#TBT: #50YearsForward

Can. Not. Wait. for The Butler, which is scheduled to open October 18 (starring Oprah and Forest Whitaker):

And Essence.com is sharing exclusive photos of the new Hallmark Channel film The Watsons Go to Birmingham, based on Christopher Paul Curtis’ novel about a family who travels here from Flint, Michigan at a pivotal time in the civil rights movement. Click here to view.

Will you be watching?

#TBT: Avon Calling!

 

Do you remember the Avon Lady? Are YOU the Avon Lady – excuse me, Independent Sales Representative? My grandmother Dorothy sold it for a short time, and I remember thumbing through the catalogs and circling items I wanted my mother to buy. Now you can find a friend or colleague who sells it, or you can shop online!

Our Avon fave? The original formula Skin So Soft bath oil spray ($6 for 5 oz.)! It’s a great mosquito repellent, has an amazing scent, and doesn’t leave your skin feeling greasy.

Images via Google search

Hmmm

Recommended Reading: ‘The Twelve Tribes of Hattie’

This is so not my life.

Wait, what?

20130206-070252.jpgI inspire someone? Little ole me? Well, that’s Gone with the Wind Fabulous! A big thanks to Karri Bentley for presenting me with this honor. I have to say that I am really inspired by all the women I’ve become acquainted with in Birmingham who are writing their hearts out and sharing their unique journeys. I am blessed and proud to be part of such a supportive, creative community of dynamic women.

And according to Karri I am now to:

Display the award image on my blog. (check)

  • Link back to the person who nominated you. (check)
  • State 7 things about yourself. (below)
  • Nominate 15 other bloggers and link to their sites. (below)
  • Notify the bloggers that they have been nominated and link to the post.

Seven Things about Me:

  1. I’m afraid of flying and am known to freak out on airplanes. Like, “I need a shot of tequila or a horse tranquilizer or maybe both before flying” afraid. Well – I’m not really afraid of flying…I’m afraid of crash landings!  And I’m good for buzzing the stewardess and asking questions about strange noises or the pilot’s credentials.
  2. I’m funny about my hair. It’s been chemical relaxer-free going on five years,  it took me a long time to grow it out and to learn how to keep it healthy AND I’m tenderheaded. So one of my biggest pet peeves is when random people try to put their hands on or in it. Yes, this happens, and it’s as creepy as walking up and rubbing a random pregnant woman’s belly. Just don’t do it!
  3. I advocate on behalf of the sexual assault survivor community and I will go to my grave fighting for survivors to have a voice and access to the resources they need. Community service and volunteerism are a crucial commitment for me, and I’m very proud to be a member of a service organization that impacts the Birmingham community in such a positive manner.
  4. I walked with a limp for close to a year, thanks to a roller skating accident when I was in middle school. Add ill-considered tinted glasses, bushy eyebrows and weird hair and the fact that my mother insisted I take PE to the mix and yeah, middle school was torture for me. And because of the afore-mentioned weird hair, I will never willingly wear bangs again. Oh – and thanks to a great chiropractor and brow waxer, I no longer have the limp or the wolf brows.
  5. I love to dance…in secret. Put on The WobbleTHIS by Maze, pre-1990s Michael Jackson, or EU (Sorry, Mom!) and I’m all over the the kitchen or living room floor. Literally, because I’m not that coordinated.
  6. I make a meeeeeeeeeean seafood gumbo. I’d tell you what’s in it, but then I’d have to kill you.
  7. I love classic films and television.  I watch marathons of The Twilight Zone and Alfred Hitchcock Presents every year, and I live for the Turner Classic Movies channel. (If I told you how many times I’ve seen Gone with the WindImitation of Life, The Little Foxes, All About Eve, The Wiz and Giant you wouldn’t believe me.)

Blogs that Inspire Me (in no particular order)

  1. ArtBLT
  2. Karri is So Very
  3. Destination Supermodel
  4. Erica B’s DIY Style 
  5. The Writeous Babe Project
  6. Magic City Made
  7. Atlantic-Pacific
  8. Glitter ‘n Glue
  9. All the Pretty Birds
  10. Marie Sutton Writes 
  11. Vodka Cranberry Clooney 
  12. Vintage Black Glamour
  13. Stellar Fashion and Fitness
  14. A Belle in Brooklyn
  15. Vintage Goodness

xo, Alexis

This is not a good look.

Go Bama!

Come on, darlings…surely you saw this one coming!

While we wait for the Crimson Tide to take on Notre Dame’s Fighting Irish tonight, we are swooning over JP Cricket’s absolutely divine collegiate slippers. In velvet, suede and linen, they are embroidered with the college of your choice’s logo! Perfect for that alumni dinner or reunion soiree.  These shoes are perfect for strolling the Quad or heading to a tailgate, and are suitable for all sporting events.  Founder and CEO Susan Meyer assures me “The all leather bottom is a real shoe, and actually the velvet is quite durable as well as the suede.  We just brush them off with a soft bristle brush.”

If collegiate designs are not your cup of tea, the slippers are offered in sport or monogram versions, and custom designs are available as well.

And if you’re watching tonight, why not responsibly enjoy a Roll Tide?

New year, new you?

SONY DSC

I can help with that.

I believe fabulous style can be achieved at any price point, and that – while clothes don’t make the man (or woman) – improving one’s personal appearance and helping others become comfortable in their own skin can be an empowering process. 

Looking for someone to help you dress your best no matter the occasion?  Need help reinvigorating your that “same old, same old” look? Maybe you need someone to hold your hand and wade through your closet, or perhaps you want to turn your look up a notch for that all-important interview, first date or special event?

Looking for a dynamic public speaker and gracious event hostess with radio, television and event experience to enliven your luncheons, retreats and social occasions?

