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Nicole: Subtly. Slutty.

Those two words capture 90% of my outfits. What is subtly slutty?  It’s exactly what it sounds like.  It’s when someone looks at your ensemble and thinks, “Man, there is something slutty about that outfit, but I can’t quite put my finger on it…” It’s a flash of skin or a peak of lingerie, but in a way that is unexpected.  It is not this. Or this.

The outfit I wore to my work holiday party last week is one of my best subtly slutty looks to date.

Sheer maroon lace shirt and sheer blue velvet blouse as skirt.

Victoria's Secret lace shirt, blue velvet shirt as skirt, purple tights, croc-skin pumps

N: Wait, did I say blue velvet blouse as skirt? That’s right mo-fo’s I did.

Victoria's Secret lace shirt, blue velvet shirt as skirt, purple tights, croc-skin pumps

Kelly: I love how this is a conservative silhouette (crew-necked shirt, mid-length “skirt”, tights, pumps) and the sheerness is really the only slutty element. That’s why the subtle-slutty works here. You want a look that says, “I am not a pretty-girl stereotype”, but also “I have condoms”

N: The lace shirt is thrifted and originally from Victoria’s Secret, of all places. The blue blouse I picked up the day of the party from A Little Wicked  on Houston.  To tuck the blouse into high-waisted pants or a skirt would’ve been far too obvious, especially after last week’s post.  Enter fashion inspiration from Anne-Catherine Frey and google video chat so the Boos can still make outfits together and you get this: Shirt as Skirt.

Victoria's Secret lace shirt, blue velvet shirt as skirt, purple tights, croc-skin pumps

K: When we saw the picture of Anne-Catherine, we thought it would be easy to imitate, but it took us over an hour to find a combo that worked. We wanted an interesting color palette but a clean silhouette, which was surprisingly difficult with the shirt’s sleeves tied in a big knot on the front.

N : After you get over the excitement that is me wearing a top as a bottom, you’ll notice that you can entirely see my bra.  Wearing a simple, triangle cut bra that gives me no cleavage makes the full-bra-expose subtly slutty.

stripy American Apparel bra, Victoria's Secret lace shirt, blue velvet blouse as skirt

N: Keep the color story going with purple tights and emerald croc-skin pumps with purple sequins.

Blue velvet blouse as skirt, purple tights, Banana Republic croc-skin sequined pumps

N: Final touch: antique Armor Bijoux earrings from Turkmenistan.

K: Love these accessories. This outfit looks lavish and sumptuous (lace, sequins, velvet) without sacrificing simplicity.

Armor Bijoux antique earrings from Turkmenistan and Victoria's Secret lace shirt

N: Special appearance by Mona the cat.

K: I must mention the importance of the hairstyle in making a look like this work. The top-knot is minimalistic, elegant, and makes you look tall tall tall. It’s our go-to hairstyle to offset an out-there outfit.

Victoria's Secret lace shirt, blue velvet shirt as skirt, purple tights, croc-skin pumps

K: My New Year’s party was the same one everyone went to at the VAC. When I’m going to be seen in public with the Frivolous ladies, I take special care in selecting my outfit. It’s not easy to live up to such fabulous friends. This vintage Junior Time 50s floral cocktail dress with matching belt cost five bucks at the Salvation Army.

N: Winter is such a great time to wear good jewel tones and florals.  They really help to liven up the short, grey days.

vintage 50s junior time cocktail dress, new years at the visual arts collective

K: I generally resent the 50s fashion aesthetic that squeezes my waist, restricts my diaphragm, and turns me into a caricature of a woman. But every now and then, I immerse myself into the deluded fantasy of the 50s and embody that pretend woman of infinite poise and grace who takes seemingly endless pleasure in polishing her kitchen appliances.

To take the edge off, I wore sheer knee-high floral stockings with vintage purple Italian suede pumps, and, by the end of a night of dancing, they were around my ankles. Keeping with the jewel tones: vintage 70s Etra suede purse.

pulling up stockings, vintage 50s Junior time cocktail dress, etra suede purse clutch chain strap

K: Having no costume jewelry (How can this be?!), I borrowed these vintage clip-ons from Bethany (who also took these photos). This Banana Republic flower ring was a gift from my friend Tina seven years ago.

N: You mean you didn’t just want to wear a string of pearls?  What kind of lady are you?!

Clip on earrings, Banana Republic flower ring, giorgio armani glasses

K: This is as close as I can get my hair to look like Laura Dern’s hair in David Lynch‘s Blue Velvet. I love the mix of 50s and 80s aesthetics in this film, beautifully reflected in Laura’s hairstyles.

