The Tragically Unhip

a blog with three fingers on the pulse of uncoolness.

Never Mind The Fashion Week… October 4, 2009

Filed under: City Living, Culture & Society, Fashion, Shopping — Little Evie @ 8:13 pm

Manhattan Vintage Clothing Show
Vintage wasn’t cool when I was in high school. Well, no one wore it when we actually got free dress days, unless it was Hallowe’en and someone went all-out with their ‘1960s Hippie’ costume (the only thing more embarrassing than that has got to be marketing Punk Lite to tweens). But somewhere between my ‘80s hand-me-downs and ‘90s quasi-raver gear, I had myself a nice little collection of retro clothing, all care of my auntie Elsa aka Liz Kolanksy aka ‘The Cool Aunt.’

The stand-outs included a gold evening jacket and a bright green mod mini dress that blew everyone else’s standard school dance fare (Calvin Klein Mom-cut jeans and baby tees) out of the water. Or maybe it provoked giggles. I can’t remember caring, just thinking I looked like the hot distant Brady cousin.

Manhattan VintageSo I was thrilled when some time after high school I started heading down to New York and helping out Elsa with Studio 42 and Oly’s Vintage (named after my uncle Oly, whose salon then shared a space with her shop on E. 21st) – and with the Manhattan Vintage Clothing Show, a yearly showcase of vintage clothing and textiles for designers and fashion fiends.

It was then and there that I…

…learned how many designers’ ‘designs’ consist of re-issued vintage pieces (often after low-balling vintage clothing dealers – it’s odd, to say the least, seeing an exact replica of a piece you sold for a mere $75 for $1,000+ apiece in Saks).

…found out cool parties and media clippings don’t pay the rent, selling alongside a designer for Imitation of Christ who had moved back in with her parents.

…marveled at interns from major fashion houses sent over to buy up vintage items from their own labels.

…realized some people’s reaction to used clothing is still a decisive, ‘Eww.’

…ran into celebs and designers, managing to remain oblivious to their identities until afterward (except maybe Patricia Field and Betsey Johnson because, well, c’mon).

…found out even celebs and designers haggle.

Victorian cape from Studio 42

Victorian cape from Studio 42

…gave some bullshit interview to a Village Voice reporter about the popularity of Victorian whites post-9/11.

…fell in love with every old timey soul living in New York, from a couple stuck in the 1800s to a gang of rockabilly kids (when I mentioned the cuteness of one of the boys, a girl from the group warned me he was an alcoholic).

…wandered around in a gaudy one-armed Miss Universe pageant gown and had it bought off my back.

…bought my first pair of (and god help the Sex and the City-ness of it all) Manolos for about $100 and learned the single upside to my giant shoe size: Lots of models have it, too, meaning I get a great selection of runway cast-offs and stylist steals.

Looks like I’m heading down again this year for Oct. 8 and 9, hopefully after developing a strategy for keeping myself from spending the last of my life savings on a Victorian cape or Chanel twin set (though it’s hard not to kick yourself for passing up a gorgeous 1940s dress for $100 only to find a look-a-like for the same price at H&M).

I wonder what it’ll be like this year, if it’ll be full of Mad Men fans looking for hot Joan-style dresses. Or Rachel Zoe wannabes hunting for peasant pieces to put under ‘stylist’s own’ in the fashion spread credits. Hipster kids, burlesque performers, bargain hunters and incognito millionaires. I doubt I’ll even want to hit Century 21 when I’m done.

 

Big (Sneaker) Pimpin’ April 30, 2009

Filed under: Culture & Society, Fashion, Shopping — Genevieve D. Markle @ 8:17 pm
Nike Air Yeezy

Photo by Genevieve D. Markle

 

Before I found my current apartment in the Lower East Side projects, I was perusing Craigslist’s roommate ads and read a posting for a room described as “Bigger Than Kanye West’s Ego!”. I couldn’t help but remember that analogy this morning when I walked by the 57th Street Niketown at 8:30 a.m. and saw a gaggle of grown men huddled around the entrance, waiting for the doors to open. I knew something big was going down because several of them were sitting on fold-out picnic chairs (the ones with the built-in beer can holders) and looked as though they’d been waiting since the night before. I asked one fellow who was sitting off to the side on an upside down milk crate: “What’s going on here? Is someone famous coming in for a signing?” He replied, “No, the new Kanye West shoe is being released.”

 

What he really meant was that the second colorway of the Air Yeezy is being launched this Saturday, May 2, and the lineup this morning was an attempt to score one of a mere 21 wristbands which afford the holders a chance to buy the the actual shoe on Saturday, provided they get there early enough and there is a pair left in their size. The first batch of Kanye’s shoes, in Zen Gray/Light Charcoal, was released on April 4 and sold out in about four milliseconds.  Originally priced at $215, they are now fetching upwards of $500 on eBay, if they’re even authentic.

 

Saturday was supposed to be the launch of  Black and Pink edition , but I got it on the low that Nike has decided to release the Tan edition instead, saving the best for last. Yes, “the best” is a black and pink sneaker for men. But fear not, young metrosexuals: Kanye’s accute fashion sense and partnership with Louis Vuitton seems to have finally taught straight men the world over that you can still be manly whilst wearing pink, or even ridiculous outfits like this. This is the first time Nike has teamed up with a rapper to create a custom shoe, as they had always worked exclusively with athletes in the past. I don’t know what this says about Kanye’s design skills or about Nike’s marketing genius, but I can say that the end result is sheer hizz-ype.

 

I learned all this after calling Niketown and spending twelve hot minutes on the phone with the nicest, most informed sales associate, who educated me on the whole culture and philosophy behind wanting to own one of the most coveted fashion items of the season and thus becoming a part of hip hop history. I was told that the Air Yeezy is a status symbol in its purest form. What are you willing to go through to get the shoe and how much are you willing to spend? Or who do you know who can hook you up: a manager at Foot Locker, an administrative assisant at Def Jam, or maybe even Kanye’s ex-girlfriend’s dogwalker? My inside scoop explained that Kanye doesn’t want just anybody sporting his sneaks, hence the uber-exclusivity of a limited release and the consequent lineups and mad cash-dropping just to score a pair. Sneaker releases used to be pure chaos, sometimes leaving bulletholes and a trashed neighbourhood in their aftermath. These days, police barricades and pre-distributed wristbands are required in order to attempt to keep the mayhem to a minimum. Mayhem over a pair of sneakers.

  

The last time I heard about police presence at the Niketown on E. 57th Street in New York was when I read Naomi Klein’s No Logo reportage on the organized protests by inner-city students in front of said flagship store in 1998. That’s the kind of police presence I would expect at a Niketown — the physical manifestation of the company’s sordid history of human rights abuses and deliberate marketing to children who can’t afford their products — a presence to make sure that labour protesters don’t become rioters, not to prevent trigger-happy sneaker pimps from looting the place over a pair of kicks.

 

But before you claim defiantly that you don’t support Nike or wear any of their products, please keep in mind that those Converse high-tops you’ve got on were manufactured by the same underpaid factory workers who make the Air Yeezy. (Nike bought Converse back in 2003, kids.) And before you scoff at the ridiculousness of people buying shoes designed by non-actual shoe designers, please also note that if your Cons happen to come from the ultra-hip John Varvatos collection, then you’re buying into the same family of hype that this morning’s Kanye fans bought into. Hipster or hip hopster, we’re all just cogs in the wheel of the same marketing machine.

 

Strictly Forbidden: Kijiji HATES Fun February 14, 2009

Filed under: Advertising, Manifesto, Shopping — Brooke D. @ 3:54 pm

Phew! Wow….I sure have been busy writing lately!! What with all the food, art, and music reviews; travelogues; memoirs; photo essays; clever daily observations; snarky social commentary; and assertions of unhipness, I feel like I’ve been contributing to society on a pretty consistent basis, all while being a great team player for this very blog!

