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Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Good Morning, er, Sunshine?

I hate how grey clouds manage to invade the small patches of blue sky left on these rainy days.

To make up for it, I'll dream of spring.

Costume Magazine | June 2010

In the shot above the dress looks very much like AW10 D&G, which they usually stocked in gold. Hmmmm; I'm not sure who it's by though so I can't really fill you in properly. Now that's going to bug me.

On the other side of the world right now it's beautiful & sunny, so Good Morning Sunshine!

[Listening to Passion Pit - The Reeling]

Louis Tiffon

Monday, May 24, 2010

Just a little heads up...


The next 'Big Fashion Sale' is on from July 22nd - 25th at Surry Hills. There you'll find both well-known & upcoming Australian designer pieces for as little as $30 (if prices were the same as last time). Last time I went they sold lots of items including shoes, dresses, jewelry, scarves, hats and other garments. Of special note were their modern statement jewelry pieces that were being sold at a lot under RRP.

Location wise it's a very walkable distance from Central Station (Sydney). If you're willing, once you're at the sale you can even check out Crown St nearby, which has some absolutely divine clothes, cute stationary shops & plenty of places to eat/drink. If you're going to the opposite direction (near Cleveland St) why not check out Bourke St bakery or Paris Texas (a clothing boutique)?

Bourke St bakery is absolutely amazing. It's such a cute corner place. Oh how I love Surry Hills.

Louis Tiffon

Primping necessities.

So I have to admit that a certain someone prompted me recently to post, and I feel awfully-bad that I haven't done so for ages! Blogging without bounds (i.e. not for work) is so much more fun, I have to say.

I'm thinking eighth.st.laundry needs a makeover, ASAP. If you have any suggestions/colour schemes/etc. etc., please feel free to leave a comment or even shoot us an email at eightstreetlaundry@gmail.com

On a completely different note, a few notes for this Australian winter:
1. It's going to be cold. Why would I know? I really don't. I'm taking my boss's word for it, because he spent a super-cold winter in Italy.

2. Colder weather means you'll probably need a warm coat & some waterproof boots for those rainy days. You can get a pretty black pair of boots from Sportsgirl at the moment for around $130 and if you wear them in enough, they look vintage. They kind of look like the Dr Martens below(from net-a-porter.com for £100) except they have a more suede-like surface & I think they also come in brown.

3. Camel colours/suedes seemed to feature in AW10 colour palettes for overseas countries that have already had their winter. Try to go for shades which aren't so dull.

4. As much as we love the 80's, try not to go overboard with the makeup, unless it's a dressup party or the like. Makeup for this season should be kept quite minimal; try using a taupe eyeliner instead of black with beautiful shades of brown or colours with golden highlights. To balance out the eyes you can get away with darker shades of lipstick; deep crimsons & watermelons seems to be winners.

5. Don't be afraid to embrace prints. They don't even have to match, so long as they have a similar colour scheme/have some point of similarity. This also includes shoes, which are also crazy as ever.


Don't forget to leave any suggestions for colours/layouts, because when I do get the time to change it, it'd be lovely to have some direction to move along/requests to fulfil (within good reason).

Louis Tiffon

Sunday, May 23, 2010

music drought

I present the raw talent that is Bjork:




And the Foals' newfound, subtle sound:



Anyone else reminded of 'Into the Wild'?

And on a nostalgic note, am really feeling Louis Tiffon's absence here - bring back the haute couture posts, s'il te plait!




- no name -

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Two Tough Cookies

To continue with the oceanic theme of the previous post...

Tough cookie #1: Jessica Watson

I've been meaning to write a post on Jessica Watson since she left in October last year and have blissfully neglected to do so but now she's put the pressure on me by actually finishing. Bearing in mind posts such as these very quickly lose their currency after the milestone/event in question passes (hence the posts I wrote relating to Bill Henson will forever remain unseen...or until he next makes headlines), lo and behold, I write!

Jesse needs no introduction but I'll summarise her achievement anyways for those of you who don't give a hoot about the whole affair: 16 years old – well, 17 now, but 16 at the time, completed a circumnavigation around the globe (eh there are some technical questions over that, but in my humble layman opinion, she did it) solo and unassisted in 7 months.

Reading her blog that she kept whilst on the high seas was rather therapeutic, particularly the early posts in October which coincided with a rather annoying series of big quizzes.
Jess would describe the ocean glassing out, schools of jellyfish drifting by, dolphins swimming in the wake of her boat and post pictures of stunning sunrises and sunsets and I would read it and wish I were out there in her place, instead of learning Crucible quotes.



