Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Blog Post No. 26 -- Crisp

The weather? Yes, quite crisp, actually, on this late November day, which is why I chose a wool skirt to wear to work. When I pulled this vintage piece, which is so old it doesn’t have a label, out of storage after I got thin enough to wear it again, I discovered it was full of moth holes. No worries! I just found a perky black and white floral applique at the craft store and sewed it on the skirt over the tiny holes. Voila. Good as new.

I paired my 1970s-era skirt with a crisp black cotton blouse with white collar and turn-back cuffs by Worthington, JCPenney’s house brand, which I’ve also had for decades, and black patent sky-high platform pumps by Call It Spring for JCPenney.com. My delicate silver necklace with gray pearls was the first piece of jewelry I ever owned from Fire & Ice Jewelers of Baltimore (http://www.fireandice.com) and it made me an instant fan of their gorgeous merchandise and exceptional service. My gray pearl earrings are screw-on antiques that belonged to my grandmother, which I converted with silver ear wires this morning, and my silver-metal stretch bracelet watch is a recent purchase from CountryDoor.com. My wide stretch tri-buckle belt is from The Limited, and my faux-pearl ring was a Las Vegas purchase earlier this year.

The nice complements I received on my outfit from strangers on the subway made me feel crisp and perky all day!
Cheers.
Lynell

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Blog Post No. 25 -- Giving Thanks For Great Clothes!

 
Thanksgiving Day dawned early for me, even though I was not hosting a big dinner myself. I was up at 5:30 a.m.  Had the first of five side dishes in the oven by 6:00 a.m. And so it went all morning as, one by one, broiled candied mandarin oranges and cranberries in Elderflower syrup, artichoke-Asiago cheese toast points, caramelized onion-bacon tart, potato celery-root gratin with leeks, and glazed baby Hakurei turnips all emerged from my oven.


Posing with my artichoke-Asiago toasts
I  worked like a fiend as the clock ticked away. Caramelizing four pounds of onions for the bacon tart appetizer took two hours of near constant stirring all by itself – and as good as it was, I won’t be making that particular dish again when I am so pressed for time. Besides cooking, I also printed our Thanksgiving menu on parchment paper as a memento for the twelve guests who would be gathering at the home of my dear friends, Robert and Jan, later that day, and made place-markers out of parchment and tiny pumpkins. Whew!


Finally, it was time to get dressed and go. I had been waiting for months for a fancy occasion to wear one of my most favorite outfits of all time, a black and leopard-print jumpsuit with a tiny bolero jacket by LaBelle Fashions that I’ve had since the 1970s. Thrilled that the jumpsuit fit me once again, I was truly excited as I slipped it on.

For jewelry I chose a gold metal choker necklace that was a gift from Joyce, the mother of my best friend, Kari, and metal medallion and leopard fabric earrings from the 1970s. My seashell cocktail ring was a find from the Maryland Renaissance Festival this year, my black and gold beaded bracelet is something I’ve owned for years, and my gold-toned bracelet watch with rhinestones is from Chico’s. 

In my hair I wore one of my favorite Dea Dreads, made from brown, black and rust-colored fabric by Thea Osato of Baltimore (deadreads.etsy.com). I chose killer platform pumps by Call It Spring for JCPenney.com, putting them in the shoe stretchers for a few minutes while I did my hair and makeup so they would be comfortable while helping Robert, Jan and their grandson Michael get their formal dinner for twelve on the table.

Jan and I survey Robert and Jan's gorgeous table

Enjoying sangria while
preparing dinner with Robert
and Jan's grandson,
 Michael

The evening was fabulous. The sangria, full of chopped pears, plums, apples and grapes, put everyone in a festive mood and the organic, free range turkey brined in apple cider for two days had a most wonderful flavor.  Our host grew misty-eyed as he presented a toast at the dinner table, speaking of how his favorite meal of the year was made all the more special by such a warm gathering of friends and family year after year.
Here, here!
Lynell

A trio of wonderful desserts from Patisserie Poupon of Baltimore






Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Blog Post No. 24 -- Out And About


To take advantage of the less formal (but just as hectic) days of Thanksgiving week, which I have off from work, my attire was decidedly casual. My blue Honors leggings from Target are at least ten years old, and the short-zippered knit pullover in blues and grays was something I purchased at Deer Valley ski resort in Utah several years ago when I hurt my leg skiing and had no casual change of clothes to slip into for spending the rest of the day in the lodge with a book. My furry après-ski boots are from Ski Haus in Glen Burnie, Maryland and my blue Dea Dread hair accessory is by Thea Osato of Baltimore (deadreads.etsy.com). My gorgeous sapphire and diamond hoop earrings were a birthday gift this year from my best friend Kari in Dallas (sapphire is my birthstone), and my silver-metal bangle bracelet is so old I don’t remember where I got it.  In all, today’s outfit was built for comfort – and indeed it was.
Cheers!
Lynell

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Blog Post No. 23 -- Dental Drama


THE BACKSTORY: I thought I would take a moment to explain a little about my dental history, so you will know how I came to lose the 70 pounds I shed earlier this year.