 

PSYCHE. Just kidding.

 

I’ve been holed up in my dark apartment writing and posting Craigslist and Kijiji ads 24 hours a day for the past three weeks.  Mostly because I am broke and also because Craigslist and Kijiji are like the poor man’s (or Tragically Unhip) Facebook.  I stalk, I flag, I’m obsessed.

 

I have also perfected the art of the repost.  As you may or may not know, Craigslist and Kijiji will kill your mother for reposting the same thing over and over to “top” your ad.  Jerks.  Therefore, I have been forced to finely tune my writing tactics in order to evade their stupid restrictions and  completely flood both sites with desperate advertisements for useless crap.  I see this as an exercise in Creative Writing for Commercial Appeal. (Yes, I just made that up. No, you cannot use it unless you pay me mad royalties.) A thesaurus, if I had one, would have also come in handy, but in times like these who the hell would spend money on a dumb book? Anyway, what is posted once as “Vintage” in Montreal is reposted as “Retro” in Parc Extension, etc.  Also, listing one thing in the title and including keywords for other stuff in the body works too… tricky.

 

Example:

Search for a Drink Mixer and you will find exactly 10 completely unrelated ads all by me!! Mwaaahahahahhha…Victory!!!

 

world domination

 

Easy, right? WRONG! This is actually quite exhausting and labor intensive when you factor in the time it takes to photograph each item (taking into consideration appropriate lighting and backdrops); edit photos; upload photos; write ads; edit ads; enter titles, photos, emails, phone numbers; skillfully solve the often poetic “Captcha” puzzles; agree to terms; confirm email addresses, and finally publish each ad.

 

I managed to post 90 (yes, NINETY; I told you I was obsessed) different ads between the two sites, in categories ranging from clothes and furniture to DVDs and appliances for basically all the same crap, before actually getting busted for attempting to repost.

 

Kijiji red alerted (not a real phrase) one ad and sent me this List of Restricted Items, telling me that I had violated their terms by posting ads for one or more of the following Restricted Items, but not specifying which:

(I’ve highlighted the really good ones so you can just kind of skim them; we’re almost done, I promise.)

 

* Alcoholic Beverages

* Baby Walkers

* Blood, Bodily Fluids and Body Parts (What. The. FUCK. Why not? I mean, if I don’t need my kidney and am asking a fair price/O.B.O.)

* Burglary Tools (Which would be totally sweet.)

* Counterfeit Currency, Stamps or Coins

* Counterfeit Products

* Electronic Surveillance Equipment deigned or used primarily to illegally intercept/record the private actions or interactions of others without their knowledge or permission

* Embargoed Goods

* Escort or Accompanying Services

* Government and Transit Uniforms, IDs and Licenses

* Illegal Drugs & Drug Paraphernalia (You mean I can’t buy crack rocks on Kijiji? WTF?!)

* Illegal Services

* Hazardous Materials

* Fireworks, Destructive Devices and Explosives (So I can’t list my red faux alligator shoulder bag as EXPLOSIVEly awesome?)

* Identity Documents, Personal Financial Records & Personal Information in any form, including mailing lists

* Items which encourage or facilitate Illegal Activity (Hmmm…a little help here?)

* Lottery Tickets, Sweepstakes Entries and Slot Machines

* Massage Services (Heh heh. “Massage”.)

* Obscene Material and Child Pornography (SHIT! I have so much of that stuff to get rid of!)

* Offensive Material (Not at all subjective.)

* Pesticides

* Pictures or Images that Contain Nudity

* Police Badges and Uniforms

* Prescription Drugs and Devices

* Prostitution or Ads that Offer Sex, Sexual Favours or Sexual Actions in Exchange for Money

* Recalled Items

* Satellite Products that Violate the Radiocommunication Act

* Sexual Services, including camming

* Solicitation of other users except by placing an Ad

* Stocks and Other Securities

* Stolen Property

* Tobacco Products

* Used Cosmetics (Darn…I ‘ve been looking for lipstick that perfect hue of Herpes for FOREVER!)

* Weapons and Related Items, such as firearms, firearm parts and magazines, ammunition, BB and pellet guns, tear gas, stun guns, switchblade knives, and martial arts weapons (What if it’s a “Vintage” or “Retro” I.E.D., hand grenade, rapier, etc.?)

 

This is really disappointing, I mean how can they hate FUN so much? Plus, I have a huge collection of films made with illegal surveillance equipment of massage therapists with fake identity documents violating the Radiocommunication Act and scratching off lotto tickets. It’s pretty hot stuff; I guess I’ll have to set up shop elsewhere.

 

Thanks for nothing Kijiji.

 

More Like “Rainbow Brite Does Dallas” February 14, 2009

Filed under: Advertising, Body, Books & Mags, Fashion, Hipster Culture, Shopping — Meagan Burbidge @ 3:12 pm

If I were to experience that incredibly irritating and deluded reverie in which a genie or sorcerer or Jesus tells me that whatever it is that I want, he’ll grant me it, I would immediately wish for the interior layout of the place of which I am employed to be switched around.  That is all.

 

I am not entirely assured in regards to the mental stability of whoever happened to establish the design of this particular space.  However, I do suspect an underlaying affinity for neo-Dadaism at the heart of it.

 

I spend forty waged hours a week in a medical professional’s office.  Most of you, I presume, are familiar with the ideologies of such a place: white walls, teal countertops (sometimes chocolate or Pepto-pink), framed art prints, and a visually communicated “front” or reception desk.  Traditionally, this desk is situated in a non-specific location within the waiting room area, sometimes in an enclosed space.  Its only unified position, in being that it faces the entryway and floor, procuring the respectful fear—through preemptive, paranoiac observation—of the occupants in hypertensive anticipation of an impending and scientific doom.

 

My situation is, of course, iconoclastic and individualistic of its own accord.  The front desk (albeit in name only) juts out of the middle of one wall, causing the door to be idiosyncratically stationed behind the desk.  This postulation for alternative or anti-order operates as the catalyst for patient befuddlement and my haphazard contortionism capabilities.

 

There exists an element of disquietude that far supercedes the spinal discomfort ensued.  As a result of limited activity (typical chiropractic patients are ‘sporty’ and in fair health, meriting little to no urgency in the acquisition of our services), I am often left to my own devices.  These devices typically involve hours of Facebook, Myspace, last.fm, and Vice magazine online.

 

Vice is fantastic because it renders various articles and literary tidbits that you wouldn’t often find in predictable publications such as Time, Newsweek, or O.  It also merits alternative versions of advertisement; the kind that could convince the creative minds behind the Coca-Cola campaign to buy clever Vitamin Water.  This is all fantastic, unless of course every person that passes by your computer screen is guaranteed to be privy to the contents of your desktop.  So, for example, when your boss comes up behind you, and you happen to be reading a review with album art in the left column, and that album art consists of a pink filtered photograph of tucked-back genitalia: nobody looks “good”.

 

I’ve always been a fan of the visual arts in the media.  Album art, tasteful and interesting upcoming film posters; I am the sort of person who still buys Vogue to simply peruse the advertisements. (Articles about which Prada bag to wear to which Libertarian luncheon or mid-afternoon movie, or, what sort of Bermuda shorts best describe me as a person on my next Mercedes Benz-drawn safari really don’t speak to me directly.) I have never really been able to pull off the dark and twisted alternativian/hip/un-jive/over-jive/under-jive/artist’s “Damn The Man and his attempted assuage of my preternatural lust for consumerism and the finer things in life” ideology.  (I am unsure if that is the exact dubbing of practice, but you should get the idea if you have ever met a person who enjoys Phish or only listens to record on vinyl.  Only.) The advertisement experience can be visceral as I pick through the pages while wearing Banana Republic or GAP or something from Target (very much in the spirit of when I would watch Julia Child prepare lobster something or other while eating McDonald’s).