I’m obviously over-idealising her experience. I mean, there were also days that looked like this:



But at the time, I’d have rather faced knockdowns and 10 foot waves than another HSC paper.

Anyways, without getting into a debate about whether she should have gone in the first place, it’s great that she’s back safe and sound having proved, amongst other things “that all is not lost after all, that dreamers propelled by their inward vision still live, that romance still manages to survive” as Vito Dumas, an Arginetine solo circumnavigator rather nicely puts it.
I take my (proverbial) hat off to you Jess!

Well, then enough smushy sentimentalism from me.

Now onto tough cookie #2: Vito Dumas (the silly blogger won't let me upload a picture of him...)

If you thought Bear Grylls was extreme, then you haven’t heard of Vito Dumas (same Vito as above). I am undecided as to whether he was insane, but he certainly was brave and an extremely good sailor. What makes him such an extreme adventurer, apart from completing a circumnavigation around the world when WW2 was raging and churning out lovely quotes, was to complete a spontaneous roundabout voyage from Havana to Brazil where he was basically starving for most of it.

Below is my rendition of his torturous 3 months at sea (credit to Alain Grée and his book “Sailing: A basic Guide” where I first read about Vito Dumas and his crazeh antics)

Dumas left his home in Buenos Aires in his boat Legh II in 1946 for a “short trip up north”. Little did he know...

After a sail across the Caribbean he reached Havana. Then on the 2nd of June he headed for New York, where his problems began. The current was against him outside NY Harbour and without any motor power he had no chance of entering. “I did not think twice” he said, “but pushed the tiller over and headed to the Azores [3380km away]. He had 10 days worth of food left.

Just under a month later (obviously he’d strung out the food very well!) he approached the first of the Azores islands. But during the night, the winds and seas began to rise, making an approach extremely difficult.

So our brave (foolhardy?) Vito decided to skip the Azores and head directly for Madeira (another island) 957km away, with 20 gallons of stale water and some flour as his sole food provisions.

However on the 21st of July, he realised that he had borne away from his planned course and had reached a position just under the latitude of Madeira. Not wanting to add miles to his journey by tacking up to Madeira, he once again decided to change plans and head for the Canary Islands. One can only imagine how hungry he would have been by then!!! Indeed, he was nearing hallucinatory exhaustion.

Then on July 26, he sighted a lighthouse on one of the Canary Islands. But it was not to be, Mother Nature conspired against him again; once again the wind and currents thwarted his approach and he was unable to put in to port. The Islands soon disappeared over the horizon and poor Vito was left feeling pretty hopeless I’d imagine, having spent 56 days at sea and more than a month without more to eat than a paste concocted from flour and water!

See below for a little map in Spanish (but it’s still gives a good visual indicator as to the prolonged pain of his “short trip up north”).



Without any food and water left, he headed for the major shipping lanes, where he happily managed to attract the attention of a cargo ship which at last provided him with fresh supplies (or else the story might have ended there, or never have been heard at all, after all he was the only witness to it).

But as it were, the story was not quite over – Dumas had not suffered enough it seemed, because the cargo ship had only given him enough food to make it as far as the Cape Verde Islands 1126km south. Of course, with his fantastic luck, when he reached the islands on the 10th of August, the wind completely dropped off and the current pushed him away from the islands. For the next 7 days, Dumas was once again progressively reduced to a living skeleton “Every one of Legh II’s movements causes another spasm of pain in my poor body to add to those already suffered during my 106-day battle” he lamented in his diary. At long last, on the 17th of August, the Brazilian coast appeared and Vito Dumas entered into a harbour at last!

I am now sick of typing. Well then, there you go – I should have read about Vito Dumas’ plight and I’d have been very glad to be doing a few exams with 3 months holidays to follow, rather than 3 months without real food or any idea when you were going to arrive back on land!
Also, if you made it to the end of this post, I salute you!

c.l.

Sunday, May 16, 2010

eighthsteet is back.. with mola-mola!

Due to popular demand, the creators and associates of eighthstlaundry are resurrecting this currently moribund blog, so watch out for some flamin' posts soon. Yeahh, hype!

To tide our loyal readers over until then, here are some piccys of one of the most bizarre underwater creatures I've never seen: the humble ocean sunfish (aka mola-mola)!


(Angelina Jolie lips above)



Isn't the last one pretty??
c.l.