Monthly Archives: September 2016

From Simple To Chaos

Fashion is ubiquitous in every form and in every way imaginable. People  need clothes or else we would be naked literally, as well as without our public identity as well. Fashion isn’t about an attitude or a look, it’s the way in which we can present ourselves at large. The day started off interesting when we had a fire drill, and I was a bit skeptical if we were going to do our workshop. However, once everyone started to work on their t-shirts, that feeling disappeared.

My t-shirt was a light green v neck that was too baggy and exposed to wear anymore. So I decided to make it unique, by adding dress pins to the v neck. I also added pleated newspapers and fabric belts to make it look punk. I enjoyed adding on things that one might consider “trash” and use it to liven up an old t-shirt.20160929_200923_fotor

In the center right of the t-shirt, I found an image that captured my thoughts on fashion as a whole. It’s an image of construction workers wearing their protective gear placed on the shirt I created as a form of expression. Fashion can either be for self-expression/individuality or to conform to society/workplace. Overall, the project gave me a new perspective on using everyday items/objects to create something new.

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As Freddie Mercury of Queen once said, it’s ok to have fun with your clothes. So next time, you see a dirty or an old t-shirt don’t throw it out! Instead go crazy or have fun with the t shirt, after all fashion should express who you’re as a person.

Jersey to Headbands

I have been a fan of soccer for my entire life. I have witnessed tremendous players such as Pirlo and Cristiano Ronaldo. I have enjoyed victories and mourned defeats. Through it all, I have remained faithful to my teams and players. In addition to the level and quality of soccer I have enjoyed from countless players, one thing always stands out: the players’ fashion inclinations on the field.

From low cuts to dreadlocks, every player has different ways of styling his hair. Some use gel, and some use nothing. One thing I always enjoyed seeing was players using headbands to keep their hair back. Different players may like thick headbands, while others may prefer thinner headbands.

My decision to turn an old jersey into multiple headbands was inspired by players like Memo Ochoa, David Beckham, and even Gareth bale. I created a variety of headbands: thick, medium, and thin. The thin headbands are more suitable for long and straight hair, while the thicker headbands are more suitable for short, puffy hair.

Stallybrass Handout Question 3

When my mother passed away a few years ago, I was not able to sift through her clothes and shoes.  I did not have a problem going through her jewelry, skincare products or fragrances yet I could not get myself to look inside her wardrobe.  In opening her closet and drawers, touching the fabrics she held so close to her body and smelling her familiar scent, the recollections and memories would have been too much to bear.  Recalling when she wore a top, jacket, skirt or pair of slacks to work, during a holiday or at a family gathering – I would not be able to bear the memories.  There was absolutely no way I would have been able to touch her clothes – it was too painful.  Had I sifted through her closet and touched her clothes, I would have felt I was violating her privacy; I did not have the right to touch her belongings.       

I remember clearly the day my sister, niece and I arrived at my mother’s apartment after the funeral service.  It was unbearable – I love my mother so much that I could not stand to look or touch her belongings; it was as if her presence was everywhere.   As I gazed around her empty home, I saw her image all over, how she occupied space – sitting at the dining room table, on the sofa reading the Times and cooking in the kitchen. 

My sister and niece sifted through my mother’s closet.  They selected, examined and filtered through her dresses, slacks, outerwear and shoes.  These items held my mom’s “gestures, both reassuring and terrifying, touching the living with the dead” (36) and of course her smell.  Yes, my mother’s clothes and possessions were there, but her body was gone.  As stated by Stallybrass, “When a person is absent or dies, cloth can absorb his or her absence presence” (38).  This is precisely the reason why I could not partake in removing and packing my mother’s belongings – the task was too overpowering for me.  Consequently, my sister and niece packed our mother’s clothes in boxes while I made idle chatter and pretended to organize random items.  My sister and niece kept most of my mother’s possessions which they keep in their attics.  Occasionally my sister will search through a box and select a blouse or blazer to wear.  She says it keeps her close to our mother.  As described by Stallybrass regarding Allon White’s jacket, he “was inhabited by his presence, taken over.  If I wore the jacket, Allon wore me.” My sister as well feels that wearing our mother’s clothes would give her the sense of our mother wearing her.   I, on the other hand will never be able to look through the boxes and wear an item, as nine years later, it still hurts.  

I was rather impressed with my sibling’s ability to handle the removal of my mother’s possession; how my sister and niece were strong, kept their feelings hidden, yet all I felt was “absence, darkness, death, things which are not” and would never be the same, a sense of nothingness, nothing would be the same again.  I could not touch the cloth, because every item symbolized a time, a day, an event spent with the person I most loved.      

Unlike Laurence Lerner’s father who got rid of his wife’s clothes when she passed, my sister will never donate mother’s clothes or take to a second-hand shop.  In doing so, would seem as if we are discarding my mother’s memory, as if putting an end to something that was; as if our mother never existed, erasing my mother’s life. 

Mother’s clothes are saturated with her shape, smell and gestures.  Her hands touched every piece of clothing she wore.  As a result, it is too painful for me to handle her clothes. My mother is “there in the wrinkles of the elbows, wrinkles which in the technical jargon of sewing are called “memory” …” (36).