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Color Trends

What’s Your Take On… Tangerine Tango?

Pantone says the color of next year is a pinky red-orange.

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Tangerine

A tangerine dream by DVF at Nordstrom. Even the model’s hair complies with Pantone’s predictions.

Each year the fashion hue gurus at Pantone put a color on our wheel and tell us to aim for it.

They just announced that year it’s called Tangerine Tango and looks a little like a piece of pink bubblegum bred with one slice of pumpkin pie and one watermelon wedge. Right?

Last year their color was even pinkier; they claimed it “encouraged us to face everyday troubles with verve and vigor” (pause here to reflect on 2011, did it work?) while this year’s orangey shade is meant to “provide the energy boost we need to recharge and move forward.” Which seems an awful lot to ask of a color, really.

You’ve probably already seen a lot of coral-colored merchandise in your world—there are no vacuums in fashion marketing these days—do prepare to see more, though. (And I’m not saying Seattle Met contributor was in on some kind of payola but remember her hot-hued design feature? Vacuums, no; coincidences, plenty.) This year Pantone announced that they collaborated with Sephora to release a lip color in line with color #17-1463.

What’s your take on all this color theory? Will you wear Tangerine Tango in the new year?

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Tags: Trends, What's Your Take On...

Wedding Wednesday

What’s Your Take On… Digital Invites?

A Mercer Island college kid is leading the paperless push in wedding stationery.

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Do not print this email. One of Greenvelope’s digital save-the-dates.

It finally happened this year: I got not one but two digital wedding invites.

Was I surprised? Yes, very. Was I offended? Absolutely not. Both couples are high-tech, super busy, and very practical. They’re both also very stylish. And super tactile; the women in each of the couples are among the biggest paper-, ink-, design-, and art-lovers I know. If this method of information-spreading was most efficient for them, so be it. I did spend a couple of minutes lamenting that they hadn’t gone the old-fashioned way—only because I knew they would have sent excellent invitations, and I like holding on to that kind of thing. I’m a keepsaker. What can I say?

But there are others who are less accepting about new world trends in “stationery.” For instance, a co-worker and I were chatting about RSVPs and I mentioned the emailed wedding invites. “WHAT???,” she shrieked. I think the guy in the office next to hers is still recovering from the mid-morning sharp-noise startle.

Clearly, however, there are those for whom the progression from analog to digital doesn’t even register. I’m guessing 90 percent of that group is about the same age as Sam Franklin, the Seattle-based founder of Greenvelope, an ad-free electronic invite company that hangs its hat on an environmentally savvy hook. No trees have to die in order for your guests to hear about your celebration, and 10 percent from every package purchased is donated to Mountains to Sound.

The Mercer Island High School grad (class of ’08 in the house?) and current Washington University (St. Louis) student started his company with money from his pressure-washing business and a stint in the pizza delivery industry. Not too shabby. Figuring that a few of you have at least considered paperless invites, and hoping to at least turn you on to a local source if so, I asked Franklin a few questions about formality, expectations, and nostalgia.

WWW: As you started brewing this idea, did you think much about the tradition of paper invites? Do you have any affinity at all to paper communication; do you find value, warmth, or romance in written correspondence, or are you simply of an age where that kind of attachment doesn’t come into play? Did, perhaps, your mother or grandmother or some sensitive uncle have an adverse reaction to your idea early on?
SF: While I can appreciate going to the mailbox and physically opening up a paper invitation, my goal is to generate that same excitement electronically. Traditional paper invitations are expensive, time-consuming, and they sacrifice trees. Greenvelope is the next step to help the tech-savvy generation deliver elegant electronic invitations to their guests with a personalized, advertisement-free, envelope animation. I have worked with many older couples who are equally excited about the idea of saving trees and delivering an exciting experience to their guests.