A lifetime with a 100% overbite eventually led to advanced periodontal disease, despite good dental hygiene on my part. My periodontist, Mark Keiser, DDS (http://www.implantandperiomd.com), performed drastic gum surgery in 2007, introducing grafts of new skin cells in all four quadrants of my mouth to build up receding gum tissue in an effort to re-anchor my teeth. The surgery worked, but without correcting the underlying overbite,  tremendous pressure exerted by my jaw continued to wear down my gums.

Braces to correct the overbite were not an option for someone with my stage of periodontal fragility, so my dentist, Joanne Block-Rief (http://www.crossroadsdentalarts.com/), suggested that I consider full-mouth reconstruction, the altering of my bite through the wearing of a removable dental orthotic for two years to realign the jaw position, followed by a radical two-step procedure to re-shape my bite using veneers that Dr. Rief would insert under the auspices of LVI Global, a dental school in Las Vegas where Dr. Rief was learning the procedure.

Under Dr. Rief’s careful tutelage, I faithfully wore the dental orthotic for two years, and in August of 2010 made my first of two trips to the Las Vegas dental school with Dr. Rief and her staff for the complicated procedure. After my mouth healed for a month from the first round, I traveled back to Las Vegas with my dentist in September 2010 for painstaking insertion of the new, permanent, veneers.

The aftermath was not without complications. My jaw did not take to the realignment well, and fought to return to its original position, which resulted in near constant movement of my teeth despite being anchored in their new position.  From September to December 2010 I couldn’t chew any solid food, and I started to lose a little weight. Not wanting to waste what might be a wonderful opportunity, I decided this was as good a time as any to embark on an actual diet, so I asked around and found a sensible, realistic eating plan that I could live with.

I also signed up for a yoga class at my gym, Merritt Athletic Club (http://www.merrittclubs.com) to try to lower the stress caused by my protracted dental pain.  At the same time, Dr. Rief patiently adjusted my bite almost weekly to try to find a place where my jaw could rest comfortably in its new position so that my mouth could start to heal. I want to publicly acknowledge my dentist and her staff, Bree and MIchele, for their dedicated service and compassion throughout the procedure and my recovery. 

By the end of December 2010 I had lost almost forty pounds. As the dental discomfort slowly subsided, I began to enjoy my new smile. The change in my appearance was a huge motivation to continue eating sensibly, which for me was simply a matter of controlling my portions, as I had always been a patron of healthy foods. By May of 2011 I reached my weight loss goal of 70 pounds. In September 2011 my dentist invited me to film a television commercial for her, in addition to a print ad I had done earlier in the year (seen above). The 30-second TV commercial is airing now through the end of 2011, on Baltimore’s local ABC affiliate, WMAR Channel 2, during morning news programming. You can click on this link  to see the vintage fashion I brought to the airwaves that day!


ABOUT THE CLOTHES: All this is really about the clothes, after all. The red denim jeans I wore for the television commercial are straight-leg, button-fly Levi Strauss originals from the early 1970s, part of the trove of clothes I unearthed in my basement after I’d lost so much weight. The jeans even sport a tag saying "made in the USA". I bought the red floral ribbed Faded Glory tank top earlier this year.  My tri-colored leather belt and red and gold beaded platform sandals are from Macy’s, and my red beaded stretch bracelet is from Something Else, a eclectic clothing boutique in the Mt. Washington section of Baltimore (410-542-0444).  I've had my red bead and chain earrings as long or longer than the red jeans, and my wonderful red and black beaded cord choker necklace is from Fire & Ice Jewelers of Baltimore (http://ww.fireandice.com).

You can view a web album of my dental procedure from start to finish by clicking on this link.  Just be forewarned that it is quite graphic and not for the faint of heart: https://picasaweb.google.com/lh/sredir?uname=lynelltobler&target=ALBUM&id=5508703186742156305&authkey=Gv1sRgCO3um4bgkqWvag&feat=email  
My year of chewing delicately has thankfully come to a close, and I feel transformed from head to toe.  I am physically fit, I have a radiant and healthy smile and this fun blog to play with, my weight is once again proportionate to my height and age and, I am happy to report, my youthful figure seems to have returned, albeit with a few more wrinkles than when I weighed this little in my twenties.   
Cheers,
Lynell

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Blog Post No. 22, 11/19/11 -- Autumn Shimmer

No sooner had I arrived home Saturday from an all-day training seminar at North Point  State Park to keep my certification current as a volunteer ranger for the Maryland Park Service, than I shoved my homemade baked artichoke-cashew dip in the oven and raced to get dressed for a going-away party for dear friends, John and Maria, who are moving to North Carolina with their adorable little girls, Zoe and Abby, both adopted from China.

Since huge backyard bonfires have always been a centerpiece of John and Maria's large gatherings, I knew this final get-together would be outdoors in the chilly November air, so I ensured my toastiness by donning a sparkly brown turtleneck sweater that I've had for years, brown leggings by HUE for Macy's and comfy warm apres-ski boots in blond faux fur that I found at Ski Haus in Glen Burnie Maryland several years ago.  

