Friday, October 31, 2008

Sky gazing




To see this photo in a larger size, click here.

Last Friday I took my camera out with me at lunchtime intent on capturing the skies for Skywatch Friday. It was a cloudy, miserable day, but I thought I'd try to find something interesting anyway. I headed over to the Catherine Chevalier Forest Preserve to see what was happening. What I found there were deer. Lots and lots of deer. While is was eating in my car, I watched seven deer graze in the open field around me. When I was done with lunch, I drove deeper into the preserve. All around were deer. I must have seen a couple dozen by the time my lunch was over. I wonder if they're having an overpopulation problem in the forest preserve, or if it's just that time of year and the deer are brave?

I was too busy to post the photo last Friday, so I'm posting it instead this Friday.

In this photo, three deer pause in their grazing while an airplane approaches to land at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport.
 

Thursday, October 30, 2008

You shall not pass




To see this photo in a larger size, click here.

This bronze bull used to stare at people from the old gate to the Chicago Union Stock Yard. It dates to 1865. Now it stares at people from its perch on the wall in the Chicago History Museum.

When I got my new camera (Nikon D40X) late last year, I went with friends to the museum and took lots of photos. I didn't want to be obnoxious with my flash, so I spent the entire trip shooting with available light. I love some of the results, especially this photo.

I'm participating in the Thursday Challenge today with the theme 
"Shiny (Bright, Reflections, Polished, Glistening, Sparkle, Metal)".
Click here for more about the Thursday Challenge and to view other participants.

Pumpkin guts galore



I've handled more pumpkin guts in the past few days than I'd ever imagined. OK, it's not really *that* many pumpkin guts. Maybe it's only four pumpkins that I had my hands inside, scooping out the innards and scraping the flesh clean.

When you go to two pumpkin carving parties, your hands are bound to get dirty.

Sunday night, in what threatens to be an annual tradition, we had the neighbor girls over to carve pumpkins. We hit four different stores in our quests for the perfect pumpkins. I fell in love with this horribly scarred and pimpled one, while my husband searched high and low for the perfect big and small pumpkin duo.

Here's the end result, all lit up and lined up. Mine is in the middle. (For a good picture of mine alone, click here.)



And here's a close up of my husband's pumpkin, which is actually two pumpkins screwed together in a "must eat brains" fashion, and a close-up of Linnae's pumpkin, which is also two pumpkins screwed together in a "must suck brains" fashion.



Then Tuesday at work, the social committee threw a pumpkin carving party. At first I told myself I was just going to play photographer, but then I found myself getting into the act.

In the end we carved and decorated 18 pumpkins. Some were carved free-hand, some were carved using templates, and some were decorated using Mr. Potato Head-type plastic parts.





I used a Jack Skellington template to make my own Nightmare Before Christmas pumpkin. I'm pleased with how it turned out.

P.S. I promise this is the last of the pumpkin carving posts. Unless I get some good photos of the pumpkin decay cycle or something. OK, sorry, I just can't promise. Maybe there will be more pumpkin posts and maybe there won't. I don't know. I really like pumpkins. :P

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

O is for.. bOkeh visiOns




To see this photo in a larger size, click here.

This dreamcatcher hangs in Robinson Woods, a local forest preserve that contains the family burial grounds of a Pottawatomie chieftain named Alexander Robinson (he was part white, which explains his European name). I wrote more about my visit to Robinson Woods earlier this week on my journal blog.

Obviously, I picked this photo because of the "O" shape of the dreamcatcher, but what I really like about this photo is the pretty bokeh effect going on in the background. That's a new term to me, by the way, and it more or less means that the blurry areas are pleasing. I think. :)

I'm participating in ABC Wednesday today with the letter O.
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Wordless Wednesday: Brain surgery



Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Workouts at the castle on the hill

I don't think I've ever blogged about my workout schedule. I didn't have an interesting angle, until now.