What would you say to someone who says their wedding is black-tie at the Four Seasons and the bride is wearing Luly Yang and there just is no way they could consider not sending out engraved six-piece invite suites to set the tone for their very upscale event. Invites are, of course, the first impression of an event, and (this hypothetical person is saying), they can’t possibly imagine conveying all that their wedding is going to be with via computer or smart phone screen.
Green is hip and classy. The most formal wedding of our decade stirred up controversy when Kate and Prince William sent the Royal Wedding save the Date via fax. If Kate and William can embrace the convenience and greenness of technology, can’t we all? Times are certainly changing. So, if the Four Seasons couple is looking for the most luxurious online experience to complement a luxurious event, Greenvelope fills this niche. For those couples that are still 100 percent set on paper for the invitation, they often just utilize the electronic save the date functionality that Greenvelope offers. Every little bit helps to reduce paper waste!

Do you save or collect anything? I’m sort of a hopeless romantic, and a very tactile person, and I save a lot of paper goods, including invites and the like. I’m wondering if you are oriented that way at all and also if there is any way that Greenvelopes can be saved—have couples expressed a desire to keep some form of their invitation? Have guests?
I appreciate the value of keeping memorabilia, and I certainly understand why one would want to save an elegant, custom invitation created electronically. In fact, I keep my computer very organized and save many photos, messages, playlists, etc. Now, more and more couples are keeping and sharing many wedding memories electronically through wedding websites, Flickr, Facebook, and other social services. Since I do not want to encourage printing, Greenvelope does not offer this functionality by default. However, I do provide couples the opportunity to save a high-quality version of the invitation to their computer. Most couples take advantage of this option and print an invitation for grandparents and themselves.

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Tags: Seattle Wedding Details, What's Your Take On..., Seattle Wedding Invitations, Seattle Wedding Planning

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

New Merchandise

What’s Your Take On … FNO Nail Polish?

Chanel issues a trio of blues for Fashion’s Night Out.

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Do these shades of blue work with what you were thinking of wearing on FNO?

Consider adding a stop at the Chanel counter at Nordstrom to your FNO plan of attack—if, that is, you can get into the idea of denim-hued fingernails.

What’s your take on Chanel’s Les Jeans De Chanel, a trio of three blue shades that’ll debut at select Chanel counters and stores across the world on September 8 for Fashion’s Night Out?

You actually have all month to decide; Blue Rebel, Blue Boy and Coco Blue are available through the end of September.

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Tags: Health and Beauty, What's Your Take On...

Retail News

What’s Your Take On … Gentlemen’s Consignment?

The Madison Park men’s shop has shuttered. Do Seattle men need good consignment options?

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Gentlemen’s Consignment in Madison Park is no more.

On a recent trip through Madison Park, I noticed that Gentlemen’s Consignment had closed.

Not a huge surprise. The store kept interesting hours and, while often stocked with perfectly broken-in Ralph Lauren linen suits and random assortments of repurpose-able Brooks Brothers sweaters and cordovan loafers, I never saw a body going in or coming out. I spoke to a few business owners in the neighborhood who noticed the same thing, although two mentioned that it was their understanding that owner Sally Dietrich was just ready to hang up her hat on that particular business model. Fair enough.

What I’m wondering is: Will another style- and fashion-minded businessperson fill the void? Is there a void to fill? Do men want to shop consignment? Do they know how?

In recent years, a number of really smart women’s consignment shops joined already established resale posts to create useful, fun, relevant in-and-out opportunities for women who like to see a bit of return on their investments and score good deals. In the best case scenarios, these boutiques are presided over by shopkeepers with keen and discerning taste. The best consignment shops don’t take garden variety big-box pill-covered sweaters. They look for special pieces—just like you do. They’re interested in finding new homes for gently used designer items and high quality basics from the best department stores and quality manufacturers. They’re on top of trends, they know their individual customers as well as the Seattle market, and curate their racks in approximation of ready-to-wear seasonal cycles.

