Showing posts with label teal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label teal. Show all posts

Saturday, March 23, 2024

Teal Vixen

 I should really publish this post before it gets too far away from when I actually took these photos!

It was back at the start of February that I wore this outfit. It was Saturday and we were playing a concert with our more local orchestra.

We arrived to the venue with an hour before the rehearsal started and dropped off our bags.  The leader and chair of the orchestra was setting up!

"Hello Charles!" I smiled as we walked past.  He grinned at me.  

"You are looking utterly lovely! You always look lovely but especially so today!".

I grinned beatifically  as CBC and I carried on! He always admires what I wear which is sweet as I think he likes vintage style!

When I put on this outfit- elements of it made me think of one of the most stylish ladies, Vix, in Blogger world, as I put it together.  She'd combine better colours and accessories but I know the individual garments made me think of her.

I actually realise that I changed my hat and I was wearing a blue cloche hat when I went out as I decided the Sheepskin hat was too warm.  Worn with my blue cape which CBC bought me one birthday.

Wearing my black wool gilet (£5.99 charity shopped Per Una)

The skirt was a Per Una birthday present from my Stepmum and Dad about 15 years ago.
The top came from Zara (charity shopped of course!) 
My necklace was the best Secret Santa present from someone at school back in 2010!

It's a bit too matchy-matchy perhaps but I was so happy to wear a maxi skirt- I can't do it on a bike as it always gets managled in the gear cogs!!!

Tuesday, February 14, 2023

TARDIS Tuesday- Amy Pond from Vincent and the Doctor

Greetings!

As I type this post, our neighbour's dog is howling like Hound of the Baskervilles and repeatedly barking loudly and continuously.  It REALLY doesn't like to be left alone and at night, it cries, howls and barks.  We only remember it does it, when it does it! I wonder if the neighbours who do not adjoin them, hear it quite as loudly and distressingly (it sounds SO bereft and melancholic!) as we do?

I thought for TARDIS Tuesday, I'd return to an outfit I have worn a version of twice before.  Last shared in April 2020, (and originally March the 9th 2015), I am wearing an outfit worn by 11th Doctor, Scottish companion, Amy Pond.

It is considered her most iconic (and probably most-cosplayed) outfit and worn in the most beautiful episode, Vincent and the Doctor.


Amy Pond Vincent episode cosplay reference | Amy pond, Amy pond outfit
Photo borrowed from this Pinterest:
https://www.pinterest.com/pin/45599014960729471/



She wears a tiny black mini-skirt, a red v-neck sweater, brown knee-high boots, a H&M red crocheted scarf, a teal coat from Jasper Conran (at Debenhams)

And here's moi!
Now, the reason I decided to wear this outfit is one that the eagle-eyed of you may have noticed...
It's pretty much the same outfit I wore 2 weeks ago as Amy Pond but with a different coat and the addition of a scarf!

Pretty much everything I am wearing belonged to someone else I knew first.
The coat is CBC's.  He bought it to dress as Newt Scamander for Harry Potter night at his school.
It's a lovely coat which he doesn't wear very often. It is, thus, fair game.
The skirt and jumper came from my Canadian work colleague when she moved back home. I have so many regrets that I didn't stay in touch with her. She was so lovely. CBC is actually FaceBook friends with her!
The belt belonged to my Mum.
The only bits I bought are the red scarf which I bought in a charity shop (but forgot to wear it with the ends thrown back!)
The boots are the recently fixed Italian leather boots.

Since it's Winter, this was only worn for the photos. I just swapped coats after I'd taken the last set of photos! I will wear a version of this for school but with a longer skirt! OR leggings!

I hope you are having a lovely day and there are no unhappy dogs howling in the background of YOUR life!
xx

Saturday, December 17, 2022

The week that was!