 

I find it necessary to iterate this appreciation for advertisement because, despite the confusion that gold pants and unitards bring me, I often find myself considering various solid color additions to my wardrobe that could be easily obtained by American Apparel.  The problem is that every time that I have such a thought, American Apparel just has to go ahead and fucking ruin it.

 

Being in New York City, land of the eternal billboard, as well as on various hipster-driven websites, I am unquestionably exposed to the marketing campaigns of prior-stated apparel companies in droves.  Perhaps I’m just a tad more prudish than I give myself discredit for, but the photographic concepts provided by American Apparel just slay me.  There’s some aspect to each and every one of its campaigns that just makes me feel morally unclean.  There’s something remarkably trashy (but not in a fun way), and dirty (but not in a consensual way) about it that I have yet to unearth.  I’ll give it this much, it has the capacity to make me feel exactly the manner in which I imagine that I would feel if I were ever to be exposed to incest or kiddie porn directly.  Engaging in an American Apparel advertisement is like watching soft core porn scenes that take twenty minutes of dialogue in regards to “Cheryl” using the shower: get to the point already.  And then, it happens: that pivotal moment when you realize that you don’t have to wait anymore; that all of the secrets of the universe may not be answered, but they are well on their way, as a direct result of the event that you just witnessed.

 

Phlebotomizing along the right-hand side of a cannibal’s interview was everything I never knew I always needed: a breast.  Granted, this breast was attached to a woman.  This woman had only a pair of white pants on.  There was no notation, or labels, or emblems, or headers, footers; no text or icon-based branding whatsoever.  She was simply topless, in pants that occupied a mere 5% of the bottom right corner.  And yet, somehow we all knew exactly what we were supposed to buy based off of this simple image that, in varying degrees obviously, has been threading through Occidental art history for centuries.

 

One cannot measure the intensity of such mitigation.   Finally!  “Cheryl” (American Apparel) is “taking her clothes off and emulating the act of sweet love-making to the torso of someone” (no analogy required). And just then, in our greatest moment together, a new patient walks up from behind me in the office.  Naturally, this was at the precise moment that the Flash application starts to stick and the brief “American Apparel” that appears has given up hope, leaving the breast permanently frozen on my screen.  It is aware that God will always resent me, and accordingly abandons me, leaving me with this total stranger and a particularly gratuitous angle on screen.

 

I did what all other creepy, porn drenched computer nerds would do, which was react in an uncoordinated and overly flustered manner, ex-ing out of the page and pretending that I was doing something respectable, like donating money to the poor children of somewhere or ordering a sundeck umbrella.

 

I thought that the situation might have heightened as my boss entered the room.  However, I think that we have reached a point in our routine that no longer warrants incredulity, or even so much as a disrupted glance.  I think I need to improve upon my knitting abilities or learn to carve radishes into orchids and intricate fishes, something to occupy my time and my hands.

 

I remain perplexed by the nature and by the nurture of the million and one American Apparel colors. But now, having been bested by it, I do feel compelled to wear (in the Scarlet Letter sense of the word) a Golden Unitard: the bitch tag for the bright and splendid cotton adorners of this generation.

 

Speaking of Indie Art… February 11, 2009

Filed under: Art, Photography, Shopping — Genevieve D. Markle @ 5:41 pm
blog_next4pups

Images courtesy of sMacThoughts

 

The original sMac, avid Tragically Unhip reader and incredible artist Susan MacSomething (not to be confused with S’MAC, the utterly delicious mac-and-cheese restaurant in NYC) is offering up three of her eight Octpuplets illustrations as freebies to fans. The draw will take place tomorrow, February 12 (also the artist’s birthday), so be sure to enter the giveaway immediately by clicking here and leaving your deets in the Comments section, telling Susan which of the eight prints is your favourite. Simple enough, right? And no purchase necessary!

 

However, if you’re in the mood for doing a little purchasing, you can always buy some of Susan’s original artwork from her Etsy shop. Her forte is her mastery of colour; Susan uses rich, sensual hues in both her chosen media of illustration and photography. Her pictures are like what you see in a dream, immortalized on photo paper, while her animated and joyous illustrations just radiate innocence. Finally, you can always read her blog, sMacThoughts, to keep up-to-date with the artist and her fan community.

 

Recessionista Fashion January 25, 2009

Filed under: Books & Mags, Culture & Society, Fashion, Language, Money, Musings, Shopping — Marianne Perron @ 6:31 pm

A true word I read in this month’s edition of Vogue, recessionista, captures everything the modern woman should be—or does it? The article in question was yet another piece about a modern day trend I don’t understand: the clothing swap. Maybe it’s because all my has-been threads get demoted to gym wear status or donated to charity, and, being an oniomaniac, I keep my closet stocked with pieces I love, but the swap party fails to appeal to me. Add to that the fact that, at size 12 (thank you Club Monaco), I rarely fit into the petite fashions being auctioned, so you can see why I’ve been known to choose dinner with grandma over the swap scene.

 

courtesy of NeimanMarcus.com

Photo courtesy of NeimanMarcus.com

That said, I did enjoy the article. It’s entertaining, if nothing else, to muse about what swap parties are like among the dolce vita set, the Kate Spade/Louboutin-sporting women it’s aimed at. Honey, if I owned a Dior handbag, I would not be trading it in, I’d be clinging to it for dear life among the debris that is our current economic flow.

 

After I’d put down the magazine and trudged home in the January snow, I got to thinking. Recessionista, a bug that had snagged my eye upon first read, came back and lodged itself in my mind. Normally, I’m crazy about linguistic acrobatics. Anyone who’s read my poetry knows I invent words and coin phrases like it’s nobody’s business. Recessionista. I even like the way it sounds. Sort of chic and regal, not at all financial crisis.

 

The more I thought about it though, the more the word made me feel sick. Don’t get me wrong—I love fashion. I love fashion and I have a shopping problem. Still, the idea of taking something very serious and turning it into a light amuse-gueule made me ponder the kind of thinking that got us into the mess to begin with. I think “recessionista” says it all: trying to plaster a fake face on a rotten corpse and keep the good times coming. While I do think today’s fashion vixen should be more economically minded, and it’s only smart to promote thrift in times of recession, the word seems to signify something beyond itself. It hints at the flawed state of American thinking—that although the ship is sinking, the pageant will go on. 

 

Beauty and the Beast December 21, 2008

Filed under: Fashion, Health, Money, Musings, Shopping, Things We Have Love/Hate Relationships With — Marianne Perron @ 10:15 pm

OK. I’ll admit it. Despite being way too intelligent for this shit, I am a bona fide shopaholic. My trusty Wikipedia tells me that this condition is called Oniomania (naw, that’s not just code for onion-chowing lunatics), and “can have devastating consequences”. Thanks, Wiki.

 

If shopping is an addiction, my drug is something like cocaine – I can’t afford the really fine stuff, but I’m not smoking crack down at Zellers either. I’m hovering somewhere in between, in a world where $300 dollar handbags and Modern American Poetry (that’s a 300-level class at Concordia) see eye to eye.

 

When I was in University I used to pay about $280 for rent and roughly $300 per 3 credits. That’s how my MPT (maximum purchase total) came to be raised to 3-0-0, give or take $45 for tax. You see, anything that I wanted badly enough to pout over got compared to those torturous 200-level requisite courses, like Intro to Lit. Theory with Dr. D. O’Leary.

 

Now that I’ve graduated, and bring in the (slightly) bigger bucks, I can afford the $500 rent I pay for my well-situated, much too small, paper-thin walls. As a result, my MPT has risen accordingly. Because, hell, if my landlady deserves my hard-earned cash, then I deserve that Mackage.

