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You are here: Home / Archives for consumerism

consumerism

May 31 Day Fashion Blogger Challenge: Day 2 – I have the most…

May 5, 2012 By Julianne

This post is three days late, it’s true. I was ill when I posted the first one and then got more ill. But I’m getting better now so today I took some photos and hopefully I’ll get caught up, double-posting over the next few days if I have to.

When I read the title of this challenge, I immediately thought: TIGHTS! But when I saw Selina’s post I was reminded that I actually have more nail varnish.

To be fair, lots of these are more than half used up. I only buy a couple of bottles a year, but I’ve been a fan of nail varnish for over ten years now and won’t throw any away until the bottle’s empty.

Over fifty bottles. Also pictured: nail varnish thinner, tubes of glitter, my backup bag mirror (which I rarely use, I usually keep the same one that I’ve carried for probably 10+ years now in my bag), and a bottle of hand soak.

With the ice cream tub stacked on top of the box and the gift set tucked behind, they fit easily on to a third of a shelf in my cupboard. My tights take up much more room. Also, I have several pairs that I haven’t actually worn yet. Shameful, I know.

Thing is, I love tights. I really love tights. I don’t like most prints so most of my clothes are just one colour, and therefore I rely on tights for colour coordination. You know how so many style guides say things like ‘don’t be too matchy-matchy’? I laugh in their faces and stomp on their words. I love matching. I feel great when I’m wearing, say, a black skirt with a purple top that is the same purple as my tights, and probably purple nail varnish and eyeshadow too.

Another reason to love tights is that buying a pair of tights is much cheaper than buying a dress or a top and skirt, even bearing in mind that I buy most of my clothes in charity shops. Also I think that there’s almost a subculture of hosiery fans. Most people prefer trousers and those that do wear tights often stick to plain black or navy opaques or sheer tights that match their skin colour, so when I meet someone else wearing colourful or patterned tights, I often start a conversation about how wonderful tights are!

My box of coloured opaques! It looks like there’s five pairs but that’s just the top layer! On the top right is my fishnets box and bottom right a box of various lace tights. I’ve also got a box just for black opaques but it just looks like a
black box filled with black fabric so I’m not posting a picture.

I got into coloured opaques in 2006 when they first started becoming fashionable. The pairs I’ve had the longest were found in fairly obscure locations – a pink pair that I think were picked up in Allders of Croydon, and a couple of lilacy pairs that I think my mum found in BHS. I still have all three though they are a bit battered from being worn to so many students’ union club nights when I was an undergraduate! I also got a pair of purple opaques, though I don’t remember where from, that I wore everywhere – club nights, lectures, family dinners – and so often that I wore through the toes and had to sew up the holes because I didn’t think I’d find another pair! I still have them, mostly for sentimental reasons because I have a few other pairs in similar shades of purple that are much more comfortable and less worn out, but occasionally I’ll find that all my other purple opaques are in the wash and put them on!

The next few pairs of tights I got came from Accessorize during a sale. I got a pair of fishnets with a back seam, which are really sexy but really fragile, made worse by the fact that they’re ‘one size’ and therefore too small for me. It’s also really hard to pick shoes that they look good with. At the same time I bought two pairs of mesh tights with embroidery-style sections, and I think I’ve only worn one of the pairs, and only once, because the summers have been cold and short since and again it’s hard to pick shoes that they’ll look good with. However, I also got my second pair of purple opaques, which meant that I didn’t have to worry about wrecking my original pair any more!

In 2007, the first series of Mary, Queen of Shops went on the air, and Mary Portas wore coloured opaques virtually all the time. Then Marks and Spencer started selling them, and the rest is history. Almost every time M&S produce a new colour of opaque I end up buying it!

I’ve also bought several pairs of fishnets, lace tights, thermal tights, fleece lined tights (amazing!) and both versions of the amazing woolly polka dot tights they sold last winter. Unfortunately, I have yet to
actually wear some of the lace tights because last summer wasn’t warm
enough, so they languish in their packaging. I just can’t resist lovely lace tights, as impractical as they are 90% of the time.

Oh dear…

That’s seven pairs still in their packaging. Two of them are actually the same as pairs I already owned but I couldn’t resist the bargain prices on offer at the M&S outlet in Lewisham! The mesh flowery ones at the back are casualties of the crap summers we’ve had the last few years. I don’t really have an excuse for not wearing the grey with black polka dot pair, I need to get to it! The bright blue ones I love and they were a must-buy as soon as I saw them but I’ve yet to get them into an outfit. I really want to wear them clubbing as part of an outfit that’s at least vaguely reminiscent of the outfits I used to wear to club nights in 2006
but almost every time I’ve been clubbing since I bought them I’ve either gone straight from work (where bright blue tights have never been appropriate – purple and teal are pushing it) or from what I expected to be a casual evening in a pub wearing my jeggings!