Look no further!

Inspired by my private consulting clientele and my public speaking experience, I’m excited to now offer closet cleanses, personal styling, shopping and image consulting at affordable price points. Whether you have champagne taste and a beer budget or the sky’s the limit, I can help.  Contact me for details today!

Follow Same Chic Different Day on Twitter: @SameChicSouth

Image via Lynsey Weatherspoon Photography

Behind the seams with WCFDA designer Daniel Vosovic

I’m baaa-aaack!

Every now and then a girl needs an impromptu vacay, no?  But after several days of utter relaxation, I’m so excited to bring you this conversation from this month’s CFDA Fashion Incubator presentation at the W Buckhead in Atlanta.   Daniel Vosovic – who was my favorite on Project Runway Season 2 – was absolutely lovely, and honestly his talent speaks for himself.  His sophisticated yet unpretentious designs were simply beautiful; he knows how to dress a woman with elegance and ease. The gracious designer spoke candidly with me about the industry, as well as his journey from a Midwestern upbringing to folding sweaters at Banana Republic to PR to his own label. Read on.

The most surprising part of the FI: I would say that change can happen so quickly when you have the right people behind it. We picked up 19 new stores in one season, which is great for me.  So, because the right people were there from the beginning, to help say ‘Well, why don’t you offer more skirts, why don’t you offer more solids’…from development, to the right people in place to sell it, the right people in place to promote it…all of a sudden there’s now accountability. It’s really amazing how tangible those goals all of a sudden are…six months ago I never would’ve thought I’d be in Atlanta, with an event, as a guest designer…that’s amazing.

How would you compare the environment to Project Runway? What’s funny is, Runway was never a real-world scenario ever. Donna Karan does not have to justify to consumers what she does, and Ralph Lauren doesn’t. It may mean that the customer may say no in the store, but there’s never been that level of defending, so I think that’s what’s really interesting. But going through the Runway gauntlet has allowed me to have conversations like this or conversations with new consumers and I think that that’s what’s been very, very beneficial from my experience, which has proven to be very helpful for the Incubator program – doing that in an eloquent way, in a way that doesn’t turn people off.  That’s just [smart marketing] from a business perspective.  

Can you elaborate on your professional journey? I’m very driven. And it’s a good and a bad thing because it means I’m never satisfied. I can never live in the moment. I’m always thinking two or three steps ahead. That’s a good and a bad thing. So for me, when I realized – I say this to my interns – if you don’t know what you want, acknowledge what you don’t want.  I did not want to be an architect, at that point. Instead of floundering, instead of saying ‘Oh my gosh, what do I do?’ I said ‘Let’s try sewing, let’s try art history, let’s try pottery.’ And basically all of my experiences since I’ve been a child – even gymnastics, even living in the Midwest – all of those experiences have made me into the designer I am today. So I can’t say that it’s even unusual because it was my path.  You look at some of the most popular designers: Alex Wang dropped out of design college. Tom Ford dropped out of design college [Ford graduated The New School with a degree in architecture].  There’s so many designers out there who did not have a “set” upbringing or regimented education. Basically, get it from where you can get it. I could’ve lamented that I couldn’t afford to go to Parsons for $40,000 a year, and where would I have been? B*tching in Michigan.

What do you know know that you wish you knew “then”? Hmm. How much work starting a small business is.  I interned at great places, and I worked at large places.  But there’s nothing more exhausting than starting something from the ground up.

What’s running through your mind just before you show?  My gut…honestly goes into auto-pilot mode. It’s acknowledging at that point it’s a show.  It’s not just about clothes; it’s about a vision. And why did I invite these people and spend tens and tens and tens of thousands of dollars to get them there for 8 minutes? Because if they just wanted to look at pretty clothes they can come to the showroom.  I become a show producer – I’m not a designer anymore; the clothes are already made. It’s about executing this amazing vision with lights and timing and the right model with the right hair and the right music for 8 minutes on stage.

On fashion bloggers and editors: I would say that editors designers bloggers can exist cohesively in the same universe without harpooning each other. I think that editors have traditionally years of experience… in regards to, they have physically been at that show…they remember certain collections from a decade ago.  They remember the moment when so-and-so showed crop tops.  A blogger can bring awareness on the ground level.  They can say ‘This is what’s happening on the street. This is what’s happening in my community,’ whether it’s Japan, Chicago, Atlanta.  So, for a designer it’s about working with both of them to offer two different things. A magazine has a three month lead time. So you’re gonna offer a different story than you would to a blogger who needs immediate content and then is going to need more five minutes later.  So I think as a designer you can harpoon yourself if you choose one or the other. It has to be both, so the message can get out there in a variety of ways.

First piece you designed? Unprofessionally, it was an asymmetrical black dress, back when I was straight and had a girlfriend [laughs]. You can put that in. Then, my first real professional piece probably was…I did a jacket for Heidi Klum as a one-off, and this must have been in 2008, but it was the first time I had sewn my own label into my own jacket. 

What’s it like seeing your label for the first time? I remember the first time it happened and it was weird – it was very weird to see my name on a label. Or I remember when the first box of labels arrived; there’s so many little thresholds you reach as a young designer: the first time a non-family or friend person buys your clothes full price. Great thing! The first time a celebrity wears your garment.  All of those little thresholds are super exciting on a really intimate level.

What’s next for you? February: fashion show. I think we’re launching e-commerce Spring ’13. Which is going to be great, because it’s going to give me more access. I’m not selling in a brick and mortar store, currently in this area.  With WCFDA all of a sudden I’m now known to this area and I have to make sure I can reach them.

Can’t get enough of Daniel Vosovic? Neither can I! Check out his book, Fashion Inside Out!

All images courtesy Pouya Dianat and Ben Rose Photography (model)

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