My sparkly sweater was the perfect backdrop to show off one of my favorite necklaces, a gorgeous Russian painted horse and amber stone pendant in a silver setting with citrine and topaz stone and silver earrings from Fire & Ice Jewelers of Baltimore (http://www.fireandice.com) that I received for my birthday last year. I topped the outfit off with a Dea Dread hair accessory from Thea Osato (deadreads.etsy.com). 

My baked artichoke-cashew dip was a big hit at the party and John and Maria were sent off in high style, surrounded by loving friends and a memorable bonfire.
Cheers,
Lynell

Blog Post No. 21, 11/19/11 -- A Uniform Look

 
Saturday was all about being crisply starched and pressed in my Maryland Park Service uniform as I attended an annual all-day volunteer ranger summit at North Point State Park in Baltimore. It was an interesting day which included interactive activities and presentations on the increasing diversity of our park visitors, the computerization of record-keeping for volunteer park staff, and the gravity of maintaining such a valuable resource such as our state parks in the face of budget cutbacks exacerbated by these enduring recessionary times, a point brought gravely home by our state superintendent of parks, Nita Settina, with whom I am pictured below.
Lynell with State Park Superintendent Nita Settina
Since there was no money in the state’s budget to issue me a new uniform after I lost 70 pounds this year, my slacks and shirt have been drastically altered to fit my smaller frame and, to some extent, it shows. The fabric hangs a little loosely on me in places. But no matter. I am I still very proud to wear the uniform and serve my fellow citizens as a humble steward of the great outdoors, bringing knowledge and, hopefully, delight with nature to children and adults alike.

I altered the belt myself, using my grandmother’s antique leather-punch to make new holes for the belt buckle and then trimming more than eight inches from the belt and blackening the newly cut end with dye to match. And I struck a slightly rebellious tone by donning a "Dea Dread" hair accessory custom made for me by Thea Asoto of Baltimore (deadreads.etsy.com).

I’ve owned the simple black bead post earrings for decades and paired them today with a black bead and green Serpentine rock necklace, which I purchased in Zermatt, Switzerland, in 2006. It is the same kind of Serpentine rock found at Soldiers Delight, the natural environment area where I work as a park ranger on summer Sundays. My look is completed with lace-up, high-heeled combat boots by Rampage that I’ve had for years. 
Receiving award for contributing several hundred volunteer hours in 2011
On a related note, I attended the "Volunteer Appreciation" picnic put on by the Maryland Park Service November 5th to honor those who volunteer their time on behalf of their state parks, and was awarded two certificates!  The first was to acknowledge the several hundred volunteer hours I put in annually in my role as a volunteer ranger for the Maryland Park Service and as a docent at the Soldiers Delight Natural Environment Area's visitor center, and the other was to acknowledge the dedication to Soldiers Delight NEA by the board of directors of Soldiers Delight Conservation, Inc., a tiny nonprofit dedicated to restoring the delicate and unique ecosystem that makes SDNEA such a special preserve, of which I serve as the board's vice president.
Receiving award on behalf of SDCI for its dedicated contribution to SDNEA
And here I am on October 29, carving a jack-o-lantern during the annual pumpkin-carving program I put on for the public each year at the Soldiers Delight visitor center.
By the way, Soldiers Delight is a fabulous wilderness area in Baltimore County -- full of hiking trails and scenic vistas. We have lots to offer, including naturalist-led hikes on our beautiful trails to learn about wildflowers, butterflies, raptors and other wild inhabitants, as well as  programs in our visitor center such as all-natural egg-dyeing, which I host on the Sunday before Easter each spring, a pumpkin-carving program, which I lead on the Saturday before Halloween each fall, a holiday craft-making program and bake sale, which I host in early December, and a children's story-telling hour, which I host every other Sunday all summer long.  Come check out Soldiers Delight Natural Environment Area, by starting with a visit to our website (http://home.comcast.net/~soldiersdelight/) for directions and further information. 
Cheers!
Lynell

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Blog Post No. 20 -- Buffalo Plaid



Today dawned gray and chilly, but I was hot to celebrate because my bathroom scale said I weighed only 114.8 pounds, meaning I could finally fit into my skinny, skinny jeans! Original Levi’s from the 1970s, these straight-leg beauties boast an old-fashioned button-down fly and are in mint condition, just like new. Last week I struggled so hard to get them on that I gave up and wore something else. Today they slipped on with room to spare. Yippee!

I decided to pair the blue jeans with a thick cotton flannel shirt in a sporty black and white buffalo plaid which I ordered from Newport News, Avon’s fashion line, at least seven or eight years ago. I made my bolo tie long ago when I lived in Texas by pairing a classic black string tie with a charcoal crystal coat pin that had belonged to my grandmother. The silver metal multi-chain choker necklace belonged to my mom, and my charcoal crystal belt was a recent purchase from The Limited. I found the silver and onyx bracelet in Puerto Vallarta in 1998 and the silver and gold-toned stretch watch is from CountryDoor.com. My black platform Marc Fisher loafers are from Macy’s, and my blue and black fabric hair accessory is a custom made "Dea Dread" by Thea Osato of Baltimore (deadreads.etsy.com). I finished the outfit with my grandmother’s black cotton scarf covered with sprays of embroidered white Lily of the Valley to soften all that graphic plaid a little.
What a wonderful day!
Lynell

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Blog Post No. 19 -- Looking Fit


I've told you all before how I lost 70 pounds within the past year, and that the basis for launching this blog was to celebrate the discovery of all the vintage clothes I found in my basement from long ago which now fit the new, trimmer me.  What I haven't shared with you is how much my journey to fitness has been enhanced by the compassionate group-fitness instructors at my local health club.

