Sunday, February 17, 2008

. . . paint on walls . . .
{{{b.burg}}}






Friday, February 15, 2008

teens in uniform:
[an anthropological study of minors on the Lower East Side]

In school, kids of the LES have explicit dress codes: no jeans, collared shirts, no hats, etc. But there's an unspoken dress code for any time not under the watchful gaze of teachers and principals. On the way to school, the journey home, and whenever they can get away with it in between, teens almost universally wear jeans. In school -- generally only after the teacher demands -- they pull a pair of oversized slacks over the offending denim . Even then a few choose to refrain from zipping up the second layer of pants, so they walk around looking like they're in the middle of a striptease.

As you can see, guys are still rockin' the falling-down-jeans aesthetic and slightly askew baseball cap that have been popular for over ten years. They're trying to make these styles timeless. Things that have changed: brighter colors (note hot-blue jacket) and backpacks are now worn on both shoulders. North Face is the brand of the day for both backpacks and coats.

On the ladies its skinny jeans and boldly patterned, princess-sleeved coats. Sneakers on the feet, preferably 80s-bright colors. For jewelry, dangling earrings and large hoops, lots of "gold." The backpack is again NF -- generally JanSport is acceptable, but not as widely acclaimed.

Friday, February 08, 2008

. Melody Lanes .

I could annoy everyone by writing something here that'd you'd see in a magazine -- you know, "Whatever her score on the lanes, she gets a strike for style!" But I'll try to refrain (though the astute reader will accuse me of doing anyway). In any case, nice ensemble. The belt, scarf and stockings make perfect accents to the little red dress. One question: how did she foresee the palate of her rented bowling shoes?

Wednesday, February 06, 2008

Awesome Day!
[field trip : grand finale]







Alright kids, field trip's over.

There's no more to see here.



Seriously, go home.

Monday, February 04, 2008

. . . field trip : day 2 . . .




That fairy coming in for a landing had a secret message to relay, but the tricky print on the dress made him miss her shoulder. He fell hard, forgetting the information, but we gave him some wine and procured the directions to Peter Pan's hideout -- so we're even.



Tune in tomorrow for final episode of this style adventure.

Sunday, February 03, 2008

field trip!

. . . down Penny Lane, across the Seven Seas, and
into the enchanted wardrobe of a style child . . .





to be continued . . .

Friday, February 01, 2008

: Bleeker Street :


These outfits brought to you by gentrification.

Call me a right-wing conspirator, but I must observe: a few short decades ago Bleeker Street was just a faster way to say "whores and junkies" (and not of the romanticized variety you see in magazine ads circa 2008). Now stylefolk such as these two roam the subway platforms.

It can only mean one thing: Giuliani is the lovechild of Superman and Jesus after all.

Monday, January 28, 2008

painted dress

{{{make it}}}

I said it before and I'll say it again:
this is a great chance to get crazy with a paint set.

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Saturday, January 26, 2008

{ T.HANKS for tuning in }

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Puttin' on the Ritz
[he also does a mean "Chim-Chimney"]

It's not what you wear, it's the way that you wear it.

The way this guy inhabits the trombone, the specs, and the head to ankle monochrome set him apart as someone who could wear anything and still have presence. That's the best kind of style there is. Alright, the basketball shoes throw me off a little, but his tunes were rockin' so let's cut him some slack.

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

too cool for school:
Washington Square Park / NYU


And she wants you to know: the beaver fur was sustainably trapped by a wild Minnesota man. Now, before you go thinking about little beaver babies wondering what happened to their dad, imagine this Paul Bunyan character in the woods, eating beaver stew all winter. This guy gave PETA the bird a long time ago, and with good reason: rather than shipping highly processed soy products (wrapped in toxic, non-biodegradable plastic) from a thousand miles away, he catches a few wild mammals, eats them, and makes warm mittens out of their fur. Very little waste, and all biodegradable. Call me old fashioned, but a favor to nature is a favor to beavers everywhere. Those Minnesotans know what's up.
Winter : still here

in Chelsea -- on her way to the Sartorialist's opening

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

: LOLpunk :

Hot, scantily clad kids drinking perfume: seductive, no?