 This week has felt like an Eternity! However, before I get started on that, I thought I'd share today's outfit with you:

The context of this is, I am playing my flute for my new church's carol service, Carols on the Green, which will take place on the village green, opposite the church and next to the pub.  
This means layers are necessary!
Under this blue/teal cashmere polo neck from Edinburgh Woollen Mill, I'm wearing a breton striped cotton top.
Under this charity-shopped Indian Rayon skirt, I am wearing black Cashmere joggers (charity shopped)
Along with my Esoteric London star necklace and earrings (sample sale) and a handknitted hat made by my friend Ellie and made for her daughter when she was young, I am wearing my  Fatface down-filled gilet which CBC bought me as a Christmas present in 2012.
How perfectly apt was it, that these floral embossed Dr Martens, that I bought from Lorelai Le Quillec, second hand (bargainous £10 + postage- they are MINT condition!) arrived this morning. I was wearing black boots but I changed once I opened the parcel! They are so comfortable- I am chuffed!
I am also going to wear my Parka coat plus you might have spotted my recycled cashmere fingerless gloves from TurtleDoves in the first picture?
So, this week...
Well, I awoke to a text message on Monday at 7am from my Deputy Head saying that School was closed because of the snow.
"Snow????" I asked, looking out the window at my own frost but definitely snow-free garden.
Yes, it was indeed so.  Where I work had had a lot of snow, as had my mum,my sister, my Dad, my stepmum and sister BUT my sister still had to go to school!  CBC's school was also snow-free and was open, but he'd been pretty unwell all weekend and took the day off (possibly the second day he's ever had off except when he's had Covid).
I prepared online lessons for the children and put away washing. Thankfully, they didn't send us loads of CPD training to do, it was thankfully, a proper snow day- almost, except for the lessons! I was quite glad not to be at school in some ways as I'd made veg and lentil soup the night before and it had affected me internally a bit!!!
My mother-in-law was due over to us and arrived around 8pm.  CBC cooked salmon and veg and we had a jolly evening.
I was anxious about not being at school because I was supposed to have had the final in-school rehearsal for Year 3-4's carol service in the morning and taught all Year 3 classes their first lesson on Jingle Bells- I can't teach Jingle Bells in January and the carol service rehearsal was important.  Already, I began to worry about whether we would be able to go to the church on Thursday. I discussed plans on the phone with my Deputy to try and fit both year 3-4 AND year 5-6 in for their rehearsal the next morning, before the dining hall would have to be set up for Reception lunch at 11am.

The next day, I awoke around 6.45am with a confirmation text that school was open and got myself all wrapped up on my bike to ride to the station for day 1 of train strikes.  The first train of the day, the 7:38 train arrived and got me to my interchange station. The snow increased as I travelled.  When I got to that station, I had to go and wait for 29 minutes on a cold platform for the next train (not the usual 2-5min wait) so I went and bought myself a hot sausage sandwich from the bakery and a roll for lunch. I arrived at school at 9am and quickly tried to get things across to the dining hall for the first Dress rehearsal for the carol service.  One class was 8 minutes late (I gave them evil looks!).  We got started and lots of songs went well but lots of the readers read too fast or quietly and a few children forgot about interludes between verses! One of the French twins was being really rude during our French carol, Il est ne le divin enfant by sticking his fingers in his ears (he gets cross at mispronounciation though he's told me I have a good French accent, "You sound like a proper French person!") so I told him off and he gave me dark looks for the rest of the assembly. The choir hadn't expected a rehearsal and none of them had their words nor had I got my piano parts so we had to miss those out. We overran by 8 minutes (grr) and the children were very fidgety!
Years 5-6 were all waiting outside the doors to come in.  Their rehearsal was much more efficient although again, I didn't have the music ready for choir, nor had I had time to tell drumming club to fetch their drums so it wasn't complete. Most of the readers were pretty good.

After playtime, I took my year 5 class and, because I'd missed one class's lesson for the carol practices, I decided not to do music with the others to make sure my classes are all in the same place. Instead, I taught my first class to make Origami stars out of a whole load of  old flyers from my orchestra concerts.It was very hard doing origami with 30children at the same time!
In the afternoon, I taught my year 6 children who were creating their own performances of a Baroque Chiaccona and then made the folded, cut paper Christmas trees out of the remaining magazines with the remaining year 5 class. Much easier than the Origami! They were all chuffed with their makes though!

Choir after school was a bit mad as the children hadn't been allowed out to playtime because of all the ice so they were hyper. I finished early because of the train strike and headed off to the station after having a quick discussion with my Deputy about whether we would be able to walk the mile to the church for our carol rehearsals the next day.  It was precarious as it was so cold that the snow had frozen over on the pavements and whilst I was ok cycling on the main road for a bit, the side streets and the walk up the hill to the station on the pavement was treacherous!  I ended up waiting at the station for 20mins for the train- SO cold! It was late. At my connection station, I had to wait 25mins in the cold!

