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Opening Soon: Paper Jewels at Paper Hammer

A conversation with Dorothy Cheng, who curated the show and runs the ship at the Second Ave shop.

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SLIDESHOW: A preview of the work on display at Paper Hammer in February during their show, Paper Jewels. Here, Alejandra Koreck’s (Buenos Aires, Argentina) neckpiece.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

SLIDESHOW: A preview of the work on display at Paper Hammer in February during their show, Paper Jewels. Here, Alejandra Koreck’s (Buenos Aires, Argentina) neckpiece.

View Slideshow » Illustration: Seattle artist Midori Saito’s brooch. View Slideshow » Illustration:

Sabrina Meyns’ (County Waterford, Ireland) brooch.

People who love paper love Paper Hammer, the Second Ave shop that celebrates tactile memories, note taking, decor, books and texts, and loads of other offline pursuits.

It’s a great place for grabbing unusual gifts, stationery, and mood boosters, and beginning Thursday, February 2 and running through February 25, it’s a good place to get your mind bent around a new sort of jewelry.

Shop manager and studio curator (and jeweler in her own right) Dorothy Cheng brings together six artists using fibrous pulp materials to craft wearable accessories.

Check out our conversation with Cheng here, and click through the slideshow to take these new jewels for a spin. And do plan to stop by the store to see these intricate and innovative pieces in person.

WWW: What was the impetus for showcasing jewelry made of paper?
Cheng: Paper Hammer hosted an exhibition of jewelry artist Sondra Sherman’s work last May and we got great feedback. So when we were brainstorming ideas for the gallery space, we wanted to revisit that theme. This show also complements our mission at Paper Hammer: to present expertly and carefully handcrafted functional objects to the public and to celebrate a union of traditional craft techniques with modern design.

The show consists of artists from all over; were these folks you already knew or did you discover new artists in your curation process?
I encouraged the artists I knew and admired who made work from paper to apply for the show and we sent out calls for entries to various art jewelry organizations. From the 50+ entries, [Paper Hammer owner] Ed Marquand and I narrowed it down to the artists that we both thought made interesting work.

What do you hope viewers will see and understand as they approach the work? Should we be inspired to wear jewelry? To see paper differently?
We’re just hoping that viewers will approach the work with an open mind and think about jewelry and paper in other contexts. And if that inspires people to wear more unconventional jewelry or to make their own jewelry from paper, that’s great!

How can we evaluate the preciousness of paper jewels? Would it be strictly time spent on each piece or is it more abstract? Without the rating system of karats and weights and so forth, how can we value this work? Is it even important to attach specific value or can we ditch that for this new medium?
The intention is not to ditch the idea of value altogether, but to present the idea of “value” as something that doesn’t inherently exist, but is contingent on a variety of factors.

I think jewelry has always been about more than the sum of its parts. And the value of those parts is also constantly changing. Aluminum at one point in the 19th century was more expensive than gold, because the process of extraction was so tedious. The high price of diamonds is a miracle of advertising and a monopolized market. Silver was more expensive than gold in ancient Egypt since it was never native to the region.

Since jewelry also takes on individually attributed meaning so easily, its value is often determined according to how well it conveys these messages. I know many people have pieces of jewelry that have been passed down through generations or as gifts from loved ones. These pieces may not be worth much to a metal refiner or gemologist, but they can be precious for other reasons.

So with the paper jewelry, we’re hoping to bring to prominence these other factors that influence value, such as craftsmanship, personal sentiment, and artistic presentation.

There are so many novel materials entering the jewelry and accessories
scene? For instance, retailers, shoppers, and designers are
obsessed with that rock
climbing rope.
Are we in the process of deconstructing metals and jewels and the traditional notion of jewelry?
Yes, in a way, non-metal materials in personal adornment have become quite mainstream and readily accessible. But on the other hand, the human quest to adorn oneself has yielded pretty daring jewelry-making practices throughout time. Victorian human hair jewelry, anyone? And in non-Western cultures, materials such as beetle wings, kingfisher feathers, hair, and natural resins have been used and worn for ages. I think designers now just have more access to other jewelry traditions to mine for inspirations.