N: I fully support your decision to channel your inner Laura Dern.  Love the little wave you have going on to keep the look from being too polished.

K: Plus, David Lynch is a freak, in the most wonderful way possible. Every frame is a work of art.

K: I feel like a walking work of art in this print. (Sequitur? Anyone?) The colors are so vibrant.

K: I looked up Junior Time and found two long-sold dresses on Etsy, but no brand info. They’re both gorgeous. Obvs prints were their specialty.

Junior Time 50s floral print dress

K: Even though I love a good vintage dress, I still have to wear it in a way that feels like me, not Donna Reed. The stockings, tattoos, and glasses are my way of knocking down the demure a notch or two. I choose jewel tones for the shoes and bag instead of a more formal black or metallic

Vintage Junior Time 50s floral cocktail dress, Italian suede pumps

K: I don’t care about chasing a trend or following hot new designers. I want to wear colors, prints, fabrics, shapes, and textures that I love in a way that only I would wear them. I want to make someone stop and think before they write me off. I would like to give the real me a fighting chance to get through.

Forget “dress to impress”, I want to dress to confuse. I’ll drink to that.

N: Couldn’t have said it better myself.  Isn’t fashion much more fun this way?

Vintage Dress 40s 50s Junior Time New Year's toast

We want our clothes to say, “I am not a stereotype. You have to get to know me.”

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Early in 2011, I read an inspiring post on creativity (and writing) by Austin Kleon, called “How To Steal Like an Artist.”

I still have several of his sort-of koans posted at eye level in my office. Every time I read one, I feel like maybe I can do this thing called the pursuit of happiness (which to me = writing):

» Steal like an artist.
» Use your hands.
» Side projects and hobbies are important.
» Creativity is subtraction.
» Geography is no longer our master.
» Be nice.
» Do good work, then put it where people can see it.
» Garbage in, garbage out.

And finally, the one I have relied on for solace more than any others:
» Fake it ’til you make it

Because for me, 2011 was a non-stop brutal year of rapid-fire growth and hard realizations (mostly about my own behavior). Originally designed to be a smallish side project, Story Story Night became an entity with a hunger and need and force all its own. At the same time, my copywriting business expanded steadily in scope and project load, and I have a way of being unable to say no while being completely unrealistic with deadlines.

Nobody ever talks about what happens when the sh*t hits the fan and you achieve the great fallacy known as “success.” You are tortured day and night by the weight of it. You feel like a failure most of the time. You (okay I) gain 20 pounds. You live in a undying fog of your own red alerts. You cry and vomit so, so pathetically much.

But you just fake it ’til you make it. Vintage silver and gold metallic polka dot dress (gift from Kelly from a thrift story in Mountain Home). Black leggings ($3.75-thrift store). Merrell fleece-lined boots $12 (REI garage sale).

This doesn’t mean being fake. More biting off more than you can chew. Stepping into bigger shoes than you can fill. Those sort of metaphors.

This is what I mean. From 0 to 24, I was so shy I barely spoke to anyone. Before copywriting, I was a complete and utter short-term incompetent at nearly every job I had, especially my excruciatingly awkward stint as a waitress at the Outback Steakhouse. Until my late 20s, I was terrible at clothing choices. I was a punk, a grunge, a weirdly Mormon/lesbian-looking preppie, but never myself.

But eventually you do grow into your own dreams. Then your own skin. Then you fake it to another level. Armor Bijoux antique Afghanistani silver and glass necklace ($$$). Art deco silver earrings ($1-Antique World Mall). Gold leaf headband ($11-some discount store in Baxter, MN).

Speaking of, I’ll be on Radio Boise (89.9 FM) today from noon to 1pm on a show called the Writers’ Block. Tune in if you can. The internets now offer it up too. You see what I mean though? How insane is a one hour radio interview? I guess I’ll find out.

Because I fake it til I make it.

Then rock on.

Addendum 1:

This year, I am adding one more crucial point, a huge life lesson I learned in 2011:

» You get by with a little help from your friends

Thank you Anna D., for being there in the grueling trenches with me and for your brilliant ideas and inspiration as a co-leader of Story Story Night. Thank you Kelly Lynae, for kicking ass in such a tremendous way on your copywriting subcontracting. Thank you Bethany, for reminding me how amazing collaboration can be with Frivolous Universe. (And for these, and all the other, fantastic photos.) Thank you Kim for your stunning soul, and for letting me visit you in Bangkok (eventually). Thank you Nicole, for your non-stop daring and non-stop booty, and for letting me visit you in New York (soon).

