Chit Chat Chunter #3: Love shirty

There are many reasons why I love the summer tennis season, that hazy trio: Roland Garros, Queens, Wimbledon.

It’s partly nostalgic I think, still somehow symbolic of the approaching long summer holidays (remember?), the end of exams, freedom?

I’m also a massive fan of uniforms. Or should I say, I’m a massive fan of the opportunity for discreet disobedience afforded by a uniform and each year, tennis’ top players show the very best of uniform flouting, especially at Wimbledon.(See Gossip Girl seasons 1 and 2 for more glorious examples). For no other reason than tradition, Wimbledon imposes the White Clothing Rule, and since a recent clamp-down in 2014, strictly white and only white may be worn on court.

And yet, every year someone, usually Serena, manages to sneak in a snip of colour. It is not just a neon trim, a hued sweat band or a bright nail; it is self-expression, rule-breaking, identity. It does remind me of school and one of my own early style triumphs when I took to wearing a polo neck under my shirt in the winter –brazen I thought, bizarre I realise.

Whilst someone in Roger Federer’s camp decided a personal logo was required to identify the Swiss senior, other players use style alone to delineate their brand: Montfils’ long shorts, Sharapova’s visor, Ivanovic’s all black or the William’s brights.  For yes, most tournaments actually allow players to wear colour!

Mimicking the global trend for brightly coloured gym wear, the clay courts of this year’s Roland Garros have been a mad clash of neon brights and I have been loving it. Nike has decked out its players in fluo orange and lilac – stripes for Safarova, leopard for Serena, naturally.

A wonderful confluence of meteorology and mode also allowed for another trend that I have spotted and loved: the long sleeve. For beneath the grey skies of early matches, many females took to the sleeve and even Sharapova’s slightly incongruous nautical stripe looked great.

In fact, the only real fashion-fail of the tournament was Roland Garros’ own ball picker-uppers, (I’m letting Stan Wawrinka off on this occasion…), who were put in most unfortunate outfits. Everything about the girls’ outfit was wrong: from the racer back vest (not suitable for pre-teens), to the long hockey socks (err…35◦C anyone?), to the URL plastered across the back (too obvious). It was a look that lacked any of the sophistication we would usually enjoy from tennis or expect of the French; mais oui, the outfit was, basically, vulgar.

Thankfully the French can usually be relied upon to hold it together style-wise and the crowd largely pulled through this year unscathed.

However, this photo fromRoland Garros my last visit to the tournament a few years ago proves that one must always be on one’s guard – even at the tennis, even in France. 

Chit Chat Cherish #1: A new bag 

Hello! 

I just had to quickly share my new bag with you : I ❤️ it! 

I usually invest a bit in bags (on the basis of the ‘price per wear’ ratio) but this one is an absolute steal from one of my high street favourites: Matalan (or ‘Matt Alan’ as my Dad calls it.)

It’s kind of sporty chic and was probably designed as a gym bag, but since the gym and I aren’t on good terms these days, I’ll be rocking it as an everyday casual. 

Plus, I am OBSESSED with neon. Some might say neon had its day around 18 months ago, but I think a black outfit with a neon bag or shoe is a timeless look.

So, here it is… What do you think?

  
I’ll try to get a few shots of me wearing it in the next few days and post them up, but in the meantime I suggest you all dash to Matalan (it doesn’t seem to be online) and grab a timeless bargain – at £14 you can’t go wrong, right? 

Chit Chat Chunter #2: The importance of fashion fit

I came to another important fashion realisation watching this year’s National Television Awards, it goes like this: if you are going to insist on wearing only half a dress, at least make sure the half you wear fits you.

I mean, poor Sam Faiers: if you’re going to wear a hideous dress love, at least wear it well.

And whilst Ms. Faiers could have benefited from putting some more fabric on, her co-star Ferne McCann could have done with leaving some of the superfluous inches at home.

Who would have thought that leaving too much or too little to the imagination could lead to the same sartorial nightmares? And yet, this dichotomy was perfectly demonstrated by the duo last night on the red carpet at The National Television awards 2015.

Both questionable choices in their own right, the dresses were made unquestionably worse by their ill-fitting awkwardness. Perhaps we can forgive celebrities their lack of style, but can’t they at least make their wrong choices in the right size?