 

So, what’s the point of this piece? To confess that I’m in trouble. Since working with my therapist to curb my other obsessions, shopping has come to play an increasingly bigger role in my so-called life. The result? A bank account that’s constantly on empty, and a wardrobe that is too fabulous to keep behind doors. This would all be fine if I was your average Betty, but truth be told, I suffer from enough conscience to know my behavior is sick, given the condition of our wilting planet. This leaves me feeling a lot like a rotten tooth – pretty on the outside, but oh so deteriorated inside.

 

And hence, my New Year’s resolution! Yes. To quit shopping cold turkey. Because really, how many pounds of silver does one little doe need? With you as my witnesses, I move forward into the year of thrift! Luckily, this won’t require any drastic purification rituals like clothes burning, or jewelry hawking. And I’ve got enough Nars hydrating moisture cream to last me through the winter. 

 

Hip Gifts for Hanukkah December 19, 2008

Filed under: Shopping, Top Ten — Tragically Unhip Staff @ 5:55 pm

December 22 is fast approaching. How on earth are you supposed to come up with eight whole days worth of unique, clever gifts for your loved ones? That’s where we come in. We’ve been scouring the internet for stuff we want for ourselves, but since we know no one’s going to buy it for us, we’ll just share it with you instead and hope you take our advice. (Or take a hint. Send up presents!)

Nice Jewish Guys 2009

 

 

Day 1: Across the Jew-niverse

Want to make your mother happy this year? Bring home a nice Jewish boy. Come to think of it, why not bring home twelve? Tess recommends a new boy every month, courtesy of the Nice Jewish Guys calendar for 2009. Wait, shouldn’t that be 5769?

 

 

Day 2: I Call Bullshit

Celeste suggests buying and reading How to Talk About Books You Haven’t Read in its entirety, unlike the skimming and/or door-stopping you do with all your other important books. Then find yourself at dinner parties, convincingly saying things like “Anna Karenina? Brilliant, but so depressing.” Contrarily, if you fear your loved ones might be offended by such a gift, Kimberly recommends a good alternative that involves actual reading: 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die.

 

 

Day 3: Measuring Up

Laurin often finds herself shopping in the men’s department, which is why she recommends the New York Transit Museum’s subway token cufflinks. She also likes Individual Icons’ ruler cuff bracelets for members of both genders, which makes it possible for you to stop randomly and measure things with your wrist. Available in metric and imperial. Fun!

 

 

Day 4: Eau de Toilette Tap

New York City boasts award-winning tap water, so why are you buying your aqua from the Man? Genevieve suggests helping to negate your carbon footprint by buying (and reusing) a bottle of Tap’d NY’s purified tap water. With all the false advertising they feed us, it’s no wonder Evian spelled backwards is “naive.”

 

 

Day 5: We Heart New Yorker

Kim had suggested buying your loved one a subscription to the New Yorker, but why read the analogue version when you can view them all on eight DVD-ROMs as part of The Complete New Yorker, as Celeste suggests? Eighty years worth of The New Yorker at your fingertips and nary a fire hazard. We need this in our lives, like, rightnow.

 

 

Day 6: N.E.R.D.

Everybody, and we mean everybody, is either a) a comic book nerd, or b) related to a comic book nerd, or c) dating a comic book nerd. Perfect gift idea, then? Marianne thinks Drawn and Quarterly’s selection of cartoon and graphic novels simply can’t be beat.

 

Banana Guard

 

Day 7: Is That a Banana in Your Pocket?

Starving artists like Genevieve could really benefit from Banana Guard’s banana carrying case, which will protect your favourite fruit from bruising or squishing and oozing out into your bag during your mad dash to work every morning.

 

 

Day 8: For the Lazy Drunk in Your Life

Nothing says “I love you” like the gift that says “I know how lazy you really are.” Membership in Winery to Home’s Wine of the Month club gets you at least one bottle of vino every month, sent straight to your door. No one says you need to have friends or even share your bottles; just wait and they shall be delivered. You don’t even have to take your slippers off—it’s that easy.

 

Knickers in a Knot December 16, 2008

Filed under: Fashion, Shopping — Genevieve D. Markle @ 10:01 am

The other day, while this little fashionista’s (and label whore’s) exterior was graced by outerwear courtesy of Burberry, Mackage, and Portolano, my underwear, on the other hand, were suffering a bit of a crisis. Faced with the kind of situation where I was in one place and all my clean undergarments were in another, I did something I’ve never done before: I bought some panties at the Dollarama. Because of my predilection for buying designer duds over secondhand, potentially dust mite-infested thrift store finds, I realize that my new bobettes are probably the closest I’ll ever get to bona fide “hipster” wear:

 

hipster underwear

 

Hipster Bingo: Can I Get an O-69? December 7, 2008

Filed under: Hipster Culture, Nightlife, Shopping — Genevieve D. Markle @ 11:30 pm
Image courtesy of Hipster Runoff

Image courtesy of Hipster Runoff

Image courtesy of The Catbirdseat

Image courtesy of The Catbirdseat

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ryan Catbird, creator of Hipster Bingo, provides the following very simple instructions for how to play the game (NB: The same rules are used for Hipster Runoff’s Alt Bingo): “Print this out and take it to the next show you go to. When you get a bingo, scream ‘BINGO!’ at the top of your lungs, then break a bunch of beer bottles on the floor and get thrown out.”

 

Last night, Kimberly and I went to our own (less destructive) version of a Hipster Bingo party, this one put on by the lovely folks at Puces Pop. Artisans from Montreal and environs convened in the basement of St. Michael’s Church in Mile End to sell their wares as part of a craft fair from 11 to 6, while shoppers were encouraged to support our local artists by opting to buy unique and personalized holiday gifts. The doors were then shut for two hours while organizers set up for the night’s big event: the Breakfast for Dinner Bingo Party. Attendees were invited to show up in their pyjamas and order dinner from a breakfast menu of vegan pancakes and pierogi, then sit down and play some bingo to help raise money for the annual Pop Montreal music festival. At just 50¢ per bingo card, Kim and I bought eight per round and lined them up on the table in front of us, determined to win something (but much too proud to be seen in public with our good luck treasure trolls, which we left at home).

 

Hosted by that chick from Blue Skies Turn Black who seems to be at every single indie event in the city, her number-calling and French-speaking skills left a little to be desired. When she translated N-48 to “N-cinquante-huit” she just about caused a riot, as seven excited francophones screamed “Bingo!” and ran to the stage to collect their prizes. It was a false alarm, but our gracious hostess gave them all drink tickets to make up for her error. The real prizes were handcrafted items all made and donated by artisans who had participated in the craft fair earlier that afternoon. In fact, the whole event was pretty D.I.Y., because once the organizers had run out of jetons and pencil crayons with which to check off the numbers that had been called on our bingo cards, the bartender resorted to cutting up little squares of brown wrapping paper, while Kim and I tore apart my green cardboard gum pack. Bases loaded—or rather, cards almost covered—one of our very own Unhipsters, Sofia Shendi, needed but the B-4 in order to call a full-card bingo. We waited with bated breath, and then Ms. Blue Skies hollered into the mic: “B-four! B-quatre!” We all screamed bingo and Sofia sheepishly made her way to the stage to pick from the selection of prizes. She chose a limited-edition print by local poster artist Tyler Rauman, although she admitted that she would have been totally fine with “just a drink ticket.”

 

While quite uncommon for any of us to spend our Saturday nights at church, we had a good time nonetheless. Now that I think about it, I think that this is what church basements were created for: flea markets and little-old-lady bingo games. Except that there were no little old ladies to be found last night—only the type of young, urban, Montreal scenesters who would attend a Blue Skies Turn Black or a Pop Montreal event. Er, people like us, I guess.