Le Frock on Capitol Hill offers, more or less, that kind of environment for men. Remember Ben and his vintage Jil Sander vest? On Phinney Ridge, Armadillo also includes men’s items in its department store-like resale environment, but GQ readers will most like feel a bit underwhelmed. All is not completely lost for guys now that Gentlemen’s Consignment is gone, but I’d love to see the male equivalent of My Dressing Room. Where’s the Driftwood for Blackbird shoppers?

Here’s a good place to say that I may be married to someone who has a few Steven Alan button-downs and a pair or two of Clark’s desert boots that he isn’t interested in any more, but he can’t be the only one. A woman I spoke to about all this last week says men wear their clothes differently—her tone meant they wear through them so that no one else oughtta touch them. I don’t know. I know more than a couple of fickle-enough clothes horses. And with the exciting and vibrant emphasis on menswear in the wake of the recession stirring up interest in all kinds of Y chromosomes, I think we all the shop the same these days—meaning some of us shop alot and often, regardless of gender. Another friend says men would have to be taught to shop resale stores, but I wondered: were women taught? I don’t remember my lesson… don’t we all just figure it out?

What’s your take on men’s consignment? Does Seattle need more of it?

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Tags: Seattle Consignment, Seattle Menswear, What's Your Take On...

Seattle Style News

What’s Your Take On … Seattle in Vogue?

Do you recognize yourself as Karlie Kloss in Tevas and designer wool tied around her waist?

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Photo: Vogue

This is what Vogue magazine thinks you look like.

And that’s what I get for not reading American Vogue on any kind of regular basis. (I won’t pretend to prefer ‘reading’ the Parisian or Italian version, but when I do pick them up, it’s the British edition.)

Melissa at the Seattle-based fashion and lifestyle site Jenesequa pointed out that Seattle is in the glossies yet again. The June issue of Vogue has Lynn Yaeger and Craig McDean hanging out in our backyards for the North by Northwest installment of the mag’s “America the Beautiful” series. (Only you can tell no one actually came here; they place the Four Seasons five minutes away from SAM; you’d have to take the long route, like through Green Lake, to spend more than 30 seconds getting from one to the other.)

I don’t have any problem with them referring to us as “sophisticated but disarmingly down-to-earth,” but it’s a bummer that they’re still buying into the Teva cliche (with Balenciaga?? I mean, c’mon). And really? The Nevermind cover again? Aren’t the Fleet Foxes big enough to name drop? Or is that a Portland band now?

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

What’s Your Take on… Fancy Hats?

Two trunk shows celebrate eccentric designs by local mad hatters.

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A hat to ponder by Jean Hicks, whose work will be at Clementine Nov 26-28.

Two special fancy hat sales have us wondering: How do you wear a tiny black cone topped with electric blue feathers? Why do you wear a tiny black cone topped with electric blue feathers?

To answer that question, first: Head to Clementine in West Seattle on Black Friday where Jean Hicks presents hand-milled wool, alpaca, and cashmere toppers, and Izzie Lewis Millinery shows off her architectural background via highly constructed and detailed hats. The California Ave shoe sellers are even pouring a special ManHATtan cocktail and hosting a the Gary Manuel Aveda Institute stylist on Saturday from 1 to 5 to help clients navigate the sometimes tricky world of hairstyle-n-hat.

Clementine’s Hat-itude runs November 26–28; the store will be open Friday 11–7, Saturday 10–6, and Sunday 11–5 for the trunk show.

And then, on December 1 at Tasty, on Phinney Ridge, Tuzzie Muzzie, Lucky Day Hats, Soft Shelter Hats and more gather from 6 to 9 for a showcase of burlesque toppers, motoring caps, tall Victorian top hats, mini clip-on accessory hats, fleece warm-ups, costume numbers, and even head coverings for pets.

We know people love to bemoan the disappearance of the hat …) but we’re not sure if this is what they were thinking of.

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Oh and about Black Friday: watch for our Thanksgiving Weekend Sale Map soon …

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Tags: Accessories, Gift Guide, Seattle Trunk Show, What's Your Take On...