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Tags: Accessories, Seattle Style, Locally Made Jewelry

Meet the Shopkeeper

Meet the Shopkeeper: Howard and Marge

No funny stuff in the dressing rooms out in Olde Burien, please.

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Howard and Marge owner Robin Dunkle with her husband and their two children in Burien.

Okay so maybe Burien never became the next Brooklyn, but the old town section of the south end ’burb provides a darn good day trip option with sweet shops and cafes, and a beach drive or two. If you go, be sure to check out Howard and Marge, one of the newer shops on 152nd Street. Here, we meet owner Robin Dunkle.

WWW: What song or album is playing on your store’s sound system right now?
Dunkle: The Black Keys are playing on Pandora in the store right now.

What was your first job in retail? What did you love or hate about it and how does it compare to what you do now?
I graduated in 1989 from the Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandising in Los Angeles, with a degree in Merchandise Marketing. I started a contemporary women’s clothing line called Tantrumm Apparel Inc. and Red Heart Knits, which I designed and manufactured in our factory in Newport Beach, California. During that time, I opened a retail shop called the Loft in Costa Mesa, California. This is where we put our over-runs along with designs from other local friends in the design business.

I loved that part of my life because it was my dream to create and manufacture my own clothing line. We had a corporate showroom in the California Mart in Los Angeles and I loved traveling to our tradeshow’s in Dallas, New York, Vegas, and other cities. It was a fast-paced lifestyle for 10 great years! I disliked that first job because it was super stressful. There were huge deadlines and the big department stores had the ability to put the little guys like us out of business with bounced shipments and cancelled orders. What could go wrong, did go wrong. But even with all of that, I really miss manufacturing. I loved being knee-deep in bolts of fabric in downtown Los Angeles, shopping trims, and interacting with our sewers.

I love my boutique in Olde Burien because we offer what the people need here in our little town. I keep everyone up on the latest fashion and trends. People appreciate being able to shop locally and get a cute new outfit last minute, or a quick birthday present on the way to meet a friend for lunch.

Howardandmargeoriginal

Dunkle’s inspiration for her boutique came from her grandparents, the original Howard and Marge.

What’s your favorite thing in the store right now?
My favorite thing in the store right now is a line called Love Heals. It is a designer jewelry line out of Ojai, California. The line mixes charms, strands, and stones so you can create your own necklace or bracelet and earrings. With every piece sold, they plant 10 fruit-bearing trees in Ethiopia. They have planted over 700,000 trees to date.

Where do you shop when you’re not at your store?
I love and prefer boutique shopping to find unique, interesting, and different things. I love antiques and rustic things.

What do you love about your store’s neighborhood? What nearby restaurants, coffee shops, etc do you recommend?
Our neighborhood is a best-kept secret. Here you will be able to stroll, shop, and eat or drink at the little restaurants, pubs, and coffee shops. I get lots of new, out of town, and local shoppers who stroll over after visiting 909 Coffee and Wine for breakfast or lunch. We also have a cool independent movie theater called the Tin Theater, which is connected to the Tin Room Bar. It’s a very intimate, 40-seat theater, featuring a different movie every week. You feel all of the comforts of home while being waited on with popcorn, candy, and cocktails!

What’s the weirdest thing that’s ever happened in your store?
A man came in looking like your regular dad or the guy next door, and started looking at the women’s clothes. He told us he had a “Pimp & Ho” party to go to, where the guys were suppose to dress as the “Ho’s.” He tried on short dresses and tops in the dressing room and came out with nothing underneath. He proceeded to try to show his junk to my employee without success!

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Tags: Seattle Style, Meet the Shopkeeper,

Seattle Style

What’s Your Take On… Grunge Girls?

Style.com says Seattle girls circa Soundgarden and Cyclops are It.