 

Hipster Bingo

The players. (Photo by Genevieve D. Markle)

 

Hipster Bingo

The winning card. (Photo by Kimberly Senf)

 

Purrrfect November 19, 2008

Filed under: Fashion, Musings, Shopping — Marianne Perron @ 10:36 pm

My new earmuffs are not only warm and fuzzy, they do a fine job of blocking out the conversation I would otherwise be subject to while crossing through the McGill ghetto. In my happy mind those McGill girls are discussing poetry, not gushing about how (ohmygod!) drunk they got last Saturday night. Two days into their season, these pups (sorry, pun in poor taste) have already gotten many compliments. I’ve even had to give out directions to the Harricana headquarters on Atwater. All that, and I’ve only had to sheepishly explain that recycled fur is OK once.

 

UPS? UP yourS! November 13, 2008

Filed under: City Living, Etiquette, Fashion, Shopping — Marianne Perron @ 10:35 pm

I recently made a frivolous purchase. See, I just had to have this fabulous, leather, Mackage jacket in black. The problem is, it’s from last fall’s line and is sold out pretty much everywhere. Then I found it online. And on sale. Having little funds of my own, I did what any girl on my block would do: I begged my daddy to let me use his credit card. No easy task, but I succeeded. Then I sent it out to a buddy in NYC via UPS. 

 

Photo courtesy of Kaboodle

Photo courtesy of Kaboodle

Now, you’d think that UPS would take their clients into consideration when making deliveries, but no such luck. Being paranoid as heck, I obsessively tracked the package online for 48 hours. The first delivery attempt occurred while my buddy was at work. Maybe a roommate got the door, but the UPS man labeled this an “exception”. Online I read the description: no such person at this address. 

 

Freaking out I called UPS and tried to clarify things. I spoke to about four different agents and departments, found out you can’t pull a switcheroo and order your package to Canada in the middle of the game, that you need a signed note to make a pick-up for somebody else, and that the pick-up service is a) in the middle of no-man’s-land, NY, and b) only open from 9-5 Monday thru Friday. 

 

My friend being a working man, he could neither pull a Ferris Bueller nor stick around all hours waiting for UPS to come a-knockin’. So we decided to hold our breaths, and hope the UPS man would find one of his roommates home on day 2. 

 

Well, what actually happened was that somebody buzzed the UPS man into the lobby, where he decided to leave my parcel in a safe little place—the middle of everywhere. That’s right. He used his fine judgment to leave a large box unattended to in the lobby of an apartment building. In Brooklyn. I won’t even tell you what this jacket is worth. When my friend came home 6 hours later, he found the parcel and emailed me in awe. I just couldn’t believe it. UPS almost cost me a pretty penny. Which is why I decided to make a move for a new section of this blog: the Up Yours section.

 

Beauty is Not, In Fact, Skin Deep October 22, 2008

Filed under: Body, Health, Shopping — Celeste Parr @ 11:22 pm

And I’m not talking about your brilliant sense of humour or your great personality.  I’m talking about all the different things that you scrub, pat, blot, and rub all over your face and body on a daily basis.

 

I was having an impromptu coffee date with my best friend the other day, and her Paranoid Tirade of the Week was about mascara and lipstick—her two staple cosmetics—and how bad they are for her.  It was phrased as a question, because she somehow seems to think I’m a doctor.  I, feeling lazy and impatient with her rant du jour, brushed it off:  “Well I guess the more important question is how bad these things can be for you, really?”  This left her unsatisfied, and a couple of days later she directed me to a website called Skin Deep: Environmental Working Group’s Cosmetic Safety Database.

 

Just to humour her, I went to the website to tell her how my new blush rated on their hazard scale.  My new blush is NARS’ Creme Blush in Penny Lane, which I am absolutely in love with and swore I’d never live without again.  I entered the name of my blush.  The results came up.  It scored 7 out of  a possible 10 on the hazard scale.  The higher the number, the worse the score.   “But it’s NARS!” I thought.

 

Still dismissive, I thought, “Well, come on.  7 out of 10.  So what?  What’s the hazard?”  So I clicked on my blush’s link and found that the “hazard” was that the ingredients in my blush were linked to cancer, developmental/reproductive toxicity, allergies & immunotoxicity, biochemical or cellular level changes, etc.

 

Suddenly it was like a fever came over me.  I grabbed my makeup bag and went through it maniacally, checking item by item: my Diorskin foundation scored an 8; my Avon anti-aging moisturizer scored an 8; my Chanel Allure perfume scored a 5; my MAC mascara scored a 6; and—my saving grace—my DuWop Lip Venom scored an encouraging 3 out of 10.

 

And this isn’t just for women’s cosmetics either.  Axe shower gel scored a 7; Degree antiperspirant for men scored a 5; Jack Black’s Beard Lube scored a 6; and for all you faux smoothies, Andrea for Men extra-strength hair removal cream scored a whopping 10 out of 10.

 

What was immediately clear to me was that 1) The exorbitant amount of money you (and by you, I mean me) pay for your cosmetics doesn’t necessarily mean that you’re getting safer products.  Dior, l’Occitane, and Smashbox all had alarmingly high hazard scores for some products, while less expensive pharmacy brands occasionally had low scores, sometimes even scores of zero;  2) Just because a brand scores really well on one product doesn’t mean that their products are safe across the board.  For example, Almay had one of the safest mascaras, scoring a 1 out of 10, but their Clear Complexion Powder Compact scored a 10 out of 10.

 

The moral of the story? Don’t put all your faith in Dior or the Body Shop.  First, decide how much stock you want to invest in this information (I, for one, am keeping my blush, but might be switching anti-aging creams), and if you decide it’s not worth the risk, do your research before you buy.

 

Kimono Kraze October 19, 2008

Filed under: Sex, Shopping — Marianne Perron @ 7:54 pm
http://www.canada.com/topics/bodyandhealth/gallery/condoms.html?g=0

Condom dress photo courtesy of Canada.com

The sudden increase in my sexual activity has recently seen me join the search for the perfect condom. My inability to use birth control caused my partner to voice concerns about the prospect of a sex life forever dulled by latex, and encouraged me to help him find one that, er, fits like a glove. After testing out a few varieties, and exchanging notes with my girlfriends, I was sent out in search of the Kimono. The Kimono micro-thin condom is a Japanese import that advertises itself as being the thinnest available with 100% of the protection offered by an American slim.

Not knowing where else to turn, I entered the maze-like corridor of McGill’s Brown Building, and, feeling a bit like a rat in a laboratory experiment, I sniffed out my final destination. OK, so I was actually being led by little arrows and not my instinct for hunting out cheese, but the prize was in fact hidden at the furthest point in the building, and was incredibly complicated to track.

Once inside McGill’s Shagalicious Shop, I gasped for air and gesticulated wildly. “I’ve been sent in search of the Kimono!” I declared, certain that the attendant would be amused by my antics. She barely glanced up from her computer screen, but her eyes and brows were enough to communicate how unimpressed she was. “You’ve what?” I was forced to repeat my mission in less grandiose terms.

Lethargically, she walked over to a display of foreign looking condoms and picked out the Kimono. She was about to walk away, but I caught her attention once again, and inquired about the Kimono’s rumored super powers. She explained that the Kimono was in fact snug as a bug, 40% thinner than other condoms, and, yes, guaranteed to have the same protection. She recommended the Aqualube version, and wished me luck. I was satisfied with her pitch and very pleased with the 50 cent price tag on one Kimono. Now that’s a cheap ride. I grabbed a bunch, and all but skipped the rest of the way home. The fresh autumn air was crisp, and the day was promising.

But how, you ask, does the Kimono fare in the sack? Well, no complaints so far.

 

Things We Have Love/Hate Relationships With October 15, 2008

Filed under: Shopping, Television, Things We Have Love/Hate Relationships With — Genevieve D. Markle @ 1:44 pm

Why am I such a sucker for infomercials? While I pride myself on rarely falling prey to the impulse purchases that line the velvet rope at Chapters or that are strategically placed by the cash register (unless it’s chocolate), infomercials seem to make me holler “SOLD!” a little too frequently for comfort. Maybe it’s because they’ve got a full half hour to try and sell me something, or maybe it’s because I’m much more vulnerable to persuasion when it’s 3 in the morning and I’m suffering from insomnia. Regardless, I’ve got to stop doing this.

