Jan 15
Deb

It’s been eleven days since I started TGAAD. As with all diets, there are going to be times when I wish I wasn’t on one. Like last night, when I was invited out on a date to the fanciest restaurant in the city. Well. Ordinarily I would have high-tailed it to the mall to buy something stunning for the occasion.

But, I didn’t. I looked deep into my closet, and found a black pencil skirt from Banana Republic, and a black v-neck top with 3/4 sleeves. Even though both pieces were over three years old, I decided I could work with that. I paired them with black tights and a cute pair of black cowboy boots, and accessorized with a heavy gold chain necklace that was intertwined with black ribbon. All from my closet. I didn’t even purchase the tights. My daughter had just given me a box of tights the day before.

Even though I wasn’t wearing something brand new, I still felt like I was dressed up. And my date complimented my outfit. He said, “You look very French tonight.”

So… I stayed on my diet, had a great evening and received maybe the best compliment ever. I think I can do this for a year.

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Jan 05

So today, I looked at my clothes with fresh, bright, optimistic eyes..  Until I was snapped back to the reality which is my closet.  Oh well, it was worth a shot.  In the end, I decided on a pair of jeans [my staple go-to pant; the new AE ones I was talking about..I can't believe how much I like them!], a flowy embellished chiffon tank, and a sparkly festive cardigan from Madewell.  Lovely if I say so myself.

..and then a thought creeped into my head: Kind. Of. Predictable. “Why?” might you ask?

Well, right now it’s VERY winter where I live.  There’s tons of snow ..and coldness.. like, I have to wear ski-pants on-a-daily-basis-type-coldness.  There’s definitely no cute winter outfits going on here or in the near future.  Theres no doubt that I lose most of my style ”mo-jo” during the winter months, since the main focus is to stay warm..

…Which ultimately leads me to no other choice but my tried and true outfit:  Jeans [of course..], a flowy tank of some sort.. paired with a cardigan.

At least I can take solace in the new clothes I ordered pre-diet that have yet to arrive :) :) :)  and as each day gets warmer, I will slowly swap ski-pants for skirts, winter boots for high heels, and sweaters for sleeveless tanks [not to be worn at the same time, mind you] :) and hopefully I can get the creative juices flowing.

Peace, Love & Happiness.

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Nov 17

I left the other night’s TGAAD exchange (thank you, Sally!), inspired by the conversation, action and awareness.

The question was posed: Where do discarded clothes end up?

Good question!

According to the EPA and the Council for Textile Recycling, the U.S. generates roughly 9 BILLION POUNDS of used clothing each year–an average of 29 pounds per person–and only a small fraction of that is recycled.

Discarded clothes go where you send them… landfill, Goodwill or your friend’s closet. Some materials (polyester and non-natural blends) take hundreds of years to decompose, and some never do.

Absolutely, recycle your clothes–repair them, make them into something else, give them to friends or donate them to a worthy cause. Keeping clothing out of the waste stream can help others in need, reduces landfill, as well as keeps valuable materials flowing for reuse.

Additionally, think “upstream” — when you purchase new clothing, go for materials that are natural, good for the environment and sustainably manufactured. Organic cotton, hemp and bamboo are natural fibers that will decompose, even if they end up in the landfill. Also consider quality over quantity — buy staples that will last and avoid “disposable clothes” that fall apart at the seams and look scruffy after just a few washings. (You know the ones I mean…)

Where and how to recycle:

Donate! Goodwill and Salvation Army are always safe bets for recycling clothes. There’s also the Jubilee Women’s Center, as well as other smaller and local organizations looking for clothing donations.

Sell them! If you have the time and patience, garage sales and vintage/consignment stores, like Le Frock, are a way to make some extra pocket money.

Recycle!  Patagonia Common Threads: Patagonia recycles a number of items–worn out Capilene® Performance Baselayers, Patagonia® fleece, Polartec® fleece clothing (from any maker), Patagonia cotton T-shirts, and some additional polyester and nylon 6 products that come with a Common Threads tag.

Make something new! My old tshirts turn into rags — that’s about as crafty as I get, although there are some fun recycled clothes craft ideas here as well as great recycled clothing fashions like these on Etsy by Feltedfancy and wonderful inspiration from The Thrifty Chicks, “Thrift Store Gurus,” who recently joined the TGAAD challenge.

