Frivolous Universe

thrift store fashion vintage Country Sophisticate blouse mini skirt__with_thigh-high_boots

Mountain Home is one of my favorite places to go thrifting. A small city of 14,000, it is home to Mountain Home Air Force Base.  People are always moving there from all over the country and then moving away. With so much toing and froing, lots of possessions get left behind and donated to thrift stores. A few weeks ago, Kim, Kelly, and I made a foray to Mountain Home to visit Kim’s aunt and uncle and to spend some quality time shopping for vintage and second-hand clothes.

thrift store fashion vintage Country Sophisticate blouse mini skirt__with_thigh-high_boots

The first thing I found while thrifting was a 1960’s pimento green lady’s dress coat for $7.99. The mink-collared coat was in mint condition. My squeal of delight was short lived, however, when I discovered the sleeves were two inches too short for me. Kelly started jumping and simultaneously tried not to throw her two-inch shorter arms up in the air. Our FU rule: If it looks better on someone else, they get it.

Luckily, my disappointment was short lived. Mere moments later, I spied this leopard-print mini. Since I’ve been wearing so many retro, feminine silhouettes to the office, it feels good to switch things up. I coupled the miniskirt with a vintage blouse I found at the same store. It’s a bizarre blend, but somehow these prints complement each other with their spotted texture. Pairing an animal-print mini and modest vintage blouse is so wrong and yet so infinitely right.

thrift store fashion vintage Country Sophisticate blouse mini skirt__with_thigh-high_boots

When we were done thrifting, we headed to Kim’s aunt’s bunkhouse to finish my outfit. Aunt Veronica pulled out these thigh-high bitch-boots from her closet. Kapowlicious. Oh the confessions these boots could tell about Ronnie’s hippie, biker, and bouncer days . . . .  The boots begged to be worn with her thick leather belt.

Kelly and I immediately headed to the wintery yard next door to photograph our thrift store finds. Kim’s uncle Boyd watched from inside and was concerned we would get too cold. Kelly climbed his trees and broke branches to get just the right angles for the photos. Thanks to Kim, we have documentation of the behind the scenes.

Thrift_store_fashion_shoot

After the daylight faded into crimson reds, yellows, and amethyst, we all cozied up around the kitchen table. I filled my belly with fresh cod cooked in vegetable broth from the garden, baked potatoes, salad with feta and pomegranates, and Aunt Ronnie’s famous pickled eggs and beets. I felt sixteen again and more at home in Boyd’s house than I had felt in a long time. Boyd’s home is cozy, humble, and personal–decorated with memories from a life of trail guiding and guitar picking–while most people’s homes are large spaces filled with empty things.

thrift store fashion vintage Country Sophisticate blouse mini skirt__with_thigh-high_boots

Dinner ended and I sat to the side in the kitchen as Kim and Ronnie cleared the table. I observed. Kelly and Boyd migrated to the living room to sit in two coupled arm chairs. Both of them are musicians. They each picked up one of Boyd’s four guitars and began to share their songs. Framed as if on a flickering stage by the kitchen door, Boyd sang Joni Mitchell’s “Circle Game.” Ronnie watched as Kelly smiled and listened and said, “There goes another woman falling in love with the Cowboy.”

Next, Kelly played one of her songs. In it, General Lee of the Civil War lies awake in his tent at 3 A.M., praising the Lord for the young men who will die in battle in a matter of hours. Kelly has a huge voice married to a slight, songbird’s frame, and her lyrics are piercing. The words simultaneously speak to those who believe in war and those who don’t. The chill her song gave me swallowed me whole. It’s the chill of recognition that highlights life’s beauty and tells a person when they or someone else has a gift, a calling. The chill is living awe.

thrift store fashion vintage Country Sophisticate blouse mini skirt__with_thigh-high_boots