I joined Merritt Athletic Club in the Baltimore area in 2008 (http://merrittclubs.com/). A personal trainer designed a workout routine for me and I went pretty regularly for a few months and then stopped going.  I just wasn't motivated to go on my own.  I continued to pay dues to the gym but I wasn't getting anything for my money except a growing sense of frustration as my hard-earned cash slipped away.  I tried to quit the gym when my contract was up in 2010, and that's when the wonderful manager, Pat Fleischer, encouraged me to re-up for another two years.  Pat threw in incentives, like a lowered price and sessions with a masseuse and a personal trainer.  I renewed my membership, but still I wasn't motivated to go on my own.  

Throughout this time I looked at the group fitness classes taking place in a side room with longing, but was too intimidated to try one.  Then, crippled by chronic pain in the fall of 2010 after a comprehensive dental procedure in which the alignment of my entire jaw was shifted, I sought out the yoga class as a way to manage my discomfort.  It turned out that I wasn't intimidated by group fitness classes.  I loved yoga, and I was impressed by the yoga instructor, Charlie Beall, who plays a flute during meditation at the end of each session.

At the same time, I began to diet, and as I started to lose weight and gain more self esteem, I started adding more group fitness classes to my weekly routine. Body Pump, which is lifting weights to music, then Body Flow, which is like Tai Chi, then Body Step.  I love them all, and I adore my instructors. In fact, I want to give them a big shout-out, for they have made a real and lasting difference in my life: Lauren Weingard teaches my Body Step class and is an elementary school teacher by day.  Tara Chapman is my Body Flow Instructor. She has the most soothing voice ever.  Anthony Knox and Robert Biffle share Body Pump instruction and both are marvelous motivators and all-around nice guys.  And just in the past four weeks I've started taking a Zumba class, led by Kelli Bigelow, who I really like, even though I can't begin to shake my middle the way she does!

In April, Merritt Athletic Club asked me to do a promotion, and in June, after I had achieved my weight loss goal, Merritt asked me to do a testimonial.  I was happy to comply and thrilled to have an opportunity to provide inspiration to others on similar weight-loss journeys.  Both ads appear below.


Today I was interviewed for an article in the December issue of Club Solutions, a trade magazine for the fitness industry, circulated to over 24,000 health clubs around the United States.  I told the reporter how wonderful my gym instructors are, and provided her with the photos you see at the top for her article.

As for my gym clothes, wouldn't you know that even some of them are vintage?  The black Under Armour yoga pants were purchased at my gym barely six months ago, and I bought the reverse balance shoes, by AM-Motion for Avia, about a year ago at Payless Shoe Source.  But the green athletic top is something I used to wear when I jogged around Lake Merritt on my lunch hour way back in 1988, when I worked at my very first law firm in Oakland, California.  The scrunchy green socks are also from that era.

I wouldn't be in the shape I'm in today if it were not for the marvelous group-fitness instructors at my gym, motivating me and helping me to feel included and capable.  Just a year ago I couldn't fit that green top over my torso. My, how my appearance -- and my life -- have changed!
Cheers!
Lynell

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Blog Post No. 18 -- Heavy Metal


Let’s talk jumpsuits. I have at least a dozen, all dating back to the 1970s and 1980s. It was my "signature style" back in the day and I loved to "rock the look", although we didn’t call it that back then. Kept most of the better ones, and this was one of my very favorites. Light blue, distressed denim, made by Champagne West for JCPenney, which I bought when I worked there in the 1970s. My black leather boots are Pleasers, also from the 1970s and also from JCPenney. Even the scarf is vintage. It belonged to my grandmother. Only the belt is new – it was purchased at The Limited this year.

I chose to pile on metal bracelets to accompany the hand-made silver pin on my scarf, which was a gift from the mother of a boy I dated in high school. I found the onyx and silver bracelet in Puerto Vallarta in 1998. The silver-toned stud bracelet on the same wrist is something I picked up at Claire’s a few months ago. The silver-toned bangle on the other wrist was purchased in California decades ago, and the stretch silver and gold-toned bracelet-watch and matching earrings are from CountryDoor.com. My silver and lapis-stone ring was a gift from my best friend Kari’s mother, Joyce, and the long, silver-toned double knuckle ring with blue rhinestones was a trinket I found in Las Vegas in May.

