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Dress Code: SAM Remix

Celebrate summer with SAM as the city “parties in the park after dark.”

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Party at the Olympic Sculpture Park this Friday night

Where: Olympic Sculpture Park

What: SAM’s Remix, this time with Truckasaurus, Seattle Percussion Collective, I Heart Shiva, and more. At this point, the museum’s get-downs are widely regarded as must-attend parties. Be there or be a square. Problem is: it’s never been that easy to be there because everyone’s trying to be there. Remember the one last February? Hopeful revelers stood outside in the bitter cold rain only to have their hearts broken. But the folks at SAM have streamlined the ticket-buying process — and, the outdoor venue gives “capacity” a much more generous lean.

When: Friday August 27 at 8; $12-$15, the first 50 people to show up in neon get in free. Tickets are available on SAM’s website

Wear: What really worked for you this summer? Work it one more time.

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Dress Code: Chicks Did It

Two galleries celebrate the legacy of rock art in Seattle and beyond

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Slideshow: Tether’s collection of female rock industry design opens on August 5 at Tether. Here, the Lisa Orth-designed Nirvana record that started it all.

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Slideshow: Tether’s collection of female rock industry design opens on August 5 at Tether. Here, the Lisa Orth-designed Nirvana record that started it all.

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Beginning August 5, Tether invites you to take a look at female-designed artwork within the realm of rock music in the Northwest. Here, a 1971 poster by Catherine Weinstein

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In addition to poster art, the Tether show also collects artwork by female musician. Here, a painted window by former Northwest resident Neko Case. Tee-shirts and other items will be for sale at the show.

Where: Tether and the Design Commission Gallery

What: Did you know that Nirvana’s first album was designed by a woman? Rock can, in some ways, be a dude’s game, but a poster and album artwork show at Tether flips that on its head as the gallery/design firm/stuff shop examines the vivid and expressive work of Northwest-based female innovators from 1966 through present day.

Tether designer Dan Smith presents the show; the former EMP designer noticed that the scene had never really acknowledged the female artists who contributed so much color and story to the music, so he decided to do something about it. The show’s namesake, Thunderbitch, was a Portland tool and die engineer in the psych rock-era who made show posters that helped define the look and feel of the vaguely isolated Northwest around the end of the ’60s.

Meanwhile, Sub Pop art director Jeff Kleinsmith and Jesse LeDoux celebrate eleven years of Patent Pending, their Seattle-based silk-screening rock poster concern. The duo has created visuals for artists from the Shins to Nine Inch Nails.

When: Both shows open on Thursday Aug 5 (aka First Thursday) with artist receptions that begin at 5p

Wear: Bell-bottoms, biker boots, skinny jeans, platform sandals. Whatever puts you in the mind of walking past a visual depiction of music and thinking, “I gotta go.”

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Tags: Design, Music, Locally Designed, Dress Code, First Thursday

Openings

Dress Code: Baby Love

Go Ga ga for the Supremes’ gowns at EMP starting June 11

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Slideshow: They just don’t make ’em like they used to; a look at what the Supremes wore

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Slideshow: They just don’t make ’em like they used to; a look at what the Supremes wore

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I wonder what the Supreme’s Mary Wilson thinks of Lady Gaga?

Back in the day, Wilson, Diana Ross, and Florence Ballard set the tone with their glitzy, glammy, but decidedly more … approachable stage gowns. Designers like Bob Mackie created the group’s stunningly dramatic looks; the sparkling, sequined, liquid-like sheaths were every bit as important as lines like “love don’t come easy/it’s a game of give and take” when it came to the girl group’s success.

Opening Friday June 11at EMP, Reflections: The Mary Wilson Supreme Legacy Collection features some of the ladies’ most recognizable fashion and memorabilia dating from 1969 to 1977.

The gowns have traveled the world but this will be their first trip to the West Coast. Those of you interested in the connections between performance and glamor, music and fashion, and pop culture and everyday dress – not to mention halter necklines, slit skirts, and long gloves – better slip into something shiny and be there on opening night.

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Events

Dress Code: In the Bag

Michael Hebb’s next Night School meet-up features fashion icon Lauren Bush and benefits her FEED Project for Haiti

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Slideshow: My favorite FEED bags

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Slideshow: My favorite FEED bags

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Lauren Bush appears in a lot of high-style event photos on Style.com. She is also one-half of the founding team behind FEED Projects, which makes gorgeous Ikat bags for Guatemala and great looking Americana-esque totes that benefit Haiti.

Next Monday, May 24, Michael Hebb’s One Pot/Sorrento Hotel collaboration, Night School, welcomes Bush and her partner Ellen Gustafson for what Hebb (and we) are calling a very special Midnight Symposium.

