Showing posts with label Fashion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fashion. Show all posts

Sunday, December 7, 2008

The Height of Narcissism

I attended a formal event last week for which I had to shun the jeans and white t-shirt for a few hours and really put on the glitz, big time. There were only two more weeks before the occasion when I realized that I had nothing to wear so I turned to Mr. Inno Sotto, who in my opinion, is one of the, if not the, greatest fashion fairy godmothers in the country. When I told him I had only two weeks of lead time, (all designers ask for at least a month with at least three fittings) he didn't even bat an eyelash. He said, "Doable."

Oy!, I thought to myself, if he can come up with a decent dress, then he rules! But of course, being the procrastinator that I am, there were only 12 days left when I came to see him. He said, "You have to do two fittings. One this week and another next week."

I had that first fitting with just the lining of the dress. They needed to take it in in several places because I had lost even more weight since they last measured me, the previous week. Lo and behold I had to rush to L.A. to be by Maverick's side after that and I arrived ONE day before the event with absolutely no more time for repairs in case the dress didn't fit right. I was very anxious when I finally had the dress in my hands. But, being the genius that he truly is, Voila! it fit like a glove and with not a single stitch out of place. Some said, "Sure, he has done for you before, he knows your body type, that's no mean feat." But still, I say, "Genius is as genius does."

Mean words have been hurled his way since his late beloved partner, Richard Tan's, death. They claimed his art has suffered. Clients had an exodus to other designers. But you know how the infamous crab mentality (like crabs climbing on top of each other, those below take others down on their mission to reach the top) of the pinoys work: you're already down on the pavement and people will delight in kicking you even more.

I had no date for the evening. I was thinking Daniel Craig in Bond's legendary tuxedo on my arm would have been the perfect accessory. No, maybe Roger Federer. No, maybe Alex Rodriguez--Madonna will eat me alive! No, maybe Robert Pattison--cougar alert! Zues would have been the perfect choice. But since Zeus was holding court in Olympia I turned and did better thing. I took Belli with me.

We ended up having the time of our lives, chit-chatting the whole night, and giggling away! She is by far the best date I've ever had!

I was debating on whether to post these photos. But given that I have no photo of just the dress (it's still at the cleaners) and I don't know how to put a heart graphic on my face as some bloggers do to conceal their identity, I'm going face commando here. Anyway I know that all you readers are my relatives (thanks for following the blog. I love you all). I'm posting them risking ire and judgement but I do so with an official declaration that it is the height of narcissism! But may I please argue that it may be warranted this one time since, in the words of Julia Roberts in the Erin Brokovich movie, "It took a village to raise that cleavage."

In fact , when I looked in the mirror after putting on the dress, I was quite pleased with results of the effort Inno put in. I started getting smug, I admit--feeling self-important, posing a la Binibining Pilipinas for Pippi who was taking the pictures. But when Belli blurted, "Mom! What are you doing posing like that? You're a mom!" I stopped in my tracks and reflected briefly on what she had said.

Really...there's nothing like an innocent child's words to bring one back down to earth and keep him grounded.

All I can say is Inno Sotto rules, always have, always will! Thank you so very much, Inno!



Tuesday, November 4, 2008

James Perse T-shirts




Hi, my name is Fourtyfied, and I am an addict. I am addicted to t-shirts and I should be committed to a t-shirt addiction rehab facility. I'm talking plain t-shirts: short sleeves, long sleeves, sleeveless, in plain earth colors. A preference for the occasional happy-colored ones does prevail sometimes, but hardly ever. I am partial to the round-necked crews but the v-necked works too. I have tried dozens of brands in perpetual quest for the softest, most cottony, most cushy, and most comfy. My latest obsession is the James Perse brand. I picked up some of these during my last trip to the U.S. and regretted not getting more when I got home. But lo and behold! Rustans carries the brand so I got some today. I am enjoying my t-shirt high right now. They also carry the men's line and if you're looking for Christmas presents for the deserving men in your life, please pick up their robes--they're fantastic: light and fluffy terry cloth outside, lined with the softest cotton. You can have the recipient's initial embroidered on the breast or the lapel and it will be fabulous!