I've been working out with Stan for a couple years. One evening of personal training a week, and then a weekend warriors class with him on Saturday and Sunday mornings. I (*ahem*) try to get in a fourth workout on my own, but find that if I don't have someone at the gym waiting for me, I often don't make it there.

We do a lot of activities that work the cardiovascular system and the core muscles, focusing on both strength and balance and endurance. I think they call that functional training. It's not my area of expertise, but I'm pretty sure that what it's called. (Hint: If you look at the client photos on Stan's site, you can find some unflattering photos of me working out. There's lots of sweating involved.)

Since I work at a desk job and can be a couch potato at home, I need something to motivate me to get moving. (As if both my parents having heart attacks in their 50s wasn't enough motivation.) For those three hours a week I'm with Stan, I'm motivated and focused and I get a really good workout.

Anyway, that's not the interesting angle I promised in the lead. What's interesting is that for the past month or so, Stan has been a trainer without a formal gym. The old personal training gym closed, and while Stan has been looking for a new location, we've been doing our weekend workouts outside -- Saturdays in a park and Sundays at a local high school track. It officially become too cold to workout outside this past weekend, but up until then our Sunday workouts were here:



What is "here"? It's Glenbard West High School in Glen Ellyn, Ill., known informally as the castle on the hill. Imagine me huffing and puffing and running around the track, dodging goose poop and being dazzled by the view. I took this photo one morning after our workout.

Why do I feel the need to blog about it now? Because ESPN just recently named it one of the best high school football stadiums. Here's what ESPN had to say:

7. Bill Duchon Stadium (Glen Ellyn, Ill.)
The field is surrounded by woods on three sides, and with the man-made Lake Ellyn Park behind the visitors' stands, the crowd atmosphere on Saturday afternoons (there are no lights) appears right out of the movies. In fact, scenes from the movie "Lucas" were filmed at the site. The high school, built in 1923, looks like a castle, complete with turrets, and sits atop a hill behind the home bleachers. After a Hilltopper victory, the home-team players storm up the hill to ring a victory bell to announce to the town they've won. The field is named after a longtime coach/athletic director who still resides in the affluent suburb west of Chicago.
I would have been oblivious to this tidbit of information, except I saw today that another blogger used my photo from Flickr and had posted about it.

Oh, and about that movie mentioned -- Lucas? My husband was an extra in one of the crowd scenes. I'm pretty sure you can't actually see my husband in any of the crowd shots in the movie, but he was there and can tell you in minute detail how mind-numbingly boring filming a movie can be.

P.S. I'll give 100 Entrecard credits to anyone (up to 2 people) who locate a photo of me on Stan's site and link to it in the comments. Why? I have no idea.

Update: Fragileheart found two of the four pictures. There are still two more on the site. Hint: In one I'm photographed with Karen and in the other with Yvonne.

Red-hot glare




To see this photo in a larger size, click here.

My jack-o-lantern glows red shortly after I finished carving him this weekend.

When I was picking out my pumpkin at the store, I fell in love with this wonderfully scarred and pimply pumpkin, and felt I had to give it an appropriately evil face. Did I succeed?

You can see the texture of his scars coming through his skin, and I love that about him.
 

Monday, October 27, 2008

Ghosts of Chicago's past



One aspect of local history that seemed odd to me growing up was a lack of a Native American presence in the Chicago historical narrative. Where were the Indians?

They exist, but you have to go back to before 1833 when the city was founded and the Indians were relocated to states further West. One prominent Indian of the time was Alexander Robinson, a Pottawatomie chieftain (who was part white, which explains his European name).

When the Pottawatomie were relocated, Robinson was given some land where he and his descendants resided well into the 20th century. That land has since been acquired by the Forest Preserve District of Cook County and is named the Catherine Chevalier Forest Preserve and Robinson Woods. It's on the eastern side of the Des Plaines River, not too far from O'Hare International Airport.

While I'd heard of Alexander Robinson, I didn't know about Robinson Woods until I went on a ghost bus tour about 10 years ago. One of the stops was this family burial ground in the woods, which some people have claimed as haunted. They report finding ghost images on their film after taking photos here.