Almost all of my tights are from M&S because until very recently, most other retailers only sold one size. I’m over 5ft 9in and have size nine and a half feet, so I’m too big for ‘one size’. M&S make every style in at least two sizes. Most come in four sizes – small, medium, large, and extra large – but some of the ‘fashion’ tights have two options,  small/medium and large/extra large. Other companies have started to cater for different sizes more recently too which is great but basically means I can’t go shopping because I find it so difficult to stop myself buying hosiery! I know I have to try to wear out some pairs enough to throw them away before I buy more because I just can’t store any more, so I banned myself from checking the M&S website.

Unfortunately the ban now has to be over because yesterday I tore a tiny hole in the thigh of a pink pair of opaques that I absolutely love. Stupid bag buckles! I’m sure I can still get several more wears out of that pair by wearing longer skirts, but I’ll be eagerly checking the M&S website again in the hope that they’ll bring it back. Also, M&S have started making lots of their tights in a UK factory and it would be great to support that…;)

Even more tights! The lilacy pair at the top is one of the pairs I got in 2006. Six years of style! The pink ones are the ones I made a hole in yesterday. Sad.

The theme for the tenth day of the challenge is ‘cute tights’, so then I’ll be taking close-up photos of my prettiest pairs. If there’s anything I’ve described that you’d like to see, leave me a comment!

Filed Under: Fashion and Style, Makeup and Skincare Tagged With: blog, blogs, colours, consumerism, fashion, hosiery, May 31 Day Fashion Blogger Challenge, nail polish, nail varnish, obsessions, purple, style, tights

TV Review: Blood, Sweat and T-Shirts

May 5, 2008 By Julianne

Blood, Sweat and T-Shirts is part reality TV show and part documentary, featuring six young British “fashion addicts” between the ages of 20-24 who have been taken to India to work in factories and cotton mills so that they (and we) will learn the truth about the conditions in which high street clothes are made. This programme is interesting, but you would have to have been burying your hand in the sand for years to be surprised by what this programme reveals about the clothing industry. It is not really shocking viewing for anyone who knows anything about how and where most clothing is made.

What is shocking is how ignorant, rude, and generally useless the group of young adults from Britain are. I’ve spent most of the episodes of Blood, Sweat and T-Shirts that I have seen so far shouting in frustration and shame. I am so embarrassed to be part of the same generation. They have definitely been burying their heads in the sand about this issue. Okay, Georgina and Mark haven’t really said much about anything. Stacey is very bubbly and a bit silly. Amrita is alright, although she burst into massively inappropriate tears at the first factory. Tara has some respect for the work they have to do but she cried because the woman they stayed with in the first episode realised they were laughing at her house and confronted them about it (!!!).

But any redeeming qualities the others might have are completely negated by Richard.

Richard is 24, runs an ad agency and makes £50,000 a year. He starts the show as one of those “poor people are only poor because they’re lazy” types, and spends the best part of the first two episodes moaning about how much more terrible it is for them (the group of British young adults) to be there than for the people who actually spend their lives in this way, because they’re not used to it! Seriously! He goes around loudly insulting everything, and almost gets in a fight with an English-speaking Indian in the second episode because he’s being so disrespectful. He doesn’t start to realise until the end of the second episode that the reason the factory workers haven’t gone to university et cetera is that they don’t have the opportunity or money and they have families to feed, and only accepts this after a man at the factory explains it to him, repeatedly.

He also sewed sleeves of different sizes and a back and front that were different sizes together as one garment. How do you manage that?

Blood, Sweat and T-Shirts doesn’t really try to push you into any conclusions about the clothing industry, and I’m not sure how I feel about this. On the one hand, it is good that viewers are allowed to make up their own minds, on the other, the lack of commentary means that it focuses on the personalities of the British young adults rather than on the lives of the factory workers. I think it would have worked better with a smaller group.

Apart from horror at the young people of today – I’m only 21 myself, surely I shouldn’t be yelling “These kids are so privileged and rude!” at the TV? – I’ve got one thing out of this series so far: that boycotting in this case is definitely not a good idea. The clothing producers in India would be even worse off without their jobs. I think that instead shoppers have got to do their research and buy brands that regulate the conditions in their factories more closely and pay living wages, and put pressure on companies to look after their workers better.

Programme details follow, but everyone, including those outside the UK, can also check out the BBC’s new online fashion magazine, Thread. It’s got a fair bit of useful info about ethical shopping and good explanations of terms and organisations, but for more on specific brands, check out Green Is The New Black.

Blood, Sweat and T-Shirts, BBC Three, third programme Tuesday 6th May 2008 at 9pm, fourth & final programme Tuesday 13th May 2008 at 9pm. First episode available to watch online on BBC iPlayer for 3 more hours, second episode for 4 more days. Clips also available on YouTube for UK viewers.

Filed Under: Fashion and Style Tagged With: charity shopping, consumerism, ethical shopping, popular culture, rant, television

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Hi! I'm Julianne and I have so many different passions I have to be relentlessly organised to keep track of them all! On this blog I document my current obsessions and share my tips for juggling multiple interests while maintaining your creative energy. I believe that advanced planning brings advanced peace of mind - so join me, and plan to succeed in everything you do! More...

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