Would love to hear other ideas and sources for recycling clothes — please post them if you know them!

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Oct 30

Dame et Chien

After a year of no shopping, and hearing my cohorts who are now at the end of the diet talk about how they are still not shopping, I realize that I love that particular activity. More than ever. The year off only honed my taste level and made me more mindful, focused, and particular when I shop. I am better at it now. During the diet, I could see what fabrics failed me, wore out too fast, seemed like disposable clothes. I took a mental note of that and paid attention to the fact that three cheaply made sweaters are the same price as one great, long lasting one. I would rather have fewer things than things made with the idea that they can be tossed out because the item is so “cheap”.

I love shopping alone, I love shopping with my friends, I love finding out about new businesses, meeting the owners, and telling my clients where they might find what they are looking for. Even my salon on Queen Anne has a series of photos in each room, photos of women shopping in Paris. The photographer, Esther Sirotnik, uses digital film, but does not touch up the images, crop or change them. The shot above is the shot she captured that day. I love it that only the dog is aware. I adore these images (Ms. Sirotnik also has a book called Unexpected Paris) because it captures these women, who are all doing the same thing, but they are from all different parts of the world. The photos really do capture the feeling of why I love wandering through shops, the feel of fabrics, talking to the boutique owners about their businesses, seeing what kind of buyers they are and what they are passionate about.
You can see the photos on Monday, November 8th from 4PM to 7PM during the Olivine “pop up shop” we are having at my studio. Or go to Esther Sirotnik’s website. But I warn you….if you are still on the diet here looking at the photos is like a person off sugar looking at pictures of Trophy Cupcakes.

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Sep 22
Lisabeth

This morning, I found the online address to stop junk mail. I receive at least six fashion catalogs a day, and don’t even peek. I have a friend who I pass them on to who is not on the diet. Stopping junk mail will stop unwanted, fashion catalogs from tempting me.

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Aug 22

In exactly a week, I will be off this “no shopping for clothes diet”.
I have to say, it has become easier as time went by. I thought it would be grueling towards the finish line. So, Sunday, August 29th I will go downtown and see what damage I can do.

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Jul 18

This morning, I had to put on a winter sweater. In July. It is so cold here in the mornings now, I am starting bitch non stop on the side walk with clients I run into, or whoever else happens to be in my path. I am turning into one of those people who talk about the weather too much. Today my friend Sue came by to help me with a project, and we both started up immediately on the subject of the weather and how frumpy we looked. Just tryin’ to keep warm, we have to digg out late fall or even winter things. And they are usually in the shades of brown, beige, black, or grey. Not summer colors, but here we are all bundled up in our dreary wear.

Now here comes the idea for the a business. In this economy, I am hoping someone will do my friend Sue’s idea for a clothing line. The first thing she said when she started to tell me the idea is “I am NOT doing this. This idea is for someone else to do. Just sayin’”. Here is Sue’s idea: Why doesn’t anyone come out with a clothing line just for our weather? Why can’t we have clothes that are warm, and water proof, but cute and stylish? And in appropriate colors for the season we are in? The person or people who came out with this clothing line would for sure have a customer base in Washington, Oregon, Alaska, and maybe parts of other states.

Why can’t coats be gortex and fabulous? I know some of you outdoorsy gals are going to try to convince me that REI coats are cute. They are not. Just so you know. They are practical, and can be tolerable. Cute they are not. And I think fleece is horrible. There are my thoughts. I am going shopping in like 40 days or something. We should have a countdown clock here. I will be on the look out for cute, water resistant coats in good colors, with a form fitting style. Let me know if you see anything like that, or decide to do Sue’s idea.

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Jul 06

O.K. I am just sayin’. I think the diet is over for me September 10th, is that right Sally? But the deal is, and I am telling you now, I will be in New York on September 1st and I am going shopping. I am going shopping! And I am going to buy clothes, dammit. I ran into Stephanie Greco on my walk this morning, and we are both so done with this. Also, I went to a CEW (cosmetics executive women’s group) in NYC last week and I got a swag bag. The speaker was Bobbi Brown, so there was all this lip gloss from her, and a gift card for Hautelook.com So I used it on a bra, a camisole, and….pajamas. Are pajamas cheating? I will be breaking out of this on September 1st, 2010. Just sayin’.