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Singles

Was Bridget Fonda’s character in Singles a style icon for you back in the day? Is she now?

Although not overtly Seattle- or Northwest-centric, there’s no way style.com could have thrown Beauty Icon: The Girls of Grunge up over the weekend without this landscape or our scene.

Yes, of course Courtney Love is in it, as is Bridget Fonda’s character in Singles. Portland gets a couple of mentions, as does, ahem, Portlandia. But what to make of the larger idea that the early ‘90s—when, as style.com reminds us, "of Nirvana’s Nevermind and Pearl Jam’s Ten,"—keep creeping up in the realm of fashion and style?

Is it just me or does everyone except Seattle want to glorify, romanticize, and generally bite the style of Old School Seattle?

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Tags: Seattle Style, What's Your Take On..., Seattle Style News

Style Counsel

Jamie Ewing, Fashion Designer Turned Schoolteacher

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School teacher Jamie Ewing used to help design Hammer Pants but these days he prefers a classic and urban skewed prepster look.

Style Counselor Jamie Ewing has a few things to say about sixth graders and good hair days; here, he schools us on some favorite shopping spots and what not to wear.

WWW: You used to design menswear in New York and now you teach elementary school in White Center. Do you find yourself wearing pieces you wore 20 years ago or are that world and this one existing on separate planes?
Ewing: I do still have some pieces from when I worked with Basco, the in-house Barneys New York line, in the late 90s. A few grey flannel shirts and a blazer. They’re timeless, almost like old friends. I am a long way from when I would wear Gaultier out in the clubs.

What are your favorite Seattle shops?
I love Ian because they keep it fresh and modern, always growing. I like DNA at the Bravern for denim. Mario’s for dressier things. I also like to go into shops like Great Jones Home and Kirk Albert Vintage to see what’s going on in local design, it actually influences things I wear. I can spend hours at Second Use and Earthwise wondering what could be next.

What one thing do you put on and always feel great in?
There are a couple; one is the custom tuxedo that my partner and I had made by Luly Yang. There is nothing like having a custom suit or tuxedo made, there is no way it can look bad. Plus, it has iridescent, shocking orange lining that looks great when you throw it over a chair. The other things I love to throw on are the vintage Burberry overcoats that I inherited from my grandfather. Not only are they still relevant but they have history, I love that. They’re really full-cut and are a blast to wear.

What’s the last great thing you purchased for yourself?
I’m in love with Frederic Malle fragrances from Barneys, especially Noir Epice and Carnal Flower. Each fragrance is designed by a different person and they all blow me out of the water. I have kind of started collecting them. I was just down in San Francisco and hit the G-Star there, it is like a candy store! There is also an Engineered Garments wool hooded poncho with nylon strapping that I got at Ian last fall that’s still really fun to wear. The best thing is that they only had ONE!

What’s your next big purchase going to be?
I’m on the lookout for some really great wool flannel pants but they need to be updated and modern, not business-y. I also am thinking hats for the winter; traditional looks maybe. And I do need new glasses but I am so not sure which direction to go. I don’t wear them all the time (yet) so I get confused on what I should do. I think I avoid it because it makes me feel OOOOLD.

We might be able to help: Try our Fields of Vision; we’ve found that Seattle’s four-eyed have never had it so good.

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Tags: Seattle Style, Style Counsel, Fashion

Style Counsel

Figure Drawing Class at Roche Bobois

Style Counselor Krista Kelly helps you wrap your brain and a pencil around the human form, for free.

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Figure on Krista Kelly being a very spirited and stylish teacher, and consider her drawing class at Roche Bobois on August 16 from 5:30 to 8.

Three things I like:

1. Style Counselors who stay in touch—this time it’s Krista Kelly, who showed up on our style radar not just for her ability to rock a perfect little dress with a just-right jean jacket (which, coincidentally, style.com has decided to call out as a trend), but because her job as an art consultant gives her an interesting perspective on aesthetics in general.