Thank you Sam Stimpert and Anneliessa Balk at Visual Arts Collective, the art/music/theater/awesomeness venue that played host to this frivolous New Years Eve party. I know the VaC journey has been long and torturous, but what a vision, and what a place. We look forward to our new Story Story Late-Nights there.

And big thanks to Jen Pascoe for her extraordinary nutritional counseling over the last several months, and for reminding my mind again about my body, and vice versa.

Here’s to 2012.

Unnecessarily Graphic Addendum 2:

I wore this dress on New Years Eve. By the end of New Years Day, still on my pitiful body, it had undergone a graphic horrorshow of alcohol sweat and 12 hours of projectile vomiting. What a trooper.

Here’s to less vomit (and less booze) in 2012.

Photographer: Bethany Walter

Comments

Nicole: It’s officially getting cold here in the city.  No snow yet, but cold. Which only means one thing.  I finally get to wear the best thing I purchased before leaving Boise…the acid-washed, fur-lined denim jacket I bought for 35 dollars at The Lux.  I can wear a tank top under this baby and still be warm.  So. Wonderful.

Kelly: Viva la acid wash! A subtle, sophisticated color palette does wonders in modernizing this much-despised fabric of the 80s (even by some of our fellow bloggers. Gasp!) I love the muted blush, blue, and caramel with a jewel-toned pant.

N: I picked this outfit to go with the jacket: high-necked blush polyester blouse and teal jeans, both purchased second hand.  The jeans are originally from American Apparel. I got them for eight dollars. They usually run around $65.  Woo-hoo! I  love a good, frilly high collar.  So demure…that’s why I wear a black bra underneath.  You don’t wanna be too demure…

N: I love that this thrifted taupe belt has a taupe buckle, as well.  Belts that are one solid color are great because you don’t have to worry about matching gold or silver fastenings to your jewelry.

K: Word, and taupe is a much more interesting neutral than black or brown.

N: My good friend Jaime gave me this antique pendant as a going away gift.  On the back, she had engraved “fall down running.”  I paired it with this crappy old H&M tassle-chain necklace to add a little more texture. I love all the detailing on this blouse.  Pleats and ruffles and poofs, oh-my!

K: This blouse is one of my favorites of yours. We bought it on one of our first thrifting trips when the wide world of blouses first opened up to us. The racks in Savers were full of vintage blouses both ugly and lovely.  For some reason, instead of giggling at them and passing on to the next thing (because blouses are for grannies) we tried a bunch on and found a handful that worked. Not just for grannies.

N: I always aim to tell a good color story when I dress.  These multi-color knit socks have both the blush from the blouse and the teal from the jeans and they make the bottom half of my outfit 10 times more interesting than if I just wore my jeans straight with the black booties.

K: We’ll say it again – details, details, details!

K: Nothing says, “Why the eff won’t it snow?” like my 90s silver velour turtleneck and Christmas-present-from-Nicole jeans. This turtleneck is absurdly out-of-fashion, so I took pity on it at the thrift store and took it home. I bet I can work it into some divinely textural layered looks. Remember the floral shirt Nicole found at the yoga studio?

N: These jeans were in the same backpack.  My ass was too big for them, so I shipped them off to Kelly.  Maybe they were sad to part with the blouse, but it’s all for the better. Really.

K: These pants fit my ass like they were spray-painted on. I could have tried on 85,000-ish pairs of jeans at the mall and not found a pair that fit me this well. I feel that they were meant for me… and most importantly freeeeee.

K: I crocheted two more pairs of these alpaca mitts for gifts this year after making this pair for myself.  This belt buckle is too big to fit between the belt loops, so I improvised. Jeans not recommended for cowboys or wrestlers.

N: I love the mixing of so many textures.  Velour, wool, knits, plaids, denim…so cozy!

K: For some reason this masculine-inspired outfit cried out for a luxe, feminine shoe. When I wore these vintage purple suede pumps in a previous blog, it was with a sweeping skirt worthy of their old-fashioned charm, but I enjoy the contrast of wearing them with jeans and a flat cap.

N: A jeans and heels combo is usually so expected and boring.  Rolling up the cuffs instantly makes the line more interesting.

K: Plus a wool, vintage, thrifted jacket with a contrast color under the collar. Many thanks to Bethany for my pictures.

For us, frivolity and frugality go hand in hand.

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