I had to take the train to the terminus as I was singing as part of CBC's school carol service. There was a tense 15minutes waiting for a taxi at the train station as none were coming! I arrived to the church with 10minutes to spare.  
The carol service was gorgeous. His girls plus esteemed adult guests did a fantastic job! I sang tenor with 2 other men and 2 other women (we were the smallest part). CBC did a brilliant job as his first turn as head of music.  Disappointing that no PTA members were there to serve refreshments and it was up to the mums of CBC and his colleague to do that. At the end, I did some frantic hoovering to help the elderly churchwarden who was awaiting our exit.
CBC , his mum and I headed to the Thai restaurant for dinner! When we got home, I discovered that David, lovely church warden at the church had OFSTED in the morning (he's chair of governors at a couple of schools) and so wouldn't be there to let us in the next morning so I prepared carol sheets just in case for the kids! At midnight, I went to bed.
Wednesday morning, I awoke anxiously- would the roads be clear for the carol service?  Alas, I had a text from my Deputy Head saying, No, it was too risky. Woe!!!
 Train strike day 2 made my journey identical except that I chose a egg mayonnaise and crispy bacon roll for my breakfast.Oh, and the train was 20minutes delayed, meaning I got to school at 9.20! I walked with our Lunch time provision supervisor who slipped on the ice just in front of me!
I didn't have to teach any of my first class as cover was in place.
After that, I had to go and cover in year 1 and did a sequencing of the Christmas story RE activity. Very hard  at times with a class with quite a few SEN children without any support!
My roll was delicious at lunchtime - Brie, Bacon and Avocado!

After lunch, I had about an hour to get some prep done for school and then I went to cover in Year 3 as a teacher had to go.  Remember my worry about Jingle Bells?  I cunningly came up with a plan and persuaded the other two teachers to bring their children into the large Year 3 classroom I was in so I could do the teaching input on reading the stave so they'd be able to do Jingle Bells next Monday. My bribery was to give the teachers 25minutes to go and do some work whilst I juggled the 90 kids.  Thy then set the kids on the task of identifying the note names when they took them back.
After school, we had an INSET and then I had to dash to the station to catch my train. Again, freezing cold, very precarious, icy pavements. Train was delayed on the way home, had 30mins waiting on an arctic platform as the waiting room was full again.
At home, I did very little except we ate more of the purple lentil soup and cry about the fact I'd worked SO hard this term to get the carol services ready, so many extra practices and grappling against technology (no working projector or computer all half term until last Wednesday), done so much admin to get it all ready and prepared and knowing it probably wasn't going to happen and my poor kids would be denied the chance to do a proper performance and visit the beautiful church (not our usual church but my old childhood church. I'd told the children childhood memories of it and they kept asking me if they'd see things I'd talked about)
The next morning, hurrah, there were no train strikes. I rode to the station super early though, anxious to find out whether we'd be able to go to the church with the 360 kids (180 morning, 180 afternoon). Ahrgh, I was super early and the train was SUPER delayed!!!! It was freezing on the platform and I eventually got to school at 9ish.Sigh.  Alas, they made the decision that no, the roads weren't sufficiently safe to walk 180 children. So, our alternative plan was to squash everyone into the dining room, morning and afternoon to perform.
The Year 3-4's did REALLY well in the morning.  The readers, whilst not perfect, were much better than previously, and my choir did really well and didn't shout and all the kids sang really well and behaved in between! IN between, I walked from school to the care home (see below) to vet the state of the pavements for walking conditions.
In the afternoon, Year 5-6 did a superb performance. The readers were brilliant- pretty much all of them had memorised their readings and did stacks of expression. Choir and drummers did a super job and the year 6 instrumentalists all did really well in their solo song!
After school, choir practised their carols and we starting learning a new song for our Royal Albert Hall concert in March. I gave them all Covid tests and chocolate lollies to go home with. The tests were because we were due to go to a residential care home for the elderly to sing the next day. But would we be allowed to go?  All the children were begging me but I had to explain it wasn't my decision..
I was supposed to go to Gamelan but had an absolute splitting headache so headed home.  Had a cold 15minute wait between trains. CBC was out in London watching The Life of Pi so I bought dinner from the chippie and lay on the sofa watching Doctor Who and Gilmore Girls!
The next morning, I had a nasty shock to discover there was ANOTHER train strike I didn't know about! Luckily, CBC mentioned it as I was getting dressed and I managed to dash, despite icy roads, to make the 7:51 train. Had to wait 25mins for the next train which was then....DELAYED!
At school, I took Year 1-2 to perform and film THEIR nativity songs in the dining hall. They did well on the collective songs though lots of them a bit starry-eyed on their solos!
I dashed over to Year 6 to take Baroque Chiaccona lesson no.2 of the week, still hadn't had time to see the Head to see if we could go to the care home. Ambushed by choir members multiple times to find out if we were going. At playtime, I caught him where he agonised over whether we should go or not. Finally, he said, "The people in the care home will really appreciate your visit so you can go BUT you can only take 12 children maximum as that is easier to monitor them!"
Ahrgh, how to choose?!!?! I decided to take Year 6 only as there were 10 who had sent back their Covid test negative results.  The year 5's were understandably upset but the Year 6's were euphoric!!
I taught Chiaccona lesson no.3of the week and did my Covid test and helped one of the Year 6 girls whose mum had forgotten to do it, do hers with many giggles and watering eyes!
We headed off at 1.40pm and managed to get there without any slips.
Despite their only being 10 of them, they sang amazingly and I accompanied on my mini accordion (badly- the kids gave me 7 out of 10!).  The care home residents were really appreciative and sang along and the staff super friendly. They gave the kids presents and snacks and the kids chatted to the residents.  They were buzzing as we left, saying how lovely it was and how nice the residents were and how they really wanted to go back! On the way back, they jubilantly sang the parts of the Chiaccona together and we got back without any mishaps!
All the staff were excitedly chatting about the Christmas do, which was last night. I hadn't booked to go- good thing as I wouldn't have got home!
Stupid train was delayed by 20minutes. Considering I'd got there 10minutes early, after an icy trudge as my bike lights had run out of charge, this was annoying. I fretted about whether I'd make my connection as this was the LAST train because of the strike!!! Luckily, it came just!!
When I got home, CBC was sleepy on the sofa. I made us dinner whilst we watched 'Christmas with a prince- a royal Wedding'.
Honestly,this week had felt SO long with all the strikes, delays, rehearsals, performances and anxiety over changes of plans.
Tomorrow, CBC and I are singing carols at a winebar-I'm singing Tenor again!
2 more days left of school- THANK THE LORD as I've started to get a sore throat!!!
xx


