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Years ago, looking back at my old photos, I could not help but be impressed how people dressed. We left the boat in Fremantle in 1956; all dressed in Sunday’s best. It was a Sunday, so that might have been one reason! However, at that time, women dressed in flowing frocks, wore seamed nylons suspended from jarretels; men wore button down jackets, nicely creased pants and lovely shirts and ties. Both sexes wore hats as well. The public pulling up of a stocking that had slipped out of that little button higher up a female thigh’s girdle was then as erotic a sight as anything available staring for hours at shavedporn.com of today.
Presently, this has all changed into an astonishing fashion indicating a kind of hobo homelessness made cool- chique. The more worn out the cool people dress, the better and the more expensive it will be. At no stage during the history of fashion have holes in material cost that much. It has to be suitably threadbare. Isn’t there a fashion label by that name? On the train today there were many men and boys in singlets and thongs, coke in one hand, mobile or apps in other. Girls and women dressed in terribly worn out looking shorts or raggedly dresses, also some in singlets with bodily parts swinging hither and dither, as well as thongs and mobiles. I am informed that those shorts don’t come cheap and that the impoverished look is deliberate. There I was, thinking to get out needle and thread and offer to do some repairs. Mothers used to work their knuckles to the bare bone preventing kids to look like Charles Dickens’ urchins. Now it is high fashion to look poor, bare boned and homeless. They all utter and talk a kind of threadbare English as well, with, ‘and like, oh my god,’ or even better, a resolute ‘stuff like that’… it all falls into place, even makes some sense.
At the back of the railway line where we live is a huge Salvation Army shop. It is situated in a semi industrial zone next to a large rural produce store. It is so big one can hardly see the end of it. It has three huge industrial fans blowing circulating the air which has a barely concealed whiff of stale perfume. The very high corrugated ceiling and steel framed structure gives it all a rather theatrical feel, making browsing very pleasurable. On offer are all those fascinating items from glorious pasts donated for a good cause and hoping for a revival in a good home.
Here one can find the discarded and sometimes fashionable items from yesteryear. The second hand dresses are especially intriguing. Who wore this silk dark dress, size 46 with a single strand of long blonde hair still clinging forlornly at the back of it? Was she tall with that flaxen blond hair and did the tri-coloured sash next to it drape over it or did she tie it around the waste? Did she talk a lot and was she happily married? Where did she live and did she treat others with consideration? I would have thought that wearing this beautiful dark dress and sash could not have been worn by a fish curer from Woolloomooloo. You never get that sort of feeling of historical haute couture looking at the endless cloth racks of David Jones or Myers.
At The Salvos, ‘at the back of the railway line’, were many other items that would have cost a fortune in the sixties or even seventies. There were top fashion label lingerie frilly items including brassieres that would have cost a fortune new. I couldn’t help myself and felt inside the cups of a ruffled cashmere bralette made in Italy. The ticket said ‘new over $ 260.-. It was a steal for $5.-. What lovely breasts had nestled there, I reflected pensively? No one would ever do this with new items. There is just no point to it, is there? New clothes are sterile; no living has occurred in them yet, let alone warm breasts.
In my shared wardrobe and for many decades now hangs a pure woolen jacket I have worn many times in the past, especially weddings but lately more funerals… It is as good now as it was fifteen years ago. It is a dark blue-black colour and was given to me by my son who found the arms a bit short. It fits me still perfectly and even though I have not found much use for it lately, I’ll keep it forever. The jacket was first given to my son and rumored to have been originally bought by a well known lawyer. Inside the jacket at the back of it is the label: Designed by Pierre Cardin ‘Paris’. Another label pronounces in smaller letters, exclusively tailored in Australia, Berkeley apparel.
It will most likely end up at the Salvos as well…eventually. A steal for just $3.-
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Tags: Fashion, Girdle, Jarretel, Pierre Cardin, Salvation Army, shaved porn
Each year at work we trot over to Watsons Bay at Christmas for a quiet little drink. The dress is Hawaiian. I buy mine from vinnies, 2010 they had a half price sale $6 down to $3. Last years cost me $5, and I don’t think it had ever been worn. The year befores mayby once. Much of the stuff was new or near new but maybe a couple of years old. Compare that to say Lowes were you can buy a suit for $99 and it looks like it. no wonder they need shouting footballers to move the stuff.
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I really enjoyed reading this. It is so lively.
The Pierre Cardin jacket Gez, maybe the blazer, navy blue and a bit nautical?
$3 ought to attract some bidders. 🙂
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You are right. It is a blazer. Never thought of it as such. It doesn’t have brass buttons though.
I have worn it once on the Manly ferry when I was invited to a party based on “Priests and Prostitutes”. I went as a priest and the dark jacket gave me a kind of celestial aura. One woman got a bit tipsy and confessed to a marital indiscretion. I suppose the dark jacket played a role in this. That is the jacket’s only claim to ‘nautical’, being on the Manly ferry
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Obviously I’m the different one here, I buy my clothes from a shop 🙂
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I do have to confess to being on hard times at one stage and wearing a dark grey sports coat which had been owned by a well known (I’m assured) barrister, and would be wearing it today, if I hadn’t transitioned from ‘Emaciated, wrung out M’ to, just plain, ‘Big M’.
I don’t understand the mentality of spending good money on torn up rubbish, but, then I don’t understand young people in general.
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You wouldn’t believe the BMWs and Mercedeses parked at ‘the Salvos, at the back of the railway’. They wouldn’t want to be seen scavenging around on the main street of Bowral but it is safe away from the main view.
It’s funny how barristers feature in the art of ‘ dressing fashionably’. They earn fortunes. Even a coughing spell in Court could cost you another $ 200.- or so.
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I have a female barrister friend who buys practically all her clothes and shoes and handbags from secondhand shops. She can sew and fix things herself. She finds top brand name stuff and she always looks very well dressed. It is a habit she got into when studying and living on the smell on an oil rag (as they say). She lives in Melbourne.
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Vivienne:
Some snobbery rearing its head every now and then. Bowral has The Salvos,the Vinnie’s, the Smith family and Father Riley. Father Riley has gone down in my estimation seeing he gets money from the pro gambling industry. I couldn’t believe it.
The Salvos tried to rent a shop in the middle of the shopping centre. The neighbouring shops then got a petition going trying to prevent this second-hand charity shop from opening. The excuse:” it would lower the standards.”
It would lower the standards of Target, Dick Smith or 2 dollar shops? No, It had all to do that the Salvos often sell very good clothing and would directly compete with some neighbouring fashion shops. That’s what it was all about.
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Don’t worry Gerard, the Salvos tried to build a half way house for rehabilitated drug addicts on a huge parcel of land, about two kms from here. There was an outcry. Everything from traffic congestion to falling house prices to ‘bloody drug dealers’ hanging around.
The land was sold to Muslims, who want to build a new Mosque with parking and community hall, for all to use (including Catholics Buddhists, etc), but they’re having the same run around.
My problem is that the same complainers don’t see that leaving the house unpainted or having two cars on besser blocks in the front yard doesn’t decrease house prices, just as having their offspring yelling and swearing up and down the street isn’t a problem.
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