 

My purchase last night? Turbo Jam’s home workout DVD’s. A few months earlier, it was Proactiv, and the month before that, it was a steam cleaner. What do all these things have in common? Nothing, except that they didn’t really work and I should never have bought them in the first place. But don’t worry; I have a plan for the Turbo Jam. I’m going to burn the DVD’s and then send everything back to take advantage of their 30-day money back guarantee. Then I’ll be able to exercise right here in my living room—for free! That is, of course, so long as I can peel my fat ass off the couch and away from all those infomercials and chocolate bars.

 

Top Ten Things We Buy at the Dollarama October 13, 2008

Filed under: Shopping, Top Ten — Tragically Unhip Staff @ 10:09 pm

 

Everything for a dollar! (All photos by Genevieve D. Markle)

 

10. Kimberlily has a weak spot for Mike & Ike candies. She buys them in bulk at the Dollarama.  

 

9. Genevieve D. Markle enjoys purchasing scrapbooking supplies at the Dollarama because they’re much cheaper there than at the art supply store. Anybody who had suspected that Gen was secretly cool can now admit that they were very, very wrong.

 

8. David Fiore likes Dollarama’s white mesh laundry bags despite the fact that the zippers break every few months. Dave is a domestic god and likes to do laundry and the dishes. Your mother will love him.

Diva?

Who you callin' Diva?

 

7. Kim likes to buy her friends cheap but personalized birthday gifts, like this Diva keychain. We shall not divulge which Unhipster she bought it for.

 

6. Celeste Parr swears she doesn’t shop at the Dollarama, but that one time she did go in and buy a loupe. Then we had to ask her what a loupe is.

 

5. Marianne Perron used to love their baby hair clips. That was back when she thought Courtney Love was cool.

 

4. Dave likes how he can buy 60 super fast-burning frankincense sticks for a dollar. While he may keep a clean home, there is the slight possibility that it will smell like hippie.

Preggers?

Preggers?

 

3. While she has never been in the kind of predicament that would require her to sample their accuracy, Gen gets a huge kick out of the fact that Dollarama sells pregnancy tests. For a dollar.  

 

2. Kim likes to buy their big bottles of Gatorade. They’re good for when she’s hungover. As long as she’s not drinking Haterade while hungover, it’s all good.

 

1. Marianne told us that an old roommate of hers once had to buy some underwear from the Dollarama after unexpectedly getting her period on a city bus. We wonder if she settled for their granny panties or one of their holographic, predominantly purple thongs.

 

Our Lady of Expensive Beauty Products October 9, 2008

Filed under: Body, Shopping — Genevieve D. Markle @ 10:11 pm

I am not a particularly smelly person: not in the good way and not in the bad way. I am not stinky in the B.O. sense, nor am I one of those girls who leaves a cloud of perfume behind her wherever she goes, causing strangers on the bus to start sneezing when she passes. I use unscented body wash and spritz on just a little rose water before running out the door with wet, product-free hair. I also make sure to put on a little deodorant before leaving the house out of respect for the people who will come into contact with me throughout the course of the day.

 

Now, we all know that ladies don’t sweat; we glisten. Sometimes, however, our glistening doesn’t smell so nice. A little while ago, my gay BFF and I came up with a bunch of easy-to-understand nicknames for the different variations of female underarm odour, such as Morning Pit, Summer Pit, Sex Pit, and Bikram Yoga Pit, among others. If y’all women don’t know what I’m talking about, you’re either a) blessed with incredible and enviable sweat glands, or b) lying.

 

The solution for masking the natural occurrence of female underarm odour is really quite simple: just buy a good deodorant. But this is easier said than done. Nearly all pharmacy brand deodorants are in fact antiperspirants, which are controversial and their use somewhat discouraged due to the potential negative side effects associated with aluminum content and impeding natural sweat production. It is very difficult to find actual deodorants these days unless you go to your local health food store and buy an all-natural brand like Tom’s of Maine or JASON. Otherwise, your options are limited.

 

Unless, of course, you subscribe to the philosophy of Madonna’s “Papa Don’t Preach” t-shirt that claims “Italians Do It Better.” The Officina Profumo-Farmaceutica di Santa Maria Novella in Florence, Italy (try saying that five times fast after a few shots of grappa) has been selling herbal beauty products and elixirs made by Dominican monks since the early 17th century. The formulas have remained virtually unchanged since that time, and the various men’s and women’s products have developed an international cult following, even though the line costs a pretty penny and is nearly impossible to find in stores. I, like these cultists, have become a devout and exclusive user of Santa Maria Novella products, particularly their crema antiodore. For fifty outrageous dollars, you get a 50mL tub of deodorant cream, which is applied by dipping your finger into the jar and then smearing the cream onto your armpits. The crema smells sweet, dries quickly, and doesn’t leave white streaks on your clothes. Oh, and it works.

 

So ladies, do your homework before committing to a brand, and make sure that not only does it work for you, but also that it’s good for your health. You never know what kind of secret Secret is keeping from you.

 

Santa Maria Novella

At Santa Maria Novella headquarters in Florence, Italy (aka Heaven). (Photo by Kimberlily)

 

Consider It a Thinking Cap October 3, 2008

Filed under: City Living, Fashion, Manifesto, Shopping, Transit — Celeste Parr @ 2:56 pm

 

Photo courtesy of Yakkay.com

Photo courtesy of Yakkay.com

The first frost might seem like an odd time to post about anything to do with bicycles, but if you live in Montreal, you’ll know as well as I do that while bicycle season slows down drastically at the first snow, it never really ends.

 
You may remember from a past post of mine that I commented on the McGill female species’ lack of bicycle helmets. What I didn’t mention in that post was that, umm, I wasn’t wearing one either. And I should have known better; I’d recently read an article in the Gazette about the spike in bicycle accidents since the addition of bicycle paths to many popular downtown roads. I was reading the article while sitting in the emergency room with my partner, who’d driven his bicycle into an opening car door on Parc Avenue.

 

Someone once mentioned to me that they thought they’d look cooler bleeding from the head than wearing a bicycle helmet. But that’s not necessarily the case anymore. (Okay, it was never true in the first place, but it seemed true.) Now that companies like Bern and Yakkay make stylish and charming helmets, you don’t have to feel like an idiot for wearing one. In fact, you should feel like an idiot for not wearing one.

 

I recently caved and purchased my own bicycle helmet for a measly $46 at the ABC bike shop on Parc, just in time to save myself from the collision I had on the Parc/Pine interchange last week. Thanks to my very cool helmet, I only have to look stupid because of the foot bandages I’m wearing with my gladiator sandals.

 

This is Not a Joke September 18, 2008

Filed under: Advertising, Fashion, Shopping — Genevieve D. Markle @ 12:35 pm

 

This is a real American Apparel ad. Clicking on it will bring you here. I don’t know what frightens me more: the weird-looking dog or the thought that very soon, legions of white 19-year-olds will be out on the streets trying to look like the homies from Run DMC.

 

Born-Again Christian Louboutins September 16, 2008

Filed under: Fashion, Shopping — Genevieve D. Markle @ 3:27 pm

I am a complete fashion snob. I don’t shop at chain stores and I won’t wear secondhand unless it’s designer or classic vintage. Urban Outfitters makes me shudder (maybe because I worked there once, for six whole days), and by the time I had counted 18 other sightings of my ubiquitous polka-dotted H&M tank top in seven different European countries, well, that put an end to my shopping there too.

 

But being a label-whore doesn’t come cheap, so I’ve learned a few tricks of the trade for how to buy designer at a fraction of the retail price. Places to go include Loehmann’s, Century 21, and occasionally Winners, as well as to sample sales on Chabanel in Montreal. Before committing to a purchase, you’ll likely find me stroking and sniffing garments like fine French bread and reading fabric tags to translate wash-instruction hieroglyphics or to search for any dreaded polyester content. I’m so neurotic about it that I honestly prefer to shop alone for fear of annoying my companion.