You’ll be fed Hebb’s stew, you’ll drink wine, you’ll have the opportunity to take part in conversation with an important style and activism icon, and you’ll be asked to participate in a dialog about world hunger, what people like us can do to help, and The 30 Project.

What you wear is important, sure, but what you know, what you learn, and what you then share with your community is more important.

Upon purchasing a ticket (I’ve got mine), you’ll receive some required reading. Upon attending the event, you’ll receive a FEED 50 Haiti bag. Way better than anything else you might have considered doing on a Monday evening, right?

(Read: I’m amazed this event isn’t sold out already.)

What should you wear? Something in the new-world-urban-safari-chic vein, naturally. See you there.

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Tags: Dress Code, Fundraiser

Events

Dress Code: Night at the Museum

SAM invited me to show you my Favorite Things next Friday May 14

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Untitled, 2009, Mixed media (36 × 36 × 12 in.) by Betty Bowen Award winner Josh Faught

Moon jars, Warhol snaps, grunge ephemera, textiles, ancient and otherwise old home decor, and the high art of stripes: These are a few of my favorite things at SAM, and, as it happens, the folks at That Place That Just Keeps Getting Cooler have a tradition of inviting outsiders such as Yours Truly and letting us lead tours through our most-loved nooks and crannies.

You should join us on Friday May 14. The tour meets at the top of escalators on the third floor at 6:30. General entry fees to the museum apply.

Chances are good (okay, fantastic) that Friday’s after work happening won’t be quite as off-the-hook as the last SAM event I wrote about. Yeesh. Gazing up at the zillions of revelers from outside the way, way, way sold-out ReMix last February, you woulda thought the Beatles were in town. That party was just plain epic. My Favorite Things tour promises to be a great deal more mellow, but I am expecting the museum to be pretty alive that evening; the Warhol and Cobain shows will have just opened, and following my half-hour stroll through awesomeness, Charles Cross will be talking about his Kurt tomes.

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Events

Dress Code: Street Wise

Advice on getting Le21eme’s Adam Sinding to notice you at this week’s Pio Square First Thursday show

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A recent post on Le21eme; Individual, well-shod, coiffed. Let that be a lesson to us all.

Want Seattle’s premier street style photographer to notice you? The first step would be to get to his April 1st photo show at Bo Concept. But showing up only gets you so far; we asked Le21eme’s Adam Sinding to name three things that catch his eye.

From Seattle’s Sartorialist:

1. Most importantly, personal style. Expressing who you are through your outfits. Not just buying for the sake of buying.

2. Shoes. Shoes are the window to your sole (heehee). Seriously. Shoes make or break an outfit!

3. Hair. Do it. We’re all lazy at times, but your hair speaks to your potential. Anyone can have great hair…ANYONE!

The Bo Concept photo exhibit is part of Pioneer Square’s First Thursday festivities; stop in between 7p to 10p on April 1st and enjoy sips from Sixth Avenue Wine Seller as you browse the photos in hopes of being included in the next show.

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Tags: Design, Seattle Street Style, Photography, Dress Code

Wear What When and Who

Dress Code: Belle Époque

What to wear to the March 12 opening at the stylish new White Sage Studio

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Slideshow: Neo-Victorian (Belle Epic!) runway looks to inspire next Friday’s outfit. (here: Christian Lacroix Spring 08)

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Slideshow: Neo-Victorian (Belle Epic!) runway looks to inspire next Friday’s outfit. (here: Christian Lacroix Spring 08)

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Charles Nolan fall 08

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Catherine Malandrino fall 08

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Jenny Packham fall 08

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Marc by Marc Jacobs fall 09

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Alexander McQueen (RIP) fall 06

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Alexander McQueen spring 09

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Monique Lhullier fall 08

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Moschino fall 06

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Anna Sui fall 09

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Vivienne Westwood spring 07

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Y and Kei fall 06

Opening March 12 at the new, buzzed-about, supercool White Sage Studio in Ballard: New Victorian, a show of gorgeously patterned wallpaper designs including one called “Wallflower” by Jordan Landin for the local house Hermitage, and new-world-meets-old-world porcelain design by Far 4.

A rule of thumb in sometimes-casual Seattle: Don’t miss an opportunity to flex your sartorial muscles. Under the heading of “Opportunities”: Art Openings.

I can’t, and won’t, resist the chance to rock granny boots and a high-neck, billowy-sleeved blouse with a pair of baggy jeans. Or maybe a cropped, strong-shouldered velvet blazer with some short pants? I love the whole Gothic/romantic thing. If you can relate, check the slideshow here for inspiration and consider adding a few designer-inspired elements to next Friday’s look.

Here’s the question, though: Where to go for dinner and drinks afterward in your neo-black lace, ruffled leather, bustled bubble-hum finery?