What’s Your Take On… Studded Ugg boots?

Jimmy Choo + Ugg Boot capsule collection is on tour now.

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Kind of wondering how those studs would hold up in the snow.

Where: Jimmy Choo at the Bravern

What: You either love them or hate them. There’s no real in-between. And there’s certainly nothing sexy about them, which is why it takes a minute to ingest the news that Jimmy Choo’s Tamara Mellon took on a capsule collection of Ugg Boots for fall/winter.

‘Other than Jimmy Choo, UGG Australia is really the only other footwear I have in my wardrobe,’ says Mellon. ‘I wear it at home in New York, on holiday in Malibu, and as an essential travel accessory. We are delighted to have created a special capsule that captures the best of both brands — the legendary comfort of UGG with the spirit of Jimmy Choo.’

And that’s where it begins to make sense, huh? If you spent all day in these# you might be looking for something like this by dinnertime. And hey, the high heelers have teamed up with Hunter, too. Kinda makes you wonder what’s next … Doc Marten? Timberland? Crocs??

Jimmy Choo’s Ugg collection includes a charcoal diamond Donegal cable knit, cream and black zebra prints, natural leopard prints, printed metallics, and studs, fringe, gold grommets, rivets, and other blingy details. They go for between $595 and $795.

The companies are only distributing them within their own stores, and they’re expecting such a great response that they’ve sent the boots out on a world tour so that customers can pre-order them. Can you feel it? The line is in your area as we speak, but only for a limited time. You can try the collection out now in Bellevue, and order and pay for them — they’ll be on your feet after October 21.

When: Now through Monday September 27

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Tags: Eastside, Shoes, Bravern, What's Your Take On...

What’s Your Take On… the Worishofer?

A one-act play about this season’s version of the Ugg boot

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Love it or hate it, the Worishofer is available at ShopOlivine.com

Date: A stifling hot afternoon that now feels like ancient history but was probably this past Monday — though it might have been Tuesday. The heat makes even the days melt.

Setting: A set of horribly uncomfortable wrought-iron chairs outside a downtown cafe.

Characters: Me and Her

Her: What’s that shoe that Michelle Whatsherface has been wearing?

Me: Sorry, I’m going to need more information. Obama? Trachtenberg? Michelle Who??

Her: Oh… (snaps fingers) … Williams! Yeah. Adorable Michelle Williams. And that nursing home sandal with the unpronounceable name.

Me: Worishofer.

Her: Do people wear those here?

Me: Sure, yeah.

Her: Like who?

Me: I mean, I don’t have a list or anything. Are you in the market for a pair?

Her: I can’t decide. Who carries them?

Me: I know Olivine, now in its online incarnation, does.

Her: Good to know. They seem comfortable. I mean, they must be comfortable.

Me: They must be?

Her: Yeah, I mean, because they’re so …

Me: Ugly?

Her: Yeah.

Me: I don’t know that they’re that ugly. No, wait — I don’t know that they’re ugly at all. The colors are nice — and there’s nothing wrong with a classic, ‘70s-feeling cork wedge. Topped with a pair of straight-legged, high-waisted jeans and a crisp, tucked-in menswear-inspired shirt with the sleeves rolled up? That’ll take you from late-summer right into early fall.

Her: You’re right. And they’re not ugly. I mean, not like … you know.

Me: What?

Her: Uggs.

Me: Hm, yeah, well. No comment.

Curtain

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Tags: Shoes, Online Shopping, What's Your Take On...

What’s Your Take On… Jeggings?

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Jeggings: Do you or don’t you?

Our sibling mag, Portland Monthly, did a bit on jeggings in their August issue. I’m curious where you stand … in fact, I’m curious where I stand.

The thing with everyone wanting to discuss the whole vulgarity of tights- and leggings-as-“pants” thing is that the skinny jeans thing is often just as … distasteful. In my opinion, if your skinny jeans are skinnier than you are, they look just as wrong as a pair of footless tights under a T-shirt.