It was a perfect ensemble for a turn of fairly balmy autumn weather, and I got three different complements on my outfit from strangers!
Cheers,
Lynell

Monday, November 14, 2011

Blog Post No. 17 -- Casual Chic

Last night was Thanksgiving menu-planning time with my dearest Baltimore friends, Robert and Jan. Each year we sit down together and review Bon Appetit, Food & Wine and other cutting edge foodie magazines to come up with a Thanksgiving meal that scratches our creative itch to engage in culinary extravagance as we make plans to feed family and friends. To accompany a cider-brined turkey with star anise and cinnamon, some possible side-dish options we are considering this year include Kobach puree instead of sweet potatoes, glazed Hakurei turnips instead of traditional root vegetables, a roasted beet and carrot salad, and perhaps a potato and celery root gratin, among other delicacies. Yum!

For our "working supper" last night, I chose to forego a vintage look completely and instead wear a comfortable tunic and leggings, both by Macy’s house brand Style & Co., with platform pumps by Call It Spring from JCPenney.com. The tunic and the leggings were gifts from my best friend Kari’s mom, Joyce, to celebrate my weight loss when we got together in Las Vegas in May. I love the brass and nickel colored studs on the leggings and the tunic, and paired them with a gold and silver metal choker necklace and matching earrings from Tina’s Antiques & Jewelry, a quirky but fabulous little shop at 237 Main Street in Reisterstown, Maryland (410-833-9337). My gold and silver-colored metal bracelet watch is from CountryDoor.com and I found the gold and silver-colored metal cocktail ring in Las Vegas.
Cheers!
Lynell

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Blog Post No. 16 -- Off The Cuff


As a longtime fan of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra and maestra Marin Alsop, I try to get to the symphony as often as I can afford (which is not as often as I’d like). The BSO’s "Off The Cuff" series of concerts are abbreviated, more low key versions of a full evening’s worth of music. These events begin at 7:00 p.m. and are finished by 8:15, so it’s easy to go to dinner afterward and not starve before the concert’s typical end time of almost 10:00 p.m.

Last night the BSO featured Aaron Copland’s Appalachian Spring and some other Copland works, one of which included audience participation (my section of the audience had to quack like a duck). These "Off The Cuff" evenings are far less formal than a typical night at the symphony, so I felt comfortable wearing a short red dress to the event instead of something more fancy.

After the concert I enjoyed a nice meal at Mari Luna, a south American restaurant virtually across the street from the concert hall, where the exalted maestra also chose to have her post-concert meal, only a couple of tables from where I was seated. It was a great evening.

My little red dress is a David Benjamin from the 1970s, which gives away it’s vintage lineage with humongous shoulder pads. Good thing I love shoulder pads! I paired that with nude platform pumps by Call it Spring for JCPenney and a darling little gold purse which was a gift from my best friend Kari’s mother, Joyce. My garnet and citrine pendant necklace, matching tennis bracelet and earrings are all from Fire & Ice Jewelers of Baltimore (www.fireandice.com) and my garnet and pearl ring belonged to my mother. The large black and gold enameled seashell ring was a wonderful find at this fall’s Renaissance Festival in Laurel, Maryland, and my hair accessory is a Dea Dread which was custom made for me by Thea Osato of Baltimore (deadreads.etsy.com).
Cheers!
Lynell

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Blog Spot No. 15, 11/12/11 -- Bedroom To Closet Conversion

Hey, vintage divas!
My interests don't lean only toward fashion.  From time to time I'll be sharing some home and garden ideas I designed and implemented in my vintage home!

Another incentive for creating a "new" wardrobe out of my old vintage threads was that I recently
converted a spare bedroom in my 150-year-old farmhouse into a marvelous walk-in closet .  See the details by clicking on the following link and let me know what you think:

https://picasaweb.google.com/lh/sredir?uname=lynelltobler&target=ALBUM&id=5650471488655592289&authkey=Gv1sRgCIqJqYaFxveZMg&feat=email
Cheers,
Lynell

Blog Post No. 14, 11/10/11 -- St. Agnes Hospital Gala


Here I am, all decked out in a little black dress and pearls for a gala event at St. Agnes Hospital in Baltimore to honor nine doctors who were inducted into the hospital’s Healing Hands Society for exemplary work in their fields. Some of the people at the function remembered me from two years ago when the Healing Hands Society honored it’s inaugural selection of doctors, and they were amazed to see the weight I’d lost and how fit and trim I look. No one could believe that I’m 55 years old! Of course, that just made me float on air for the entire evening.

My dress, with a slit that goes up just high enough to be sexy, is very vintage, but also timeless. It’s from Gantos, a little boutique of specialty and formal wear I found at Sun Valley Mall in Concord, California in the 1970s. I loved that little boutique – it was my go-to shop anytime I needed a something fancy for a special occasion. Even after I moved to Texas in the 1990s, I still shopped at Gantos whenever I was in northern California for gowns to wear to my Dallas employer’s annual holiday ball. When the store finally closed after many years, I was heartbroken, and I haven’t found a shop since that fits my tastes in formalwear as well as Gantos did back in the day (sigh).

My sky-high patent black platform pumps are by Call It Spring for JCPenney.com. Those shoes got tons of compliments at the gala and made me as tall as my date! After spending a bit of time in old-fashioned wooden shoe-stretchers, those pumps are comfortable on my feet all day long, believe it or not.

