I know I can do better than that!
See if you can tell who was the inspiration for each of these photos. (Answers tomorrow)
This is the time of year when most of us in the Northern Hemisphere are warm (or hot) and could use a break.
First, if you don’t keep track of denisebrain on Facebook, I invite you there now for a cool break on vintage clothing.
Second, check out my August theme, which is fashionably late this month...appropriate to the theme:
I am OVERJOYED to say that the manatee fundraiser put on by Rosie and me reached our goal, on the button.
Of course there is no way we could have reached this goal without very generous support from many people: Customers who purchased from my denisebrain vintage shops, those who contributed directly on my YouCaring page, and all those who spread the word and offered encouragement.
My greatest thanks goes to the Save the Manatee Club for being the manatee’s constant advocate. I have just sent them the proceeds of our fundraiser, $1000.
Yes Rosie, we did it!! (photo of Rosie the manatee by William Garvin)
Rosie, denisebrain official manatee adoptee, is feeling pretty hopeful about our fundraiser! I have heard from people all over the world who appreciate the cause (who doesn’t love Rosie?) and are glad to give back with their purchase.
In case you haven’t heard, Rosie and I are hoping to raise at least $600 by July 17 for a donation to Save the Manatee Club. We have a YouCaring.com page where I am recording 25% of my sales at denisebrain, and I can also accept direct donations on this page.
A lot needs to be done to save the manatee, so Rosie and I would really appreciate if my donation could be even greater than $600. Are you in?
The denisebrain Etsy shop
The denisebrain web store
This is the time of year when I hand wash clothing that I’ve saved up for fair weather. I have two laundry lines and hang the clothes out to dry. Nothing quite like the smell of clean laundry-line clothes!
My July theme is a tribute to my clothesline and the summer breeze that dries everything so quickly and well. It’s a vintage technique that I can thoroughly endorse.
When I speak of the beleaguered manatee, please know that partisan political forces are representing the species as not so endangered. Right now, steps are being taken to delist the endangered manatee for the benefit of few. Notice (from this Tampa Bay Times article) that manatees have never been more endangered in recorded history. A gentle, intelligent herbivore that has been on our planet practically infinitely longer than we humans (30-60 million years vs. our 170,000 years) deserves a chance to survive.
Right now, and through July 17, 25% of your purchase price from my vintage fashion venues online will go to Save the Manatee Club. You may also donate directly (as a number of caring individuals have done) on my YouCaring.com page.
For more on the fundraiser, please see this post. I feel hopeful enough to have raised the goal to $600!
Bad hair day? I am having a bad hair life, so there’s nothing more handy to me than being able to compensate with a beautiful scarf. This look, glamorized by Sophia Loren, looks vaguely peasant-y while adding vintage je ne sais quoi.
I couldn’t resist adding the door knocker earrings...anyone need her fortune told?
Rosie and I are back to let you know that our fundraiser has gotten off to a grand start from a couple of very generous donors and purchasers (25% of denisebrain purchases are going to the cause). See the total over on my YouCaring.com page.
Thank you!
We can do it...but not without you!
Big square scarves are extremely versatile. With just a couple of knots, today’s scarf got to act like a shrug, or wrap. Basically it is like a shrug with full sleeves.
I got the idea from a post on Vmac and Cheese. Check out the other uses for a large square scarf in this post!
Then in 2000 I had the opportunity to visit my relatives in Florida, and they took my husband and I for a short boat tour at Blue Spring State Park. We saw amazing plant life and any number of alligators, but what we really yearned to see was a manatee. There were hints that they were near—
Since then I’ve tried to find out all I can about this creature, and have been amazed. For instance, manatees are intelligent (“capable of understanding discrimination tasks, and show signs of complex associated learning and advanced long term memory.” [Gerstein, E. R. (1994). The manatee mind: Discrimination training for sensory perception testing of West Indian manatees (Trichechus manatus). Marine Mammals 1: 10–21.] They demonstrate complex discrimination and task-learning similar to dolphins and pinnipeds in acoustic and visual studies. [Marine Mammal Medicine, 2001, Leslie Dierauf & Frances Gulland, CRC Press]. The manatee’s closest land relation is the elephant, not the cow, despite their being called sea cows in many parts of the world. They are thought to have evolved from four-legged land animals some 60 million years ago.
