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04/21/2008

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Allison

Here's the non-admin link for the Dress A Day flickr group:http://www.flickr.com/groups/689013@N24/

Lee

Great dress, Eva! Now that I am finishing my *third* dress, I know all about the "it's Ms. Dressaday's fault" excuse. I use it often.

Eirlys

Ooh, one resounding "yes" for London, Erin!Echoing your Simon Winchester praise, The Map That Changed the World is a great read. It's about the birth of modern Geology and all about Bath, England, funnily enough - first geological map ever was made of that area by the wonderfully pioneering William Smith. His fossil shop was across the road from my poste restante... the bow-windowed building still stands, but now sells fripperies. While I'm on a roll, Jane Austen also lodged in that street, briefly, before she quit Bath. It was a street of tradespeople (dressmakers included). That takes us neatly back to the subject in hand!

Melissa

Thanks for the link, those liberty print converse will be mine mwaa aaa aaa.

Anonymous

Hooray, I'm in London and my friend Hannah and I are great fans of dressaday so if you'd like tea chums we're there!x sasha

Caroline

I would love to meet at the V&A, or the Liberty Tea Room, or wherever there is tea, buns and pretty things to look at! Caroline

melissa

Erin, I'm so there if you come to London again! I'd like to put in another order for a dressaday tape measure, though, pretty please. I'm too distraught to go into details, but you can safely advertise that they do in fact float. *sob*

tea

Wow! That's awesome that you and Simon Winchester are close enough pals that he sends you e-mail.

xstpenguin

Wah!!!! Me wanna go. Sadly I'm still barely able to make it to the library, so not exactly possible. You'll just have to have a sticky bun on my behalf.Eva's dress - gowjus... and with those shoes and the cardigan? Totally your fault Erin. You are slowly taking over the world by mind control!Cheers,AJ

wundermary

Oh, no hope of meeting up in London, but I hope everyone has a grand time!What is the deal with that dress? I clicked over to the auction to see if there were other shots, I thought there were silhouettes with both parasols and headpieces. There are more photos and the print does have a figure with what looks like a basket for carrying things on your head.How odd! Is it supposed to be a wacky hat, or is this some reference to colonialism and forced servitude?I often like juxtapositions, but the belleish figures and opart treatment and weird. I think this dress just shouts: "Avert your eyes!".

cpeep

Ha ha, I WENT to the University of Rhode Island but did they get my patterns? No, YOU did. :)Mom always liked you best, too.Carol Extreme Cards and Papercrafting

Marianne

That southern belle dress would be perfect if you were taking a class on how to dance the Virginia Reel. I don't know if such classes exist, except in my imagination, but I could see buying that dress just for that purpose.

Latter-Day Flapper

I'm afraid I hate angel sleeves, or whatever those things are called. I hate them even more when they're elbow-length. I think they're one of the ultimate you-must-be-stick-thin-to-pull-this-off dress components.That would be a contra-dancing class, by the way.

Cassie Louise

Do let me know if you are coming to the V&A in May - I'd love to meet up with everyone!And I love the dress-a-day Flickr group too.

Jean C.

You know, I didn't even notice that the dress had "belles" all over it until I read it! Guess I fell for the subliminal thing! Yeah, I'm not crazy about the sleeves either... although I guess you could wrap them around yourself if you got cold! You know, like a wrap of some sort... or if you forgot a coat!

Eirlys

Eva's dress is lovely. I wouldn't have been confident using babycord for that number (all I can think of when faced with babycord is toddler pinafore dresses) but that works just beautifully. The belles dress is making me think of Sue Ellen from 'Dallas' ... all flapping sleeves and quivering lips. I can also see Princess Diana wearing this in the dark days of her marriage, with similar mannerisms and just as much smeared blue eyeliner, probably peeping out from under a wide-brimmed straw hat (black with white trim or white with black trim? I dunno). It's not a happy dress, is it? A brazening-it-out I-Will-Survive doomed-to-failure dress. I really don't like the way the fabric sits in the belt buckle (euch!). Nor the lugubrious bunny-ear droop of the belt end. Nor the jaunty raglan sleeve join. Hope it's seen at least one good polo match, anyway. I really should get off the fence here... LOVE Kristy's translucent Ikea drawers. Good find. If someone can locate bookshelves that make husbands think books have disappeared like that, please let me know. My mother used to keep two rows of paperbacks on one shelf, one hidden behind the other, for purposes of space economy. But then she'd forget what she'd got back there, and buy the same book twice. It wouldn't work for me either. A practical tip about Liberty's for tea (which sounds heavenly btw) is that there are actually two places in Liberty's to have tea: the ground floor TEA (happily named), and the second floor Cafe Liberty (that's the third floor to US English-speakers). They appear to overlap a lot on what's served. Details here: http://www.liberty.co.uk/services/bars_restaurantsI haven't been in since this latest refit, so can't offer any pearls of wisdom, except that those are vacation prices (you know when you've been Londoned!), but we're worth it, fellow Dress-a-Dayers. Anyone have any up-to-date cafe information or preferences?

Sarah B

I thought they were bells, not belles. Ah well. :)

londongirl

Sounds like my idea of a perfect day - trip to the V&A, fabric-shopping and tea (which of course means cakes .... mmmm!) So should such an event come to fruition ... count me in! I recommend Patisserie Valerie for pitstops at any time of the day - but at tea-time it is a wonderful place to be because the cakes are especially good. The original Valerie is on Old Compton Street - but there are now daughter branches all over London.www.patisserie-valerie.co.ukYummmmmmy.

astrojen

I think Marianne has it quite right about the dress ( although I do think its kinda cute in a odd sort of way). The dress would be perfect for afternoon "beeya" and pork skin here in the culturaly retarded state of Virginia. Do you think it might be too -too to don at a DUI trial? Actually, your defense lawyer could use it to hypnotize the judge if you twirl in it. Just a thought.

lorrwill

The picture is a great Kentucky Derby dress. All it needs is an audacious hat.Also it would work for the black and white ball. Which isn't a ball at all and anything goes (as far as fancy dress).It is really cool how the Threshals are holding up the sleeve and hem.And I have more stuff I need to post to the wiki.Would so love to go to London. And Cardiff. Can only do so in my dreams.heavy sigh

Shrimpton Couture

Hi everyone! Just wanted to say thank you to all the Dress A Day readers (and Erin too) who gave me feedback! The new site is now live - www.shrimptoncouture.com - I hope you all love it!Cherie

Suzanne

My mom use to design in LA (plus size coats/sweaters)in the 1980's....that dress reminds me of some of her partners creations! Those are HUGE sleeves!Just wanted to thank you for your blog and links to others of the vintage World. I did not realize there were so many of us!Suzanne

PostMuse

Simon Winchester is a fabulous historian who also weaves a fascinating narrative. We went all the way to UK and had in mind a visit to the Geological Society in London to see William Smith's "map that changed the world." Back then it was only on view once a week. Tuesdays. In the afternoon. The one Tuesday we were in London, it was only to catch the flight home and we were heading to the airport when the map was on view. Next time...

Helen

So so so so so in love with the idea of a London meetup. Have put the deets in my diary and will wait for more news. I wonder if it's worth trying to reserve somewhere for us all at the V&A? I'm thinking the numbers are going to get pretty special...Sadly you'll be missing the Viktor & Rolf exhibition by a mere three weeks, but better luck next time.Hxx

Eirlys

Oh yes, Londongirl, Patisserie Valerie is a legend! Think you may be right about the burgeoning numbers, Helen. Perhaps the Albert Hall's free?!

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