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Pasalubong



I leave for Sydney, Australia, to visit Kitty tomorrow and I can't wait! I have been racking my brain for pasalubong material to giveaway to friends over there and I think I just found the perfect ones.

Remember the Collezione shirts of old? Well, they have been reincarnated by no less than innovative designer, Rhett Eala into statement shirts that come in superior fabrics and friendly price points.

I find that the longer my two daughters stay abroad for school, the more nationalistic they become. They have become hyper aware of their heritage and their provenance. I believe it is something that distance awakens in someone--this love of country.

And so tada! Don't you think they're perfect. At P500 each, not bad! They are sold in botiques called C2 by Collezione located in Market Market and Robinson's Galleria.

Sunday, May 18, 2008

Death by Bermuda Shorts






The article for the Fortyfied column that generated the most number of hate mail, to date, was the one in which I outed my disgust for men in Bermuda Shorts. I got death threats, believe it or not. Apparently, a lot of men are emotionally attached to their shorts. I, on the other hand, happen to think that knees are the ugliest part of a man's anatomy, making the sight of Bermuda shorts and the wearer's knees that it showcases, a cause for me to cringe. Really can't stand them--just one of those irrational things; what can I say?


While waiting for my flight out of L.A.X. today, I was assaulted by the visual of what seemed like thousands of men sporting these hideous trousers with the lower half missing. I could have died. Here are some photos. You be the judge.

Friday, May 16, 2008

The Shoes Don't Buy Themselves


When I saw this pair of red Roger Vivier pumps I thought to myself: I must starve and siphon my food money into my shoe fund. It is gorgeous! The four-inch heel is where most of the beauty is--curving inward at an oh-so-slight angle, making it seem like it would break at any moment. There's some really brilliant architecture going on there. The description for the front, however, eludes me--"Amish" comes to mind, what with that giant, square, silver buckle. But isn't it the perfect foil to the cutting edge design and in-your-face color of the entire shoe? I think the buckle gives it some element of humor, as though it were saying, "C'mon, don't take me too seriously, I'm just a shoe!"


The price, though, is another matter. So now, to starve...

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Men Know All About Women's Fashion--Not!

I don’t know of any woman who would willingly surrender the task of choosing an outfit for a special occasion to a man, unless he were Mr. Armani or some other notable fashion designer with impeccable taste. Conversely, I doubt that any man, who is in the market for an automobile, would pass on the burden of such a choice to a woman. There exist no elaborate explanations for this phenomenon, no multi-faceted theorem, no scholarly philosophy; it simply is that—some things we don’t entrust to the opposite sex, period.

I was shopping at H and M in Hong Kong at the onset of spring and the spring line they had just debuted that week was a burst of sorbet colors: lime green, mango yellow, cantaloupe, cherry, and mandarin orange—so festive and enticing that I instantly got swept away in the spring shopping fever. Since shopping is an Olympic sport for us, women, I focused on the task at hand.
I was holding out a reasonably-priced, bright yellow, fitted cotton top, which had sent my pulse rate several beats higher at first sight (this is how women know an article of clothing is meant for us—we feel it, much like serendipity) and I was sizing it up as to whether it would fit me. Out of nowhere I heard a man’s voice say, “That’s way too small for you and the color, oh, not good with your skin.” Several female heads—those of shoppers who understood English, presumably—snapped to his direction, clearly in shock of his pronouncement.

Here’s the thing; when a man says something like that to a woman, he should expect to be decapitated with a blunt-edged sickle. He might as well have said, “Hey lady, you are obese.” So naturally, I took offense, thinking him presumptuous, brash, and uncouth. I probably should have kept my peace and walked away, but I, a mid-lifer performing an Olympic sport, who happened to have skipped breakfast, so the raging hormones, the empty stomach, and the rudely-interrupted shopping spree, was not at all inclined to let him off easily. I turned to him and asked to make sure, “Me? You’re talking to me?” He, a complete stranger, said, “Yes, you,” and unabashedly repeated while pointing to the shirt, “Tsk, tsk, too small—tooooo small.”
That was his death sentence! I closed in on him and took in his nerdy outfit of corduroy trousers and a random tee under a lumberjack plaid shirt—clearly some techie on a day off. In a sweet, sing-song tone but spewed from within a tense jaw and clenched teeth, I asked, “And who might you be? Tom Ford, Karl Lagerfeld, or Yohji Yamamoto, perhaps?” Of course, the sarcasm was lost on him because he simply answered with a clueless, “Huh?” To which I replied, “I didn’t think so,” and promptly walked away. The nerve!

