Happily Ever After (and After)

“Can the stories of our past become part of a sustainable future?” asks designer Ryan Novelline. His incredible one-of-a-kind dress takes the recycling of “golden” materials to a whole new level of fantasy.

Constructed entirely of the charming little Golden Books you’ll recall from childhood, this fairytale concoction is at once enchanting and thought-provoking. Carefully color-sorted illustrations have been sewn together with metallic thread, and the bodice utilizes the eponymous golden foil spines of the books. If you visit the designer’s website, you can take a fascinating step-by-step tour of the construction, and he even invites suggestions regarding an appropriate venue for his creation. If I only had room in my closet…

I was introduced to this delightful work through Ecouterre, which is one of my favorite sites to read about cutting edge eco-fashion. From the outlandish and bizarre Chanel bag made from beef jerky to the slightly-creepy yet strangely-intriguing restored Victorian-era dress bejeweled with beetle wings, their features never cease to amaze me. The jewel-beetle dress, in particular, reminded me of my own fascination with the oddities of antique jewelry history when I worked at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, such as misnamed Egyptian-revival “scarab” brooches incorporating those same iridescent beetles, Chinese hair adornments made of brilliant blue kingfisher feathers, and Victorian mourning items of woven human hair. The recycling and repurposing movement in fashion is hardly new.

Beetles and feathers were used in ancient jewelry because it was impossible to manufacture their equal in color and iridescence at the time, and they were surprisingly durable. In the Gothic and Victorian eras, wearing dead animal or insect material was morbidly appealing and did not seem out of place amid a fascination with what Edgar Allen Poe called the “terrors of the soul”.

I’m no Goth girl myself, but I do find the resourcefulness and creativity of early jewelry-makers remarkable. If I could be half as innovative in my own work I would consider it a great accomplishment.

Wanderlust

It’s been at least six years since my husband and I took a vacation together, and since I seem to be finding fewer and fewer opportunities for leisure as time goes by, it probably would have been another six years before we actually made it happen if it weren’t for the clever scheming of a great friend of ours. When he and several other close friends attended our wedding in Siena, Italy twelve years ago we promised we’d return together to one particularly idyllic spot on the Maremma coast at a secluded, “singing beach” called Cala Violina. The warm, shallow water stretched out seemingly forever, and we rolled up our pants and waded giddily in the waves until after dark, the “singing” sand squeaking between our toes. On the way, one pair of friends had unbelievably, almost magically, taken a wrong turn and happened upon another lost pair of friends on foot by the side of the road (they had tried to meet up with us by taking a bus from the airport to the closest village). Rarely do such moments of true relaxation and guiltless pleasure arise in life, and we plotted ways to recapture this bliss later on.

The ten-year reunion of this happy event came and went, and our friend decided to take matters in his own hands. Out of the blue, we received an invitation from him to his own Italian wedding this summer–at that very spot. Of course, there was no way we could refuse.

I’m beside myself with glee. A trip to Florence, Siena and the Maremma, with some of my favorite people ever. I’ve got to start planning my travel wardrobe, don’t you think? I had some fun with Polyvore, putting together an inspiration board with organic, sustainable, eco-friendly apparel from Rag & Bone, the Podolls, Stewart+Brown, Edun and Kim White to wear with okomido jewelry. If you’re a Polyvore fan, you can even access the jewelry images I saved there and use them for your own creative wardrobe styling. Hope you enjoy!

Token of Affection

I was reading one of my favorite children’s books to my son a few nights ago, and I realized how appropriate the sentiment is for this time of year. Mr. Rabbit and the Lovely Present is not actually about Mother’s Day, but it is about a little girl’s quest to find the perfect gift for her mother, assisted by the charmingly rakish Mr. Rabbit. Charlotte Zolotow’s lilting prose and dreamy watercolor illustrations by Maurice Sendak bring to life our heroine’s brilliant choice: the gift of color, represented by red apples, green pears, yellow bananas and blue grapes.

My family knows why I love this book so much. Every mother desires her children to put as much reflection and ingenuity into finding the perfect representation of their affection for her. Amidst all the chaos and activity of my busy work- and family-life, I take refuge in beauty and simplicity wherever possible, just as this endearing present suggests.

I hope the mothers in your life receive as thoughtful and evocative a gift as this one. They deserve it.

Local Color

One of the most adorable small-town features of this area is the Apple Blossom Parade and Festival every spring. You know I’m fond of this gorgeous time of year in Sonoma County, when the rolling hills have just been furred with green and acres of heirloom Gravenstein apple orchards are adrift in white blossoms, and apparently I’m not the only one who finds it worth celebrating. They pick a theme every year, some of them wackier than others (this year’s: “Blossoms On Safari”, in an unlikely pairing of apple blossoms and wild animals). Crepe paper blossoms are everywhere, and home-made floats abound. Charming old-fashioned tractors and 15-foot-high bicycles are followed by dancing dachshunds and guys in gorilla suits, with a few cardboard elephants thrown in for good measure. Too cute for words. My family adores it.

photos courtesy of Debbie Wiegmann

In honor of the season, I also just had to share with you a stunning photo I stumbled across by photographer Ed Buziak, because it just looked so jewel-like. Isn’t it amazing?