I didn't find any ghost images after taking photos during my visit to the family burial ground last week, but I was reminded of a piece of ghost lore that I learned on that tour.

Before being converted to farmland, Illinois had vast stretches of prairies that were subject to natural and man-made fires. But along the rivers, especially the eastern banks, you'd get large groves of Oak trees, mostly burr Oaks. They would survive the fires because they were protected by their thick bark and the rivers to their west, since most of these fires would be coming from a westerly direction.

On the tour we learned that it's on these eastern banks of the rivers that you'll find the most hauntings, as this is where people found it the safest to live and build homes.

As I stood in the burial ground and took photos, I tried to be sensitive to those who had come before me. I may not necessarily believe in ghosts, but I do like to think that part of a person's essence or spirit may linger. In reality, all I saw were lots of cars zipping by on the nearby street, plus a few squirrel and deer.

I'm participating in Manic Monday today with the theme of Ghost.
Click here for more about Manic Monday and to view other participants.





Thursday, October 23, 2008

Intimate gestures




To see this photo in a larger size, click here.

When I saw that the Thursday Challenge theme today was hands, I was fairly positive that I had nothing in my archives that would work. I just don't take a lot of photos of hands. Paws yes, but hands, no. Then I remembered this photo that I took over the summer. We were at a summer festival and my friends were casually holding hands while we waited for the band to start.


I'm participating in the Thursday Challenge today with the theme "Hands".
Click here for more about the Thursday Challenge and to view other participants.

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

N is for Nose!




To see this photo in a larger size, click here.

When you have dogs, it's easy to collect a lot of photos where the center of focus is the nose. What's not easy is deciding which one to use. Here's Thor. I took this back in February on a really sloppy, snowy day.

There's not quite as much nose here as you see in those famous Artlist The Dog photos, but it works for me. And it makes me think of something my friend Marriott always tells me when we're ending a phone conversation: "Kiss the doggies on the nose."

I'm participating in ABC Wednesday today with the letter N.
Click here for more about ABC Wednesday and to view other participants.

Wordless Wednesday: Camera Shy



My good friend's daughter, Sam (left), hides behind her hair while her friends turn away from the camera. In another photo I did actually get them to smile for me, but yet I find this photo very compelling for some reason.

Monday, October 20, 2008

Kicking the habit -- tardiness

It's Kick the Habit Monday over at A Frugal Housewife. The idea is that everyone write about a habit they are trying to kick so they can get support.

My habit I'm trying to kick? Tardiness. Specifically, tardiness in the mornings. I have the devil's own time trying to get to the office on time. Fortunately, we have a flexible work schedule at work, so I can stay late to compensate, which is when my brain functions better anyway. But, it's not professional. I need to do better. (Mind you, it's not like I'm late for meetings or appointments. I'm just late getting to my little cubicle of solitude.)

How am I kicking it? Through accountability. I have to call ahead every time I'm going to be late. This doesn't seem like that big a deal, but it gets really annoying really quickly when I have to call a few times a week to say I'm going to be 15 minutes late. What's even more annoying is that call on days when I'm only 5 minutes late.

I think the root of my problem is that I always strive to be exactly on time, so there's no margin for error. For some reason, the idea of being early has no appeal for me. That's 5 minutes I could have used doing something else.

Anyway. I'm making progress, but old habits die hard. Really hard.

Thursday, October 16, 2008

13 random things

1. I'm crampy and a little crabby today, but since I haven't said much in the past week, I'll try to update you on some things I've been thinking and doing.

2. Last weekend was productive, even if our big project was a bit like putting lipstick on a pig. We took our vintage 1970s green bathroom and dressed it up a little bit with paint, and a new light fixture, new towel bars and a new medicine cabinet. It looks much nicer, but the green and white swirls in the sink are still a bit nauseating if you stare at them too long.

