Sunday, October 4, 2009

Inaugural post

The idea for peacock & poison green came to me last week when I was doing a FB post about my 2009 New Year's Resolution. The two-part resolution was: 1) Buy no clothes/shoes/accessories in 2009, and 2) get rid of 52 pieces of clothing (i.e., one a week). So, October 1st was the 3/4ths-of-the-way there mark, and I posted that I reached that milestone with zero temptation to write a book about the experience -- a reaction to the spate of books out now about these wacky one-year lifestyle experiments/stunts where people eat local, use less electricity, or, you know, cook their way through Julia Child's Mastering the Art of French Cooking. After I posted about not being at all interested in writing a book about my experience buying no clothing for a year, I realized I actually had a lot to say about this topic...and how it relates to what we wear, how we think & decide, how we imagine & present ourselves, and what it's like to be a 40-something female these days...So -- welcome to p&pg. I hope you'll read, enjoy, react, & comment.

Peacock and poison green is my favorite color combo, BTW, and you'll be hearing more about that as the blog rolls along. What else will I be posting about? Here's a sampler of future topics (what  my 10-year-old daughter would call "idea insurance"):

  1. Why "I was Jacquline Kennedy's Dressmaker" was my favorite book as a child
  2. Which 52 pieces of clothing got de-accessioned in 2009 and why
  3. The 80/20 rule as applied to clothes, and why I "frequency file" my closet.
  4. How people react to my peacock & poison green color fetish
  5. What it's like to organize a neighborhood clothing swap for fellow moms
  6. Why Real Simple magazine is my porn
  7. What "want vs. should conflict" is and how it relates to our shopping behavior
  8. Why I'm obsessed both with Michelle Obama's fashion choices and the media coverage of them
  9. How some of my clothing "issues" play out in my choices about my kids' clothes
  10. The post-Seinfeld take on the J Peterman catalog
  11. The unique form of Buyer's Remorse that pertains to clothing catalog purchases
  12. That startling gap between how you think you look and how you look when you see yourself in store window when you walk down the street. What's up with that.
  13. How my sister only wears one designer and how I'm considering moving in that direction
  14. What happens to my blood pressure when I watch "What Not To Wear"
  15. What mindfulness meditation can do for your daily outfit selection.
  16. The catalog wars: J Jill vs. Boden vs. J Crew vs. Lands End vs. Eilenn Fisher --- what are we being told? What are being sold?
  17. My idea for a fashion-oriented reality TV show set in my favorite So Cal thrift store
  18. That whole "what season are you?" fashion & color system -- does it work?
  19. My incredibly fabulous and fashion-forward sister in law, and why I can't be her.
  20. What your sleepwear choices say about you
  21. The increasing importance of well-fitting undergarments as we age. No, really.
Today's outfit: Black v-neck t-shirt, purchased at Quality Thrift ("QT") c.2001. Long blue skirt, purchased @ QT,  2007.

5 comments:

  1. I can hardly wait to read every one of these topics. Great start, Ali! xo

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  2. Interesting...maybe it's something about turning 40, but I've been attempting to remake my own wardrobe in the last year. Only mildly successful. I signed up at www.missussmartypants.com, and have actually found some nice things as a result (including a bright fuschia dress...don't know how much you remember about me in junior high, but a bright fuschia dress would not have been anywhere near my closet back then). Anyway, I'm looking forward to reading what you have to say, Alison.

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  3. Sigh. V. difficult project and maybe I should join you in 2010 as I can't stop buying and I can't get rid of anything either! Admirable!

    Do you buy new clothes for the girls?

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  4. Alison, just to feed into the already complex mix:
    1. the CEO of J.Jill was a major financial contributor to W's administration, so we stopped shopping there. I'm sure if we knew about the political affiliations of the CEOs of most of our favorite clothing lines we would have to stop shopping everywhere, so we don't ask.
    2. Eileen Fisher got an award from Ms. for something like "most politically correct women's clothing line." Most of that stuff is made in China. So is it made in better-run factories with less horrific environmental and labor practices? Inquiring minds want to know, because I'd feel a lot better about paying Eileen Fisher prices if I thought the higher cost translated into higher pay for laborers.

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  5. I'm subscribed. Please post Pantone (or other color system) colors for peacock and poison green so that I can follow along at home. (BTW, according to Pantone, cerulean blue was the color of the last millennium, and mimosa is the color of the year for 2009. I don't think I can wear mimosa but I'll continue to drink it.)

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