As someone who is frequently faced with the reality of being a “size 11”, between retail stock options, I understand the predicament, really I do. But, after years of aiming to slim or plump into outfits, I have realised it doesn’t matter how amazing the item is, or how much you want it in your wardrobe; it will look hideous if it is too big or too small. Even the most beautiful, most expensive item (as no doubt the offending pieces on the carpet were last night) will look awful if it doesn’t fit you.

Yet again, I find that a few simple rules may be applied to this minefield:

  • If it doesn’t fit immediately, it probably wasn’t meant to be, so don’t buy it.
  • Try picking clothes off the rail by eye, rather than trying to label your size.
  • Consider this: it is the item that is the wrong size, not you.

And, if all else fails on a particular day, head to a shoe shop, where fabulousness is more or less guaranteed: it must have been a very bad run for Ms. McCann.

See these links for images!

http://tinyurl.com/ovz6339

http://tinyurl.com/q8epbgq

Chit Chat Chunter #1: The relentless assault of the jogging pant, sweat pant, master of deceit.

Tracksuit bottoms and me have a complicated past.

When I was in school, ‘Poppers’ meant one of two things: a type of drug and a type of jogging bottom. Both these things were critical in the determination and maintenance of the adolescent social order.

Poppers drugs were the preserve of the most skanky students, not the fake ‘bad’ kids who had access to weed (the middle class, predictable even at this age), just the real skanks. The social affiliation was therefore, on this criterion, fairly easy to establish. Poppers jogging bottoms, however, were a more duplicitous variable.

As with all quandaries, let’s define our terms in the first instance. Poppers were tracksuit bottoms (jogging pants, joggers), with a vertical strip of press studs (‘poppers’) to each leg.

Something like this:Poppers

So, there were three critical fashion events of the academic calendar in the 1990s. Firstly, school trips, but these were thankfully scarce for my year group after a disastrous outing to the zoo in Year 7. Secondly, non-uniform days, again scarce in their truest form, thanks to routine sabotage by the charity brigade – dress in your pyjamas, wear your uniform back to front, dress as Mr Blobby…[snores]. But the third event, a yearly occurrence, was the hardest to avoid of all. As a nod to the era of the school’s inception in the 1970s, traditional sports uniform (including a skirt for girls) was strictly monitored.  That is, until the annual period towards the end of January, when the P.E. teacher could ignore the blueish hue of our legs no longer and the critical decree was issued: “girls may wear their own jogging bottoms for sports until further notice”.

As the jogging pants emerged from boot bags in the changing room, it was as though a power source had been applied and the established molecular hierarchy of the class made vibrant and re-ordered again. Simply put, your joggers determined your status unequivocally; your joggers defined you. The particular appeal of Poppers was the ease with which they were ‘popped’ open by boys, to reveal the pre-nubile legs of teenage girls and waft the whiff of depilatory cream around the classroom – a kind of sartorial courtship, if you will.

Most sports brands of the 1990s dabbled, but really, Adidas Poppers were the only ones to countenance. Less cool variants were, in order, Kappa and Le Coq Sportif. Also just about acceptable, were non-popping versions of the same brands, or Reebok or Umbro, at a pinch.

But my jogging bottoms – navy blue, baggy up-top, tapered below, from “Ethel Austin” – didn’t pop and didn’t feature at all in the spectrum of tolerable possibilities.IMG_2748

Could social status really be decided by a series of formless crotches? It seems so, and to seal my fate, on account of my tall stature (my downfall once again), I had to have the man’s version, which included enormous fake flies (the urinary kind) stitched into the front. Not even real flies, not even with a single, real popper.

But, no matter. As with the many traumas of adolescence, I thought I had made my peace with joggers and finally got them where I wanted them. I relish giving the finger to good taste, decorum and the Popristocracy of 7GH, in my most lewd Juicy Couture, but only during binge-watch or flight, naturally.

And yet, today is the day that everything changed and the battle lines between me and the great shapeless ones are drawn once again.

Apparently, Spring’s key Power Pairing is…the jogging pant and the high heel, something like this:

IMG_2757

OK, let’s remain calm. There are those fashion trends that are wrong from the start: showcased on the catwalk, attempted by celebrities and then quickly forgotten. My early analysis is that this of that nature and my warning level at this stage simply, “be aware”.

But, let it be known that the day I see this…

poppers heels _ small

is the day we launch an all-out offensive. And having already laid siege against the Popper-Slappers of 7GH, I am ready.