Monday, March 7, 2011

Laundry Day Tips to help you breeze thru your day.....~SEG~

Monday, already????  Where does the weekend go?  I had a very full weekend spent with my darling hubbie and family.  March is going to continue being full of fun, family, and frantic weekends.  I should be thankful for the daily routines getting back on track come Monday morning and a full basket of laundry.

Our weekends start with Shabbat dinner.  And that begins when I, as the lady of the house, light the candles.  With this comes candle wax dripping on out beautiful white table cloth.  No matter what precausions I take, freezing the tapers, wax guards, etc, I always find that a rouge drop of wax makes it to the linens.

I found this tip in Mrs. Dunwoody's Excellent Instructions for Homekeeping: Timeless Wisdom and Practical Advice.  I have posted about this book in a previous post, I highly recommend it for housekeeping advice.

Remove Candle Wax from Table Linen

"Apply ice to the wax until it freezes (or the cloth may be left out in a dry area overnight during the cold winter months).  In the summer, chip off all the frozen wax you can.  Next, lay down brown paper over the wax and press with a medium-hot iron.  Move the paper as it absorbs the wax, taking care not to redeposit the wax in a another area of the cloth.  Have patience and continue as long as any wax shows up on the brown paper".

I have found using parchment paper works, as well.

This works well on carpet, too.  I had a huge mess of wax on some carpet of a town-house I rented before I was married.  I just knew that I would loose my deposit because I had one of those big dark maroon, cinnamon scented, candles fall to the floor after being hot and melted for a few hours.  There was cinnamon scented maroon wax in puddles on the carpet.  It cooled and hardened FAST, too fast for me to get much up before ruining the carpet.  I let it sit there, vacuuming  over it for about a year, dreading the day I would be moving and the land lord see it.  The very last day, before he came to inspect the house while I was moving out, I decided to give the "iron to remelt the wax" method a shot.  It took awhile but IT WORKED!!!!  I got all of the wax up and there was not even a stain left.  I got all my deposit back!!!!

Happy Laundry Day,

Tiffany

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Vintage Patterns on Sale

I marked some of my vintage patterns down in Girlie Girl's Notions on Etsy.  I will also be adding a few over the next week to the shop.  I hate to get rid of them but I certainly can not keep them all, right?  The thing I love about the patterns is there are so many uses for them.  I use them for the intended use, of course, making clothing.  I also use them in scrap booking projects, altered art, decorating my sewing and craft room, greeting cards, etc etc.


This is the only child sized pattern I have.  Isn't it darling?

I love the sassy variety this one can be made.

Oh how I would LOVE to have the full skirt version of this dress...EXACTLY like pictured.

These would be perfect for the warmer weather that will surely happen soon!!!!
Tiffany

Saturday, March 5, 2011

Mon Oncle (1958): Great example of consumerism, gadgetry, and the next great "thing"

model of Villa Arpel
M. Hulot (Jacques Tati) is the dreamy, impractical, and adored uncle of young Gérard (nine years old), who lives with his materialistic parents in an ultra-modern geometric house and garden (Villa Arpel) in a new suburb of Paris, situated just beyond the crumbling stone buildings of the old neighborhoods of the city. Gérard's parents, M. and Mme. Arpel, are firmly entrenched in a machine-like existence of work, fixed gender roles, and the acquisition of status through possessions and conspicuous display. (A running gag involves a fish-shaped fountain at the center of the Arpels' garden that Mme. Arpel turns on only for important visitors).
Each element of Villa Arpel is representational rather than functional, an environment completely hostile to the comfort of its occupants. In choosing modern architecture to punctuate his satire, Tati once stated, "Les lignes géométriques ne rendent pas les gens aimables" ("geometrical lines do not produce likeable people"). from Wikipedia From pas japonais, stepping stones,  positioned like mine fields, weird, hardly comfortable furniture and a kitchen with booby trap-esque controls and appliances,  Villa Arpel emphasises the supremacy of superficial aesthetics and electrical gadgets over the reality of daily living.  All this to impress those who work FOR M. Arpel and the neighbors (who live in smaller, less impressive homes).  The Arpels were huge show off to those who did not "have" and looked down their nose to the less ambitious uncle (who never was honored with the fish fountain being turned on).

Looks like the this guest deserves the honor of the fish fountain being turned on.

The Arpels might have been ridiculous, stuck up, and all around pretentious but this film is worth checking out.  The set design was so much a part of the film that one might not notice the entire dialogue is in French.  A few scenes come to mind when hardly a word was spoken, other than mumbles and rambling.