3. We also tore out most of the evil bushes on the side of our house. They were growing out of control, plus they have this obnoxious dust that itches and gets in my eyes when I'm doing yard work. Very happy they're gone.

4. We had a new sign installed in our reception area at work yesterday. When I came in today, it had already been torn down. Opps. Someone didn't spell check it. I guess "Blood Mangement" didn't fly too well with the powers that be. Sounds like something that might be contagious.

5. A black Sharpie marker can work wonders. I was *forced* to buy something at a mall store that insists on putting their logo on their clothes in rhinestones. That black Sharpie did an amazing job of toning down the sparkle. I wonder if it will last through the wash?

6. I hate stores with annoyingly restrictive return policies. Fourteen days? Same day exchange only? I can't even get an in-store credit? I can't take that credit to your sister store in the same mall? You've lost me as a return customer. Forever. Don't believe me? Just ask Macy's.

7. I still haven't forgiven Macy's for renaming the State Street Marshall Field's store in Chicago.

8. Did I mention that I am crampy and crabby today? Fibroids. I haz em. Stupid fibroids.(Sorry if that's TMI.)

9. I was supposed to get a mammogram this week. It would have been a perfect writeup for Breast Cancer Awareness month (remember the whole Pink for October thing?), but I had to cancel the appointment. The ritual boob smashing will have to be done another day. I don't know when yet, though.

10. I hate being crabby. I need to snap myself out of it. I think I'll go read some I Can Has Cheezburger and I Has a Hotdog. Or some Daisy the Curly Cat. That always helps.

11. Oh yeah, like I could forget. I have to train most of the office in a new software application next week. Me. Train the office. I've mentioned it several times before, but you may not have noticed: Public speaking makes me really nervous.

12. Yep. Daisy is helping my mood. The fifth photo down really cracks me up, with all the food covering her face. :)

13. Yay! It's lunch time. Thanksgiving Everyday soup. My favorite. The day is definitely looking up.

Grape Vine in Autumn




To see this photo in a larger size, click here.

When I was walking around the park last week, trying to find a photo for Skywatch Friday, I found a trellis of grape vine growing in the park. The sunlight was coming through the vines, and the leaves on the vine were in various stages of changing their color from green to red.


I'm participating in the Thursday Challenge today with the theme "Autumn".
Click here for more about the Thursday Challenge and to view other participants.

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

M is for Moon




To see this photo in a larger size, click here.

Where has the week gone? Wow. With the really cool Hunter's Moon we've been having this week, I'd hoped to get a new photo. That hasn't happened yet. Instead, I'm pulling out this older photo of the moon that I took back in July. I took this at twilight while we were at an outdoor concert. I think this is the first photo of the moon I've ever taken where you can actually see some surface detail (if you look at the original size). The detail is ever so slight, but it's there. :)

I'm participating in ABC Wednesday today with the letter M.
Click here for more about ABC Wednesday and to view other participants.

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Lazy girl :)




To see this photo in a larger size, click here.

When I saw that the Photo Hunt theme for today was "Lazy", I knew I had to choose a photo of my dog Loki. Of my two dogs, Loki is the lazy one, content to lay around, often trying to entice me to come to her instead of her getting up to come to me. She has a definite bed time or she turns into a pumpkin (as my grandmother used to say), and has to work hard to keep her weight down (*ahem*).

My other dog, Thor, is always ready to go somewhere, day or night, and is always on the alert.

I took this photo of Loki last weekend. I like the fact that she's in virtually the same pose as another photo I featured of her, taken 6 years ago when she was only 8 weeks old.

I'm participating in the Photo Hunt today with the theme Lazy.
Click here for more about the Photo Hunt and to view other participants.

Friday, October 10, 2008

A clear day




To see this photo in a larger size, click here.

Over lunch today I took my camera to a park near my office to take some photos. I'd driven by the park several times, but had never stopped and explored. It looked petty from the street, but I was pleasantly surprised to find a little pond and cottage tucked away in the the back. The park is in Rosemont, at the intersection of two major Chicago area expressways, near a major convention center and in the shadow of O'Hare International Airport. A little oasis. You can see the Rosemont water tower in the background.

