Wednesday, February 20, 2013
Ab Fab
My friends at Made Woman Magazine introduced me to this great site called JustFab. This site has amazing deals with customized boutiques for every customer. A lot of celebrities sport the same goods seen on the site.
To whet my appetite I received this multi-jeweled necklace and stud ring with a bow. I knew I could layer both, and they are so on trend. I included an Instagram image of me wearing the ring with my other jewelry assortments. The price of this ring was ridiculous: under $10. You have no excuse not to buy. JustFab features clothes, bags, and shoes too! I included a couple of my favorites from their current selection above.
You can read more about JustFab at madewomanmag.com
Happy Shopping!
Monday, February 18, 2013
Bundled Up
I've been challenging myself to wear things that I don't usually, and with the cold coming out in full force this winter, I have been looking to add on layers. I didn't like how these images Picstitched together for an Instagram post, so I saved the individual shots for a blog post. One of my New Year's Resolutions was to capture more outfit posts on the blog, since all my money goes to things I wear.
I threw this outfit together one Friday. It consists of amazing arm warmers that I don't usually wear, but had to because it was freezing on this particular day. I love how the arm warmers can actually be turned around and used as leg warmers too. I bought them in black and gray from Juicy Couture a couple of years ago because they reminded me of the bejeweled Miu Miu socks I was obsessed with. The coat is Juicy too, scored at a thrift store for $3. Top is from the Zara sale and just seemed to match the gray gem theme. These shoes are so affordable and from a great site called UrbanOG, they have pieces that are very on trend and under budget. I've been doing a lot of shopping there lately. In fact, I bought these wedges in cobalt in addition to the gray. I've been purchasing a lot of multiples lately ... thus adding to my ever over-crowded closet.
How do you bundle up and stay fashionable?
Keep cozy!
Sunday, February 10, 2013
In the Trenches
I blogged about the loss of one of my favorite coats here . While I didn't find an exact replacement of the vintage and $5 variety, I did find many modern pieces to take its place. The after Christmas sales were kind to me, but before they even began I found this trench coat from Sam Edelman that I loved. It was very on trend with spikes and crystals, just like his beautiful shoes and bags that I have from his line. When the coat went on sale on Hautelook, I had to get it for the sample sale price.
It was then that I realized I have adopted a thing for trench coats. Trenches will never fully replace the love I have for a good vintage coat, but I love these twists on the classic camel colored one. The pink and yellow ones are by Juicy Couture and are a few years old. One was purchased from my favorite consignment shop in Northern California and the other from Nordstrom. They are perfect for So. Cal. fall and spring too. Here are some trench-wrapped outfits I have worn recently.
Happy (coat) shopping!
Tuesday, February 5, 2013
Portrait of a Lady
My grandmother passed away a few weeks ago.
It was one of those passings where you are "prepared." My grandmother was 94. I watched as age gradually dimmed the light of her memory until it was completely shut off. I watched her walk around her own home strongly and day by day grow weaker until she was bedridden. Through the past 10 years I keep hearing people say "I don't want to get that old." I would never have imagined my grandmother living so long, surviving so much. But she was tough. She survived the Great Depression, Wisconsin winters, and the death of her husband, my grandfather. She toughed it out as she had to move in with us, 10 years ago. I know it wasn't easy for such an independent person to move their beloved furniture, give things away, leave the home they had finally settled in after years of moving around (they were a military family -- as most people of that generation were). But we are never really prepared to let someone go. Never. Death has a bitter sting. I know that my grandma is better off now, happy, free of pain, and united with all those we have loved and lost. Heaven was made for people like her. But living with death is one of the hellish parts of living on Earth.
We had a service for my grandmother two weeks ago, and it was so very beautiful. It was everything she would have wanted. Our pastor asked the small group who had gathered at our church to share any memories they had of her. I never stood up, I only listened. And in a small way, I wondered if I had let her down by not sharing. But my intent was always to write this post instead for her. Because I always write things better after chewing on them rather than just standing up and talking. So here's what I would want my grandmother to know, and what I would want anyone who reads this to know about Meta Livesay:
I always remember her telling me that when she was young, she would tell her mother that she wished she were older. And her mother always used to tell her "Don't wish your life away. It goes by too fast." She would recall these things with exaggerations and exclamations, really emphasizing the words for me to comprehend when I was young. She would tell me this story time and time again from her recliner, her hair white with years gone by. She would always end the story with "And it did. It went by so fast."
I have spent the latter part of my life studying literature. One thing that alway fascinated me about the Modern period was that there were three poems published in that time by three different poets titled "Portrait of a Lady." And of course, there was the Henry James novel published only a couple decades before. Art has always praised great, graceful, women, and the Modern poets were searching how to classify and capture that species again. While these portraits are not like those found in classical art, there are lines that ring true to me in 2013.
Ideas, old gossip, oddments of all things,Strange spars of knowledge and dimmed wares of price.Great minds have sought you—lacking someone else.Oh, you are patient, I have seen you sitHours, where something might have floated up.And now you pay one. Yes, you richly pay.Trophies fished up; some curious suggestion:Fact that leads nowhere; and a tale or two,That might prove useful and yet never provePregnant with mandrakes, or with something else,That never fits a corner or shows use,Or finds its hour upon the loom of days:The tarnished, gaudy, wonderful old work;--Ezra PoundMy grandmother was patient. She was kind. And through the sea of dementia, memories from far awaywould surface. She loved old things, particularly jewelry -- they were her treasures. She volunteered at a thrift store in Claremont and frequently came home with the most amazing finds. Even though no one else wanted them, she knew their value. A couple years ago I blogged about the collection I took from her stash after she stopped wearing her jewelry. You can read that post here . So in honor of my grandmother, I thought I would post some pictures from my Instagram account of me wearing her jewelry. Something I am proud to continue to do and something I hope brings honor to this lady and the era she came from.Because my grandmother was that classic lady so many writers and artists have searched for. She was that lady who gave up her job at a phone company to raise my dad. She wore fur coats, lipstick and gloves almost daily. She taught me how to type on a typewriter and to love my family more than anything else. She volunteered and gave generously because she loved others, especially animals. She told stories, read and enjoyed home-brewed coffee and meals with dessert.I had started to fear I was nothing like my grandmother. I work constantly and don't want to give that up for a child. I don't wear fur or cook or bake, and rarely wear lipstick or gloves. I haven't volunteered or been very selfless. While I love dessert, I am trying to do without it. But when my stepmother gave me this framed picture of my grandma in her fur coat, she told me that I looked just like her. And it was then that I realized all that made us so similar. My grandma is the reason our family knows how to love so greatly, so fully. And while I may never have my Christmas shopping done in March or the edges of my wrapping paper meeting perfectly, I possess the greatest gift possible, and that is to know what it means to be related to a real-life lady.--T.S. EliotIn a twist that I would have never seen coming, my boyfriend's grandmother passed away on the day of my grandmother's funeral. Marty was 84 and lived in Illinois. She made jewelry, and I wrote about her here. In some of the pictures above I am actually wearing pieces she passed down to me. The world lost two great ladies. And I am so honored to be connected to both of them.My dad's favorite memory of his mother was her saying, "Be good, be careful, have fun." I really like this adage. I think Marty would have liked it too. I wish for a great many things on a daily basis and smile away many of the things I don't want to face. This blog post is an example of something I tried to put off. I tried to evade feeling that sting from death all over again. But since I have been the one left sitting pen in hand, jewelry on fingers, memories intact, it is my duty to talk about dying, about living. It is my job and my privilege to create this portrait of two ladies -- who make me smile.Be good. Be careful. Have fun.
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