Photographer: Kelly Lynae Robinson

Leopard-print polyester mini, MODA International, thrift store, $3.5o
Vintage blouse, Country Sophisticates, thrift store, $4.50
Wool scarf, family trip to Russia 2002
Thick leather belt, Bad-ass Aunt Ronnie’s closet
Thigh-high leather bitch boots, Bad-ass Aunt Ronnie’s closet

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Nicole: Forgive us for our post-Chicago Chicago reprise. But Kelly just developed the second roll of our Lomography four lens camera film and these are the photos that ensued…

K: On our last full day in the windy city, I discovered that I, having planned for NYC prices, had not nearly blown my budget for the trip. (HOW COULD THIS BE?!) So we went vintage shopping in the only clothes we had left that didn’t stink. Nicole got this tee at Shedd Aquarium. We lurved the Jellies.

N: The jellies were super fucking rad!

N:  Sometimes early(ish) mornings and a lack of clean(ish) clothes make for verrry interesting outfits. (Just like camping!)  Here I am wearing Kelly’s sweater vest and floral pants while she rocks out my vintage Lacoste menswear cardigan.

K: As it was our last day together, we decided to celebrate the most hallowed of holidays, our BOOiversary, with the frothy crunch of multicolored macarons. Then we donned evening-wear for a night at the theater.

K: Nicole acted in Mary Zimmerman’s Metamorphoses at Boise State, so we had to see the production she directed for Lookingglass Theatre. We dressed ostentatiously to shock the overabundance of middle-aged people in the audience. (I hear they alone keep theater afloat in this country.)

N: Be it Chicago or Boise or even certain NYC theatres, the blue hairs always manage to get their paws on the creative goods.  Our only way to stand out is to deviate from the standard cocktail dress/suit jacket and tie dress code when we see such a show.  I’m gonna wear a gold lame pantsuit (masquerading as pants) with a purple polyester top.  Maybe you can see the top of the jumpsuit tucked into my stockings…so what?!

K: Oh, you know the bitch can work a muffin-top at the disco. E’rrbody wants a bite! I wore silver-toed booties (hand-painted by me), a silver collar, and a little a lot of exposed neon pink bandeau bra. Also, tuxedo jacket for warmth (not modesty).

N: Believe you me, when the boo is in such a ferocious outfit, getting dressed can be quite a challenge.  We like to compliment/justify each others extreme looks.  It took several tries to get this outfit working.  In the end it was alllllll worth it.

K: In one short week I will be in New York City, and we will have the challenge of dressing together for nine whole days, one of them being my 27th birthday. Woah, officially late twenties. Watch me go.

Next Week: NYC or BUST

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Leave it to the Welsh to have a word for it. Hiraeth: (n.) a homesickness for a home to which you cannot return, a home which maybe never was; the nostalgia, the yearning, the grief for the lost places of your past.

In the sunset of dissolution, Kundera wrote, everything is illuminated by the aura of nostalgia, even the guillotine.

Kim Philley

It’s Thanksgiving week in the U.S., and many of us are homeward bound. We’re wrapping up work and boarding planes, trains, and borrowed cars–transmigrating worlds. Which is greater, Buddha asked, the tears you have shed while transmigrating and wandering this long, long time–crying and weeping from being joined with what is displeasing, being separated from what is pleasing–or the water of the four great oceans?

Kim Philley

This is greater, Buddha answered, the tears you have shed while wandering on.

Kim Philley

I’m still addicted to the wandering on, to samsara, to the world of fabrications. I stumbled upon this immaculate cashmere and wool coat in a Boise consignment store; when I saw it was lined in pale lavender silk with leather-cuffed arms long enough for Gumby, I had to have it.

I believe in warmth and style for the wayfaring–for the long commutes to the homes we cannot keep but are with us now.

 

 

 fabulous photographer: Bethany Walter

Wool-cashmere blend coat with lavender silk lining: Liakes (Piece Unique consignment, Boise); jeans: Rich & Skinny (Fancy Pants, Boise); batik top: Anthropologie; Cece suede ballet flats: J. Crew; snakeskin belt: Bangkok vintage; jade earrings & jade ring: vintage

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