2. Retail locations getting outside the bounds of normal retail activity. For instance: Roche Bobois, who is hosting the aforementioned Ms. Kelly for a very unexpected sort of pop-up gallery and classroom.

3. Style and fashion practitioners who understand that the human form is engaged in an important conversation with clothes, and, well, everything else.

Also, sometimes (but not all the time) things that are free are good.

On Tuesday, August 16 from 5:30 to 8, at the aforementioned European furniture gallery on Western Ave, the aforementioned Style Counselor is offering three 20-minute figure drawing sessions. A nude model and materials are included; Kelly, a seasoned and spirited drawing instructor, will advise on technique and form. The class is open to beginners and experts alike. Check the Bilinear Art blog for more information; or to RSVP, contact rsvp @ bilinearart.com

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Tags: Seattle Style, Style Counsel, Art Events

Seattle Style News

Hedi Slimane x Frances Bean Cobain

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Francesbean

One of the recently published photographs of Frances Bean Cobain by fashion icon Hedi Slimane.

If you had any sort of personal investment in the music and fashion scene in Seattle in the 90s, you’ve had at least one middle-of-the-night panicked thought for Frances Bean Cobain.

The images that just popped on up the blog of French fashion designer, photographer, and all-around icon Hedi Slimane don’t necessarily put any fears to rest, but neither will they keep you from falling asleep tonight.

You will see both Kurt and Courtney in the images of their not quite 20 year-old daughter, but moreover, you will see stark beauty and a very pinpointed approximation of the Nevermind years.

Moreover, you will find it pretty difficult to look away.

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Tags: Seattle Style, Photography, Nirvana, Seattle Style News, Grunge

New Merchandise

Just Landed: Fiorentini and Baker at A Mano

A favorite boot line shows up for fall.

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Fall has arrived at A Mano, in the form of Italy’s Fiorentini and Baker.

Seattle women do like their boots. Many of us, I’d say, love our boots, and a perennial favorite is Italy’s Fiorentini and Baker.

Several styles just landed at A Mano, where fall arrivals mix it up with on-sale summer styles. The overall vibe is, as ever, handmade and earthy but not too casual, and as European as it is Northwest.

I remember that last fall a friend was socking away money for a tall, taupe neo-Victorian pair of lace-up Fiorentinis, but my favorite style from A Mano’s current edit is this softly studded biker. Picture it with a full-length everyday dress in some fall texture and weight, or with a pair of summer’s sharply hued denim and a big sweater.

And keep in mind the very Seattle, quite 90s autumn mood at the recent Nordstrom Designer Preview; combat boots with Missoni dresses, and quasi-industrial stompers with Chanel.

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Tags: Seattle Style, Shoes, New for Fall, Just Landed, Grunge

Shopping Map

Shopping Map: More Seattle Essentials

17 can’t-miss stores for visiting shoppers or locals who just need the reminder.

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Ebbets

Ebbets Fields Flannels in Pioneer Square is known to vintage baseball fans and other sportsters all over the planet. For more on what makes them a Seattle Essential, read our Outstanding in the Field.

I cringe when I see tourists walking out of the T-shirt shop near Pike Place Market. A made-in-China iron-on is just no way to recall a trip to our city.

Of course, there are a few different types of shopping visitors…those who buy Space Needle-shaped pepper grinders, and those who don’t. For the latter—and for locals who just need a reminder about which stores define our character and elevate our retail experience—this map of 17 Seattle Shopping Essentials ought to do the trick.

From kids stuff to smart stuff to the active life; from idiosyncratic niche shops to local designs, world-sourced all-naturals, and the best high-style offerings around, these are the stores that elicit both “Only in Seattle!” and “I didn’t expect this in Seattle” remarks.

For more on what we consider “essential”—and for another map-full of must-shop stops, check out the 18 retail necessities we plotted last month.

And don’t worry, we’ll be back next month with another dozen or so more.

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Tags: Seattle Vintage, Seattle Style, Downtown Seattle Shopping

Seattle Style News

Just Landed: Filson x Blackbird

Could this bag be any more local?

