AMuse About
  • Newly Acquired
  • August31st

    Natasha Gan dress (worn as skirt), Witchery silk blouse, Steve Madden ‘Averry’ heels, Mulberry ‘Margaret’ bag, Marvin belt, necklace and bracelets from Rumour. Shot in Surry Hills and Moore Park.

    There are some items of clothing that wear themselves. Designed by unhinged creative geniuses, made of the most exquisitely delicate fabrics and cut to a millimetre of measured perfection, their existence is to be marveled at. You wear them with pride, knowing full well they’re actually wearing you in a role you accept with humility. It’s your go to piece – the one you bit the bullet and bought, hoping it would be the emergency showstopper your wardrobe needed. And it was.

    Owning a piece like that is not so different from raising a prodigy child. From the very day they enter this world, they are destined for greatness. First musical composition at 5, university at 14, whatever it may be, they’re self-explanatory and you love them for their simplicity and sheer brilliance. You almost can’t believe they’re yours, your pride and everybody’s joy. Yet at the same time, being around such greatness proves high maintenance. Not wanting to stifle their creativity and development, you labour over their protection, treating them somewhat too preciously. You lose sleep over them, worry needlessly about them. You know that a creation like this doesn’t come around twice and yet the more you stress, the deeper you get thrown into the reality that their existence has already outshone, no, eclipsed your own.

    Then there are the clothes that are imperfect from the outset, that you buy anyway. Be it one inkling or another, they satisfy your need at that point in time. In some ways, these pieces are a lot like adopted children. They’re not things you have that intangible connection to but something about them does catch your eye as a little spark, a certain je ne sais quoi compels you to take them home and entertain these curiosities further. There’s something about them that, humbled by the many before you who have bypassed without so much as a second glance, yearns for a place to belong.

    At that point in time, you don’t understand completely what their addition into your life will bring. But you give them time, consideration and a great deal of patience and slowly, you make inroads. You watch them grow and blossom before your eyes, with their own individual character and quirks, as the two of you become inextricably tied with one another.

    This dress is my adopted child. When I bought the metallic frou frou number last week, my shopping companion was a little bemused and largely horrified. Why on earth had I bought the strapless, ostentatiously coloured poofy creation reserved solely for the tacky discos of the 50′s? Without any real idea myself, all I knew was that I loved the volume, the oomph, the look at me factor. And somehow, just somehow, I was going to make it scream va va voom without blinding unsuspecting onlookers with its Marie Antoinette levels of excess.

    By highlighting the things I adored and tzuj-ing the things I didn’t, the result was a statement ‘skirt’ that I loved. With its awesomely abundant circumference, it blocks me from any chance of colliding with other pedestrians but more importantly, wearing it makes me want to sing and dance and be on my merry galloping way, as few items of clothing have ever done.

    Sometimes when you give things, people, ideas a chance, it pays off. By keeping an open mind, you also open up possibilities you never fathomed existed, proving that there is always a silver lining to everything.

    But in this case, it’s gold.

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  • August22nd

    Therese Rawsthorne dress, Steve Madden heels, Peter Lang cuffs. Shot in Coogee.

    Seven days. One whole week. That’s how long a reprieve I was able to offer your poor eyes until now. In launching another back-centric Therese number on you again, I just wanted you to know that I really did hold off for as long as I could. Believe me, I did try. I looked at alternative items in the wardrobe, contemplated other labels that have been sorely neglected these past weeks during my ongoing Rawsthorne affair. But I just couldn’t help myself.

    Sure, we were fond of the last one, I hear you say, but isn’t this getting a bit much?

    To be honest with you, I feel like I’m cheating on my clothes. It’s as if when I darted to take this one off the hanger, I pretended my eyes can’t see the other dresses up there, waiting and silently suffering. They were shouting to me through their colours, teasing me with their delicate lace details and winking at me via sequin embellishments.  Some pieces were passive-aggressive, repressed by their own simplicity, other glamorous numbers were offended by their pride but all were hurt at having their loyalty and patience be taken for granted.