My gorgeous black and gold beaded pearl bracelet and matching earrings are from Fire & Ice Jewelers of Baltimore and the pearl necklace is from the museum gift shop at Henry DuPont’s exquisite Winterthur estate in Delaware. My goldtone bracelet watch with rhinestones is from Chico’s and the goldtone and rhinestone cocktail rings are from BCBG in Dallas. My black and gold hair accessory, called a Dea Dread (Dea is Italian for goddess), was custom made for me by Thea Osato of Baltimore (deadreads.etsy.com).
Cheers,
Lynell

Blog Post No. 13, 11/10/11 -- A Hepburn Sensibility


My late mother, Ruth Myers, in 1938

If I was asked what celebrity’s fashion sense I admire most, it would have to be Katharine Hepburn. Her classic style, which made big-shouldered menswear look chic and feminine, is a look with which I strongly identify. Today’s look is all about the trousers – and what a storied pair of trousers they are!

My maternal grandmother, Hester Myers (nee Plymyer), was born in York, Pennsylvania in 1893. Having migrated to California in early 1914 to seek work (where my mother, Ruth, was born later the same year), my grandparents took up residence in the wild, wild west. My grandfather, a young railroad telegraph operator from Emigsville, Pennsylvania, took a job managing Southern Pacific Railroad stations up and down the California desert while my grandmother worked as the station’s ticket agent. These stations were lonely outposts, nothing more than wooden buildings sitting on the desert floor with nary a road or a store or even plumbing anywhere nearby. It would be 15 years before my grandfather owned (or needed) a car. In those early days, the family lived above the station in an apartment, or in a converted boxcar on a side track, depending on the station's location. My grandmother told of sweeping rattlesnakes from the platform with her broom before the train pulled into the station each day. It was desolate, save for the steady flow of supplies – fabrics and flour -- which came by train whenever my grandmother thumbed through her Sears catalog.

My grandmother was a talented seamstress who made all my mother’s clothes on her trusty Pfaff sewing machine (she owned three). She made the wheat-colored, light wool trousers I wore today in the 1930s, when my mother was in her twenties. They fit my mother like a glove, of course, and I have held onto them all these years, not because I could wear them – I was rarely thin enough to do that – but for purely sentimental reasons. They are of a classic era, evoking Katharine Hepburn and her exquisitely feminine (and radical) take on male fashion. I loved how they drape – still do. Except now I can actually wear them. And so I did today, for the first time in almost a half century.

I couldn’t find a classic blouse in my closet to wear with these wonderful trousers, so I ended up pairing the slacks with the same Native-American inspired fabric I’ve been wearing all week long – this time fashioned into a Longhorn blouse for Niver Western Wear that I purchased at a Fort Worth, Texas, rodeo back in 1995. The straw colored arrowheads in the blouse’s fabric pattern played up the trousers’ wheat-toned hue perfectly. I didn’t want to wear turquoise jewelry again, however, so I stayed with the golden theme and chose a necklace of cascading amber beads by Fire & Ice Jewelers of Baltimore and amber-beaded chandelier earrings from Claire’s, which I paired with a chunky citrine bracelet I found at the DeYoung museum gift shop in San Francisco in 2004 and a goldtone bracelet watch with rhinestones from Chico’s. My shoes are Marc Fisher platform loafers from Macy’s. I’ve had the beige suede belt for decades.

Wearing my mother’s beloved trousers has made me feel connected to my mom and my grandmother throughout this chilly gray, drizzly day. Both women would be pleased to see me in those slacks, I think; the small moth holes here and there in the fabric notwithstanding. I believe even Katharine would be smiling.
Cheers,
Lynell

Blog Post No. 12, 11/9/11 -- Indian Summer 02



On the eve of what is predicted to be the arrival of a blustery cold front tomorrow, Baltimore boasted another perfect Indian Summer day, with the temperature reaching almost 70 degrees this afternoon.  So it seemed only appropriate to don a tank top, since it may be the last time I get to wear one until next May!  A trip to the dentist didn’t require that I dress up.  However, I had so much fun with the Native-American patterned skirt I wore yesterday that I wanted to experiment with different tops, since I felt yesterday’s long-sleeved shirt made the outfit a bit too staid for my taste.

Hence, today’s look is a bit more edgy: this time I paired the ombre mauve Longhorn broomstick skirt by Niver Western Wear of Fort Worth with a purple St. John’s Bay tank top from JCPenney.  I tried several blue tank tops but they all clashed with the turquoise jewelry I wanted to wear.  The purple tank brought out the gorgeous hue in the skirt and complemented my jewelry perfectly. Like yesterday, I wore a heavy silver and turquoise lotus blossom necklace and bracelet that my mother found at a trading post in California in the 1950s, and paired that with turquoise and metal earrings I found at Grapevine Mills mall in Texas about 15 years ago, and a turquoise ring I bought at Claire's in May. Today I added a silver and turquoise butterfly belt that that belonged to my mother and an armband made of small turquoise stones, along with a turquoise colored plastic bangle, both from Claire’s. My black boots are from DSW and my stretchy silver- and gold-metal watch is from CountryDoor.com.