My goal was to get a photo for Skywatch Friday, which I did, but there wasn't a lot happening in the sky. Just gorgeous blue color. And as close as I was to O'Hare, you'd think I would have captured an airplane overhead, but I didn't see one the whole time.

Thursday, October 09, 2008

Bungee Jumping




To see this photo in a larger size, click here.

This is one of my favorite photos from the summer. We went to a festival with our neighbors and I snapped like crazy while the girls jumped on a giant trampoline while attached to bungee chords. They could jump incredibly high while in this contraption. It was a lot of fun. The real challenge for me was to keep them focused and in frame while they were jumping.

I'm participating in the Thursday Challenge today with the theme "Favorite".
Click here for more about the Thursday Challenge and to view other participants.

13 things on my bulletin board



1. Brigid's Cross -- It's a symbol of Brigid of Ireland. She figures in my fiction writing.

2. Inspirational Quotes -- Lots of inspirational quotes picked up from all sorts of places. I listed many of them here in this post a long time ago: Inspirational Thinking. This is one of my favorites: "Make no little plans... They have no magic to stir men's blood." -- Daniel H. Burnham, that great Chicago city planner. It's in the photo, but hard to spot.

3. A Book Thong bookmark  -- A gift from my mother. It's too pretty to use.

4. A pen shaped like a sword -- The pen may be mightier than the sword, but in this case the pen is the sword. I picked it up at the romance writers conference over the summer.

5. The End Bear -- a gift from Jules when I finished the first draft of my novel Prairie Fire.

6. A carnival rose -- My husband won it over the summer. (Psst: You can find a photo here, but don't tell Dave I linked you to it.)

7. Han Solo -- lots of Han Solo stuff -- A Valentine. Two postcards. A Christmas ornament. Am I a big fan of Han Solo? Maybe. And maybe it has something to do with my hero in Prairie Fire. (I only wish I could find the life-size cardboard cutout that JC gave me 10 years ago. I haven't seen it since we moved from San Francisco 6 years ago. I *think* it's in a box somewhere still.)

8. A tiara pin -- I bought it a few years ago when I was entering a lot of writing contests and to symbolize my contest diva wannabe status.

9. Loki's Canine Good Citizen Patch -- She passed a test a few years ago and earned her certification as a good doggie citizen. Even though she passed the test, I never did send in the paperwork. My bad.

10. Haley's Parking Only sign -- A gift from my husband. There was once a time when my name was so unusual that I couldn't find anything preprinted with my name on it. Those days are loooooong past.

11. World War II recruitment posters -- "Gee!! I wish I were a man. I'd join the Navy." That just cracks me up. I picked up these postcards on Fishermans Warf probably 10 years ago.

12. A Grace d'Otare business card -- I helped Grace design this business card.

13. Old conference badges -- Because I keep forgetting who I am and need to be reminded?

I think it might be time to redo my bulletin board. Some of the things have gotten quite old. Time to refresh.

Wednesday, October 08, 2008

Ladies Only?




To see this photo in a larger size, click here.

When I was in Melbourne, Australia last year, I saw this mosaic on the sidewalk outside St. Paul's Cathedral. I have no idea what it could have been intended for. Perhaps a Ladies Only bus stop, entrance or waiting area at one time in the cathedral's history? If anyone has a theory or, even better, knows it's original purpose, I'd love to hear it.

And if I'd known how much this was going to intrigue me, I would have taken the time to get a sharper photo. This was a quick walk-by.

I'm participating in ABC Wednesday today with the letter L.
Click here for more about ABC Wednesday and to view other participants.

Wordless Wednesday: Watching You



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Tuesday, October 07, 2008

You bore me with your camera




To see this photo in a larger size, click here.

This photo is part of my ongoing attempt to desensitize my dogs to my camera. It's working very well. I had the camera only a foot from Loki's face here, and she proceeded to ignore me and fall asleep.

