think that little sliver of green from Ofelia's dress is meant to read very powerfully as a slice of warmth in a cold place. At the very least, it is the most saturated color on screen right now, and when we see green juxtaposed against a grey coat here and later against the blue outfits of the soldiers, I think it's meant to read as the warmest color in an otherwise cool palette. It also ties Ofelia to her adult counterpart, Mercedes:


I think this shawl is a brilliant piece of costuming. It 1) ties Mercedes to Ofelia, 2) distinguishes her from everyone else with its comparatively bright color, 3) is ratty as hell, indicating her "low status" in the Vidal household, and 4) is very maternal and nurturing, signaling her as an important caretaker for several characters. The only thing it doesn't do is reveal her downright ferocity and incredible strength in moments of adversity, but I think that it's probably intentional that we don't see that side of her yet. Anyway, here's Captain Vidal, whose sharp uniform sets him apart:


Now, although I think Vidal is one of the most loathsome movie villains in history, I do also think he's a stone-cold badass. Everything about him is meticulous and precise and intense, and there is no mistaking the fact that he is in control of every situation he's a part of. That cold grey color of his uniform? That's probably the most abundant hue in the entire film, and it's because he basically owns reality. Also, just for fun, here are two shots of the most villainous hands ever captured on film:

Do you hate him yet?
How about now?
Anyway, probably the most iconic outfit in the film is what Guillermo del Toro calls Ofelia's "Alice in Wonderland dress," and it is indeed a wonderful addition to the great canon of dresses worn by little girls in fantasy masterpieces:








Instant Classic!
So this is a beautiful dress, and very classy, but what I love most about it is the ways in which it (and the story that surrounds it) is not perfect. First of all, I think she looks kind of awkward in it, don't you? Almost as if she's just a little bit too old (10) to be wearing a little girl's dress. I know for a fact that Guillermo del Toro had to age up the character a little bit after casting Baquero, and I think that is ultimately a very happy accident. It creates just a little tiny bit of age-related tension every time we're asked not to think too hard about the fact that Ofelia is more a young woman than a little girl. Second, I think the most brilliant use of the dress as a costume piece is the fact that Ofelia takes it off before her first big adventure, transitioning to this:

And that, my friends, is how you make a movie.
Guillermo del Toro talks at length in the commentary about how the iconic green dress is silly, in his mind. It's frivolous and decorative, a symbol of the kind of inactive but beautiful "princess" that her mother wants her to be. Ofelia, on the other hand, has the good sense to take off this pretty nonsense before embarking on a quest that will make her very, very dirty. For me this is one of the film's most brilliant moves, playing with the traditional idea of the girl as someone merely to be looked at even in a story that is ostensibly about her. Ofelia's wardrobe choices are her own, and they eventually make her parents rather mad.

In any case, Ofelia has one more knockout costume piece. I won't reveal the plot surrounding how she comes to wear it, but even seeing it could be a bit spoiling, so here's your warning!









Wow!

So, this is what the film looks like in full-fledged fantasy mode: golden, warm, red, round, etc. I think Ofelia's outfit here is amazing! It's otherworldly, timeless, and whimsical without sacrificing any of the dire seriousness of the scene that it's in and the movie as a whole. If you needed any further convincing that Guillermo del Toro (and the people with whom he chooses to collaborate - props to Lala Huete, the costume designer) is a sublime visual artist, look no further.

Anyway, that was a long entry! Thoughts about the film? Its costumes? Anything? Would you like to see more Film Fridays in the future?