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Blackbird

Blackbird found the only way to improve on Filson; they got them to make a bag in black.

Props to Blackbird in Ballard for knowing that the only thing you could to make Filson bags cooler is to make one in black.

And then another round of props to the menswear pioneers for actually getting the iconic Seattle-based brand to do it.

For sale now at the shop and on blackbirdballard.com: the Filson Medium Field Bag in Blackbird Black. Don’t sleep on it, though. Only 66 of these things were produced, (as in historic Route 66) and each comes with a harmonica, a copy of the sheet music for Woody Guthrie’s “This Land Is Your Land,” and a railroad striped bandana.

Authentic Americana, by way of Seattle, for $265.

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Tags: Accessories, Seattle Style, Filson, Seattle Retail News, Blackbird

Slideshow

Slideshow: Nordstrom’s Designer Preview

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SLIDESHOW: Down the runway, after the runway, and all about the runway from Nordstrom’s July 21 Designer Preview benefit for Seattle Art Museum. Here, Lanvin. We loved the wide brim hats and tone-on-tone taupes.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

SLIDESHOW: Down the runway, after the runway, and all about the runway from Nordstrom’s July 21 Designer Preview benefit for Seattle Art Museum. Here, Lanvin. We loved the wide brim hats and tone-on-tone taupes.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

Compared to recent seasons, Marni designer Consuelo Castiglioni really reigned in the pattern mash-ups and eclectic approach to color theory…

View Slideshow » Illustration:

…which just made the exceptions, this this tote, all the more appreciated.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

There were so many sumptuous coats on Thursday night. This one, by the always impeccable Dries van Noten, was princely and perfect.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

The Missoni look is so Seattle circa the 90s. Slouchy sweater dressing with combat boots and knit hats. Grunge would seem to be the gift that keeps on giving. Chanel was pretty Belltown, too: steel toe-inspired black boots and oversized, copiously cuffed trousers.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

Hats were a prominent accessory in general, most notably with Burberry Prorsum. The collection had a super 60s feel topped off by mink news boy hats.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

The vibe at Dolce & Gabbana was 80s menswear—boxy Talking Heads style blazer references and short sweaters over slacks-with-suspenders paired with Creeper-style oxfords.:Teddy Boy-esque You can see it in the foreground there, but then in true D&G style, it’s followed by a curve-hugging dress. Animal prints and sequins punctuated the boyish looks, ensuring that the average glam-loving Dolce & Gabbana client got her fix.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Case in point: This dress. I don’t normally go for sequins, but paired with black ankle socks and glittery Dorothy from Oz pumps, it won be over. After the show we watched a serious Nordstrom collector try it on; up close you got the detail of the extra, extra, extra long sleeve. So luxurious.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

Gucci is all about the 70s—but with technicolor, supermodern color. The salmon roe red of this high-neck, mid-length dress was in tune with deep emerald greens and iris-blue purple.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

More from Gucci: raspberry and an electric shade of eggplant. Photographer Lucas Anderson caught this shot just off the runway; it gets at the moodiness of the film noir-meets-flare legged decadence of the collection.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

The finale is the best part, because you start to imagine a real life parade—say, up Pike or down Pine—of all the best pieces. Here, a Givenchy fur in the classic style of a baseball jacket.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

With eight or ten looks each from lines like Chanel, Akris, Dries van Noten, and Marc Jacobs, the runway has an electrically charged feel. It’s a once-a-year (at least in Seattle) thing. Some Designer Previews hang around afterward (there’s Pete Nordstrom in the foreground), while others rush to get to where the genuine articles are ready to be tried on.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

In addition to the dresses and coats, shoes and bags are available for inspection and order. Nordstrom personnel are there with trademark service.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

The day after the show I flipped through my copy of W and noticed that these Miu Miu Bowie-esque glimmer bootie pumps are everywhere.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

Of course, the show is always good for people watching. And it’s good for showing off your favorite pieces. This gal took the opportunity to wear boots and a bag from a recent Chanel collection. (Wonder if she was at the Chanel show at Novelty Hill-Januik that we reported from last spring?)

