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You are here: Home / Archives for winter

winter

Layering for Spring

April 5, 2010 By Julianne

Spring has sprung. The days are longer, the sun is brighter and it’s raining more. I’ve started to think along the lines of, as magazines call it, “transitioning your wardrobe into summer”. Now I don’t exactly follow fashion so I won’t be phasing out old clothes and trends to replace them with the new, which is what that actually means. I also don’t have the luxury of two separate wardrobes, just a bunch of long-sleeved tops I only wear in winter and short-sleeved tops and dresses I only wear in summer.

What it essentially comes down to is layering. 

Keeping warm in winter is quite an effort for me. I’m not one of those people who radiates masses of heat and if I get chilly I usually will get ill so it’s important for me to keep wrapped up. After all those months of cramming as many layers onto my body as I can bear, I’m having to go through an adjustment period. I really knew the seasons were on the turn, and that we weren’t getting just a few random days of sunnier weather, when I realised that I no longer need to wear five layers indoors. I can get away with three!

If you keep all your layers thin and make as few of them jumpers or cardigans as possible, you’ll look sleeker. This is a pretty easy principle to follow in winter – I would put on a vest, then a long sleeved top, then a fairly tight fitting short sleeved top, then a jumper and a cardigan. However, in spring you have more unpredictable temperature changes to deal with, at least in Britain, where it can be warm in the morning and freezing by the afternoon, or cold in the morning, hot in the afternoon and warm in the evening.

Don’t put layers on in a way that makes it too hard to take them off! I’ve got a couple of tops that are a bit tight around the neck and I had been wearing them over long sleeved tops, but it is now too warm to keep doing that. They are a pain to get off without messing up hair and make-up and getting sweatier and more annoyed. If you make the tops that are tight around the neck the second or third layers (ie. over bra or over vest) and then put more easily removable layers on top, you’ll be alright.

If you wear a heavier jumper and a scarf, you can get away with not wearing a coat when you go out, or wearing a more lightweight one. Alternatively, you can wear just a thin cardigan over your top, and then wear your thick winter coat – but you need to be sure your destination will be warm enough!

Gloves will probably make your hands too hot but arm warmers can be a great idea if you’re wearing a t-shirt or other short sleeved top. Hats can make your head hot quickly so choose floppy berets or lace caps that aren’t too tight to let the air in. Watch out for strong gusts of wind.

If you live in a land of raininess, like the UK, umbrellas are essential. They’re not called April showers for nothing. Unless you are really sure there’s no sign of rain, unless there is a blue sky with no clouds above you, it is best to wear closed-in boots or shoes. In the summer wet feet dry quickly but now your toes will be really cold if they get damp.

You can also lighten up on the hoisery front and wear thinner socks, and one pair of tights if you were wearing two (I was). If you are cold in one pair of ordinary opaque tights and would be too hot in thicker tights with some wool in the mix, try wearing a pair of fishnets over the normal tights.

I’ve been spending some time on Polyvore, finding clothes that look similar to clothes I have and putting together outfits. The umbrellas are all fantasy though – my last one broke last week so I’m on the lookout for a new one! Again! It seems like I’m looking out for a new umbrella at least 50% of the time that I post on this blog. If you can recommend any that are max £15 with some kind of strength/durability/lastingness guarantee on them, let me know!

Layering for Sping 1

This is almost my perfect charity-shopping outfit. In an ideal world I’d have shoes not boots, but for all that walking, the only footwear I’ve got that’s comfy enough is Docs. A skirt and tights is essential when charity shopping in case I want to try on a skirt or dress, and I also need a big bag to take all my purchases home in!

Layering for Spring 2

I’m not sure where I’d be going in this outfit, it’s pretty smart-casual, maybe to some sort of event, or to dinner with family and/or friends.

Layering for Spring 3
This is comfy but fun. I think I’d wear it to the library or book shopping – I wouldn’t have to change when I got home and wanted to snuggle up with the books and read for hours on end.

How are you adjusting to the change in the weather – if you’re experiencing one yet?

Filed Under: Fashion and Style Tagged With: clothes, Doc Martens, fashion, layering, polyvore, season, spring, style, transition, under my umbrella-ella-ella-ella-eh-eh-eh-eh-eh, winter

The Glove Guide

November 20, 2007 By Julianne

It’s getting colder, and my poor hands are already starting to suffer. Despite the copious amounts of moisturiser that I apply every night, they are adversely affected by the weather, even on days when I do not leave my house. So, I have reached into the pink case where I store out of season accessories that do not fit into my wardrobe, and brought out all my gloves.

