Category Archives: Tips

VPOD: Vintage 1970s Dress & Green Graduations


vintage 1970s flapper inspired dress

greenweaver eco-friendly graduation caps and gowns

As graduates nationwide march across stages at their commencements, I’m thrilled to discover one company that is helping them to do it with green eco-style.

Oak Hall Cap & Gown has found a way to divert over 7 million plastic bottles from landfills with their Greenweaver line of graduation gowns made of 100% post-consumer plastic.

Each eco-friendly gown is made from molten plastic pellets derived from about 23 plastic bottles and the company’s orders have tripled in just the last year.

Surely even more colleges and universities will join the party when they discover that the manufacture of these Greenweaver gowns also reduces carbon dioxide emissions by 54% and saves 52% on energy costs by using thermal energy instead of petroleum. Plus the gowns come in recycled plastic bags and are shipped in recycled cardboard containers.

And get this: they cost about $2 LESS than the old polyester gowns!

In addition, Greenweaver provides collection boxes to college campuses to help encourage recycling of the gowns after their use and makes a donation to each campus’s sustainability program with purchase.

So come on, Vintage Crusaders, help spread the word and, in the meantime, don’t forget to make your own graduation celebrations as green as possible. Here’s ten quick tips:

1. Send evites instead of paper invitations.
2. Use cloth napkins or inexpensive cloth bandannas instead of paper napkins.
3. Rent or borrow silverware, tableware and stemware instead of purchasing disposable items.
4. Or choose compostable dinnerware and utensils.
5. Set up recycling containers as well as trash receptacles.
6. Consider serving prepared drinks from pitchers rather than drinks prepackaged in aluminum cans or plastic bottles.
7. Choose organic or local alcoholic beverages.
8. Support your local farmers by shopping for local, in-season produce and flowers grown locally.
9. Plan a menu heavy on finger-foods which require less plates and utensils.
10. Use natural, recycled or repurposed materials for party decorations.

Then don today’s VPOD to be the greenest hostess-with-the-mostest.

This vintage 1970s frock is a modern take on a 1920s flapper dress and has easy-breezy styling with a fab fringed belt.

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

Available at Posh Girl 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 Edwardian Cape and Some Vintage Shopping Advice


vintage edwardian cape 2

vintage edwardian cape

There are definite trade-offs between vintage shopping online and vintage shopping in person, especially when it comes to assessing a vintage item’s condition.

For example, when you shop for vintage clothes in person, you usually won’t receive a clear-cut written description of any flaws in the garment. While most brick-and-mortar vintage stores carefully select pieces with minimal damage, they still expect you to use your own eagle eyes to do a full-fledged inspection of any piece you plan to purchase.

Of course when you’re as picky as I am, that means always asking the sales associate if she’s aware of any damage on a piece, asking to inspect the garment in daylight to better assess any fading or staining, and going over every inch of the item with a fine-toothed comb.

It’s a completely different situation, however, when you shop for vintage clothes online. Here it’s often the pictures of items that can trip you up.

Have you ever noticed that many vintage items look waaaaaaay better in their online pictures than they do in real life?

Unless you’re diligent about carefully reading item descriptions, it’s easy to get all excited by a really great picture, place your order (or bid, if it’s an auction) and then be unpleasantly surprised when the item arrives at your doorstep. That why you absolutely MUST read every word of an item’s description to ensure you’ll be satisfied.

Fortunately, in cyberspace, it’s expected that sellers will disclose any significant flaws in their item descriptions. And while what I consider significant and what a seller considers significant can often be worlds apart, at least you can expect a synopsis of all major areas of concern.

Unfortunately, many items that look beautiful in their online pictures show flaws that will be glaringly evident in your living room. So, if it’s an option, always enlarge each provided picture and use that nifty magnifying feature if it’s available.

Here’s another great tip that’s protected me from many a bad purchase:

If an auction or merchandise picture is not well lit, take a screenshot or download the picture to your computer so you can use your photo-enhancement software to lighten the shadows. Often that stain, fading, snag or break in the lace that was almost unnoticeable in the original picture will stand out like a sore thumb in the enhanced photo—just the way it will when you hold the garment in your own hands.

Today’s VPOD is a fine example of why you need to read descriptions carefully before purchasing items online.

This Edwardian cape is a fantastic find because it’s in pristine condition—on the outside. A quick glance at the first pics and it’s easy to see that the beading, the needlework and the fringed trim are all in extraordinary shape which is very unusual for a piece of this age. You have to look at all the pictures in the listing and read the description to the very end for a clear disclosure that the lining is shredded.

Of course, when you’re buying a beauty like this to wear as a contemporary piece this shredding is not a deterrent. After all, replacing the lining is an easy fix and this piece is truly extraordinary! But you do want to expect the lining damage and not have it take you by surprise when you open your package.

That why I firmly believe that being a satisfied online vintage customer requires responsibility on the part of both the seller AND the buyer.

And when you do your part, and the seller does their part, you’ll end up as one very satisfied vintage fashionista!

Cape available at Simplicity Is Bliss.

(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
.