Think about it: Manatees have made it 60 million years on the Earth and now their survival is threatened.
Katie Tripp, Director of Science and Conservation of Save the Manatee Club, wrote a succinct essay about the threats to manatees and what the future might hold (After Devastating Losses, What’s in Store for Manatees in 2014?). As she concludes, manatees “need our voices and our support now more than ever.”
Please help me support Save the Manatee Club and all they do to protect manatees. I am hoping to raise $500 by the end of the day on July 17. 25% of sales through my business will go to the cause, or you may donate directly at my YouCaring page.
If you read my blog, my Facebook page posts, my tweets on Twitter, or know me personally, you are certain to be aware that I have a thing about manatees. I love the gentle giants, and am deeply concerned for them as an endangered species that is terribly vulnerable.
Photo © David Schrichte
Last year was the worst on record for Florida manatees, with an estimated 829 perishing. With no natural predators, their adversaries are humans. Every year many manatees are killed or injured by boat strikes. In addition, we encroach upon and pollute the manatees’ vital habitat.
With humans so responsible for the grave endangerment of the manatee, we must also be responsible for their survival.
Save the Manatee Club is devoted entirely to the survival of the manatee and its habitat. Manatees have no greater friend than SMC, and I support them whole-heartedly.
That’s why today I am announcing that 25% of my sales for the next month (June 17-July 17) will go to Save the Manatee Club, with a goal of raising $500. I have also set up a YouCaring.com
page for those who don’t find any vintage to suit themselves but who would like to help.
$500 is a lot of money, and a sum I could never offer up on my own, but my customers have always come through, and I know will want to do their part for the manatees again.
In fact, I’m confident enough to pose as Rosie!
Appropriately, I have just symbolically adopted a manatee named Rosie as the honorary manatee of denisebrain.com and this campaign.
Rosie is a beloved manatee, known to all who visit Homosassa Springs Wildlife State Park. She is decidedly vintage, having first been brought into captivity in 1968. Rosie is not a suitable candidate for being released into the wild because she has an equilibrium problem that causes her to swim in right-hand circles. Instead, she is the babysitter to the orphaned and injured young manatees brought to Homosassa for rehabilitation, nursing the calves and shepherding them around the spring waters.
Rosie, photo © William Gavin
Rosie epitomizes all manatees, who are known for their great intelligence and gentle good nature. While Rosie may have a home safe from boats and other perils living at Homosassa Springs, most of the few thousand Florida manatees left do not.
For Rosie and all endangered manatees, please help me reach this goal. I know
We Can Do It!
In 1974, Spokane was smallest city ever to host a World Exposition. It is now the 40th anniversary of Expo ’74, and the denizens of my smallish city are still feeling the fair’s positive impact.
Today’s scarf (a vintage souvenir from the fair) is one I’ve been pulling out quite a bit this year in tribute to the anniversary. It features the Möbius strip, symbol of the fair which was the first to have an environmental theme.
Any woman who was young in the 1950s probably had a chiffon scarf tied around her hair or her neck at one point. I chose Natalie Wood as my icon fort his because she had the perfect teenage look in that period.
The scarf I’m wearing today is a 1950s souvenir of Hawaii, and it could be worn the sock hop way, with a knot to the side of the neck.
Or I could go the headscarf route, which certainly shows off the design. (Darn, where is my convertible?)
I opted for a not-so-characterstic rosette made by twisting the scarf throughout its length. A pin holds the scarf together and a clip holds it in my hair.
In honor of the cool and iconoclastic style of Diane Keaton, and with Father’s Day in sight, this is a post about wearing ties.
I have worn ties ever since...a long time, and still wear them. Yes, I can do a Double Windsor.
You have to have a certain sense of irony wearing a tie as a woman, but heck, it’s almost to the point that you have to have a sense of irony wearing a tie as a man.
So why not wear it without a collar?
Head wrap-tying icon: Rosie the Riveter |
This month I’m wearing my vintage scarves every day. (It is a Vintage New Year’s Resolution.)
I love my two long organza scarves. The one in black is easily the most useful scarf I own. This one is silk in iridescent orange and green.
If nothing else a long scarf is dramatic, and if it is crisp like this, it can be made into very structural knots and bows.