Monday, June 16, 2025

Refresher Course

    Branching out can be intimidating, even more so as we get older and set in our ways, but I always try to challenge myself to keep trying new things, keep changing things up, so that I don't get too comfortable in a life or a style that used to work for me but just doesn't anymore.  I've been a dresses girl for most of my life.  I am now at the point where the only time I wear jeans or trousers is for my job and even then it's rare, or more often for doing home repairs and renovations, because for me dresses are the easiest thing in the world to wear.  Slip on a dress, grab some ballet flats and voila!  Instant chic outfit for any occasion.  
    At this point, anything outside of dresses is a little daunting because I don't do it often.  Never the less there are days when I do like to have an easy work or going-out outfit that involves trousers and a blouse.  As much as I love a bold novelty print for my dresses, I usually keep it pretty low-key on the blouses...until I saw this gorgeous silk blouse from Free People. I was watching Angela Braniff's Fashion Hacks video (because even a fashion lover like me can get stuck in a rut and need a refresher course on ways to make my clothes look better) and I loved everything about the outfit that she created with this blouse that I waited for FP's Memorial Day sale and then purchased it along with a couple of necklaces from JC Penney's sale.  In January I bought some linen trousers from American Eagle and haven't worn them much because they fit great in the store, but I found as the day went on, they were rather snug around the waist.  It was too late to return, so I shelved them for a while, until I had the idea of moving the top button over about a quarter of an inch so I could still breathe after having a meal.  Suddenly, this outfit came together.  In the future though I may swap out the wide leg trousers for a more straight leg jean.  Baggy tops need balance with a more fitted bottom. 
The take away tips from Angela on this style were the importance of sleeve length and a belt!  If I had been browsing FP I might have noticed how pretty the print on this top was, but I wouldn't have purchased because the fit it so baggy that it's unflattering.  It looks more like the shirt is wearing the model rather than the other way around.  However, with a belt in the right place and rolled up sleeves, suddenly this is a very beautiful and flattering causal look.  It wasn't my idea, and it's outside my comfort zone, but I love the way this looks!  
Outfit Info:  Tyler Shirt in Fuscia from Free People, Trousers from American Eagle, Jewelry from JC Penney, Shoes and bag from SheIn.

Sunday, June 15, 2025

Family Treasures

    I have taken some time off from my usual posting schedule. I orignally intended to take just a week or two but it ended up being a month or more.  My youngest daughter asked for a graduation gift: a family trip to our old home in the Pacific Northwest.  It was such a sweet request that I couldn't say no.  So, we loaded up our family and drive thousands of miles at highspeed to try to see everything we possibly could in a week.  In the weeks leading up to our trip, my mother and grandmother were caring for my great-aunt who was 90 years old and had Dementia.  Determined not to let her drift in lonesome forgetfulness in a nursing home, they worked tirelessly to make her feel loved and safe in her own home until she passed quietly from life.  Her care became around the clock for both mom and nana and I went to visit them more frequently as the their task became more involved.  I took my mother out for lunch and a little shopping once or twice a week just to give her a break from the demands of caring for my aunt.  Nana has friends who did the same for her.  


    As I left for my trip, Auntie Jay was declinging, but in good spirits.  The decline became more rapid while I was away and the day we returned home, we were instructed to come and say our goodbyes.  Ninety years, nearly a century, and what a life she lived!  For three weeks following her passing, my extended family and I went through her belongings to prepare her home for sale.  There is no denying that Jay was a hoarder, but of the classiest kind.  She hoarded exquisite antiques and every nook and cranny was piled high and pressed full with valuable things.  There was no dumping drawers and carting away armloads in this cleanout.  No, everything had to be carefully picked through and examined.  Antique coins, century old jewelry, original oil paintings--everything was a treasure.  As much as I have always loved Aunt Jay's taste, I was reluctant to be involved with the cleanout process.  


    My other grandmother and great-grandmother died in the same week when I was a young teen and I was shocked and horrified by the scorched earth style cleanout that I witnessed.  The greed, the people who came out of the woodwork demanding their "fair share," the fighting, the slashing and burning of the things that the people I loved so dearly had cherished is deeply ingrained into my life, so it follows that I wouldn't want to go through that ever again.  But, my mother persuaded me to come on the first day "just to look."  I pulled her aside as we headed in to the house and said, "if things get ugly in there, I'm leaving and I'm taking you with me."  She nodded and we went in.  And then the strangest thing happened: everyone was kind.  There was no fighting, no grabbing, no distant relatives making demands, and the earth remained unscorched.


