Though it's not newly published, we hope you'll enjoy this book review from our old site design's free info section.  Over the next few days, we're transferring these articles to our blog... consider it website housekeeping.  :)  Meantime I hope you'll see something intriguing amongst the posts!      The quirky title is an        apt descriptor of the lively contents in this book by sisters Alison &        Melissa Houtte.  It chronicles Alison's journey from a newly        discovered model in the 1980s, who flew alone to Paris in her teens, to a        vintage clothing shopowner in Brooklyn sharing anecdotes about buying and        selling in this interesting niche business.            Alison's stories will resonate with fellow vintage        dealers, and they're a fun vicarious experience for shoppers.  She        recounts having a customer find a label in a dress before she did,        learning who Claire McCardell was only after selling a few McCardell        designs.  She found the quandary of explaining the differences        in size labels over the years too difficult - "very few people want to        hear that today's size eight was once a fourteen" - and began snipping        sizes out of garments.  And she recounts the tension involved in        haggling with customers, as well as having customers bid up other shoppers        for choice pieces.                                                                                                                                                          |               
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                         Alison is a true fashionista,        having walked the runways of Paris long before she        became a student of vintage clothes.  Her relationships with clothes are passionate and        practical at the same time.  In        one anecdote that reads  like a rite of        passage, Alison was coaxed into buying a $2000 Hermes jacket while        a fledging model making her first real  wages.  After many enjoyable and impressive        wearings, the realization about her purchase was a mature one - "I        also have come to realize that I've  spent much more, in smaller increments,        on countless piece of clothing that are long  gone and forgotten.  Applying fashion math, I        have no regrets about my Hermes fling".  In later years, she continues        to  weave stories of favorite        vintage finds next to anecdotes about the development of her store.  While        these are  also a        treat, including pictures of these clothes would have been        worthy eye candy.
            Throughout this book, Alison's philosophy        shines through as earnest and down-to-earth regarding her mission,        business expectations and style of dressing.  In business, she finds        nothing is perfect, including competition and location.  In fashion,        she believes "dressing is an adventure, not a chore", even on the days when        you appraise your outfit and wonder what went wrong before you left the        house.  As a shopowner, she is able to play the        gleeful matchmaker, finding clothes for "people who see a future for        something from the past".  The promise of eternal dress-up is an        enticing one in this book, and a light read the fashion hound will        enjoy.
 
This is a fashion blog that celebrates vintage and retro style, with a focus on the elegance of past decades. It shares styling tips, product reviews, and outfit inspirations for those who appreciate classic fashion. The blog often explores the history behind vintage clothing and accessories, highlighting their cultural significance. It also offers advice on finding and restoring vintage pieces.
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