What wraps do you wear with these outfits, you ask?  Well, I tried on several today – a purple velvet cloak that belonged to my grandmother (wrong purple and wrong era).  A two-tone denim jacket with lace collar and a peplum (too fussy). A black mesh-knit asymmetric shawl (not western enough).  I finally decided upon a light blue denim cropped bomber-style jacket that is so over-the-top with glitter and crystal adornments on the shoulders that although I’ve owned it since 1986, I’ve only worn it once or twice. Somehow, it looked right with today’s outfit – in fact, it took edgy to another whole level.  Back in 1986, I walked into the little shop where I used to get my nails done in Pinole, California, and spied this amazing jacket on a small display that had been set up to feature a few of a local designer’s pieces. I fell in love with it immediately, even though I knew then I would probably never wear it.  Still, I had to have it, and have loved it ever since, even though all it’s ever done is sit in my closet!  There is no label in the collar – probably because this designer was just starting out.  Nevertheless, it’s one heckuva wrap, don’t you think?
Cheers!
Lynell

Blog Post No. 11, 11/8/11 -- Indian Summer 01



The expression 'Indian summer' has been used for more than two centuries to describe a meteorological phenomenon that occurs in mid-November and refers to a period of unusually warm temperatures, typically after there has been a hard frost. Is it Mother Nature’s way of teasing us into believing winter’s sustained discomfort is not just around the corner?

No matter. Today’s gorgeous weather inspired me to don a broomstick skirt by Longhorn for Niver Western Wear of Fort Worth that I picked up at a North Texas rodeo and festival in the early 1990s. To highlight the yellow-gold accents in the beautiful dusty rose fabric featuring dramatic interpretations of Native American jewelry and arrowheads, I chose a yellow menswear shirt by the venerable western-wear maker Stubbs and a blue denim vest that I found at a church bazaar about three years ago for $5. To complement the turquoise jewelry depicted in the skirt’s fabric, I wore a heavy silver and turquoise lotus blossom necklace and bracelet that my mother found at a trading post in California in the 1950s, and paired that with turquoise and metal earrings I found at Grapevine Mills mall in Texas about 15 years ago, and a turquoise ring from Claire's. My black boots are from DSW and my stretchy silver- and gold-metal watch is from CountryDoor.com.

Indian Summer never looked so good! As I walked to my car in the parking lot of the subway station on my way home from the Library of Congress today, a woman in a vehicle rolled down her window as she passed me, shouting "gorgeous outfit!". Certainly made my day!
Cheers.
Lynell

Blog Post No. 10, 11/6/11 -- Swiss Miss


 
Me with my cousin Christian
As if that early November Friday night was not busy enough, what with the Gutierrez Studio’s "First Friday" open house to attend, dinner out, then Afro Beat Society’s annual commemorative gig, the next day was equally fun-filled and full. On Saturday afternoon I attended a "volunteer appreciation picnic" hosted by the Maryland Park Service, at which I was awarded an honorary state park guest pass for having donated over 100 hours of volunteer service to the parks in the past year, and I also accepted a certificate of appreciation on behalf of Soldiers Delight Conservation, Inc., the friends group of which I am vice president, for "dedicated and enthusiastic support" provided by SDCI to Maryland state parks in the past year.

I got back from the picnic just in time to doll myself up for a gala evening at the Swiss embassy in Washington DC where the Swiss Club, of which I am a longtime member, was hosting its autumn "Raclette Evening" in honor of those of us in the U.S. who are also citizens of Switzerland. For those who don’t know, Raclette is a special cheese which is traditionally shaped into giant rectangular logs and laid upon an iron plate, which is then swiveled against an open flame and kept there until the top half-inch layer or so of cheese has melted and turned bubbly and nicely browned in spots. Then the cheese is pulled away from the flame and the bubbly melted layer is scraped off the log and onto boiled potatoes which have been mashed and spread upon one’s waiting plate. Add to the plate some tiny cornichons, cocktail onions, warm caramelized onions and a heap of thinly-sliced curls of Swiss dried beef and you have the makings of a traditional Swiss raclette meal. Washed down with some splendid Swiss wine and followed by a traditional dessert of ice cream, chocolate sauce and a chunk of crusty meringue, and I was ready for a long winter’s nap!

My cousin Christian, a retired senior scientist at the National Institutes of Health and president of the Swiss Club, and his wife Chang Ting, a scientist at the Food & Drug Administration, are always very happy to see me at these events. Christian kept the evening, and the food, humming along at a leisurely but efficient pace.