 

As you can imagine, a snob like me wouldn’t be caught dead wearing anything fake. I can safely walk along Canal Street in New York without even the slightest yearning to stop and consider the knock-off Tiffany’s jewellery, the plastic Chanel shades, the counterfeit True Religion jeans, or the fake Vuittons. So you can imagine my concern when I came across a pair of absolutely heavenly blue suede shoes by shoe god Christian Louboutin for a mere $100 on eBay.

 

blue christian louboutin

All minez!!!1!! (Photo by Genevieve D. Markle)

I’d been looking for the “something blue” part of my wedding ensemble and decided that the only thing that would do the trick were Louboutin’s electric blue Rolando heels. Retailing for upwards of $685 and sold-out just about everywhere, I was lucky to find a pair period, especially these hundred dollar babies. But my suspicions were aroused: they had to be fake, and I reminded myself that I don’t “do” fake. But I messaged the seller anyway, asking him what the catch was, and received a very interesting reply.

 

Tom in China wrote back and explained that my coveted Rolandos were “O.E.M. – Original Equipment Machinery.” A-ha! I’d read about this before, referred to as “third shift manufacturing” in an old back issue of my fashion bible, The New Yorker’s bi-annual Style Issue. Essentially, top designers outsource their manufacturing to large factories in China. (Spoiler alert: Most “Made in Italy” claims on designer shoes refer to the vero cuoio, or real Italian leather used, and not to the actual manufacturing.) These factories are open and operational for two shifts during the day (morning and afternoon/evening) and are supposed to close for the night. The products made during the day get shipped to the designer’s flagship stores and to high-end department stores such as Holt Renfrew and Sak’s. But unbeknownst to the designers in Paris or Milan, some of their manufacturing plants actually stay open throughout the night, working what’s called the “third shift,” making off-the-books merchandise using the exact same materials and machinery as the legitimate daytime products.

 

Why should I care if my Louboutins were made at 3 a.m. instead of 3 p.m.? They’re still authentic; they’re just black market. Shoot, my people practically invented the black market, so I’m just fulfilling an Italian stereotype here. I’ve never been a big fan of supporting The Man anyway, so if I can contribute to lining the pockets of a few entrepreneurial, likely underpaid factory workers and get a deal at the same time, it’s a win-win situation then, isn’t it?

 

Things We Would Do If We Were Cool September 10, 2008

Filed under: Shopping, Things We Would Do If We Were Cool — Genevieve D. Markle @ 1:29 pm

I would own a Vespa.  That is all.

 

How To Get Wasted For Ten Dollars or Less September 7, 2008

Filed under: Booze, How-To, Money, Neighbourhood, Shopping — Ryan Marlboro @ 11:34 pm

I don’t want the fact that I was born and raised in Verdun to define me, but when Gen called and asked me to write this article, I think we both knew that my borough-folk and I are real experts when it comes to getting completely annihilated for as little financial expenditure as possible. Verduners like to drink a lot—usually outside on the balcony or, if you’re from neighbouring Pointe Ste. Charles, out on the front stoop with your legs stretching into the sidewalk. Regardless of neighbourhood, however, there are numerous ways for you to get wasted for ten dollars or less, but it’s quite obvious when I say this that hard liquor and bars are pretty much out of the question.

 

One great way to get your buzz going is to find a non-franchised dépanneur that advertises selling beer for the “lowest price permissible by law.” I’ve seen a few joints on Wellington doing this. Most stores will carry brands like Pabst Blue Ribbon or Old Milwaukee (not to be confused with Milwaukee’s Best or Milwaukee’s Best Dry), and these beers go for about a dollar a can. A bottle of beer contains 341ml of liquid while a can contains 355ml, so you do the math. With ten dollars, you should be able to pick up eight of either, providing you with a good buzz for the night. A 355ml can of beer with a 6.1% alcohol content for a dollar sounds like a real steal, doesn’t it? Oh yeah, except the beer tastes like crap.

 

This one worked well a few years ago, but I haven’t tried it recently. While Colt .45 is cheaper, a 40oz bottle of Big 10 (Black Label 10%) has a higher alcohol content and less social stigma attached to it. Big 10 tastes even worse than the Pabst and Old Milwaukee beers, but sometimes sacrifices must be made in order to drown your sorrows and/or escape reality. This stuff is bottom of the barrel, but it’s cheap! A forty of Big 10 goes for about $4.50 a pop, so why not go all out for the evening and buy two? You could even leave the dep owner a one dollar tip. Expect a night of blurred vision, horrible-tasting mouth, and probably vomiting.

 

If you live in Montreal, Foufounes Électriques has $5 pitchers on Tuesday nights, but tips for your bartender and the 3$ cover charge must be factored in to your night’s total spending. Throw in a few games of pool and maybe a drink for the hottie you want to take home with you, and already you’ve gone over budget. But unless you are an alcoholic, most people want to get hammered in the company of other people anyway, so you can always rally up a group of your friends to go to the dive bar of your choice on Cheap Beer Night and have everyone chip in to a communal pool to help fund the intoxication. If you’re money-savvy enough, you and your friends should be able to spend a drunken evening in an enjoyable social setting, which sure as hell beats drinking on the sidewalk.

 

Taking a Stand for Secondhand September 5, 2008

Filed under: Fashion, Manifesto, Shopping — Meghan Best @ 5:09 pm

Here in the U.K. we have high streets. These are mostly made up of chain stores like Topshop and such, various £1 emporiums, and a decent sprinkling of charity shops. Now, while you over there in America have your Goodwills, Value Villages and Salvation Army’s, we, on the other hand, have an endless spate of sad-looking, dusty-windowed shops supporting every uncomfortable situation known to man and the animal world.

 

These shops used to be littered with bargains made up of pretty, pleated old lady dresses, jewel-coloured wool winter coats and fantastic leather bags (often with a free clean handkerchief!). I used to feel bad that these beautiful garments had survived for decades when I could ruin them in two weekends with fag burns and lip gloss stains.

 

But this guilty feeling hasn’t arisen in the past few years, as U.K charity shops are not quite cutting the mustard anymore. I recently went to a village in Derbyshire to try and find some thrifty gems. Going out of town is often more fruitful because London shop owners tend to be more eBay-savvy/giddy than their village counterparts. However, I was severely disappointed on my weekend trip to Derbyshire; the chazzies were saturated with last season’s Primark clothing.

 

Primark has shops on nearly every major high street, selling similar stuff to H&M, but at half the price and across 10 colourways. Primark used to be good. In 2000, whilst it was undergoing its tranformation, you could have a mooch around and find gems costing one-sixth of a Topshop equivalent. Then, gradually, Vogue started featuring Primark’s items here and there, and by 2004 it was the pièce de résistance of the British high street, peaking in 2007 with its Oxford Street store opening.

 

Nowadays on a Saturday, young girls stride the high streets laden with brown paper Primark bags brimming with £20 worth of cheap dross. They proceed to wear these items once—maybe never at all—and then fill their heart with that warm, gooey feeling by donating their cast-offs to their charity shop of choice.

 

This is insane! I do not want to buy a shrunken secondhand top with half its sequins missing for £4, especially when Primark was selling it three months ago for £5. Alas, I am worried about the future of our charity shops. Good quality vintage goods are much harder to find these days, and charity shops have difficulty selling these garments, which will ultimately end up in landfill. The U.K population needs to go back to investing in well-made garments, using quality fabrics, rather than spending the same amount on cheap, fickle trends.