Admittedly, this ad has visual appeal. But when you look closer, something's off. The girl looks appropriately high maintenance, but the guy is less convincing. Since when do punk boys wear cologne? Or drink perfume for that matter? Yeah, yeah, punk got Sold ages ago -- what's interesting is this sort of blend of the punk aesthetic with a more insatiably consumerist, L.A.M.B. sensibility.

What are we supposed do when movements get sold? When the very idea of revolution can be sold on a t-shirt, or as a jug of scent? I see a couple of options.

First option: ethical consumption. Since corporate bigwigs are clearly giving us what they think we want, why don't we figure out what we really want and need and buy it. Unless you'd willingly live your next life as a sweatshop slave, don't let it happen to someone else by pleading ignorance. Pony up for fair trade, legally made, living wage, sustainable shit. Yeah it's more expensive, but that's how much this stuff really costs when labor laws aren't broken to bring it to you for less. Just buy less crap. I know that's really gonna rile the masses, but admit it -- we don't really need half the stuff we own. Besides, the cost argument doesn't work with the designer stuff: it's beyond expensive and still often involved in sweatshop dealings.

Here's another idea (and I'll probably get a cease and desist order for writing this): jack the corporate logos. I'm not talking knockoffs, I mean make fun of that whole paradigm. Buy an old shirt at the thrift store, get a big, fat marker and write "Juicy Couture," "Hollister," or "Prada" across the front all sloppy. You're not stealing anything but their thunder, and it's funnier than a LOLcat.

Monday, January 21, 2008

tie one on

If you were a piece of rope or a skinny old leather purse strap, wouldn't you like to be re-purposed as an accessory for some hottie's waist? Thought so. This kind of thing is probably just lying around the house -- if not yours then your friend's, neighbor's, or parents. Not to mention the thrift store. Use your Powers of Resourcefulness -- a knife or scissors might be helpful too -- and go to it.

Sunday, January 20, 2008

.Cold Snap.

The northern hemisphere has officially frozen into a malicious icicle. The sun is shining, but make no mistake, it's time to break out the serious wintershit. That makes it harder to look hot, but these brave Williamsburg folk managed to bundle up, face the wind, and still look rad.


water

Saturday, January 19, 2008

hobo chic

Whether boho was really over or someone at Harper's Bazaar just f***ed up a memo, it's easy to see that the kids are rockin it hobo style. Finally we can have some fun. All the rules you ever learned about clashing have been thrown out the window, landed on their heads, and are now roaming mall corridors like zombies.

Pair an overtly "ethnic" print with office attire, and mix in a trend that died a decade ago but you secretly never got over. If you look in the mirror and think I couldn't possibly go out like this, then you have it just right. Don't change anything -- unless you're going to add a belt for the finishing touch, because waistlines are back. And yes, wear the belt over a dress, blazer or whatever -- it doesn't have to hold your pants up. I've even seen a couple of guys pull this off. Like I said, no rules. If someone asks, "Does that belt have a function?" (as if that's the only fashion sin you're committing) smile mischievously and say, "Yes, it defines my waist. Isn't it doing a great job?"

The best part about hobo chic is that even the picked-over thrift stores still have this stuff in them -- these items were abandoned long ago by anyone with a glimmer of style. So rescue the cloth orphans, get experimental, and remember this quote from designer Christian Lacroix: "very often the most exciting outfits are from the poorest people" (from Vogue, April 1994).

Friday, January 18, 2008

dawn of the dead

Thursday, January 17, 2008

War on Drugs:
an update

Am I right to assume that this woman is supposed to look like she just slammed some pretty good heroin?

