Lingerie Lust List

The lingerie that I'm currently drooling over!

 

With Love Lingerie - Courage Brass Lion's Head Garter

I'm a bit of a Game of Thrones geek, and this just screams Lannister to me! 

 

Crystal Bra 

I love blinged up bras, so I've had my eye on this for a while. If it were in gold I'd have already snapped it up, as I always wear gold and rarely wear silver. There is a black version too, which is tempting. The only issue is the website seems a bit odd. Hopefully the quality is decent!

 

Galstern - Moulin Rouge hand printed tights 

I'm always on the lookout for interesting tights and stockings, especially gold (WHY are there no decent gold-topped fully fashioned stockings?!). I tend to prefer stockings to tights, but these are so beautiful. I also love these lace print ones. 

 

Amoralle - Bleeding Heart Bodysuit

I don't think I've written about how much I love Amoralle (previously Sockbox). Unfortunately I don't have/can't justify spending roughly £200 on a bodysuit, but oh my god all of their designs are complete perfection. Also, their robes make me cry, in a good way.

 

Femme-Dandy Finds: Tailored Trousers

I've recently become a little obsessed with Esther Quek's style. You'd expect the fashion director of dashing menswear magazine, The Rake, to be well-versed in men's fashion. Just looking at her, you can tell she knows a thing or two about dressing dapper. 

 

 

I love seeing tailored womenswear, so I thought I'd pick out a few of my favourite tailored trousers from the high street shops.

 

ASOS Peg Trousers in Stripe

I'm just going to say I HATE PEG TROUSERS. Unless you happen to be a 6ft model and wear heels constantly, they aren't going to look all that flattering. However, the print (you can't really see the gold stripe in this image) on these trousers really drew me in, and I couldn't help grabbing them in the sale. Wear with a sheer blouse or shirt to balance out the masculine baggyness. 

 

 

New Look - Mela Navy Chain Print Trousers

This kind of print is just like marmite, love it or hate it. I keep skipping between the two, but I think if it were worn with a un-printed but well-tailored blazer, it could work in a dandy way. 

 

 

Boo Hoo - Loren Harlequin Panel Trousers

Love these! The only things I would say that are offputting about them is that the pattern within the panel is not straight (perhaps that's just my OCD talking!)

 

Boo Hoo - Tash Chiffon Tribal Print Trousers

I've been looking for this kind of print in trousers (although I definitely wouldn't call this tribal print), and these actually look like a decent length. There's nothing I hate more than above-ankle trousers. 

 

 

This Month In Pictures

What I've been up to during the past month, via my instagram @swiczeniuk!

 

 

Top Left & Top Right - I spent the past week in Cornwall visiting my parents. They live in the town opposite St. Michael's Mount (right), having moved there when they retired. I've been holidaying in Cornwall since I was very young, so it's a place that means a lot to me! Plus, as you can see, it's beautiful!

Bottom Left - I managed to grab a beautiful new fringed and embellished capelet for just £10 (down from £60)!

Bottom Right - Now that I've finished the Game of Thrones books, this is my current read. China Mieville's writing is astounding (and quite striking after reading George R. R. Martin!); I've read a number of his books. I love the bizarre worlds he creates, that are familiar enough to be chilling. 

 

 

Top Left - Playing Bioshock Infinite on the 100 inch projector screen! I still haven't finished it yet :( 

Top Right - Another of my recent purchases, that I absolutely LOVE. I had a bit of a google hunt for this, but I'm so glad I got it. I wore it to The Burning Beat and it drew quite a lot of attention.

Bottom Left - One of my looks for The Burning Beat. It's a bit of a mash of cultures and inspirations.

Bottom Right - After a bit too many drinks with my friend Kerry <3 

Audio: David Byrne and St. Vincent

I've realized that I don't really blog much about one of the biggest loves of my life (possibly because much of my spare time is spent playing it): Music. So, from time to time, I'll recommend an album or musician. It might be something new, or it might be old (this is far more likely), it might be "mainstream" or it might be something obscure. 

I was brought up listening to Captain Beefheart, Frank Zappa, Miles Davis and Prince, among others. My tastes are varied and accepting, I do not stick to genres just because I feel like I should. I have some terrible pop music in my itunes, sitting next to classic and rare gems. 