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Jun 26

Ok. Just went to Newark on Alaska Airlines, and lost that yellow coat I bought. My client says it is pay back for cheating, some kind of punishment from the universe. I don’t think filling out the “lost and found” form online with Alaska will do me any good. I really don’t think I will ever see that coat again. Shoot!

How much more time do we have left? I talked to Stephanie Greco the other day, and we are both so ready for this to be over. But….I am glad I did it. I really do see how many clothes I do have and I have been wearing them. And I think I will be a better shopper when this all comes to a close. So, when is that? I am going to take that day off to shop.

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May 30
Me in a formerly "too small" dress from my attic!

Me in a formerly "too small" dress from my attic!

Well, I’ve been quite busy, so it’s taken me awhile to get around to writing this confessional… er, I mean, entry… but here it is:

I bought some clothes.

Yep, folks, I fell off the TGAAD wagon… actually, I jumped off it quite deliberately, but I can explain:

Many of you know that I’ve lost over 22 pounds over the last 6 months.  It was hard work and I’m proud of my accomplishment.  I’m also proud of the fact that – with the help of several belts, hand-me-downs from friends, and the timely discovery of a bin of clothing labeled “Cathy – too small” in my attic – I’ve remained true to my TGAAD commitment this entire time.

However, when I recently landed a part-time job (after being primarily a full-time stay-at-home mom for 11+ years), I knew some clothing purchases were on my shopping horizon.  I work mostly from home, but when I do need to go into “the office”, I’m with CEO’s and C-suite executives of major Manhattan corporations.  At those times, the dress code is “current & corporate”.  The few businessy items I still own that are even REMOTELY corporate positively scream, “I love the 80’s!” (think boxy with big shoulder pads), and just aren’t going to cut it!

SOOO, I quite intentionally took a little trip to a local off price women’s clothing store for the purpose of picking out a few “must have’s” for my new job.  In my mind, these included a skirt suit, a pants suit, a couple of business blouses, and an additional business skirt or dress.  Really not excessive, I thought.

On the one hand, I felt guilty shopping for clothes while on TGAAD, but there were many facets of the experience I enjoyed:  surveying the many colorful racks of apparel, feeling the various fabrics and textures as I thumbed through the hangers of clothes, lugging loads of items into the dressing room, trying on clothes I thought would fit only to find I was now a size smaller than I believed.  The only unpleasant part of my trip was the bingey sensation I had trying on loads of clothes after being on this clothing fast for so long.  With dozens of items in that dressing room, it was like being on a clothing pig-out!

Once I narrowed my dozens of potential items down to 8 pieces of apparel, I floated on cloud nine over to the register.  However, that’s when my mood changed.  With each swipe of that bar code reader across my apparel tags, my bliss decreased while my tab increased.  The thrill I’d experienced in the dressing room dissipated and uncertainty crept in, “Do I really need THAT?”, “Can’t I make do with just THOSE?”  After having scrimped through 12 months of my husband’s unemployment, the number at the bottom of my receipt seemed huge.  I left the store with garment bags over my shoulder and doubts swirling in my head.

Once home, I laid my new items of apparel out on my bed and took a long, critical look at them.  Those “must have’s” now seemed excessive and self-indulgent.  Yes, I needed clothes for work, but I didn’t really need that many, I just WANTED them.  Prior to losing weight, I’d been “dressing room averse” for awhile.  But, with my new svelte figure, I was like a kid in a candy store and got a tad carried away.

With a guilty conscience, I scoured my closet yet again for any apparel that could possibly replace some of the pieces I’d bought.  There was nothing in my closet but, at the very bottom of the clothing bin from my attic, I did uncover a passable pencil skirt, a businessy blouse and 2 pairs of businessy slacks.  SOOO, with that, I decided to go back to the store and make a few returns.  After having “binged” on all that clothing, the returns felt much like the concomitant purge, but I was happy to let them go.

I still own a lovely Tahari two-toned skirt suit, a work blazer, and a lovely asymmetrical neckline blouse (that can do double duty for evenings out), but the rest of my purchases ended up back at the store awaiting a home in someone else’s closet.  Depending on my new work schedule, I may still need a few more pieces of work clothing before TGAAD ends on September 1st.  However, I’ve vowed not to cross any more clothing bridges until I get to them!

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