Really, a man should never say to an ageing woman, who has yet to make peace with middle age spread, anything that might allude to her weight or to her fashion sense, unless he has a death wish.

I was still seething when I went to the fitting room. I then squeezed myself into the yellow shirt, the very object of that entire hullabaloo, which if I might add, was perfect with my skin color albeit a little too snug. But I wasn’t going to let him get away with assault on a middle-aged woman’s ego, which to my mind is punishable with stoning, so I wore that shirt out of the dressing room—tags and all—and searched for the smart aleck; let’s call him Mr. Rud Lee. I him found right where he originally was, still browsing in the very same rack of tops. Thankfully, there was a sales lady close by with whom I could make my point, so I said to her in a forceful voice, while parading in front of Mr. Rude Lee, “It fits perfectly, don’t you think?” She surely couldn’t have said anything to sabotage a sale so she agreed, if reluctantly. With arms on the waist, I faced him squarely and said, “SEE!”

The top now still hangs in my closet—tags and all—awaiting the shedding of a couple of pounds for that perfect fit that it deserves. But then, he’s not supposed to know that!

Another time, in a faraway land and a forgotten era, I greeted my New Year’s dinner date at the door wearing hot pants—which reads: really short pants in my generation for all you, youngsters—but paired with black cashmere tights (it was winter) as an attempt at decency and to camouflage the jiggles—he wasn’t supposed to know that! He took a step back the instant he saw me and I attributed the supposedly flattering reaction to the 10 extra minutes of primping I threw in for that special night. But then he said in a pseudo-mocking tone, “Wow, I can’t decide whether you wanna be Robin Hood or one of the Shoemaker’s elves in that get-up.”

I saw red! First of all, because he had the gall to diss my outfit when he, himself, was wearing a Christmas sweater with Rudolph and his red nose embroidered on the front! And second, because he used the word “get-up” which sounded too centennial an expression to even be funny. I felt like slamming the door on his face. But of course not, he was a clone of the young Steven Bauer when he appeared as Manolo on Scarface. What woman in her right mind would bail on him? He never called back though—dang those hot pants!

Last year, my 17-year-old nephew took his girlfriend to prom. She took pains in choosing the “right” dress for the occasion and after much deliberation, ended up with a wispy, periwinkle blue, chiffon, body-scheming, long dress by Max Azria. It was perfect for her as I saw photos and a video of them after the event. Every part of her glowed that night; she seemed to float on clouds as she walked, the dress swishing around her.

As a little social experiment, I asked my nephew, “What did your girlfriend wear to prom again? I don’t quite recall.” His answer was, “Oh, some kind of blue thing.” “That’s it?” I wasn’t quite satisfied so I needled him. “Describe it.” He then proceeded to describe it after several “ums…” “Well, it was blue, kind of like my bed sheet, you know, if like, you wrap it around yourself like I did when I was young. It was all the way down to the floor, and then it had no sleeves.” I wanted to whack him on the head with a throw pillow.

Remember Robert Redford’s character in Indecent Proposal when he had that now-famous, little black dress delivered to Demi Moore’s hotel suite? It looked like it was made especially for her when she wore it, right? Well, let’s not forget that she was the one who chose it; he saw her trying it on at the hotel shop. What about Mikhail Barishnikov as Petrovsky in Sex and the City, didn’t he buy that gorgeous Oscar de la Renta dress for Sarah Jessica Parker’s Carrie character? Again, she chose it! She had earlier showed him a photo of that dress saying that the dress IS poetry to her. What about Richard Gere giving all those outfits to Julia Roberts in Pretty Woman? All the credit for those exceptional clothing choices goes to the shop’s stylist who assisted her in shopping.