New Victorian at White Sage will also include art by Cody Blomberg, Frank Correa, and Jeffery Babbidge. The party on Friday March 12 goes from 6-9p, and the show itself will be up through April 10.

(And no, I didn’t spend hours researching every season by every designer for the past four years, I just made use of NYMag’s superfun trend finder. )

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Tags: Seattle Restaurant Openings, Home Decor, Dress Code

Wear What When and Who

Dress Code: Remix

What to wear to SAM’s after-work party on Friday night?

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Mix it up ala Duro Olowu

Four Fridays a year, SAM stays open till midnight, fires up the sound system, and invites a music-listening, good-time audience to enjoy an entirely different museum experience. By definition, SAM Remix is a doubled commingling of art and culture, so you can make an argument that just about anything goes. At least in terms of important things like what you’re going to wear.

You might dress in primary colors, with accessories that feature engineered dangling, with a nod to the Calder exhibit; you might take the Quartet of Suits up on its offer. Or just pick any era covered in the wide expanse of black and white photographs snapped by Northwest visionary Imogen Cunningham.

You might also just literally mix it up. Pattern-, print-, and textile-mixing being, of course, one of fashion’s favorite trends. (Oh, just you wait and see our Spring Fashion editorial in the April issue of Seattle Met.)

That’s about what I intend to do. Especially because the folks at SAM asked me to contribute a mix for the event. For each SAMRemix the public programming heads solicit media types, artists, and oh you know, others to put together twenty minutes of music to soundtrack the evening.

Sounds like a good date for you and that Shazam app, eh?

I was psyched at the invitation to participate. Below is what I ended up putting together, and why.

I look forward to seeing you — and seeing what you’re wearing — at the party on Friday night.

+"Gunbeat Falls," Shabazz Palaces, from Of Light I begin and end the mix with Seattle artists; from this track, I quote, “Push the button/start the show.”

+"Gembira Ria," Rosnah and the Siglap Five from Steam Kodok LP There’s something about ’60s pop music from Southeast Asian countries that is just totally immersive and mood-altering in the best way.

+"A Raincoat’s Room," Swell Maps, from Jane From Occupied Europe from Jane from Occupied Europe A post-punk palate cleanser with piano. This quick one-minute-and-some-spare-change tune was later renamed “Raining in my Room.” How Seattle.

+"Mind Holes," Yoko Ono from Onobox Is there anything better to fall into while in the middle of an art museum?

+"In Quest of the Unusual," Cabaret Voltaire, from Cabaret Voltaire And then a worthy goal to get you out.

+"Tango Whiskeyman," Can, from Soundtracks Cinematic, obtuse, direct, rambling, safety-yellow floral — with a flashes of purple-gray cross-hatched stripes.

+"Franz Kafka At The Zoo," by The Clean from Anthology Kurt Cobain at the museum, Franz Kafka at the zoo … I don’t know it just seemed right.

+"More Noise Please," Steven Jesse Bernstein from Prison My absolute favorite made-in-Seattle “song,” and a polite request for the remainder of the evening.

Oh, and: the first 100 partiers get in FREE. The rest of you will pay $10 (SAM members pay $5 and students $8; regular daytime admission is $15)

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Wear What When and Who

Dress Code: 80s Edition

A new, recurring post requiring you to dress for every occasion

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I’m guilty of it too, but I dislike hearing people complain that they have nowhere to wear their most out-there outfits. One of my 2010 action items is to blog about events — art openings, rock shows, New Age Tupperware parties, whatever — where the dress code all but requires your most directional, special, and this-hardly-ever-leaves-the-closet best.

Remember Team Gina, our December 08 Style Counselors? I’m gonna go ahead and guess that they’d be totally on-board with this initiative.

Except, that is, they’re breaking up. There will soon be no Team Gina to agree with anything. I got word earlier this week that Seattle’s politically minded, 80s-obsessed synth poppers are breaking up.

But before they do: Two last bashes, and thus, two chances to rock roller skates with high-waisted teal skinny jeans and a pair of those Marc by Marc Jacobs bunny ears.

Team Gina plays on January 24 with that wack-job Har Mar Superstar (oh and what will he be wearing?) at Chop Suey and on January 31 at the Comet with something called Punk Bunny.

Go Jazzercise chic (there’s a contradiction in terms) for the former and a MTV-era Madonna for the latter. And let us know how it goes.

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Where do you go to dress up? Any high, high-low, or gloriously middle-brow style opportunities you think we oughtta know about? Get in touch!

AND while we’re at it, if you’re the type of person who enjoys neon knits and brightly colored statements, do check out Snow Business, this month’s Spree page.

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Tags: 80s, team gina, madonna, neon, Style Counsel, Dress Code

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