Category Archives: Evening wear

VPOD: Vintage Pierre Cardin Beaded Evening Bags and Finding Vintage


vintage pierre cardin beaded handbag

Earlier this week I was blessed to share a stimulating conversation with Mark Levy, the brilliant founder of Levy Innovation, who has been described as “a positioning guru extraordinaire,” “a Superman of the mind,” and “a horse whisperer for writers and thinkers.”

With accolades like that you might correctly surmise that our talk included phrases like externalized thinking and thought leadership but, surprisingly, Mark and I also mulled over the origin of the cape, its use by both men and women, and yes, even its association with superheros.

Then Mark recounted a story about a time he was speaking at an event and was introduced to a client’s brother who just happened to be a vintage clothing dealer.

Well, Mark thought this was a fascinating profession and starting asking the man questions about his job. And it didn’t take long before he hit the taboo question that every vintage clothing dealer dreads:

So, where do you find your stuff?

But this dealer handled the question with extraordinary style and grace:

Sorry, I’d love to share but that’s a trade secret.

Bingo!

You see, as Mark quickly realized, asking vintage dealers to reveal their product sources is like expecting magicians to reveal the secrets behind their magic tricks.

And with quality vintage becoming harder and harder to find, you can bet that vintage dealers are guarding their sources with the same zeal that Coke uses to guard its secret soft drink recipe.

So while I’m not gonna share my own favorite out-of-the-box people and places that I’ve used to source great vintage myself, I will share a super-secret weapon that may sound a bit woo-woo but still works like a charm.

You see, I believe that the dealers with the best stock don’t always find great vintage as much as they ATTRACT great vintage.

Once you acknowledge that our world is made of energy, you soon realize that setting an intention to discover great vintage and then exhibiting gratefulness when it arrives seems to beget more great vintage.

At least that’s what seems to happen in my world. And I’m always amazed and delighted when the universe provides just what I’ve asked for.

For instance, if I have a designer on my mind, I’ll often discover one of their pieces on my next trip to a thrift store or flea market.

Or I’ll be thinking about something I’d like to acquire and then open an email announcing an auction that surprise, surprise, has that exact piece on the auction block.

Or I’ll bump into someone who knows someone who knows someone looking to sell what they call old clothes but what I think of as a vintage collection.

Which brings us to today’s VPODs. Both of these lovely micro-beaded vintage evening bags hail from a series designed by Pierre Cardin.

The bottom golden version is from my own collection, discovered at last fall’s Vintage Expo in Santa Monica. Since it’s one of my favorite pieces I won’t be parting with it anytime soon.

But you can grab the top version done in primary colors for your very own. And while you’re welcome to inquire with the dealer where they discovered it, don’t be surprised if they choose not to tell.

Of course, whatever its path to you, it’s a beautiful gem for a vintage fashionista!

Available at Chic Antiques. | Discovered at TheFind.com.

(To receive the VPOD free via email with detailed size and price information, sign up for the growing email mailing list here. Your information will never be sold or shared and you can easily unsubscribe at any time.)

VPOD: Vintage Christian Dior Silk Evening Coat & Advice from Bossypants


vintage christian dior silk evening coat

vintage christian dior silk evening coat 2

I laughed my way through chapter after chapter of Tina Fey’s hilarious book, Bossypants, over the weekend. And while she offered some wacky advice and opinions on everything from breastfeeding to management styles, her observations about fashion were right on the money:

“It can’t be said enough. Don’t concern yourself with fashion; stick with simple pieces that flatter your body type.”

And

“A wise friend once told me, ‘Don’t wear what fashion designers tell you to wear. Wear what they wear.’ His point being that most designers, no matter what they throw onto the runways, favor simple, flattering pieces for themselves.”

And while I wouldn’t suggest copying Tina Fey’s self-described look of oversize T-shirts, bike shorts and wrestling shoes, or of copying those celebrities who wear just about anything as long as it’s outlandish enough to get press coverage (and you know who they are!), I would suggest sticking with classics like today’s VPOD.

This vintage Christian Dior silk evening coat with train from the late 1960s to early 1970s promises to look elegant in any decade past, present, or future.

It’s a forever-stylish find for a vintage fashionista!

Available at Vintage Textile.

(To receive the VPOD via email along with detailed size, price and purchase information, sign up for my growing email mailing list here. Your information will never be sold or shared and you can easily unsubscribe at any time.)

VPOD: Vintage 1960s Ruffle Tier Prom Party Dress


Vintage 1950s ruffle tier prom party dress

In one scene from Sex and the City 2, Samantha and Miley Cyrus both arrive at a Red Carpet event wearing the same dress. Fashion disaster, right?

I mean, a dress would have to be super-extraordinary to transcend the decades (and years of gravity!) that stand between a teenager and a woman in her fifties. And this particular dress, cut up to here and down to there, fell far short of that super-extraordinariness.

Let’s face it. Some dresses are just Young. Fresh. Youthful. They’re made to be worn during that time of innocence before life jades a girl with all its hard knocks.

And call me be old-fashioned, but after staring with horror at the prom dresses that Google showed me recently, my advice to the tens of thousands of gals shopping for prom dresses this year is this:

Go ahead and be a girl! There’s plenty of time to be a woman in the years ahead.