 

Not Without My Moleskine August 24, 2008

Filed under: Hipster Culture, Shopping — Genevieve D. Markle @ 6:38 pm
moleskine culture

Photo by Genevieve D. Markle

 

Want an example of an obligatory hipster accessory aside from your stereotypical can of Pabst, a pair of nerdy glasses or an ironic t-shirt (favourite slogan so far: “I listen to bands that don’t even exist yet.”)? A Moleskine. Any true hipster wouldn’t dare leave home without theirs, and it can come in many forms: a journal, a sketchbook, a reporter’s notepad, a day planner, or a city guide. I myself have four in use for different purposes at any given time. And I can tell you that whenever I’ve whipped one out at a party to take note of something, another Moleskine devotee would without fail dart across the floor to me and proclaim, “You have a Moleskine too!” as if that made us kin. Possessing one or more Moleskines is a calling card within hipster culture, permitting us to pick each other out in public and exchange secret, knowing smiles.

 

I think the Big Brothers at Amazon.com are keeping track of my purchase history, because just today I received an email from them suggesting I “might like to visit [their] brand new Moleskine store.” And last week at the Strand in New York, two of my friends decided that they both absolutely needed to buy a Moleskine Japanese photo album—the kind where the cardstock sheets unfurl like an accordion—in which to paste some of their favourite momentos. But there was only one left on the shelf, and CC got it. My other friend was willing to purchase the somewhat beat-up display copy, but the cashier insisted on checking all over the store’s three floors for a new, sealed one. Ten minutes later and after much ado, we all walked out with new Moleskines. It was a bit ridiculous, now that I think about it. But whatever it is, Moleskine’s marketing people must be doing something right.

 

Lendas and Tjusigs and Brädas, Oh My! August 11, 2008

Filed under: Home, Shopping — Kimberly Senf @ 7:09 pm

Billy is my strong, dark, and quasi-handsome bookcase that holds all of my most prized possessions on his less-than-mighty melamine shelves. Brattby lives at the end of my bed and stores anything I ask him to, from extra bed sheets to forgotten sewing machines, and he is truly a chest like no other. I sit here writing on trusty Curry (aka Vika Curry), my modest white table. And the newest addition to the pack is the ever-versatile Expedit, who can be used as a storage shelf or as a bench with cubbyholes to boot.



I have to admit that I’m quite content with my little Ikea furniture family and I don’t think I’m alone in refusing to call my pieces by any other name than the ones Ikea gave them. Billy is not simply a bookcase; he is a trusted friend that has endured more moves than his short lifespan should allow. I know my friends think I’m one flew over the cuckoo’s nest when I invite them to sit on Lillberg or to grab something from Brattby. They look around for people or labels, unaware that they are surrounded by pre-named furniture and that I’m referring to a loveseat, not an actual human.


Brattby and Curry doing their thing. Oh, and an appropriately placed Ikea catalogue that every Montrealer received in the mail. (Photo by Kimberly Senf)

Brattby and Curry doing their thing. Oh, and an appropriately placed Ikea catalogue that every Montrealer received in the mail. (Photo by Kimberlily)



The art of naming the furniture at Ikea is truly up there with ice cream flavours and paint colours: it’s one mighty fine occupation. Apparently it’s not left entirely up to the whim of whoever sets eyes upon the shiny new specimens first, as there is a system in place. A Malm is not just a bed at Ikea, but also a Norwegian town with strong ties to mining. The Gulliver collection of children’s furniture translates to “darling,” and many other articles are given the names of people, places, occupations and even nautical terms. It seems that naming furniture offers up a public relations nightmare as well, considering that what could easily be the term for a blue lake in Sweden means something else entirely to those shopping for the item half a world away.


Yet no matter how many times I hear about Ikea’s reputation for shoddy craftsmanship (aka assembly-line production), I actively refuse to listen and go back for more. Like a junkie who craves their next fix, sometimes I just really need that new organizational gadget whose name is right on the tip of my tongue. But my failsafe rule is this: If I can’t pronounce it, I can’t bring it home.

 

The Clone Syndrome August 10, 2008

Filed under: Etiquette, Fashion, Shopping — Marianne Perron @ 11:47 pm

Fashion is about edge, originality, and theft. The true fashionista has to be able to assimilate and re-invent. Fashion on a budget is all about having an eye for the best pieces available to you. Often that can mean scouring magazines and thrift shops for ideas, diving into discount bins, and tailing key pieces for entire seasons until they hit the reduction rack. At other times it means scoping out what the competition is wearing, even accosting strangers with the question some consider a faux-pas: “Where did you find that?” 

 

Once you dare to become a fashion-scout you’ll quickly realize that there are many different personalities you may encounter. There’s the free-spirit: ready to distribute any knowledge and divulge all secrets, she’ll even give you directions to the shop. The elitist: she’ll smirk as she rolls the designer’s name off her tongue; the more obscure the label, the smugger the girl. The petty princess: she’ll actually refuse to tell you where she made the purchase, and will sometimes even claim it’s a personal policy. And of course, the Carmen Sandiego sister, who will vaguely drop an international hint: shaped like a boot.

 

But what if the owner of the perfect shoes/purse/jean jacket is a friend? What’s the policy on cramping your girlfriend’s style in the name of your own? If you grew up as part of a school-yard gaggle, chances are you went in fear of the other CC label: that of copy-cat. Somehow, coolness came to be defined paradoxically: Be the same, yet different. In the grown-up world it seems the same rules apply. Especially when it comes to fashion accessories. The rarer and quirkier the find, or the more into it your pal is, the less acceptable it is to copy.

 

Personality type also comes into play. Some girlfriends couldn’t care less. They’re happy knowing you can both look good rocking a particular item. Others are more possessive and don’t mind sharing basic pieces, but will get uptight about you moving in on more original items. And then there are those who just won’t budge. Stubborn and snobby, you know they’ll kill you for cloning. But what about when you just hafta, hafta, hafta have it? Is it OK to be a closet-cloner?

 

Maybe. When you can get away with it. Sure it’s devious and sneaky, and risky business when you’re wearing your outfit out on the town, but that can add to the fun. You must, however, follow the golden rule: Avoid places the original is likely to be. Actually, this rule applies to knock-offs of all stripes; follow it, and the (fashion) world is your oyster! 

 

Can We Get Our Own Fashion Label Too? August 1, 2008

Filed under: Fashion, Manifesto, Shopping — Genevieve D. Markle @ 9:53 pm

 

Ten-Second Fashion Designer Qualification Quiz:

 

1.  Have you been to design school?

2.  Are you Italian or French and therefore exempt from having to go to design school because you were born with fashion coursing through your veins?

3.  Would Anna Wintour use one of your garments to blow her nose with?

 

 

Chances are, if you are one of Hollywood’s latest starlets-of-questionable-talent, the answer to all of the above questions is a loud, resounding NO. Celebrities who spring to mind when considering the clothing label bandwagon are Jessica Simpson, Jennifer Lopez, Lauren Conrad, Perez Hilton, Posh Spice, Hilary Duff, and the Hilton and Olsen sisters. But how many of these “designers” are actually designing their own fashions? I’m guessing none. The only thing that these celebrities seem to be doing is jumping on the money train, approving other people’s designs, licensing their names to a bunch of poorly-made garments, then sitting back and counting the profits.

 

Last time I checked, fashion and couture were art forms, possibly even sciences. A good designer must consider everything from season to colour to fabric to stitching to fit.   If you want to better understand how the mind of a real fashion visionary works, go rent Lagerfeld Confidential. In the meantime, why not support the local economy by purchasing clothes from up-and-coming local designers, or, for the frugal, from secondhand thrift shops in your ‘hood? Why, you can even throw your own clothes swapping party! I know, I know: No self-respecting hipster (or, I pray, unhipster) would ever be caught dead wearing one of these starlets’ “creations.” But I still feel the need to advise nonetheless: Do not encourage these talentless fashion blasphemers by purchasing their products, even if they are half off at Zeller’s or Loehmann’s! Because remember, kids: The Anna Wears Gabbana, not Heidiwood.