Category Archives: Outerwear

VPOD: Vintage 1980s Graphic RainCoat


vintage 1980s graphic coat raincoat

This raincoat is loooooong so even your legs will stay dry although I say why limit yourself to wearing it only on rainy days!

Available at Times Up Vintage.

VPOD: Inquisitive vs Acquisitive and a Vintage 1960s Holt Renfrew Silk Coat


vintage 1960s holt renfrew silk dress coat

Let’s face it. We live in a consumer culture where we are bombarded by messages that try to convince us that we need another doodad, an improved something-or-other, a better whatchamacallit or the latest thingamajig if we ever want to be truly happy, content, or satisfied.

But being acquisitive isn’t the way to inner peace.

As soon as you do finally get whatever is was you were hankering for — a new car, a bigger house, that vacation to Hawaii, the new It bag — you’re bound to begin hankering for something else.

And any of those things you work so hard to acquire can literally be swept away in a heartbeat — as was so painfully proved with the Midwest tornadoes last week.

So I say it’s far smarter to be inquisitive.

To spend your time questioning, learning, relating, and gathering up as much knowledge, insight and wisdom as one person can possibly hold. To be curious. To be interested in other points of view. To collect ideas instead of objects.

This too will be a lifelong quest. After all, there will always be something more to learn.

But unlike the quest for more and more shoes, the practice of being inquisitive instead of acquisitive actually makes you a better person.

Which isn’t to say a gal has to resist every call from the online mall!

Today’s vintage 1960s silk coat from Holt Renfrew makes a lovely and glamorous Spring accessory for the inquiring mind of a Vintage Crusader.

Available at Mod-Chic Vintage.

(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 Coat and The Future of Fashion


vintage 1960s silver brocade and mink coat

I’ve been reading Michio Kaku’s fascinating book, Physics of the Future, and marveling at his predictions for how science will shape our daily lives by the year 2100.

And while the book covers the areas of medicine, computers, nanotechnology, artificial intelligence, energy production and astronautics, the scientist doesn’t bother to offer any thoughts on the future of fashion.

So I’m gonna do a little predicting of my own.

For instance, Michio Kaku describes super-thin and flexible wall screens that will be as inexpensive as wallpaper and will allow you to redecorate and change their patterns with the push of a button.

And I say, if this is possible, then I’d like to see a similar-type fabric with embedded computer chips that will allow us to change the print of our dress or coat on a whim. I predict in the future we’ll be able to buy these special dresses or coats and then download seasonal prints from our favorite designers just as easily as we download music from iTunes.

And how cool would it be to download a simple, conservative print on a sheath dress for the office and then just push a button to switch it into a sparkling brocade for evening?

Michio Kaku also describes haptic technology which is already being used in the military. It allows you to feel the presence of computer-generated objects and simulates the sensation of texture.

So I predict that soon we might actually be able to “feel” the silk or the velvet or the cashmere of the items we’re browsing online so we’re not disappointed when our purchase arrives on our doorstep.

Pretty cool, right?

Every time my sister and I talk on Facetime, I’m reminded that the crazy lives the Jetson’s lived in their futuristic cartoon world are quickly becoming reality here in my world.

Perhaps that’s why, even though I’ve been melting in the 113-degree afternoon heat here in Tempe this week, I’m still drawn to today’s VPOD.

The silver brocade on this fabulous vintage 1960s winter coat gives it a mod futuristic vibe but its classic styling is solidly old-fashioned.

And that creates the perfect combination for a future-focused Vintage Crusader!

Available at The Kaliman. | 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 1970s Gucci Travel Raincoat and Being Prepared


vintage 1970s gucci travel raincoat

vintage 1970s gucci travel raincoat

I don’t know what you East Coasters have done to incur the wrath of Mother Nature but she’s sure lashing out with a wallop, isn’t she?

First, she starts your week with a shake, rattle and roll earthquake and now she’s planning to unleash her fury with 100-mile-per-hour winds and huge storm surges along the coast.

Since I’m of the mind that it’s better to be safe than sorry, I’d be hightailing it out of there and heading for safer ground.

And since I’m of the mind that it’s better to be safe than sorry, I also think that whether you believe Hurricane Irene is a naturally occurring phenomenon or the result of climate change, treating our recent rash of extreme weather occurrences as if climate change is the culprit seems to be the conservative and logical approach.

I guess I don’t understand how paying more attention to our impact on the environment and the delicate balance of nature could be a bad thing.

Part of being prepared means accepting responsibility for your own actions.

So shouldn’t the entire human race accept the responsibility of protecting our habitat on this shared planet just as folks on the East Coast are accepting responsibility to board up their windows and grab sandbags?

Part of being prepared is thinking ahead and projecting what might go wrong.

So shouldn’t we consider the warnings from scientists detailing projected consequences if the polar ice cap melts or the Gulf Sream Conveyor Belt shuts down just as individuals grab emergency provisions and fill their gas tanks to heed evacuation orders and get to safety?

Part of being prepared involves confronting your fear that things might indeed turn out as bad, or worse, than predicted.

So shouldn’t you prepare for the worst and hope for the best?

Of course!

But whether you’re preparing for Hurricane Irene or the future natural calamities Mother Nature has in store, I believe that it’s only when you prepare for the worst that you can hope for the best.

My thoughts go out to everyone on the East Coast fleeing their homes or battening down the hatches.

For, as one commentator reminded everyone, property can be rebuilt. Lives can’t be unlost.