Keeping Hands Warm

I only have three pairs that are really suitable for cold weather. A short, black, chenille pair from Dorothy Perkins that I have had for a few years, and a long “touch of cashmere” purple pair that my sister got me from Topshop last Christmas.

Gentle reader, if there is ever one thing you must resist buying from the High Street, let it be gloves. The black pair have been unravelling at the fingertips ever since I got them. I actually had to return a first pair of these after a few days because a hole appeared so quickly.

The purple pair are lovely and soft. The colour is fantastic. I didn’t wear them for a couple of months after I got them, which was a stupid mistake. When I did wear them that same day there appeared a massive hole to the left of the thumb and below the index finger on the left hand glove. I had to sew it up, and did so pretty well, but it feels awkward to wear and spoils the comfort of the cashmere.

For now I will continue to wear my often-mended pairs, because I haven’t acquired the skills necessary to knit myself a pair of both style and quality. If you have such skills, why not try the urban rustic gloves, or the Broad Street Mittens, the latter of which are designed to be convertible from fingerless gloves into mittens. If you don’t and are looking for mittens, these felted double-cuff mittens sound like they would be really warm.

Keeping Hands Warm Whilst You Work

book: The Virago Book of Love Letters

What would I do without fingerless gloves? Earlier this year the pair I have (see above: purple, Marks and Spencer, no unravelling as yet, but they are not very soft) saved my hands from many aches and pains as I sat in cold rooms and lecture theatres at university, trying to take notes. In fact last year as I walked to uni, I would wear my fingerless gloves and then normal gloves on top! It was seriously cold!

Fingerless gloves are apparently easier to knit than the full-fingered variety, and the fantastically cool Knucks are very inspiring. However, Etsy is full of wonderful, original ready-made fingerless gloves. My favourites are these spiral gloves, the design is super-stylish and is the creator’s best-seller. I think they would be a talking point because they are such an original design. I am also quite enamoured of these purple and lavender arm warmers (I wonder why?), I think they are the funkiest thing ever. Please people, let’s bring back the word “funky”. I miss it. Erm…these bobbly little “glovelettes” are cute and cool, but if you prefer a vintage look, these lace cuff fingerless mitts are 100% cashmere and very decorative. If you need something a bit longer, these snuggly warm merino armwarmers are plain but luxurious, and very well priced – by which I mean cheap – 100% merino, handmade, for only $35! The shop has several colours available. Definitely belonging on the dark side are these lovely merino striped fingerless gloves…drool.

Glamourous Hands!

Not all gloves are practical, some are just beautiful. These are the type of gloves that you wear in autumn (a time that seems sadly to have passed in Britain), spring, or to evening events when you will be going directly from carriage to venue. These are slightly harder to track down. Meet my frivolous gloves! To the left you will see a green stripy little one. This was passed down from my grandmother. I recently rescued this pair from a pile of scarves that my sister had stuffed in a carrier back. I think they are so sweet and am looking forward to getting more wear out of them next Spring!

Below you will see a long pink evening glove. I love these gloves! They were from a stall at last year’s Clothes Show Live, and are supposedly vintage, but even if they are not they are still so much awesome. In real life they are a darker version of the colour you get if you write “magenta” as the font colour in HTML. I am such a nerd. I often describe aqua blue similarly. “OMG! It’s aqua! Like the font colour!”

To assist you in finding yourself some glamourous gloves, I recommend Ebay. They are harder to find on Etsy, although I did find a few gems. These soft scarlet baby kid yarn gloves, for instance, and some silver grey sheer evening gloves, with delicate embroidery. You can also make your own pretty pair, if you have the skill, I think that Carpathia is too fine and delicate a design perhaps to keep your hands warm, but it would look very pretty.

Of course, one does not require a special event to get one’s fancy gloves on. One can be posh and utterly faaabulous when doing one’s washing up too! Aggie MacKenzie is a inspiration to us all, really, darlings, but please don’t follow glove etiquette to the letter, it can transform one into an awful bore. Wearing giant rings on top of one’s gloves is perfectly stylish, if you ask me…

Filed Under: DIY, Fashion and Style Tagged With: crafting, fashion, gloves, knitting, offline shopping, online shopping, style, winter

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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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