Sunday, 11 May 2014

My Favourites from the Met Gala

How many of you stayed up the other night, constantly refreshing twitter as the images dripped through from the Met Gala Ball Red Carpet?

Suki Waterhouse photo

Arizone Muse Photo
Blake Lively Photo
and for me, the winner had to be...

Taylor Swift Photo
Initially rather underwhelmd with the theme of White Tie and Diamonds, it did appeal to my sense of nostalgic romance with many a guest paying homage to Charles James.  I'm clearly an old romantic at heart, which seemed to come out when talking to Navaz (Disneyrollergirl) the other week with Mastered.com, my style as a stylist seems to come under the moniker of Modern Classic, Romantic and Pastoral. It might have something to with preferring the West Country to London, and I always feel more comfortable styling a Tim Walker esque, fantastical shoot. My projects always come back to a romantic yearning for the great outdoors whether it's flower topped wellies or practical outdoor embellishments. Anyway, enough about me...

Charles James Ball Gowns, 1948
Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Photograph by Cecil Beaton, Beaton / Vogue / Condé Nast Archive. Copyright © Condé Nast
Charles James: Beyond Fashion is a look back at the groundbreaking designer's work on ball gowns in the 1940s and 1950s, shaking off the mantle of the war years, where fabric had been at a premium and tight silhouettes were the order of the day to save money, James' voluminous yet mathematically structured ball gowns summed up the New Look of the day, alongside Dior's New Look Collection of 1947.

James approached the female form as an anatomical specimen, and aren't we the better for it!

More than ever, this has made me want to hop on a plane to NYC and drool over the exhibition's many sketches, fabric samples, technical drawings and, of course, the real thing!

Friday, 9 May 2014

Disney Roller Girl Day with Mastered.com

Disneyrollergirl

I spent the day with Navaz Batliwalla aka Disneyrollergirl as part of one of Mastered's online courses for modern creative development. 

some of Disneyrollergirl's work with brands

Navaz launched the blog in 2007 as an 'anonymous fashion insider' and gave her opinion on all things aesthetic and driving the fashion/art world. It was awesome to sit down with her, with just one year's experience of blogging under my belt, and talk about the next steps for FixUpLookChic. The chat was all in aid of Mastered's course about how to turn your fashion blog into a money making commodity and how to work with brands. Of course blogging is ultimately for the love of it, and is a place where a writer can empty their head and share their thoughts with the reader. 
with Frances and Navaz

No one can underestimate the power of the individual armed with a laptop and some high speed broadband in the comfort of their own home.


These days, that is all you need to take over the world, one post at a time, and why shouldn't it make you some money/contacts in the process? 

Also lucky enough to be a guinea pig like me was the lovely Frances who's blog Last Year Girl is a vintage fashion focussed blog, writing about Vintage books, exhibitions, styles and key items that have found their way back into our modern fashion psyche.

Wednesday, 7 May 2014

Fashion Fix 1st Birthday: Revisiting the Burberry Aztec Beaded Yoke



It's time to have a look back at some of my favourite summer fashion fixes of the past year. I've now been working on this blog for a year and as my readership has grown continually through the years, I know some of your newer FashionFixers won't have seen some of the gems that lie in the early end of this blog. 


Photo Amanda Thomas

One of my favourite trends of 2012 was Burberry's tribal inspired beaded yoke adornment on their Spring/Summer Collection. I really think this is a unique addition and surprisingly wearable in the everyday as the gorgeous Eva Lazarus models for us below. 

You will need:

  • pattern paper
  • 3/4 metre cotton fabric
  • 3/4 metre lining fabric
  • sewing machine and matching thread
  • 1/2 metre matching ribbon
  • dressmaking pins
  • dressmaking scissors
  • fimo in assorted colours
  • oven
  • needle and thread

How to do it:
  1. Measure you collar size and add 5 cm, draw this circle on pattern paper. Measure out 17 cm from this line and draw a larger circle, fold in half, press and unfold again. Above the neck opening on the inner edge, measure out 2 cm either side of the centre fold and cut out a segment of the pattern. Cut down the centre fold below the neck opening  leaving you with half the pattern.  Lay onto the fold of the fabric, pin in place and cut out two collar pieces, making sure you include a 1cm seam allowance with both.
  2. Sew ribbon onto both sides of one collar piece.
  3. place the collar pieces right sides together, tucking the ribbons inside. pin in place
  4. using a running stitch sew all the way around, 1cm from the edge, leave a gap at one end to pull through.
  5. Pull the collar through, hand sew the opening closed.
  6. Draw a template of your yoke on pattern paper and mark out your bead design. use this as a reference to make your beads out of Fimo. Make sure to score holes in the beads before you bake them. hand sew them on in thread that matches the yoke fabric



In the studio, working out the pattern after a night of Fimo baking!

Eva Lazarus modelling the yoke, shot by Amanda Thomas, Makeup Jo Williams, Styling Harriet de Winton