This time, I'm talking about David Byrne and St. Vincent's album "Love This Giant"

Talking Heads was one of the bands I grew up hearing, that I now tend to listen more to in the Spring and Summer (weird right? I listen to a lot of Tom Waits in the winter, unsurprisingly). Their songs are always positive in sound, even though the lyrics may not have such happy connotations. Unfortunately Talking Heads ceased to be in 1991, when I was 2, but it's what lead singer David Byrne, of over-sized suit and crazy dancing fame, has been up to since (and during that time) that I also love.

In 1981, 8 years before I was born, Byrne teamed up with Brian Eno to record "My Life in the Bush of Ghosts". I only just discovered this album (via my ever-knowledgeable boyfriend) a few years ago and was surprised to read the release date. As with many ground-breaking records, it could have been a modern release. One of the first albums to use samples, "My Life..." is bizarre, created out of "found" objects, from the instruments used to the vocals sampled (one of which is the voice of an exorcist). Find time to play it. Loudly. 

Between then and 2012, Byrne has done a lot of other things. Albums, talks, exhibitions, etc, but that would involve rambling a lot and I just wanted to mention "My Life in the Bush of Ghosts" before getting on with the main point. 

I hadn't previously heard much from St. Vincent, although she has worked with David Byrne on various projects. This collaboration was initially only going to be for a single live performance, but once brass was added to the musical line-up, they were inspired to use that sound as a base to write the rest of the music. They began in 2009, and released the album in September 2012. 

What I love about the music they created is each little inspiration and mood both parties brought to the sound, and the strong brass moving throughout. The album is uplifting yet melancholic. 

They released "Who" as the first single, with this music video.



David Byrne and St. Vincent are touring Northern America and Europe from June to September, so make sure you catch them! I'll be seeing them at The Roundhouse in London on August 27th.

Body Positivity: Shooting a "Plus Size" Model

 

Last month, we (i.e. the director of Playful Promises and I) decided to shoot some of the "larger" sizes we do on a size 14 model. As a bit of an experiment. 

First, let's take a step back, so I can explain one key point. One of the things that often makes me want to bash my head against the keyboard is when people demand to know why we cannot expand our size range, particularly "large" cup sizes. Seriously, every time you ask a tiny, independent brand this, someone kills a kitten. Think of the kittens. 

Thankfully Catherine at Kiss Me Deadly has written a long detailed reason as to why, which includes charts and numbers and probably makes most people wish they hadn't asked. And sure, most people ask in a very polite way, but some people take it as a personal attack on their breasts. CHILL OUT. 

Despite people informing us that we'd make lots of money if we made larger bra sizes (as opposed to the reality which would be that we'd go out of business if we made larger bra sizes), the large sizes are the ones left over at the end of a sale period. So, the experiment was that we shoot those larger sizes on a size 14 model (as opposed to the size 10 models we use for lookbooks) to show what those sizes look like on.


 

This is Ali. Gorgeous, right? Of course she is, she's a woman. Like the rest of the models I use. Size 8, size 6, size 14, all "real".

 And you know what I found different about working with a "curve" (which is the word the agencies now use, rather than plus size, because the latter phrase makes those outside of the fashion world explode) model? Absolutely nothing. I didn't need to have her pose differently, I didn't need to do any more retouching than I would on a size 10 model. Because being a model is her job, her job entails looking after herself. Just because she is a size 14 doesn't change this. She's fit, healthy and confident, which should be the key concepts in body positivity. 

 

 

We released the images on our facebook, with a statement saying how much we love ALL sizes, all positivity and rainbows. And then comes the inevitable. The body shaming of thinner women. And it's sad that people, men and women, feel the need to do that. As if it's some competition.

Perhaps I find such comments insulting because I've been on the receiving end. I used to be incredibly underweight for the first 15 years of my life, despite eating well. I was called names too, much the same as bigger girls would have been. That hasn't put me in the mind-set that telling "fat" women to "stop eating" (in my case, it was that I should "eat a hamburger") is ok. So why is this suddenly acceptable now? And among so many women?

 

 

I feel that it's a mixture between a backlash against the fashion world and encouragement from certain brands using this backlash to their advantage.

The phrase "real women" seems to be a fairly new one. In fact, I'd love to know if anyone knows a more specific timeline. I wouldn't be surprised if it came into use (in this way) since the Dove "Real Beauty" campaign began to roll out in 2004. I'm going to write a whole different post regarding my thoughts on the farce that is Dove's "Real Beauty", but for now, let's just say it's a marketing stunt, tapping into a sensitive subject to help sell beauty products. 

 It's such a shame that, when a brand or a person DOES do something positive for body image, some of the responses just put other women down. Will we ever be able to get to the point where women are not pitted against eachother?