"Where did you get that?"
Several visitors asked me that as we toured the city. Another weaponized her partner. Over dinner, Jacquie said, "Sandra wants to know where you buy your clothes—that top you wore last night, for example."
As I answered Sandra's question, I felt mildly embarrassed.
My unease is rooted in family etiquette. An inquiry about provenance was considered "being nosy", a transgression Mom ranked just below ax murder. If a compliment did not elicit the information ("What a pretty dress, I've never been able to find that colour!" "Oh, it's from Welling's."), you dropped it. A French friend has no use for subtlety; deft as a pickpocket, she will pull my collar back to check the label. I told her to just ask.
And yet, gobsmacked by something great, watch me do the same thing!
At a street market, I saw a curvy, auburn-haired woman in a shirtdress that made her look like an Art Deco goddess—the interesting colourway of the geometric print, the princess-seamed bodice, the elegant length. When she placed her hand in a pocket, I swooned. As if propelled by another brain, I approached to say that her dress was perfection, that she looked so beautiful yet relaxed, that I sometimes wrote about style, and would she be willing to tell me who made it?
She said it was the "For the Love of Pockets" dress from Bombshell, a London boutique. She was here for the month and (this was the real surprise), she said, "I packed seven dresses. Just dresses." I was impressed with this approach; why not swoosh about—she's not going hiking!I realized that usually, the inquirer is longing for sources. She too is trying to find a graceful dress, beautiful fabric. I learned that—if the if label is lofty—the inquirer might assume that I spend all my money on clothes. But half the time, it's more likely new only to me.
My city has luscious secondhand boutiques (Seconde, Le Dressing, Ruse), who make designers somewhat more manageable, as well as friperies, less refined but always worth a peek.
Left: Jacket, Seconde; top right: detail, Tahari dress, Le Dressing; bottom right: Roger Vivier shoes, Ruse. |
When I mention secondhand, a frequent rejoinder is, "Oh, I just don't have the time for that." But I've left so many boutiques in empty-handed exasperation that a secondhand swoop is worth my half-hour. I've been thinking of a navy jacket cut long enough for my height. I am smitten by this Frame blazer, but the price, around $650, is a chunk of change when I am not sure.
A few days ago, I found similar piece in a Sally Ann for $7! I've tried to shoot it, but it's pesky to photograph, so here I am simply looking pleased with a bargain.
It does not have the hip raw edges of the Frame jacket, but I can assess its utility and see if the pricey version goes on sale. The label is a Montréal mystery brand, NatalieB—perhaps a short-lived company; I can't find any reference.
If it turns out that I don't want to keep the NatalieB for long, it was the price of coffee and a cookie! But already, I have been asked The Question.
Comments
I'm looking for an oval pearl enhancer to hang on my pearls (don't know if that's what they're still called, I'm having trouble finding what I'm looking for on pearl websites - I keep getting suggestions for earrings - perhaps I don't have the correct name). I just need the pearl, I have some old diamonds I can use to make the loop (I'm sure that's not what it's called). Any suggestions?
For your pendant project, the enhancer is also called a hinge bail, snap bail, or removable pendant bail. Good ones are •very• hard to find. Here is an oval one in silver: https://www.etsy.com/ca/listing/183526025/sterling-silver-textured-bail-with-hinge?click_key=66d63f10a8abe14cf32d9e55cf9ee94aa39cd2b2%3A183526025&click_sum=8ad6c51a&external_collection=&sts=1
Finding an enhancer bail that does not look dated and mass-made is really a job. Some jewellers will make them but this is fiddly work, there is a hinge and a closure, and it has to be secure.
A more recent design is the double-ended chain with a 'charm holder' . You slide your pearl pendant onto that. Here is a video from Mejuri showing how that works (watch to the end of brief video): https://mejuri.com/ca/en/shop/products/paperclip-chain-charm-necklace?currency=CAD&source=shoppingads&variant=16+inches&utm_source=google&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=nonbrand_shopping_ca_product_necklaces&gclid=Cj0KCQjwyLGjBhDKARIsAFRNgW_nv_T7l0DbbZGpeq6-o8EXEFwDZ4SZv3lATYLBrRLn0Acmf_n7pbwaAij0EALw_wcB
The 'loop' for your pearl pendant is called a bail. A jeweller will use either a stock one or custom make it. Please send me an email if this explanation isn't clear or you have more questions.
Well, La Dump was actually the local dump! My friend's husband used to take things to dump there and came across the blouse so he brought it home.
BTW, please sign your comments with any name or pseudonym you like, it's a request I make of all anonymous commenters.
Next, your navy blazer is a steal and it looks great on you. The keshi necklace is also lovely. Kojima?
The closest I get is to admire the article and ask "did you get it in London?" This gives them a get-out - they can say no, or yes, or yes and give you the name of the outlet/label.
I suppose this instinctive reluctance to reveal a source stems from those simpler times when women owned far fewer clothes, social occasions were more formal and there was more social awkwardness if someone else wore the same thing as you.
Congratulations on scoring that jacket! I've found some real secondhand bargains in my time, including a beautiful apricot and cream fleck designer linen jacket that appeared unworn and still had the original tacking stitches holding the pockets closed. I wore it happily for years (fortunately, nobody asked me where I'd got it from)
Jane: That's a discreet inquiry. You remind me that in in my 30s I had to wear what I call "corporate drag", and of good quality; business casual was not acceptable then where I worked. I often bought at consignments and would rather be boiled alive than have to say that to anyone but close friends. Now, the younger generations see second-hand as environmentally responsible, and those rental sites are essentially renting used clothes. The attitude has changed. That apricot jacket sounds gorgeous.
Susan: About 400 women are reading your comment and wondering "WHAT is that perfect dress"? It does feel good to help, whether one gives or receives.
I have a favorite navy blazer that was thrifted years and years ago - it's Italian, well-tailored, and only looks a little dated with its shoulder pads but I still love it.
If it were my dress, I test it by hand-washing a sleeve, in cool water with a fine-fabric soap, if a dark colour, one made for darks like Woolite Dark.In these times of every company around trying to fluff up their sustainable and ethical reputation, I am surprised they are making DCO clothes except maybe for specialty items. Travelling is another story; you probably won't need to clean the dress, and if you do and are in a local with fast-turnaround cleaning, dry might be more convenient. But when home, I would bet you can wash that.