A bonus aspect of this photo is that you can clearly see what company my husband worked for back in the '90s.

Monday, October 06, 2008

Going Pink

This site is pink, but just for October. This is in recognition of Breast Cancer Awareness Month. After seeing some other bloggers go this route, I decided to sign up with Pink For October, too.

The idea is to educate and raise awareness about breast cancer, and if some money gets raised for breast cancer research, that's a bonus.

I was trying to think of what I know about breast cancer, and at first I thought it was virtually nothing. Then I remembered five women with close and not-so-close connections to me who were diagnosed with breast cancer. "Grandma" Fukuda and Jules' good friend Marian ultimately died because of the disease. For "Grandma" Peters, it was one of several diseases she had in the end that contributed to her death. The other two women -- Jerilyn and Chris -- are survivors, I'm happy to say.

Both Jerilyn and Chris I know through my romance writers group. In fact, Chris was a contributor to the book "Uplift : Secrets from the Sisterhood of Breast Cancer Survivors" by Barbara Delinsky. It's an incredible book from what I've read, filled with all sorts of cancer survivor stories. It comes highly recommended.

Coincidentially, I have an appointment to get a mammogram next week. The appointment has nothing to do with this being Breast Cancer Awareness Month and everything to do with my annual physical two weeks ago. Purely routine. Apparently, since I'm pushing 40, my doctor decided to reward me with a session to get my boobs smashed in a big machine. Don't worry about the smashing, though, I've done it once before and it wasn't so bad. (Which reminds me: I need to track down those old films and bring them with me to the appointment.) Maybe I'll write more about the ritual boob smashing next week. Stay tuned.

Faux Falling Leaves




To see this photo in a larger size, click here.

The Bellagio Hotel in Las Vegas has a really cool conservatory that is redecorated every season. When we visited in November 2005, it was decorated for autumn with these giant faux falling leaves suspended overhead. On the day we left, the staff was ripping out the autumn theme and starting to install a winter theme. It looked like a giant effort that would be achieved in a very short window of time. I wish I'd gotten to see the entire process.
I'm participating in Manic Monday today with the theme of Leaf.
Click here for more about Manic Monday and to view other participants.

Sunday, October 05, 2008

Secret identities

I saw this on JennyJinx. Since she tagged me (She did! In a non-specific manner...) I thought I'd give it a whirl.

Since some of these are dangerously close to providing the answers to account security questions, I fudged a little on some of the names. I wouldn't want to make my identity too easy to steal.

1. YOUR PORN STAR NAME: (First pet and current street name): Red Manchester

2. YOUR MOVIE STAR NAME: (grandfather/grandmother on your Mom's side, your favorite candy): Alice Heath

3. YOUR “FLY GIRL/GUY” NAME: (first initial of first name, first two or three letters of your middle name): H-Ell


4. YOUR DETECTIVE NAME: (favorite color, favorite animal): Green Dog

5. YOUR SOAP OPERA NAME: (middle name, city where you were born): Ellen Burlingame

6. YOUR STAR WARS NAME: (the first 3 letters of your last name, first 2 letters of your first name, first 2 letters of mom's maiden name and first 3 letters of the town you grew up in): Hughastros

7. TERRORIST NAME: (first name spelled backwards, your mom's maiden name spelled backwards): Yelah Htims

8. SUPERHERO NAME: (”The,” another favorite color, favorite alcoholic drink) The Red Riesling

Feel free to tag yourself if this meme appeals to you.

Saturday, October 04, 2008

In the makeup chair




To see this photo in a larger size, click here.

Here's another photo from my nephew's 1st birthday party last weekend. This little girl is getting her face painted to look like Hello Kitty. She looks so serious and sad in the photo, I keep coming back to look at it.

Edit: I noticed that today's theme for Photo Hunters just happens to be Sad. Hmmm... This photo seems to fit. I guess I'll go play with the Photo Hunters today. Now that I see that she's posted the themes for the month in advance, maybe I can play more often.