    So what if it’s got a sexy back? Tell that to Justin Timerlake – we don’t care for cheap frills, they say. And those pleats? I have pleats – hundreds of them! The moment I even begin to hint at the beautiful volume of the skirt, I am silenced by the statement that fat hasn’t been fashionable since the 19th century. Then one of my older dresses finishes it up by being an Asian mother – she’s bad news for you, you’ll catch a cold!

    As I continue to have this internal dialogue with the newly formed gang, I know I’ve been cornered. Yes, it’s cotton, not the silk I’ve pledged my undying love to. Yes, it’s white and and will only send me broke with dry cleaning bills. And I know, I know, I wouldn’t be able to take it anywhere respectable. But like all who superficially stray, what good is logic in times like these?

    We forget the staples that saved us in the humble years, the preppy companions that helped us fit in at university and the once-worshiped knockouts that marked all those birthdays, anniversaries and glamourous nights out. This is just a summer fling, I try to reason, knowing full well that they themselves owe their existence to S/S and F/W sketchbooks – even inanimate objects know about seasons. I live in the southern hemisphere, so even spring has yet to arrive, let alone summer. That argument was a good three months too early. Having lost the defense, there’s nothing left to do in this situation but to admit that I have been unfaithful, apologise for all the hurt I have caused and promise never to do it again.

    Once the shoot is over, I take a deep sigh and resign myself to the task of  putting the dress, with which I have shared a fleeting moment, back in the closet, hidden somewhere where the others won’t find it. And if one day, I wake to find the damsel splattered with violent red wine stains, I’ll know that the culprit is also hiding, somewhere in the maze of my walk-in.

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  • August17th

    Ebony Eve sequined top, Saba silk skirt, Tristan Blair booties, Mulberry ‘Margaret’ bag, Esprit belt, Sportsgirl stockings, necklace (worn as bracelet) from Surry Hills markets. Shot in Newtown.

    Like many young girls growing up in the 90′s, I had a Julia Roberts thing. I thought she was beautiful and regardless of how bad her films were (my tastes were not yet developed), I loved them. I remember crying when Shelby died in Steel Magnolias and secretly egging on Julianne’s home-wrecking ways in My Best Friend’s Wedding, back in a time when I believed all guy/girl best friend relationships were meant to end in wedding bells. What was the point of being best friends if you weren’t going to marry each other?!

    And of course, let’s not forget the godmother of all romantic comedies that proceeded it: Pretty Woman. Way before I even understood the essence of what a prostitute was or what they did for a living, I was already lost in the endearing story of a warm, quirky, unpolished girl from the wrong side of the tracks melting the heart of a rich, successful yet emotionally crippled businessman. I may have also been lost in Richard Gere’s smouldering eyes but that fact is only incidental.

    It was a modern day Cinderella story told with flashy cars, beautiful clothes and Roxette playing in the background. In this Garry Marshall retelling, meeting and falling in love with the right person can change your life in the most amazing ways and if he happens to be debonair and rich, then that’s just like having your cake, eating it too and never having to gain a pound.

    It feels as if we’ve been flirting with the fairy tale notion of being swept off our feet into the perfect world of happily ever after since infancy. The journey begins with Prince Charming and that big castle and somehow morphs into the divorce lawyer with a cute daughter (see Patrick Dempsey in Enchanted). Yet as a young adult, as much as I still love these films for their entertainment value and warm and fuzzy afterglow, I find it hard to relate with the happily ever after dream.

    Rather, I love that life is full of these imperfections, big and small, that somehow make the journey feel all the more real and tangible. There’s great strength and satisfaction that comes with knowing that you are as much, if not more, accountable for your own happiness as the person you choose to make a life with. All the wonderful people and shoes, yes shoes, that make life better are just the gravy on top. And as much as I love the damsel look in clothes, the only rescuing I want is from Emergency Services in the event of a natural disaster.

    And in a my life partner, I ask not that he be tall, dark and handsome (the Boy actually comes with Scandinavian complexion) with money to burn on Minolos. Rather, that he be my equal and that we share an engaged, exciting life together and continue to learn from each other and the world.

    Oh, and that he continues to follow me with a camera. That’s a not negotiable.

     

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  • August15th

    Therese Rawsthorne ‘Dusky’ silk singlet, Topshop paneled leggings, Steve Madden heels, Peter Lang gold cuffs, Saba straw hat. Shot in La Perouse.

