Frivolous Universe

Kelly: Dis ma new coat. It reminds me of Ms. Onassis. Rest assured, I will not wear it with nearly so much class and dignity. In fact, I might cut out dignity altogether. Jackie Oh no she did not get that for eight dollars!

Nicole: While Kelly sasses up her class, I’m gonna class up my trash.  I think it’s quite possible my newly thrifted leather bustier once belonged to a 90’s hooker.

K: I got this coat with Kim and Bethany in Mountain Home last week. We hit up St. Vincent’s something fierce, and I walked away with this union-made, mink-collared beauty. And yes, I was for real, only $7.99. Scores like this make the hand-cramps that come from carrying too many hangers at a thrift store all worthwhile.

N: Not to mention the gross gray hanger fingers…eww.

N: Friday was my 25th birthday (who-hoo! Quarter of a century!), so got myself a prezie! I picked up the bustier from Vice Versa on Bedford, because really, what screams “every day I wake up it feel like my fucking birfday” quite like white leather?

K: My birthday isn’t for another month, so it was a wonderful surprise when Bethany gave me this jangley Middle Eastern necklace last week. I marvel at Bethany’s unflinching generosity. She inspires me to be more willing to part with my treasures. I love how this necklace reads like elaborate costume jewelry and makes music whenever I move. I also love the contrast of skinny jeans, suede shirt, and bold antique silver next to such a soft, ladylike coat.

N: Kelly designed and made me this ah-mazing beaded fringe necklace for our 10 year boo-iversary.  I love how it modernized my ultra-90’s high-waisted pants and bustier combo. I also love how the blue really pops against the solid red bottom half and otherwise red and white palate.

K: Our day trip to Mountain Home was much-needed salve for my soul. The cold landscape, hot tea, gracious hosts, and pickled eggs gave me clarity and perspective in an otherwise trying time in my life.

N: I am jealous of your escapade and the awesome scores and photos that came with it.  Luckily for me my roommate and I are going upstate today to do a little thrifting.  The hurricane has really turned the flow of the city upside down in every way.  While I am  grateful to have made it through the storm with nothing but an inconvenient commute for a few days, it will still be nice to get away from this crazy town for an afternoon.  Pictures to come of what we find!

K: Just don’t blow your wad before I get there on December 1st, mmmmkay?

N: Not unless it’s buying something for your December 2nd birthday!

This post has been brought to you by Nicole’s Ass.

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The clothes we wear have power not only over others, but also over ourselves.

Adam Galinsky
Professor at Kellogg School of Management
Northwestern University

For the last few weeks of being M.I.A, I have been settling into my first office. This is a serious step in my career. I am analyzing everything about this new chapter in my life down to what I wear. Even though “dress for success” is not a new concept, I have been researching what it means for me. Google searched articles advise professional women to wear closed toed shoes, pant suites, and to avoid overly decorative feminine adornments. Greys, blacks, and navies are the suggested color palette. All these helpful tips make a straight jacket sound exciting because at least it would be unexpected. To be fairthere were a couple of articles that advised women to dress traditional but add personality with shoes, belts, and jewelry. Men are supposed to use subtle pattern mixes with their ties, suites, and shirts.

Vintage 70s polyester pants, striped pajama blouse, blouse bow tie, velvet heels, thrift store fashion IdahoSince I am a graphic designer and photographer I have been lucky to have creative leeway in how I dress. Now however as an independent contractor I am meeting with business owners outside the marketing and creative world. I wonder if my playful and colorful aesthetic sense discredits my ability to create appropriate and strategic designs.

Vintage 70s polyester pants, striped pajama blouse, blouse bow tie, velvet heels, thrift store fashion Idaho

New York Time’s Mind Games: Sometimes a White Coat Isn’t Just a White Coat article discusses not only the affects our clothes have on others but also the affects they have on us. Women who wear more masculine clothes in interviews are seen as more intelligent and competent and as a result are more likely to get hired. Research from Professors Hajo Adam and Adam Galinsky of Northwestern University discovered that what we wear affects our cognitive process. This phenomenon scientists refer to as enclothed cognition. Adam and Galinsky learned when people wear a doctor white lab coats, their attention span increases sharply. In one of their studies participants wore the white lab coat, half were told the coats were doctor coats and the others were told the coats were painter coats.  They were then given a test on selective attention based on their ability to recognize incongruities  such as the word red in the color green. Those who thought they were wearing doctor coats made 50% less errors than those who thought they were wearing painter coats.

Vintage 70s polyester pants, striped pajama blouse, blouse bow tie, velvet heels, thrift store fashion Idaho
If clothes have the ability to affect how I perform and performance is most important, I have concluded I should wear clothes that I associate with the traits I want. People might associate conservative and traditional dress with competence and intelligence, but I see it as a uniform and uniforms are for following and conforming. I want to be successful and that means I need to focus on being an individual, an independent, a leader, a creative, a risk taker, experimental, aesthetically versed, and resourceful. My thrift store style is my way of practicing all these traits.

My 70s Ka-Po-wer Suit

Vintage stripped 80s blouse: Cabrais, thrift store, $2.50
Blouse bow: borrowed from another blouse, thrift store, $3
Vintage 70s polyester rust pants: no label, thrift store, $3.50-$5.00
Velvet heels: Sam & Libby, thrift store, $6

Vintage 70s polyester pants, striped pajama blouse, blouse bow tie, velvet heels, thrift store fashion Idaho

Photographs by Marcus Pierce

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Nicole: I see absolutely nothing wrong with wearing shiny leggings during daylight hours

K: Nor should you! I wore those leggings today with silver sneakers. Here are two vintage items we picked up in Chicago: your teal belt, which matches my bra and necklace perfecto, and this fakey fur vest. Do you realize how many muppets had to die?!

N: I’m sure not nearly as many as were sacrificed for Pandora and Mimi’s eleganza.

N: Leggings and a tunic are a pretty basic silhouette, but they make for a good vintage shopping outfit since you can try things on over them easily.  So if you’re gonna go basic, at least make it sparkly!

K: And how! My outfit would be tres predictable if I left it to a black tee and jeans, but my fuzzy vest, flat cap, and exposed bra take it to a higher plane… or to a sluttier plane, as the case may be… (Check out Kim’s exposed bra here.)

N: Always always take it to a sluttier plane if possible.  There’s not much slut to this outfit, but I really like the weird layering of the pink shiny sweater vest over your tunic.

K: Let’s see, what didn’t we tell about Chicago? Most everything. We went to a gay bar to watch the season premier of the new Rupaul’s Drag Race last Monday night. It was amazing, everyone was cheering for their favorite queens. Now I know what normal people must feel like watching their favorite football team in a sports bar.

N: We also saw three great shows.  44 Plays for 44 Presidents, Metamorphoses, and In Pigeon House.  Would definitely recommend all three to anyone in Chicago at the mo, but especially In Pigeon House, which features a fellow Boise State alum!

K: Yeah, Ira Amyx pretty much kicked ass from curtain to curtain. What else?  Oh yeah, we ate LOTS of food. Italian, Southwestern, Russian, Nepalese, Lebanese, and vegetarian.

N: All in all a pretty great trip.  And our hostel roof deck made a great hang out/photo shoot/late night chat spot.

K: And place for you to pose like an American Apparel model. You are wearing their leggings…

Kelly was definitely being the butch one in this photoshoot.

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