View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson
View Slideshow » Photo: Lucas Anderson

Yours truly with Jamie Fish from Heffner Management and Mia Harrison from Fashion Network Seattle.

Once a year, Nordstrom brings partial collections from top designers around the world to Seattle, and sends them down the runway so that shoppers and Seattle Art Museum supporters (ticket sales benefit a specific exhibit; this year, Gauguin and Polynesia: An Elusive Paradise, on view February 2012) can whet their appetites on the coming season. It’s like New York or Paris fashion week distilled into one evening.

This year’s show was last Thursday. We all cruised out to Pier 91 and filed into the pavilion, first for drinks, then for the show itself, and then for a sort of pop-up shop in which the runway pieces are tried on, coveted, and sometimes pre-ordered.

Nearly $150,000 was raised for SAM; our slideshow gets you on the runway and in the crowd.

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Tags: Seattle Style, Nordstrom, Grunge

Slideshow: Gold Coast Trading Co.

Get a look at Style Counselor Emeka Alam’s historically driven, music culture-influenced clothing line.

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SLIDESHOW: Style Counselor and Seattle designer Emeka Alam’s spring ‘11 line. The lifeblood of Gold Coast Trading Co. is the T-shirt. This season’s references the Soweto Youth Riots of 1976.

View Slideshow » Photo: Gold Coast Trading Co.

SLIDESHOW: Style Counselor and Seattle designer Emeka Alam’s spring ‘11 line. The lifeblood of Gold Coast Trading Co. is the T-shirt. This season’s references the Soweto Youth Riots of 1976.

View Slideshow » Photo: Gold Coast Trading Co.

Strong colors and gold graphics are how Alams has made his name, but …

View Slideshow » Photo: Gold Coast Trading Co.

he’s lately been extending the brand with items like this cardigan.

View Slideshow » Photo: Gold Coast Trading Co.

There’s one for the ladies, too.

View Slideshow » Photo: Gold Coast Trading Co.

The spring ’11 collection also features very current bow ties made with very current African textiles.

Of the current trend of using textiles and fabric that are from various African nations, Alams says, ‘On one hand I’m happy that people are seeing the beauty of Africa but at the same time its important that the source is authentic and doesn’t make Africa just another fad. Some designers could care less about the image they portray when it comes to Africa and their goal is to get it while it’s hot and that I can’t support. There are amazing designers from Africa like Yodit Eklund of Bantu Wax (who sells at Barneys) and Tunde Ogunnoiki from FRESHiAM who are doing more then just played out African prints and who more importantly understand the culture, issues, and people of Africa.’

View Slideshow » Photo: Gold Coast Trading Co.

Another look at the bow ties.

View Slideshow » Photo: Gold Coast Trading Co.

These shoes, also from the current collection, are a joint effort. ‘Its a on-going collab I have with my good friend "Angelic of 23tribes,’“:http://23tribes.wordpress.com/ says Alams. ’She’s amazingly talented and is a master craftswoman. So we had a lot of mutual respect and love for each others work so we decided to team up and combine the customs of old with the creatives of new. The moccasin is inspired by the traditional footwear of Mayans, Aztecs, and Incas. The lining is traditional African fabric; keep looking out, we have much more to come including driving shoes and "Clark’s style boots.’”:http://www.clarksusa.com/

You might not have guessed that there’s a connection between experimental pop icon M.I.A and this sometimes sleepy city of ours, but there is, and his name is Emeka Alams.

Our Style Counsel subject first worked with the singer/rapper/electro-everything artist in the capacity of tour merchandise designer; eventually, M.I.A and her fiance Ben Bronfman approached the Seattle native about collaborating on a clothing line now known as Gold Coast Trading Company.

Yeah, that’s a lot of name dropping, I know. I take full responsibility. But it’s so cool seeing how creative minds in our own community intersect with some of the most internationally celebrated ones out there in the world.