The designers of yesteryear, of course, understood this. I dare you to find a 1950s or 1960s prom dress cut up to here or down to there!  Which is not to say that these dresses didn’t show some skin. Or couldn’t make a girl feel glamorous. But they also weren’t designed to be appropriate for the Hollywood starlets of the era who were long out of high school.

Now I’m not suggesting that every girl don something frilly (or “flurry” as my daughter used to say). But for gal who appreciates nostalgia, likes pretty, feminine things, and isn’t afraid to take her time growing up, then traditional vintage can truly be her friend.

Take today’s VPOD for instance.

This 1960s prom dress in baby pink is oh-so-pretty and a refreshing option for a gal who wants to convey the message of pretty princess and not sexy siren.

It’s a beautiful age-appropriate find for a teenage vintage fashionista!

Available at Spanish Moss.

(To receive the VPOD via email along with detailed size, price and purchase information, sign up for my growing email mailing list here. Your information will never be sold or shared and you can easily unsubscribe at any time.)

VPOD: Vintage 1950s Laura Phillips Sequin Tulle Party Dress


vintage 1950s laura phillips sequin tulle party dress

vintage 1950s laura phillips sequin tulle party dress

There’s no denying that the internet completely changed the music industry and it’s completely changing the way we shop for clothing, too.

Are you one of the internet shoppers fueling the fire?

Do you go “window-shopping” at your local boutiques, spend hours trying on piles of clothes, then hurry home to your trusty computer to order those same items online where you use discount codes, accumulate shopping points, and avoid paying sales tax?

Well, if the trend in Australia catches on, those days of shopping behavior will be coming to an end.

It seems boutiques there have caught on to the number of sales they’re losing to internet window-shoppers who frequent their dressing rooms but walk out without purchasing anything. And to discourage the behavior, they’re instituting “fitting fees” and “change room” fees.

That’s right, spend an hour with a custom ski-boot fitter at InSki and it’ll cost you $50 which will be cheerfully refunded by voucher when you check out with a pair of boots at the store.

Shop at some other popular boutiques and you’ll pay a “change room” fee to use the changing room which will, again, be cheerfully refunded at the register when you check out with actual purchases.

It’s all designed to discourage internet window shoppers who will ultimately use the brick-and-mortar store as nothing more than a tool to make online purchases from discount retailers.

As a shopper, what do you think of these policies? Is it fair for stores to charge these fees so they can survive against their online competition? Or is it utterly ridiculous?  Please weigh in with your comments below.

Fortunately, this new practice won’t apply to your favorite local vintage sellers. After all, when you walk into a vintage store, there are no online alternatives! The items are all one-of-a-kind.

So while you can comparison shop on vintage websites and perhaps find something similar, there’s no chance that you’d find the same exact item in the same exact size and same exact condition. And vice versa.

So, for instance, if you fall in love with today’s VPOD online, you’ll just have to take a chance and order, knowing your local vintage shop won’t have the same dress in stock and being reassured by the site’s generous seven day return period for refund or exchange.

Of course, once you hold this little lovely in your hands it might be hard to pry it away even if it doesn’t quite fit! This early 1950s party dress by Laura Phillips features a full skirt created with layers of muslin, acetate satin and tulle and a design that sparkles with oodles of iridescent sequins.

It’s a chic cyberspace find for a vintage fashionista!

Available at Secret Siren.

(To receive the VPOD via email along with detailed size, price and purchase information, sign up for my growing email mailing list here. Your information will never be sold or shared and you can easily unsubscribe at any time.)

VPOD: Vintage 1970s Silk Chiffon Tangerine Evening Gown


vintage 1970s tangerine silk chiffon evening gown

I’m a huge orange fanatic — the round, juicy kind of orange, that is. So I’m a bit sad because the peak season for oranges is coming to an end.

That just means, though, that I’ll have to be more selective when choosing at the Farmer’s Market each week. After all, not all oranges are alike.

Thin-skinned oranges are juicer than the ones with thick skins and medium-sized oranges are sweeter than their smaller and larger cousins. And surprisingly, the actual orange color of the orange says little about its quality. In fact, because oranges can “regreen” when there are blossoms on an orange tree at the same time as fruit, sometimes an orange that’s tinged green will be the sweetest orange of all!

Luckily, orange is enjoying a sweet moment in fashion, too. And with bright colors the name of the game this spring, you just can’t beat the mouthwatering hues of mango, tangerine, and carrot.

I just love this quote by Wassily Kandinsky:

“Orange is red brought nearer to humanity by yellow.”

Plus we know orange shades whet the appetite. Take today’s VPOD for instance.

This vintage 1970s silk chiffon evening gown will have the crowd drooling even before you add on your knock’em-dead accessories.

It’s a chic citrus find for a vintage fashionista!

Available at Mill Crest Vintage. | Discovered at TheFind.com.

(To receive the VPOD via email along with detailed size, price and purchase information, sign up for my growing email mailing list here. Your information will never be sold or shared and you can easily unsubscribe at any time.)


© Mary Kincaid 2006-2009
.