Friday, October 03, 2008

A trip on the wayback machine

When people warn you that anything you post to the Internet is now out there forever, take that warning seriously.

Thanks to Rudy Amid, I visited Google's wayback machine, which is an index of pages from 2001. There, I found an old resume I'd posted online, along with several clips of stories I'd written for the newspaper, back when I worked for a chain of community newspapers.

For your reading pleasure (?), I've copied one story below. It's certainly not Pulitzer caliber, but I thought it was fun to revisit. This story also makes me smile because when it ran in the newspaper, it actually generated a letter of complaint from an older woman who thought it was too salacious for a family newspaper.

Past, Present, Future?

Retrospective show takes a look at the foundations of fashion

By Haley Hughes (Press Publications; Nov. 15, 1996)


The Waist Eliminator, Body Re-Former, Tummy Terminator. The names sound modern, but the idea isn't.

These are current foundation garments to shape the body – an idea that harkens back to the corset and the girdle. But the difference is that these new garments won't make your body do anything unnatural – at least that's what fashion historian and designer Joyce Baran says about today's shaping garments manufactured under the Smoothie brand of Strouse Adler Co.

"It's not like the girdle was earlier. We're not making the body do anything it doesn't want to do," Baran said.

"There's been incredible change [in the industry]," said Baran, who has been in the business for 30 years. When she started her first job, women wore rubber girdles, and in the summer they would put powder on the inside so they could get into them.

On a recent afternoon, Baran presented a fashion show at Nordstrom in Oakbrook Center featuring antique lingerie, current shapewear fashions and conceptual future shapewear.

The antiques turned up while the Strouse Adler Co. was restructuring its headquarters. Behind a wall was found a box of sample foundations and corsets dating back to the company's first garment - the C/B corset, manufactured in 1861. Since the discovery, a fashion show and retrospective was put together and has been touring major department stores around the country.

The corset


In 1861, the "hourglass" figure was the ideal. A tiny waist was desired, and often achieved with the help of the corset.

Worn over a chemise, the corset laced up the back and bones from whales were used for reinforcement. The C/B brand name for the corset reflects this technology – the "C" being the Roman numeral for 100 and the "B" standing for bones – it featured 100 whalebones.

A woman would put this corset on, Baran explained, and every day tighten it more.

"They had an obsession with achieving an 18-inch waist," she said.

Women who wore these garments found some benefits: The corset provided back support and demanded good posture, making the woman stand straight and letting everything fall into its right place, Baran said.

But, corsets were also misused, some women striving for a too-thin waist for their body – sometimes 13 inches – resulting in fainting spells, bruised and broken ribs, and other problems.

"This is what women wore. This is what was going on at the time," Baran said. "If Paris said you had to have an hourglass shape, you did that."

With improvements in technology, the whalebone was replaced by the watchspring.

And, as the desired shape of women changed, so too did corsets. By the end of the 19th century and the beginning of this century, corsets were still in demand, but he desired silhouette was no longer the "hourglass," it was the "kangaroo" shape – full bust, straight front and distended hips.

The '20s and '30s

World War I was over, and women were working for the right to vote – it was time for a change. Gone were the "hourglass" and the "kangaroo." It was now the vogue to have a boyish figure with a flattened chest.

While this meant new freedom for a lot of women, for others it didn't, Baran said. Women with curves sought to flatten their chests and hips, plus, unless you were 18 years old, you wouldn't want to Charleston in just your tap pants.

This desired silhouette was achieved with the help of rubber yarn called Lastex, which had two-way stretch properties. These flattened the chest and hips, and featured a belly band around the waist.

Then the '30s hit, and while the nation may have been dealing with the Great Depression, the fashion world now had the Smoothie brand, foundations that smoothed the figure. Glamour and status were the key words.

The '40s and '50s

Then, the men went away to fight World War II.

"Women, out of practicality, had to take over where men took off," Baran said.