Well, okay, almost just as wrong.

The relative bulk-factor of denim does provide a little more modesty, sure. But don’t fool yourself: It’s not just the look of denim, it’s the sturdy weight of the fabric around your tush that makes the parading of it in public more acceptable. Thus, a pair of leggings made to look like denim – that is, thin, curve- and flesh-hugging stretch fabrics that have a faded, raw, or acid-washed feel but not weight to them – nah. That’s not going to cut it.

On a side note, a friend/co-worker told me she posted the Portland Monthly link to her FB page and someone had a pretty astute observation: if the marketing un-genius who came up with the jeans + leggings hybrid term “jeggings” had instead come up with “leans,” well, a lot more women would be buying them.

Then again, in my opinion, that wouldn’t necessarily be a good thing.

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Tags: What's Your Take On...

Wedding Wednesday

What’s Your Take On… Boudoir Photography?

It seems every bride-to-be is doing it, and everyone has an opinion about it

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Slideshow: Images from top boudoir photographers around Seattle and insight into what it’s like for them and their sultry subjects. Here, an image by Joey Nicole who says her clients are always surprised by how glamorous they look.

View Slideshow » Photo: Joey Nicole

Slideshow: Images from top boudoir photographers around Seattle and insight into what it’s like for them and their sultry subjects. Here, an image by Joey Nicole who says her clients are always surprised by how glamorous they look.

View Slideshow » Photo: Joey Nicole

Photographer Joey Nicole says “Nine times out of ten a woman begins this process feeling apprehensive and unsure. Even if she is confident about walking around in her lingerie, most women are completely unsure about posing. I work to ease this worry by letting them know that I will show them each pose myself first, and coach every single step of the way.”

View Slideshow » Photo: April Greer

Photographer April Greer built her boudoir photography experience while living in Germany; in 2007, after returning to the Northwest and realizing that clients were using words like “provocative and sexy” to describe her work, she added the service to her offerings.

View Slideshow » Photo: April Greer

April Greer says not all women book their boudoir sessions because their significant other wants them to do so. “Most of my clients have always dreamed of doing something like a boudoir session. They arrive to the studio early out of excitement. On several occasions my clients have purchased two custom boudoir books; one filled with images she adores and another for her significant other. The book for herself is far more racy and sexy in comparison!”

View Slideshow » Photo: Jenny Goldberg-George

Photographer Jenny Goldberg-George says she “usually get a big high five from the groom on the wedding day!”

View Slideshow » Photo: Jenny Goldberg-George

“Most sessions are filled with laughter, but I had one woman share that part of her reason for doing a session was to help pull her out of the sadness around the death of a loved one; she said that the experience helped lift the fog and that was really touching to hear,” recalls Jenny Goldberg-George.

View Slideshow » Photo: Old School Pin Ups

We asked Lance and Trixie at Old School Pin Ups how many women are apprehensive when they the session begins. “Seven out of ten when they walk in the door, 0 out of ten after seeing their first images on the monitor. Spending two hours with Trixie in their makeover, she helps build their confidence, then they’re guided through poses on the set so by the time they have completed the first of nine poses, all apprehension is gone and is replaced with joy and enthusiasm.” You have to admit that this gal doesn’t look at all camera shy.

View Slideshow » Photo: Old School Pin Ups

At Old School Pin Ups there is definitely a vintage calender girl vibe. Here’s more on that from the OSP team: “We designed a dream studio complete with eclectic sets (the Bachelor Pad, Oriental Bar, Tiki Room, and of course Boudoir), our complete makeover including hair make up and wardrobe, and our classic mid-century style photography. We create a wonderland experience in intimate photography producing images that are instant classics, to be treasured forever, never going out of style.”