Of course, not everyone is facing impending disaster today. If you’re one of the lucky ones not dealing with Hurricane Irene, today’s VPOD is an especially stylish way for you to always be prepared for a quick turn in the weather anytime and anywhere.

This vintage 1970s Gucci travel raincoat features the brand’s iconic horse bit motif and easily folds away for convenient storage in your luggage, handbag or car.

It’s a lovely rainy weather find for a prepared Vintage Crusader!

Available from Douglas Rosin at 1stDibs.

(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 1960s Bill Blass Coat, Vintage Pricing and Brad Pitt’s $12k Ugly Vase


vintage 1960s bill blass print coat

This weekend I had the pleasure of meeting a lovely older couple who were avid antiquers and we engaged in a conversation about what life’s like as an antiques dealer and just how quickly one’s passionate collecting can turn into a full-time business.

Then we got on the delicate topic of pricing and they regaled me with an entertaining tale.

A tale that starts with an ugly vase.

This ugly vase belonged to Party A’s deceased wife and had been in her family for generations. It had also been in Party A’s house long enough. He’d always hated the vase and thought it was u-g-l-y.

So he set it out at a weekend yard sale and slapped on a $15 price tag thinking, what the heck, maybe somebody would like it.

And somebody did. We’ll call him Party B.

Party A could hardly believe it!

Party B had actually parted with $15 of his hard-earned money for that ugly vase! Party A quickly pocketed his $15 before the buyer changed his mind and was thrilled to have that ugly vase gone from his life forever.

Party B was an auctioneer. He put the vase up for sale at his next auction and it sold for $120 to Party C.

What a nice little profit for such an ugly vase, he thought.

Party C also happened to be an auctioneer but he ran a much larger and better attended auction that Party B. This time when he offered the ugly vase at auction it sold for $325 to Party D.

That was an even bigger profit on the ugly vase than Party B had made!

Party D was a dealer and he immediately took the vase to a high-end antiques store in LA that often bought items from him. The owner of the antiques store, Party E, was drooling to pay $700 for “such a beautiful vase from this manufacturer in such fine condition.”

And later that day, the ugly vase (or beautiful vase, depending on the eye of the beholder) was seen displayed in the window of Party E’s antiques store with a price tag of $3500.

A few days later, Party F, a well-known interior designer, was scouting in Party E’s store and purchased the vase for $3500 which he then re-sold to Brad Pitt for $12,000!

Now, please note that this is my best recollection of the couple’s story and the prices that they shared with me over the weekend. I, of course, have no way of verifying if any of this is true or just one of those urban myths-in-the-making, but it certainly rings true for me as I’ve heard many similar stories over the years and I’m part of this vintage and antiques pipeline myself.

For instance, I know that items I’ve purchased at auction have been worn by the celebrity clients of a certain famed stylist (initials RZ) who regularly pulled items from a Beverly Hills vintage boutique where I consigned my monthly vintage finds. And I know those celebrities paid waaaay more for those dresses than the price tag at the store.

So you can see that wherever you sit on this vintage and antique food chain will determine the prices that you can command or will end up paying.

Those folks with celebrity connections and lots of knowledge and experience sit at the top and can command the highest prices. Think of them as the lions of the jungle.

Those people with little knowledge and experience and who are consumers, not professionals, sit at the very bottom. Think of these folks, like Party A in this story, as the wounded antelope (and these folks can often fall prey to the hungry lions).

But does it make sense now why you might see similar items on two different vintage websites with very different prices?

I mean I remember once seeing the exact same Lilli Ann suit offered online at two different venues for $99 and $895!

The price all depends on where a seller is in the vintage and antique pipeline and who their clients happen to be. Or, to continue my jungle analogy, when they get to drink at the watering hole and how much they’re willing to pay to avoid being eaten.

If you’re a buyer, you want to buy as close to the bottom of the pipeline as possible to get the best price.

If you’re a seller, you want to sell to buyers as close to the top of the pipeline as possible to get the best price.

Finally, a Facebook friend recently posted about her amazing $1 Thierry Mugler find at a thrift store in Utah. So that’s the beginning of the pipeline, right?

So while this gal may just keep this find for herself, since she’s a dealer she’ll probably sell it for a hefty profit to her local vintage shop who, to expose it to a larger audience, will put it up for auction on eBay where it will be won by a NYC vintage dealer who will show it to an LA costume designer who will feature it on a famed celebrity in a film that goes on to win an Academy Award prompting this $1 Mugler to command a 6-figure winning bid when it is later sold at a specialty auction and acquired by a museum for its permanent collection.

But you, as a consumer, have both the power and the opportunity to interrupt this chain.

If you’re willing to pay a premium NOT to have to troll through thrift shops you can snatch this Mugler on eBay.

If you’re willing to pay a premium NOT to have to page through thousands of eBay auctions, you can intercept a Mugler like this at an upscale vintage boutique.

If you’re willing to pay a premium then you don’t have to drag yourself out of bed to go to the Rose Bowl at 5 am or spend hours in a messy thrift store. You can just sleep in late and surf on over to a favorite vintage website with a steaming cup of tea nearby.

That’s how I discovered today’s VPOD.

This vintage 1960s Bill Blass printed coat is oh-so-lovely and while you may never know how many hands it passed through before it got to your closet, you can be grateful for each one and then welcome it yourself with open arms.

It’s a wonderful classic find for a vintage fashionista!

Available at PinkClouds.

(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.)


© Mary Kincaid 2006-2009
.