But, when the men returned from the war, they brought home the idea of the ideal women being very statuesque, probably influenced by pinup girls during the war, Baran said.

"Men returned from the war and they wanted the women to look like the bombs they had left behind," Baran said. The bras looked like the nose cone of an airplane, and could be worse to get into than the whalebone corset, Baran said.

Bras and innerwear had never been so distorted since the turn of the century, she said, and such role models as Donna Reed, June Cleaver, Marilyn Monroe and Jayne Mansfield all perpetuated it.

The '60s, '70s and '80s

By the end of the '50s, Lycra had been introduced, requiring half the fabric as Lastex to provide the same support.

But, by the end of the '60s, foundations saw a huge revolution. Many women wanted more freedom than ever, burning their bras and going au naturel.

Baran said that throughout the '70s and '80s there was confusion about how women should look. Women tried to camouflage themselves and fit in, with the typical business attire being a gray suit with frilly bows at the collar.

The '90s 'attitude'

But things have changed. The words to describe the shapewear business today are "comfort" and "attitude," Baran said.

"If it's not comfortable, you're not going to wear it," she said.

That comfort is achieved by having panels that help the body's muscles achieve a toned look. For instance, Baran said, a garment may have panels corresponding with the back and abdominal muscles to help achieve a tiny waist.

"We're using these panels to imitate your muscles," she said.

And, the women who wears these garments isn't necessarily overweight or flabby. Instead, she is a woman who wants to look sleeker, more toned, and have her clothes fit better, without a lot of lines showing, Baran said.

"Our customer today is defined by attitude, not age," she said. "It's only been in the past 10 years where attitude has come into play."

That attitude brings with it some new vocabulary, such as the shlipp. "A shlipp is a shaper that lets you slide into your clothes," Baran said.

A lot of women discover smoothing a short time after having a baby, Baran said. The women have lost the weight, but her body needs toning.

Here's where the shaper comes in. "This does what your diet doesn't. It takes over where the gym left off," Baran said.

The shaping garments of today borrow from the past, some of them imitating the look and appearance of the classic garments, but they are definitely modern.

"It took 130 years to get here, and it's not going to go back," she said.

The future?


But if the past was whalebone and the present is Lycra, what could shape the future of shapewear?

The fashion show at Nordstrom featured two garments and represent Baran's visions for the next century.

"I believe technology is racing light years ahead of us," Baran said, but she went on to warn: "This is a total prototype."

The first garment would let the wearer dial in her ideal size, and the garment would do the rest. Since the technology wasn't quit there yet, the prototype just illustrate the concept – measuring tapes around the bust, waist and hips.

The second concept borrows from the space program and law enforcement. It would employ a fiber named Kevlar, with is used in bulletproof vests, plus the panel used to cool the space shuttle as it enter the Earth's atmosphere.

The purpose? A "climate-controlled" shaper that comes equipped with a gauge to regulate the garment's temperature to the wearer's liking.

Slip-sliding




To see this photo in a larger size, click here.

This is my current favorite photo from my nephew's 1st birthday party this past weekend. Here's my niece Kelly coming down one of the slides at the park. She's just about to turn 5 years old and is so much fun to photograph -- all natural spontaneity and no self-consciousness yet.

I'll probably feature a few more photos from the party in the coming days. If you want a sneak peek at the photos, check out my set on Flickr -- or just wait and see what shows up here. :)

Wednesday, October 01, 2008

Cold cash





To see this photo in a larger size, click here.

When we had our annual garage sale this past summer, my sister, brother-in-law and nephew carefully sorted our proceeds and laid them out in stacks on the glass-topped table. The sun was streaming into the room, beautifully illuminating the money. While they counted, I took photos.

I posted several of the photos to Flickr, showing the bills lined up, and the coins. A site called Now Public, which is "Crowd Powered Media," found five of these photos on Flickr and has used them with permission to illustrate various stories. The photo pictured here was used on this story. And here's a link to my profile where you can see all the photos I've contributed.

 

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