The uncle in the booby trap of a kitchen
Mme. Arpel has a special garage door installed for M. Arpel's anniversary gift.  The door opens and closes automatically when the sensor is set off.  Mme. gets locked in the garage when the dog walks in front of the sensor, with his tail UP.  Meanwhile M. Arpel comes home, walks in front of the sensor, opens the door.  Both walk back into the garage marvelling at the gift.  Dog walks back in front of sensor, door closes, locking BOTH inside.  They yell and make all kind of noise, trying to get the dog to walk in front of the sensor, again, to let them out.  Does not work because now the dog's tail is DOWN and he is not tall enough to set the sensor off.  Maid hears the commotion and FREAKS out.  She will NOT help them as she is scared to death of all the modern contraptions around the villa and thinks if she walks in front of the sensor devastation will happen. I know I am not doing the scene justice, you must watch it to get the humour and enjoy it yourself.  There are several other scenes, few involving the glorious fish fountain, that command little dialogue, I will not butcher them.


 
There are subtitles, although not many, as there is not that much dialogue.  It is a very physical and scenic movie, not much dialogue is needed to tell the story.  Please do not let it being a foreign film turn you off. I highly recommend this film if only to see the Villa.

Mme.  Showing off to the neighbor.
M. Arpel "relaxing" in the courtyard of the villa.


Tiffany

Friday, March 4, 2011

VIRTUAL GARAGE SALE!!!! Plus size clothing for sale.

Virtual Garage Sale!!!!  
I have several plus size items, gently worn, that I am clearing out of my closet.  I have some listed on eBay but am trying a few different venues to sell these items.

If you are in the Dallas, Texas (Plano) area, I will meet you to deliver.  If you need them shipped, I will do that, too. 

I will be listing more as I clean more out.  My hubbie said NO MORE...clean out the excess.  And I obey like a good wife...LOL.  (plus if I clean out, I have more room for new things...)





 2 Venezia Linen / Cotton Blend Button Down Shirts 10.00




 2 100% Cotton Venezia / Lane Bryant Button Down Shirts 10.00 (plus one bonus not pictured)



Turquoise Blue Lounge suit / jogging suit / swim suit cover-up.  Thin terry cloth.  Size 22w / 24w (3x).  Very comfortable and fits nicely over workout clothes, swim suit, etc. 10.00

 Woman's size 18W Crinoline / peticoat.  For under formals, wedding dresses, etc. 40.00




Plus size formal, prom, bridesmaid, dance dress.  Very pretty and flattering.  Comfortable size 24W 50.00

It has been stored in a smoke free / pet free environment in the original bag.

I will meet in public place in a reasonable distance from my home or ship to you for additional charge.

Please take a look at my other listings on craigslist.com (search for dfwgirliegirl) or see more for sale at my blog: http://www.ramblingsfromagirliegirl.blogspot.com for plus size clothing and women's clothing and my etsy store for VINTAGE things, patterns, vintage clothing, pyrex, nick knacks, pottery, owls, etc. http://www.etsy.com/shop/GirlieGirlsNotions I also have eBay listings under dfwgirliegirl

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Unusual Pyrex Finding

I posted this on the Pyrex Collective to see if anyone knew what this Unusual Pyrex thingie might be.  I got some great answers and thought I would also share it on my blog.

WTHeck? Pyrex looking kind of "odd".


I found this odd looking pyrex thingie...does anyone know what it is?  My hubbie thought maybe a gravy seperator then said it is something medical or science related.

I just think it is cool.  Picked it up at Goodwill today and thought it was odd so I bought it to show on here to see if anyone could tell me WTHeck it is.








Thanks.
Since this is an UNUSUAL Pyrex finding and Alphabe's letter this week is "U", I am linking this up with:


Tiffany
www.ramblingsfromagirliegirl.blogspot.com

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Give-a-Way Alert!!!!

Hop on over to Antique Chase for her give-a-way to celebrate her 500th follower.

Tiffany

New Dresses!!!! And a Brief History of the Shirt Waist Dress

I hit the jackpot today during Salvation Army's Half Price Day.  All of their clothing is half on on Wednesdays (in the Dallas area, at least).  I almost did not go.  I had arrived  a little after 8am to find out they do not open until 10am.   I ran a few errands, filled the car up (OUCH...Gas Prices!!!!), etc and almost decided it was not worth waiting on.  At the last minute, I turned around to wait it out.

