Clothes
My favourite
game as a child was dress ups. Mum would sometimes let me wear her shoes during
my experiments. She had these amazing
red patent leather platforms, and all of her shoes fit me perfectly when I was
around 10. Her feet are tiny. Her cork soled wedges were too high for me to
balance on, but the leather uppers were hand painted with small pink roses. Mum
still has these shoes. She let go of a lot of things in the 80’s, and in the
90’s I took all of her 70’s stuff that I could fit and wore it till it fell apart
. I ended up giving Tamasin one of the best dresses mum wore in the late 70’s because I couldn’t fit it anymore. She looked
amazing in it, but then, she’s so beautiful that she could wear any old crap
and still look cute.
I’m thinking
about clothes a lot right now because of all the changes that are
occurring. In the 90’s I wore quite a
lot of polyester. This seems unbearable now, but in my 20’s I had a vast
collection of 70’s frocks and it was rare that you’d have seen me wearing jeans.
As a teenager, I was not one of those privileged North Shore girls who flicked
their (very straight or spiral permed) hair and spent their considerable pocket
money on a nice pair of $300 Zambezi shorts. I couldn’t take part in
conversations where someone was saying “oh god, I know I shouldn’t have, but I
had to have it!” about some linen skirt in Cuntry Rd or Esprit. I wanted something that was magical and fun
to wear, something that took me to another place. As much as I appreciated the
costumes of punk and goth, I didn’t want to commit to one ‘brand’ in the way I
looked. I enjoyed op shopping more and more, finding cheap frocks from the 40’s, 50’s and
60’s (which was still possible in the 80’s) and pairing them with boots. I felt
like Anne of Green Gables and Kate Bush combined.
By the time
I was 22 my wardrobe was so varied that it looked like several different people
must have shared it. I liked classy things. I liked slutty things. I liked
funny things. I liked hats, big earrings, plunging necklines, short skirts,
long socks. From the time I was around 22 to 25 I lived in a fantastic
oversized flat on Mt Eden Rd. It was positioned above an Op Shop, a pie shop,
and next door to a whorehouse. Living
above the op shop meant I often grabbed amazing things before anyone else
could, and I once scored a lime green crotched skirt and matching cardigan. The
best thing I ever got was a large creepy doll from the 1950’s. She cost me $3.
I love her, I like to think that she’s a protective energy, that she might
scare away thieves and naughty ghosts.
When I moved out of the Mt Eden Rd flat, I
gave so much stuff to that Op shop that they asked me to stop; they were
running out of room. In the night I would sneak down and put another bag of
stuff outside their door and hope that someone would walk past and take it.
These days
I’ve only just figured out how to wear silk. I found a couple of amazing
vintage silk shirts this year, but they’re so ‘good’ that I wasn’t sure when
I’d be able to wear them. One morning I threw one on over a singlet and knew
I’d finally figured it out. Layers and casual. The shirt might have cost a shit
load originally, but since I only paid $4 for it, I’m wearing it with the ease
of an old t shirt. What’s amazing about silk is that when I sweat it doesn’t
show up! This must be something all those silk experts know, but was new to me.
I also have an incredible cream (vintage Thorton Hall) silk nightie that I’m gonna
wear like it’s a rag from K Mart. No more ‘saving’ things. I bet that’s how
I’ve got these things in such good condition. Someone kept saving it for good,
and then they died. This nightie is long. It reaches the ground and it’s like
walking in a waterfall of thick liquid cream.
I wore it around and then to bed last night, and I’m sure I slept better for
it. Now I’m full of half formed plans to buy ugly silk shirts and make them
into pillow cases.
I scored a
Helen Cherry silk slip with cute pockets from Dressmart for $10 yesterday. It’s
got a really lovely pattern on it, and although it’s not sexy, I couldn’t
resist the fabric. The way things feel makes such a difference.
Scored lots
of excellent baby clothes too. I touch them and imagine a baby wearing them
with its soft skin and inability to know where they start and something else
begins. Ti is looking really pregnant, and Tam’s womb fruit popped out in early
October. The Painter and Miss Monday are back together and I’m wishing them
well! The sexy ex has a new lover. Rob got an amazing contract for his
business. Things are changing. Friends are having babies, travelling or
starting courses of study or courses in Love. I’m in a new and loving relationship.
It’s time to wear silk, eat strawberries, grind my own coffee beans and learn
the guitar. Year of the Dragon. You fucking bet!
2 comments:
Hooray! Wear silk! Eat strawberries! Lovely. I too am discovering the joys of natural fabrics. My little fetish is linen though. :-)
What a coincidence. I was just considering it might be time for a blog post on "what I've spent on my wardrobe this year". I think I might have to leave it until after the silly season to make it fair though. :-) LOL.
Aw thanks for the comment! And yeah, the feeling, oh the feeling of the fabric! xxx
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