Plus, the line stands up to it. Check out the slideshow and see for yourself.

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Tags: Seattle Style, Seattle Designer

Slideshow: Swink Style Bar

Seattle’s original blow dry bar is set to open in U Village early this spring; here’s what they do.

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Slideshow: What’s a swink? Celebrity inspiration and real-world salon images illustrate the work. Here: feather extensions, the latest thing from the trend machine.

View Slideshow » Photo: Featherlocks

Slideshow: What’s a swink? Celebrity inspiration and real-world salon images illustrate the work. Here: feather extensions, the latest thing from the trend machine.

View Slideshow » Photo: Mandy Arroyo

“The Swink”
The house blow-out; whatever that may mean to you: straight, wavy, curly, or otherwise perfectly face-framing.

View Slideshow » Photo: Mandy Arroyo

“The Cosmo”
A “Euro-chic ponytail” – harder to do than it sounds, you can customize with perfectly straightened ends, curls, or a little flip.

View Slideshow » Photo: Getty Images

“The Fifth Avenue”
Think straight, smooth hair on a classic uptown girl, like Kate Bosworth’s Park Ave princess locks.

View Slideshow » Photo: Getty Images

“The English Rose”
A sweep of an updo with twists of hair and falling tendrils, like Kristen Stewart’s artfully undone look.

View Slideshow » Photo: Mandy Arroyo

“The English Rose”
Swink’s take on old romanticism with plenty of pintucked curls.

View Slideshow » Photo: Getty Images

“The Knockout”
Half-up, half-down; Lucy Liu went curly but you have your choice of curls or straightened tresses.

View Slideshow » Photo: Mandy Arroyo

“The Knock Out”
But it’s more like a mix between the “Knock Out” and the “5th Ave,” right? Super straight, and half pulled back.

View Slideshow » Photo: Getty Images

“The French Connection”
Courtney Cox rocks the modern chignon: low on the head, smooth, neatly tucked.

View Slideshow » Photo: Getty Images

“Belle du Jour”
You can go for a more Victoria’s Secret-style bedhead look like Leighton Meester, or something a little more shampoo commercial perfect.

View Slideshow » Photo: Mandy Arroyo

“Belle du Jour”
Like the aforementioned shampoo commercial perfection of well-done, smooth curls.

Downtown’s Swink Style Bar is getting a sister salon in University Village. The new store will open early this spring.

Swink makes its business on quickie blow-outs and hairstyle makeovers; they don’t even offer time consuming cuts and colors. Hairdryers, curling rods, and straightening irons sub in for scissors and shears, and most styles are priced around $30 and take about 30 minutes.

Owners Natalie Angelillo and Jacquie Byrne opened their downtown location November 2009 and, for a certain set of girls, quickly established themselves as the place to go post-work, post-gym, post-bad hair day, and "pre-prom or graduation,":/blogs/wear-what-when/michelle-moore-swink-senior-portraits-070210/ pre-wedding, pre-party, pre-date.

They’ve since added eyelash extensions, full makeup application, facial waxing, and their latest: feather and tinsel hair extensions.

‘We’ve been looking for a second location for some time and University Village was a natural fit for Swink,’ said Natalie Angelillio. ’As one of the top ten malls in the country, it attracts a wide demographic, and is ideal for our array of services. We appeal to the college gal who wants to add feathers to a style for a party [see the slideshow if you have no idea what she’s talking about. -eds] and the mother-of-the-bride who wants to get makeup and a blowout for her daughter’s wedding.’ Angelillo also added, ‘We are actively working on opening a salon in Bellevue by the end of the year.’

Assuming there are three or four of you who haven’t been blown-out, feathered, or otherwise up-done we asked Angelillo and Byrne to help us illustrate the Swinky possibilities with a slideshow of salon images and celebrity inspiration.

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Tags: Seattle Style, Seattle Retail News, Seattle Hair Salon

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