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Veronika Maine

The window at Veronika Maine is so deliciously colourful right now. It’s so refreshing to see bright, saturated colours for spring instead of the usual wimpy pastels. Don’t get me wrong, wimpy pastels have their place, but only in small doses, or combined with big, bright jewelery.

I’m especially in love with the little cropped green jacket and beige dress combo in the second picture. I’m afraid if I go inside, I might go on a rampage, snatching everything up and crippling my credit card. Must. Have. Self. Control.

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Bling 4eva

If I were to carve a love message into a tree right now it would read “Grace hearts Costume Jewelery”. Sorry The Boyfriend, but I’m a fickle woman. Maybe if you were more sparkly, it would be your name on that tree.

Here are a few of my favourite pieces. You’ll have to excuse the funny shadows. I’m not the most talented photographer in the world, and I don’t have any fancy lights, so I have to depend on old fashioned equipment like “the sun” and “going outside”. I had to climb out my bedroom window onto the tin roof of our apartment building, distribute my weight carefully so as not to (1) dent said tin roof, and (2) not sit my butt into the thick layer of red dust coating the roof from the crazy dust storm we had in Sydney last week. Sometimes I wonder if there is anything more amazing than living in a big city and having no outside space.

This chunky, colourful beaded necklace was a gift from The Boyfriend a few years ago. He got it at a shop called Bernstein & Gold in Victoria Canada. I love the busy mix of saturated, bright colours and the interesting choice of beads. I wear it to work with a crisp, white, collared shirt, but I think it would look equally sharp with a midnight blue silk top, or a light coloured scoop neck t-shirt. Unfortunately I’ve forgotten the name of the designer. Shame on me.

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I just got this fantastic sparkly necklace at JCrew when I was in Seattle earlier this month. It was a bargain at around $70. I can tie the chain in a knot at the back to make the necklace a bit shorter. The beads are a weird sort of non-colour; they could be olive green or grey, but they also pick up the light and colour from whatever I’m wearing, and morph, chameleon-like, to complement the outfit.

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This white and gold cuff was also a gift from The Boyfriend and also came from Bernstein & Gold in Victoria. And what do you know, I can’t remember the designer’s name for this one either. Double shame. It’s made of white marble, gold and citrine.

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I adore this weird minty-green brooch that my mom and I found in an antique store in Victoria a few years ago. Upper Fort St. downtown is full of these neat little antique stores that sell shoes for teensy feet, corsets for teensy waists, and amazing jewelery. Notice the creepy little frog sitting on a petal, minding its own business. Also notice how in this photo the shadow looks like Batman”s head. It”s a double whammy of subtle weirdness. Like WHAM. And then again, WHAM. You didn’t think I was going to do it, but I totally did.

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This is a silver collar I got at a store on Crown St. in Surry Hills called Mrs. Red & Sons. Their website only gives a phone number, but the store is definitely worth a visit if you’re in the neighbourhood. They’ve got a giant red door at the front, which opens into a lovely little shop full of jewelery and homewares, most of which have an Asian bent. This piece is by a designer in Western Australia named Susan Pender. The collar is sterling silver and the fish ornament is freshwater pearl and coral. I love this necklace because it’s striking when worn with a plain top, but you can also remove the ornament to wear the collar alone with a printed top or dress.

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This necklace belonged to my grandma, who brought it to Canada from the Philippines. I don’t know much about it except that it’s super cool.

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I was so excited when my mom and I found this peacock brooch in a shop called Chapel Street Bazaar in Melbourne.  Each piece of its tail is connected separately, so the tail swishes when I move around. The Bazaar is in a massive space at 217 Chapel St, Prahran and it’s chock-a-block with vintage clothing, jewelery, shoes, and heaps of other flotsam and jetsam. What a fabulous place to spend a few hours drinking in the wares.

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This pewter flower also belonged to my grandma. I think the cross-hatching texture on the petals is genius. It takes something that’s soft and reflective and makes it rough and almost industrial.

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I got this cool vintage gold-tone bangle at the Glebe Markets on the weekend.

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Finally, this is a bangle that my friends gave me for my birthday last year. I love how everything reflected in it looks like liquid. It’s such a unique piece that I wasn’t sure what it was at first, and I had some trouble figuring out how to wear it because it sits quite high off my wrist. Looking at it today though, I had a brainwave. I’m going to pick up some heavy chain or ribbon and try wearing it as a mid-length necklace. Sometimes I ask my friends how they can stand being around someone who has such clever ideas all the time. They just look at me, laugh and pat me on the head. I think they’re jealous.

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In betweensies

Every spring and fall, I faithfully watch the collections debut on www.style.com and feel sorry for myself because I live in a country where it’s summer at Christmas time, the Havaiana flip flop is a major fashion accessory and dingoes roam the streets searching for unattended babies. It’s cruel and unusual punishment that New York fashion week, showing all the gorgeous collections for Spring 2010, should come right when the weather in Sydney is just warming up, and yet I won’t be able to buy (ok let’s face it, drool over and lament not being able to afford) any of the pieces until next March when it’s already getting too cold to wear them. If life got any harder, I might have to throw my hands up in despair, fill my pockets with stones and walk mournfully into the surf at Bondi, shocked backpackers looking on.

As if sensing my loss of hope, Aussie Vogue for October 2009 had a clever idea and has done a four page spread on the Resort collections. In a country where it’s mostly hot, and where wearing a jacket in winter is less a necessity and more of an optional wink at a season no one really understands, why not look to the Resort collections? The Resort and Pre-fall collections are for the insatiable appetites of the fashion-savvy. These days, designers are not only showing Spring and Fall, but also Resort and Pre-fall for the lulls in between the major collections. The Resort collections are shown in June and a lot of them are available in the flesh in shops around the country (or at least online) right this second. The Pre-fall collections are shown in January and are available just in time for our mild, snowless winter.