View Slideshow » Photo: Tease Photo Studio

Addressing nerves, photographer Susan Berman of Tease Studio says, “Women are apprehensive ten out of ten times. It’s not normal to parade around in front of a stranger in skimpy underwear! And it is certainly not normal to do it in front of a camera! However, ten out of ten times, within the first 15 minutes, all inhibitions are set aside and everyone really starts to have fun. There isn’t anything anyone can show me that I haven’t seen before!”

View Slideshow » Photo: Tease Photo Studio

Of course it’s not just brides who get seduced by boudoir. Susan Berman of Tease Studio says, “I do a lot of sessions for military wives and girlfriends. Being able to provide a service and product that eases the time these soldiers are away from their loved ones is a really precious and sweet gift.”

View Slideshow » Photo: Belle Budoir

“I’d say nine out of ten women think ’that’s awesome, but I could never do it’ when they first hear of boudoir. But it sticks in their minds and when the perfect opportunity arises, such as a wedding, they just go for it! Meeting ahead of time and being treated to professional makeup removes any leftover apprehension. Very few women are nervous by the time we start the session and they always relax quickly,” says photographer Cheryl Jones at Belle Boudoir.

View Slideshow » Photo: Belle Budoir

Cheryl Jones shares this story: “A client let it slip to her fiance what she was doing. Throughout the session he sent her sweet, encouraging text messages and photos he wanted her to replicate! As women we are really rough on our bodies and it’s refreshing to remember that the men in our lives see us as sexy and beautiful, and don’t really care about the flaws we see. Boudoir is an opportunity for us to see what he sees.”

View Slideshow » Photo: Katrinka's Secret

At Katrinka’s Secret, Christina Mallet’s boudoir services began with the pregnancies she documented; “non-pregnant women requested I photograph them, sans bump, in the same ethereal, sexy style I used for pregnant women,” she says.

View Slideshow » Photo: Katrinka's Secret

An example of Christina Mallet’s urban style

View Slideshow » Photo: Photos by Sara

Sara Adamski-Satterlee of Photos by Sara says she considers her style more aligned with Vargas-style pin-ups. “With this style, it’s not necessary to strip down… unless you’re feeling it. It’s all about being sexy in anything from a full dress to nothing at all,” she says.

View Slideshow » Photo: Photos by Sara

Sara says, “I try to shoot nearly everything clean enough that we don’t have to keep the images in the safety deposit box. I want the women to feel fabulous, enjoy the process, and love the results. We only go as far as the client wants to go and she usually only goes as far as her sweetie would want to see.”

View Slideshow » Photo: Persimmon Images

Kat Speyer at Persimmon Images says, “As a bride, I was thrilled to discover boudoir for myself and had a fabulous time at my session. I think I loved the experience more than my husband loved his photos! It was so liberating and fun. I decided to offer boudoir to give women that same experience—in addition to sexy, flattering photos. I feel confident in my own body and comfortable in my skin and nothing is greater than empowering another woman to feel that way, too.”

View Slideshow » Photo: Persimmon Images

There’s definitely something to the ‘secret’ element of all this. Kat Speyer relates this story: “I had a client whose fiance was suspicious that she was up to something and kept calling during the session. She had a friend with her to throw him off the trail, but it was hard to keep from laughing in the background while they lied to him about what they were doing. The guy must have called four times trying to trip them up. He loved the photos when he got them, though!”

View Slideshow » Photo: Seattle Boudoir Photography

Phil Holden at Seattle Boudoir Photography reports that, “So far our youngest client has been 20 years young and our oldest was 63. That 63 year old was also in a wheelchair and weighed over 300lbs. It really doesn’t matter what size, age or shape you are. We have also had clients celebrating divorce and others that are single and have been for years, they wanted to do this for themselves.”

View Slideshow » Photo: Seattle Boudoir Photography

Phil also relates this story, “Ms N, a self described plus-sized girl came into the studio nervous because she has never been comfortable with her body and was worried about what we would think of her. She left feeling ‘freakin hot’ and had the most empowering and liberating experience of her life. My words don’t do this justice, you can read about it for yourself at http://offbeatbride.com/2010/06/wedding-boudoir-photos”

Talk about a hot topic.