    The moment I picked up this beautiful top, the fashion blogger in me knew it was destined to be in front of the camera lens. There is something almost magical about the way it’s so deceptively simple at the front, yet with the slightest lingering glance is an invitation to discover the tiny delicate masterpiece on show behind. The neckline twists a little, drawing the eyes slowly across, then behind, to the plunging drape that flows, almost cape-like, fluidly continuing beyond where the front gaze left off.

    As beautiful as it is, like Mariah Carey in a beauty salon, this shirt is high maintenance. Being a delicate silk, handling with care is already a given but as a showstopper, it’s uncompromising. You don’t work it around other pieces, it’s the other way around, baby. It doesn’t like to be paired with anything loud, textured, or scraggy so put down those red vintage jeans before anybody gets hurt. It deserves more love and attention than that. And lets’ not get started on the need to abandon feminine ‘support’ because unsightly straps would totally cramp its sophisticatedly sheer street style. With so many restrictions, I’m surprised I wasn’t handed a rider with my receipt at the till.

    And yet the elements that make it difficult to wear are so intrinsically tied with what makes it one of a kind in the first place. For that, I cannot hate it; in a curious way, it makes me love it more. When you finally come up with a thoughtful ensemble that works not just around but with it, there’s a satisfaction in knowing it’s not a fashion fluke.

    Some clothes you can wear with everything, but it’s the ones that stand on their own feet (or in this case, tail) that will be remembered in their own right.

     

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  • August10th

    Therese Rawsthorne ‘Nymph’ silk dress, camilla and marc slip, Tristan Blair ‘Therese’ heels, Marvin belt, Chloe ‘Margaret hobo bag, Peter lang gold cuff. Shot in Centennial Park.

    My best friend has recently returned home, after an intense year of oriental escapades in China, perfecting her Putonghua and refreshing her ability to haggle with the fiercest of locals.

    With almost a decade of friendship behind us, our adventures together have played out equal parts overseas and equal parts in Australia. Though we never went to the same high school or university (until final year), we were always involved in the life events that mattered. We’ve shopped until we dropped, in ringgit and energy, at every department store ever built in KL and had too much fun raiding wholesale garment markets in Delhi. We’ve even done village life together, as young volunteers in the mountainous regions of South India and as visitors to my grandmother’s village in Vietnam one year. Let’s also not forget the long distance friendship conducted over my year in France and more recently, hers by the Yangtse River.

    So what do two newly reunited friends do on their first day out in Sydney together? I think that’s a no brainer.

    Shopping together was always a fundamental part of our friendship and conditioned by its regular occurrence over the years, we’ve developed some unique consumer habits of our own. Being similarly partial to silk and feminine details, it is not unheard of that we buy the same thing, breeding twins in our respective wardrobes. However, if there is a particular item that we both like, and it just so happens to be the last one there, the person who made contact with it first gets to take it home. In a world where such unspoken codes are honoured, it pays to have good reflexes.

    Having raided the collections of Therese Rawsthorne the day earlier and come home with a new wardrobe myself, I had to share with her what all my fuss was about. Everything was going smoothly until she realized that there was a dress she forgot to pick up and try on whilst in the change room. Being her fashion Wing Woman, so to speak, I quickly darted off to grab it, arriving just seconds short to see another customer pick it up. It was the last one.

    For the next half an hour or so, I spent my time in the store eyeing that very customer, willing her to put that dress down. Her body language looked indecisive and my own partiality to my friend convinced me the dress would look better on my companion anyway. I discreetly trailed her for a couple of laps around the room, waiting to jump the moment she set the dress free, before I realised how shady this might have looked to sales staff who were not accustomed to how literally I took the concept of fashion wars.

    In the end, I had to let it go. To be honest, I don’t think she minded. It was as if I took on a personal mission of my own and became too involved and proud to surrender.

    Regardless of outcome, this is just another example of how we look out for one another in the change rooms, just as we would in the real world.

    This is the very dress I had to let go of for her. Thankfully, I’d secured mine the night before.

     

    *I was very tempted to make a play on The Bro Code, as popularized by Barney Stinson, but the lady in me couldn’t bring myself to title a post The Ho Code.

     

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