    Each day I went in with a knotted stomach, waiting for this to be the day that it would all fall apart.  Instead we laughed, we shared, we talked.  It was wonderful and the very best kind of tribute to this woman we all loved.  And truly, thanks to her hoarding, there was no reason to fight, because if there was one of something there was at least five more, so everyone who wanted one could have it.  Truth be told, although the work was hard and I came home at the end of each day and fell into bed exhausted, I felt so accomplished and had so enjoyed the company that I was sad to see it come to an end.  It was time however to get back to living life, caring for my farm and garden, working my job, and setting about the task of cleaning all the treasures I found and finding space for them in my own tiny home.  Dear Auntie Jay brought us together, to honor her, celebrate her, and spend some happy time together with family and that my friends was the greatest treasure she ever gave us.

Thursday, June 5, 2025

Japan Fashion Memories

    I put this outfit together, thinking it would be a spring wear to work 'fit.  When I sat down to edit the photos, all I could think was--this would have been perfect for when I lived in Japan!  I can't exactly say what it is, everything about this reminds me of the Japanese ladies I would see waiting to catch the train to their office jobs in the mornings near Tokyo.
    So many aspects of Japanese style appealed to me, I loved seeing the fashion and browsing the shops.  With emphasis on bows, ruffles, puffs and pink, what's not to love?  It's been eight years since I left, so maybe this is a little late, but I'd like to dedicate this post to Japanese style.
Outfit Info:  Top is vintage, brooch and skirt are both old from SheIn, Flats are new-ish from SheIn, bag is by Ecosusi.

Monday, June 2, 2025

Road Trip Movie Night

We're off on a cross country family road trip this week.  It's been years since we've been anywhere as a family, so I'm both exicted and nervous.  In honor of this undertaking, I thought today's post should be a feature list of my favorite road trip movies.  (Just a heads up, the text decided to double space under a few of these and I cannot figure out how to fix it)

1.  Paper Moon (1973)

Admittedly an all-time favorite of mine.  Addie and Moze embark on a trip across the midwest to get the recently orphaned Addie back to her relatives in Missouri, but Moze sees an opportunity to make a little money along the way selling Bibles to widows.  They meet colorful characters and get into a few scrapes in this is the wickedly funny and heartwarming tale of a grifter and his young apprentice.  This role won Tatum O'neal a well-deserved Oscar.
2.  True Grit (2010)

I'm a fan of the book and both the movie adaptations, though I believe the 2010 version stuck closer to the original story.  Young Maddie Ross loses her father and sets out to avenge his death, hiring Marshall Rooster Cogburn to help her bring the murderer to justice.
3.  Zombieland  (2009)

The world descends into chaos and four strangers become unlikely friends while traveling across the country and surviving the zombie apocalypse.  The story is charming, undead gore aside, and the casting is absolutely perfect.

4.  Green Book  (2018)

A world class African American pianist travels through the deep South performing concerts during a time when racial tensions are high and segregation is still enforced.  He hires Italian American driver/bodyguard to accompany him and the two become unlikely friends.
5.  Dumb & Dumber (1994)

    I went to see this movie with a boy-girl group of friends in the eighth grade.  It was a pretty big deal.  Of course, no one could drive, so our parents took us and then stayed to watch it with us...so, it was awkward and embarassing, but none of the boys were interested in me, so it hardly mattered.  But, I digress.  
    I actually really hated this movie at the time.  The humor was just too avant-garde for me.  It would be years before I recognized the brilliance of the story and the performances.  Much of Jim Carey's work was improvised and having watched an unedited version of this film, I can confidently say that they made some amazing cuts, to really create the best version. Harry and Lloyd are friends and, well...their lives aren't going great.  One day a bag full of money falls into their laps, thanks to Lloyd's chance encounter with a beautiful stranger.  Now they're on a mission to return her bag, spending all her money along the way.  

6.  Lord of The Rings (2001)


I mean...do I really need to say anything about the most epic road trip story ever written?  If you haven't seen it or read it, maybe it's time you asked yourself what you've been doing with your life.

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