I am so glad that I did.  You know that I complain about not being able to find dresses in vintage styles because of my "granny arms" and well...my size in general.  Someone must have cleaned out a closet and donated a load of never worn dresses.  Never worn but they have that .... smell....that older clothes get.  Well that is part of the price, I guess...so they are being laundered or aired out right now.

Before I proceeded to take care of the "dusty attic" smell, I played dress up with Gertie.

A little wrinkled but in such perfect condition.  I am posting this one on my etsy shop, Girlie Girl's Notions.

This one looks just so darn cute on me.  The belt does not fit Girtie, but really nips MY waist in.


I almost did not even try this one on...It is my most favorite of the group.


Each had the tags or the little plastic thingies that attaches the tags still attached. 

I am not too fond of the pockets on the chest of this one.  I am thinking of a re-design.

I have the perfect cardigan for this one.

This one needs some work.  I like the shape so it was well worth my time.


I know these are not 50's house-dresses / shirt-waists but they have the fit and design of what I look for.  I am thinking these might be from the 1970s / 1980s because there was some influence during that time of 1950s fashions.  I remember when I was in Junior High (mid 80s) I had a few shirt-waists that I liked because, even way back then, I preferred this fit and style.  I even kept a few until I was in college because the styles changed and I could no longer find them.  They must have been trashed when the evil second husband of my mother (lol...notice I did not say "step-dad") redid my room.

After World War II, women looked to lifestyle magazines, such as Good Housekeeping, to define, learn, and adapt to their new roles in the land of plenty.  Such magazines "influenced the fashion decisions of women, and provides information on how the 1950s shirt-waist was sold to them.  Tracing the path of the shirt-waist—from its established pre-war form, to its 1947 revision by Haute Couture designer Christian Dior, to its gradual appearance in this new form in Good Housekeeping—shows how it began its development as an icon.  Exploring how it was represented in other media in later years will show how it solidified as an icon" from The Clothesline Journal .

When we were researching the early 1900s in my costume history class at Texas A&M, we learned that the shirt-waist was based after a man's shirt.  Women wore these because they were practical and they did not need assistance in getting dressed.  This brought a lot of freedom for the ladies to spend their time on other matters, such as fighting for the vote and other civic minded activities.   So you can see that the 1950's designers were not the first to construct a shirt-waist inspired look.  


These dresses became the uniform of the 1950's housewife.  Since this is the fashion era I am interested in, as far as this blog post is concerned, I will focus on the 1950's influence.  June Cleaver, Donna Reed, Father Knows Best's wife (what was her name?), Marrion Cunningham, etc all wore these dresses....so when one thinks of the 1950's housewife, this is usually what she is wearing, of course with heels and pearls.  


"Christain Dior’s influence on the 1950s style shirtwaist began with his “New Look” collection in the spring of 1947 and almost single-handedly defined the post-war silhouette.  Although other designers such as Claire McCardell were working with similar skirt shapes at the time, the fashion media credited Dior with the inception of the “New Look.”  While Dior did influence ready-to-wear styles, it is incorrect to say that his version merely “trickled down.”  Grant D. McCracken explains the specifics of the trickle down theory in his essay “The Trickle-Down Theory Rehabilitated.”
“The trickle-down theory, first stated by Simmel (1904), was an ingenious account of fashion change.  The theory holds that two conflicting principles act as a kind of engine or motive force for innovation.  Subordinate social groups, following the principle of imitation, seek to establish new status claims by adopting the clothing of super ordinate groups.  Super ordinate social groups, following the principle of differentiation, respond by adopting new fashion."[7] 
If anything, an opposite scenario caused the shirtwaists popularity.  This change disseminated in a circular and almost cyclical way.  Dior took the already well-established form of the shirtwaist and created a new, haute couture version.[8] While this is not necessarily an early incarnation of the now common trend of turning street fashion into couture, it does suggest Dior’s “. . . willingness to work with an established form but to complicate its construction and render it idiosyncratic.”  The new style then slowly began to influence all price points and classes to create the new form, while obliterating the old one" from The Clothesline Journal

So every housewife was able to follow the styles, no matter her social status.  From farmer's wives to socialites on 5th Avenue, women were dressing up or down in the popular shirt-waist style.
Happy Homemaking,

Tiffany

This post is being linked up at  

And Fabulous Thrift and Fashionable Friday at  A Thrifty LA Life (kris is so darn cute, you gotta go see what she found at Goodwill...so fashionable)