Especially among brides-to-be (and, one supposes, their grooms) there’s a growing … let’s call it a hunger … for boudoir photography, in which less is more, smiles are sexier than they are cheerful, poses are playful and provocative, and the whole idea is to conjur, well, more hunger. When it comes up in conversation, the yay’s and the nay’s easily separate into teams. There are those who claim to be ready, willing, and about ready to pose themselves (or see their loved ones do so), and those who just can’t wrap their head around it.

In the slideshow here, we hear – and more importantly see – from photographers at Old School Pin Ups, Photos by Sara, Persimmon Images, Tease Studios, Katrinka’s Secret, Jenny Goldberg-George, Belle Boudoir, Joey Nicole Photography, April Greer Studios, and Seattle Boudoir Photography.

These Seattle shooters, all of whom offer different styles of the certainly not-new art of boudoir photography, shared with us their experiences in dealing with apprehension – or, as is often the case, the absence of it – and with satisfied customers, and satisified partners-of-customers. (We asked, and even offered to keep the answers anonymous, but there seem to be no unsatisfied customers.) Of course, they share their images as well.

Take a look and tell us, what’s your take on boudoir photography?

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Tags: Weddings, Seattle Wedding Details, What's Your Take On...

What’s Your Take On… Spare Shoes?

Seattle company launches ’10s version of white commuting sneakers

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Remember Melanie Griffith in Working Girl, and all the thousands of women like her, who commuted to work across hard urban pavement in white sneakers underneath crisp navy skirt suits and shoulder pads? Early 90s memories of Wall Street women rushing toward lower Manhattan are not among my most sartorially significant, although they sure conjure up a specific female prototype.

I guess several factors contribute to the decline of the Reebok Executive, and we can be thankful for all of them-mostly. We’d have to do a pretty extensive cost/benefit analysis on the whole everybody-in-khakis, casual-ization of the workplace thing before we decided for sure on that. The office is, in most industries, a far less formal place than it used to be, but nevertheless,
spike heels are not any less spiky, whether worn for stomping into conference rooms or onto dance floors, and there’s a new non-white, non-sneaker shoe in town that aims to be there for women when the going gets tough.

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And I do mean in town. The company that launched the packable, roll-able, there-when-you-need-it ballet-type flat pictured here (it comes in black, gold, and silver) is based in your town. The women behind Seattle’s Fabbys figure most of us aren’t really into making an all-day affair of our four-inchers, so they created what is essentially a more presentable slipper to save the day – or, more likely, the night.

Now let me be straight on one thing: I’m not a high heels kinda girl. My mom didn’t allow them in high school, and I learned to live without them. So I suppose it’s easy for me to say that in the best case scenario, we leave the house wearing shoes that we can wear for the duration of time we plan to be out in the world. But still.

If you can’t stand the height, don’t wear the heels. Or something like that.

Fabbys come in a little velvet pouch and are marketed at women who travel for business (‘why are our connecting flights ALWAYS at opposite terminals?’ asks a road-wary voice on the “About” page), live in urban settings, and/or are getting married, and I understand that in each of those settings any of us might want an elongated line and lifted tush-and then, of course, a break from that-but I can’t help but think that ultimately, what’s sexier and more stylish is to wear what you’re wearing without a plan B. One of the most unattractive things you can do is wear clothes you don’t feel good in, and, on the other hand, a big indicator of style is ease. I mean, who packs a pair of sweats for when the skinny jeans get too skinny? And in this competitive marketplace where value counts as much as trend, there are plenty of shoemakers making gorgeous, orthopedically mindful heels. Why not invest in shoes that you can actually wear?

What about you? What’s your take on spare shoes?

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Tags: Shoes, Locally Designed, Seattle Wedding Details, What's Your Take On...

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