It is truly romantic, gallant, and heartwarming when a man surprises a woman with a dress or some other fashion item like shoes or handbags—a personal show of affection—whether or not he has excellent fashion sense. Also, it doesn’t follow that if he has good taste in men’s clothes he will be similarly tasteful in women’s’ fashion, which is an altogether different thing—much like nuclear disarmament: fickle and illogical.

Generous gestures from men bearing fashion items of their own picking are endearing, no doubt. But my guess is, if the item is not to the taste of the female recipient, she won’t give two shakes about doing a Jennifer Aniston as Rachel in Friends and exchanging it for a something else she really likes. There have been many horror stories about what popped out of men’s gift boxes for women, some even having grown into urban legends. There was that floral, shapeless muumuu that a friend got as pasalubong from his boyfriend who vacationed in Hawaii. There was that puke-green sequined, spaghetti strapped, body-hugging, micro mini that a cousin received from her fiancĂ©e, which she couldn’t be paid to wear—not even for a costume party. There was that somber graphite-gray, long-sleeved, high-necked, dress that another friend who loved figure-baring clothes got from her husband who was so proud to present her with her very first Armani black label dress. Her reaction was, “Who died?” The best thing for men to do in their gift-giving endeavors is to enlist the help of a sister, or a female friend.

Men and women must come to a truce if we must share the space and the air in this world. We will leave you, men, to your cars if you leave us to our fashion, thank you very much.

Saturday, April 5, 2008

Mohawk



These are the before and after shots of Kitty, first with her long hair and then after she shaved it all off into a mohawk in December of 2006. Many people who were inconsequential in her life made it their business and had a lot to say. I personally think she rocked it. You be the judge.

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

The Great White Shirt



I don't know what it is about the white t-shirt that has gotten me hooked, addicted, dependent. Call it fetish or obsession, I've had it since I was a child. I grew up in Davao and back then I wore whatever it was that my mom threw my way--I was so not into clothes. I kept wearing this one light green Cinderella brand t-shirt that my mom brought home from Manila with my favorite pair of jeans that had appliqued fruits and flowers on them (ode to the Seventies) that a schoolmate, Doris Tagle, said unabashedly, "Don't you have other clothes?" I didn't take offense; not at all. She was just being truthful. But I think my mother did, after I had told her. She probably felt as thought it were an indictment of her parenting so she dumped a pile of new clothes on my bed the next day. The problem was, none were as comfortable as my trusty light green shirt and jeans.

During one of the annual summer breaks spent with grandparents in Manila, Manang Charing, my grandma's mayordoma, got me white Crispa t-shirts from Kamuning; it was love at first wear. I wore them until they were threadbare. I've been addicted to white shirts ever since. I've gone through many brands: three dots, petit bateau, Armani, Ralph, Gunze, but I wear them out like nobody's business and it got too expensive to buy branded ones. Now, I'm happy with the Zaras, the Topshops, and the H and M's. I've tried pure cotton; cotton blends; cotton silks, which feel like you're enveloped in a cloud; cotton lycra for that suck-in-the-gut effect,and cotton elastin, which holds its shape for a few more washes compared to the rest. Once in a while I am still suckered into dishing out serious bucks for a luxurious one but I instantly regret it because I always get the 100 % cottons, which have a definitively short shelf life.

Today, I go through the motions of shopping--this exclusively female sport that we all excel at--only to end up wearing what is known around my family circle as my "uniform"--white shirt and jeans. I try to spice it up with a vest or hide it under a blazer, but no one is ever fooled. They're on to me! Even my five year old has taken notice. She asked me recently, "Do you not have enough money to buy other clothes?" Just to end the heckling, I've taken to wearing colored tees but only when I've sort of worn my favorite whites for consecutive days and always, always with a heavy heart.

I really can't explain this preoccupation with white t-shirts, maybe because dressing up becomes a no-brainer? How can you go wrong with jeans and a white t-shirt? And with too many kids and too many other things to worry about, they simplify this whole fashion business.

Oh, and here's my attempt at diversification: colored t-shirts. My current favorites are these Theory ones.