Resort collections tend to be a bit more pared down and wearable. They appeal to the masses – the masses who can afford them, anyway. They’re also a bit cheaper than the major collections, although when your dress is ringing in at $5,000, I don’t think “cheaper” is a consideration that generally crosses your mind. Regardless of the season, shopping for designer clothing in Sydney is like highway robbery. You offer them a credit card, and they snatch your wallet and drain your superannuation account.

Here are a few of my favourites:

Doo.Ri

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Photo: www.style.com

Marc Jacobs

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Photo: www.style.com

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Photo: www.style.com

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Photo: www.style.com

Marchesa

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Photo: www.style.com

Miu Miu

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Photo: www.style.com

Balenciaga

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Photo: www.style.com

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Photo: www.style.com

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Photo: www.style.com

3.1 Phillip Lim

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Photo: www.style.com

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Photo: www.style.com

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Photo: www.style.com

Jumping on the bandwagon

You know what I’ve realised since the whole Kanye West / Taylor Swift debacle at the MTV Awards? It’s not that Kanye is a jerk, or that Taylor is sweet natured, or even that her music is any good. I’ve realised that the girl is one chic 19-year-old. If, when I was 19, I had had the budget or the taste that Taylor has, there would have been a lot fewer clunky boots and mini-skirts in my past. You’ve got to give me a break though. I grew up in a town where bi-laws prohibit buildings from being over five stories high in the downtown core and skate shoes worn with flare jeans are de rigueur. You think there was such a thing as fashion there? There was no fashion. Only Aldo from the 90s.

I’ve been seeing more and more photos of Taylor looking super chic popping up all over the place. This probably coincides with the fact that her music is becoming more popular, but who cares about music? Taylor’s style is genius! The paparazzi snap her loafing around town wearing a sweet, colourful circle skirt and tangled strappy top, or in a shimmery mini dress showing off the gamine, gangly, fashiony legs that could only belong to a teenager or a foal.

Here are some photos of her nabbed from www.people.com:

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Photo: www.people.com

This dress looks like it’s been sprinkled with gold dust. Her lovely petite figure absolutely can pull of the giant bow at the bust. Note her contrasting short, red nails. Taylor, I think you, me and Blair could be bestest friends. Call me.

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Photo: www.people.com

This shade of purple isn’t my favourite for my colouring, but it looks fab with her hair colour and complexion. Blondes take note: this rich shade of lilac is perfect for you. I also love how her signature winged eyeliner is really strong in this picture. And those shoes? Let’s just say I would consider selling my boyfriend into slavery for those shoes. They simultaneously complement and contradict the sweet, soft ruffles of the dress and make the whole look edgy and modern.

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Photo: www.people.com

The dresses, from left to right, are by Aussie designer Collette Dinnigan and KaufmanFranco, a designer I’ve never heard of before but am keen to see more from. The KaufmanFranco dress is a stunner and I love the subtle and strategic horizontal strap under her right arm which keeps the dress in place and any embarrasing side boob at bay. Lindsay Lohan could take a lesson.

Hooray for international shipping!

I just ordered these kick ass brogues from Topshop online:

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Photo: www.topshop.com

Shipping to Australia (read: the ends of the earth) was completely reasonable at only about $15.

I can't wait to go prancing around town in these sweet little shoes. Now I'll be as cool as those cool cats at the Governor's Island Jazz Lawn Party that The Sartorialist seems to frequent.

Who needs two yellow jackets?

There is absolutely no doubt that I do!

Brightly coloured coats are a great way to enliven a drab winter wardrobe and lift your spirits during colder months. Unless you’re lucky enough to live in a perma-sunny climate, then winter is grey and ick and ack and yuck. It rains, daylight is fleeting and people pout a lot. Everyone wears black, charcoal or some other shade of boring. In your yellow coat, you can be the little ray of sunshine, meandering down the street in that elegant way that you meander.

On that note, this northern hemisphere fall, American company JCrew, ever the trickster after my wallet, has come out with yet another must-have yellow jacket . Last year, they had a long, wasp-yellow coat with giant snap closures and a big gorgeous bow at the neck. Australia is a little bit too hot for such a long, woolly coat, but I made it work. It got trotted out on a few chilly Sydney nights, and sometimes, when no one is home, I put it on and swan around the house in various yellow coat-featuring outfits. I’m not joking.

This fall, they’ve got a three button wool pea coat in “bright butternut” that marries band geek chic with a little dash of entitled private school brat. Look at the model. She’s thinking, Yeah, my hair is messy. My shirt is untucked. So send me to the principal’s office. I dare you.

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Photo: www.jcrew.com

Too. Much. Awesomeness. Can’t. Breathe.

And how serendipitous that I happen to have three hours to kill in Seattle amid the downtown shops when I fly there from Sydney on my way home to Canada this week. Is it serendipity, or have I been planning it all along? The shopping and I, we’re a wily pair.

I’ve been making good use of the time leading up to my trip, Googling American companies that don’t have stores in Canada so that I can make the most of my precious few hours in Seattle. In the same mall as the JCrew store, there’s also a Victoria’s Secret where I plan to run wild.

I will have just walked off an 18 hour flight, tired and confused. I will have gone back in time two days, simply by crossing the International Dateline. I will be in the most wonderful, affordable lingerie store on earth. There will be no one to rein me in. Good spending judgement will not be a strong point. Looking into my crystal ball, I forsee some credit card-crippling expenditure in my future.