It is customary to wear some form of red, if possible, since red and white are the colors of our Swiss flag. So for the evening I donned my favorite sweater, a densely knit red turtleneck with soutache trim made by Meister (a venerable ski-apparel maker) which was a gift almost fifteen years ago from my best friend Kari’s parents, Joyce and Lyle, of Spokane, Washington. Paired with the same black-beaded leggings by B.Allen for JCPenney and JCPenney Call It Spring platform pumps that I’d worn the night before and I was ready to rock in an outfit that would still be comfortable once I’d eaten my fill of Swiss raclette. Since this was a slightly more formal event than Friday’s venues, I chose a matched ensemble of garnet and citrine necklace, earrings and tennis bracelet from Fire & Ice Jewelers in Baltimore, and added a rhinestone cocktail ring from BCBG in Dallas, a goldtone bracelet watch with rhinestones from Chico’s, a black and gold Dea Dread hair accessory by Thea Osato of Baltimore (deadreads.etsy.com) and, of course, my Swiss-American flag pin!
Proscht!!
Lynell

Blog Post No. 9, 11/5/11 -- Sequin Season



Finally! A characteristic nip in the air heralds the long-anticipated season of ramped up social engagements. I have been waiting all year for a chance to rock the black sequined tank top I bought at The Limited on New Year’s weekend while shopping with my best friend Kari and her mom at Galleria Mall in Dallas, Texas. Indeed, there was nothing "vintage" about my look on this chilly Friday night in early November, when I paired black beaded leggings by B. Allen for JCPenney with that sparkly tank and JCPenney Call It Spring platform pumps for a night on the town, beginning with a stop at Gutierrez Metal Studios in Baltimore for their monthly "First Friday" open house which celebrates artists in various media in memory of my beloved and inspirational artist and friend, John Gutierrez.

After enjoying appetizers and a glass of wine while listening to Caleb Stine sing folk songs on his amplified acoustic guitar, it was off to a dinner of venison risotto and salad at Joe Squared Pizza in Baltimore’s arts district where a modern fusion band was playing some really weird music, and finally to the Baltimore Afro Beat Society’s annual concert in commemoration of the late Nigerian, Fela Anikulapo Kuti, which kicked off at 11:00 p.m. with 23 instrumentalists, singers and dancers crammed onto a stage on the fifth floor (yes, I climbed all five flights of stairs in those platform pumps!) of Baltimore’s ancient H&H building.

To tone down the formality of all those black sequins and beads, I wore playful "golden sun" earrings I found at last month’s Renaissance Festival in Laurel, Maryland, with a vintage sun charm dangling from a golden rhinestone armband and a matching sun ear cuff and necklace that I picked up at a Northern California Renaissance Faire decades ago. My goldtone bracelet watch with rhinestones is from Chico’s and the sparkly cocktail rings are from BCBG in Dallas. The black and gold hair accessory is a Dea Dread custom made for me last week by Thea Osato of Baltimore (deadreads.etsy.com).
Cheers!
Lynell

Blog Post No. 8, 11/4/11 -- Jewel Tones, The Redux


Today I went someplace different than yesterday so, being the slightly eccentric gal that I am, I rocked the same jewel-tone outfit again, only this time with black HUE leggings from Macy’s sporting metal studs that were a gift from my best friend Kari’s mom, Joyce, in May instead of the blue jeans I wore yesterday. The blue turtleneck top was part of an ensemble I purchased decades ago in California, and the scarf is a beloved memento from my maternal grandmother. My black scallop-trimmed booties with little bows by Lower East Side are from Payless Shoe Source and the blue fabric "Dea Dread" hair accessory was custom-made for me by Thea Osato of Baltimore (deadreads.etsy.com). I found my handmade emerald green earrings at a St. Patrick’s Day street fair in Reno, Nevada in 1992, the sparkly blue and green ring was a recent $10 Las Vegas purchase, and the stretch bracelets came from a vendor selling costume jewelry in the lobby of my employer’s office building in 1995 or so.

When I passed through the turnstyle at the subway station this morning, I apparently looked so "fierce" that the helpful attendant shouted cheerily across the station admonishing me to "try not to hurt anybody today!!" I shot him a quick smile over my shoulder before bounding up the escalator to the platform. Do people realize how much they can brighten someone’s day by random complements like that? I found myself smiling at his kind remark all day long!
Cheers!
Lynell

Blog Post No. 7, 11/3/11 -- Sapphire Sky


Today’s sky was such a brilliant blue that I was inspired to don jewel-toned shades of sapphire and emerald to honor Mother Nature. I love how the blue brings out the color of my eyes.  The tapered-leg vintage denim jeans are Ocean Pacific by Montabert. I have owned them for at least thirty years, if not longer. The blue turtleneck top was part of an ensemble I purchased decades ago in California consisting of three like-tops in primary colors – yellow, blue and red, with a scarf that ties all three colors together beautifully and a red swing coat.  

I don’t recall the name of the little shop where I bought the coordinated pieces, but I do recall that my dear friend Juanita and her sister Mary were with me at a mall somewhere when we stumbled upon the shop and its eye-popping colors and they convinced me that I had to own the whole set.  The scarf I wore today, however, is not from that shop, but rather is a beloved memento from my maternal grandmother.  

My black scallop-trimmed booties by Lower East Side are from Payless Shoe Source and the blue fabric "Dea Dread" hair accessory was custom-made for me by Thea Osato of Baltimore (deadreads.etsy.com). I found my handmade emerald green earrings at a St. Patrick’s Day street fair in Reno, Nevada in 1992, the sparkly blue and green ring was a recent $10 Las Vegas purchase, and the stretch bracelets came from a vendor selling costume jewelry in the lobby of my employer’s office building in 1995 or so.
Cheers!
Lynell