Before our government declared war on Terror, it threw lots of money at finding and confiscating mind-altering substances. For most of us, this conceptual war seems like a relic from the '80s, but it was initiated by Nixon in 1971. Apparently, when people started to think for themselves about how they would, or would not, participate in mainstream U.S. culture (as was the case with 1960s counterculture), Nixon blamed drugs.

After all, who in their sober mind would not want to live the American Dream: a house in the suburbs, a wife with an Old Fashioned in hand at the end of every day of your 40 hour week -- only 32 more years till retirement! In your free time golf a little, wife-y can shop at the mall and raise a couple of thankless offspring who won't take care of you later on. Instead, you'll go to the Old Folks' Home until it's all over. If it took psychedelics to clue people in to the drab futility of modern existence, well, that just shows you how well everyone had been brainwashed by "the Protestant ethic and the spirit of capitalism" (to accurately if inappropriately quote Max Weber).

Meanwhile, Timothy Leary is telling everyone to "turn on, tune in, and drop out," but the government couldn't let that happen -- there were taxes to be collected. If the Merry Pranksters had declared Nixon the winner of one of their surprise trips, things might have been very different. But they didn't, and he conjured up his War with Leary and the Pranksters heading the list of Most Wanted.

At some point the government did succeed in putting a serious lid on the availability of coke, LSD, heroin, and so on. It doesn't take a mad scientist to hypothesize that -- in a true display of human ingenuity -- this was probably when huffing was popularized and crystal meth invented. You can take drugs from the people, but you can't take the people from drugs. Besides, the biggest pushers (pharmaceutical drug companies) were never pursued, so people of all ages are addicted to painkillers, anti-depressants, ADD meds -- you name it.

The government doesn't talk too much about the War on Drugs anymore -- they have more pressing matters at hand. But make no mistake, they're still spending billions of dollars on it. And peddlers of clothing and perfume are left to use images of drug-induced euphoria to seduce us.

"ouch."
I hope they gave this model real drugs, because you'd need something good to endure lying almost naked on all that dry grass. I bet she was itchy for the rest of the day -- or maybe the drug-like Promise of Fame was enough to ease her pain.

But here's the real question: if these images are seductive because we're secretly bored as hell and dissatisfied with life in general, why would we waste money on perfume or a slip? Why not buy what they're really selling?

Wednesday, January 16, 2008


Revenge of the Smock


Break out the champagne! Anyone who ever ruined their favorite shirt (or dress, apparently) while painting but couldn't bear to get rid of it can stop pouting. Dig said item out from the back of the closet, pair with a sweet bag, and your mistake has been reborn as high fashion. It's like a "get out of jail free" card, but more colorful.



I'm all for the paint-smeared aesthetic, just don't ask me why Dolce & Gabbana is selling this shirt for $550. Buy an acrylic paint set for $10 and make one yourself -- it's a lot more fun than buying it anyway. If you're really ambitious, throw a shirt-making party: upon arrival all guests must go topless until their shirt is finished. Other rules may be concocted as you see fit: shirt swapping at set intervals, rewards for winners, punishments for losers. . .

Yeah, you're right. It won't say Dolce & Gabbana on the tag, but when the company's reportedly guilty of overworking and underpaying its labor crew, the name kind of loses its luster anyway. . .

Monday, February 05, 2007


sweet sweater.

If your grandma's wallpaper leapt onto a hanger, this is what it would look like. Phrases like "Partridge Family," "button up," and "nickel between your knees" come to mind. The earrings add just the right edge. This is a girl who knows how to dress but doesn't need to show off.

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

Block E baby. on the corner, that is. . .
I didn't know they made shoes like this. Hi-top boots?! They clash so horribly it's wonderful -- it's so rare to find something truly surprising. And she wears them just right, not trying too hard yet showing off all the goods. Nice.



The askew bike helmet perfectly completes his pink n' blue neo-kindergarden style. It just screams "Let's get a quarter from Mom and ride our trikes over to the ice cream truck!"
In a good way.



I found this sweet scarf in Uptown. It's made of pink and yellow stripes that offset the denim and looks just right.