Monday, October 03, 2022

TARDIS Tuesday - Robots of Sherwood- Clara's tartan cute look

Hi,

Welcome to another TARDIS Tuesday! Today, I'm featuring an outfit worn by Clara in series 8 of Doctor Who.

 I have featured this outfit twice before: in May 2019 and earlier in September 2017

It's not changed hugely but I have made a slight alteration.


https://claraoswaldcosplay.dreamconnect.de/?p=586

Sadly, we didn't get to see the outfit for very long, nor in daylight which is a shame since it is SUPER cute!

It featured a teal Oasis jumper and a Topshop purple and teal skort (that's a picture of shorts and skirt). She wears black tights and I THINK she wears her Bertie Astor wingtip heel shoes.




Related imageImage borrowed from WornonTV.net


And here's my 2022 iteration!

I started with the same Topshop skort I've worn each time (it's screen accurate). It's really short but cute.
I teamed it up with an alternative Oasis jumper which has a leather collar. This jumper originally had a floral colour and a fake shirt bottom but the wonderful Ang adapted it for me. She even managed to turn the floral collar into lining for another Clara dress so not to waste it!
Today, I decided to wear a different pair of Clara shoes- these are my Bertie heels rather than my black suedette boots I wore last time.
I can't work out where I got this leather collar from but it is not the one I usually wear.
I wore this on Sunday for an orchestra rehearsal.  The skort IS short but I do like how well this outfit goes together. The whole thing really needs an iron but that's not going to happen!

I have not worn this outfit for school for obvious reasons but I hope Clara didn't- too short!

Hope you had a good day!
xx



Tuesday, April 07, 2020

TARDIS Tuesday- Amy Pond from Vincent and the Doctor

Hi there,

Today's TARDIS Tuesday was one I attempted on March the 9th 2015- so I think 5 years is a suitable amount of time to leave it before reattempting it again!


Amy Pond Vincent episode cosplay reference | Amy pond, Amy pond outfit
Photo borrowed from this Pinterest:
https://www.pinterest.com/pin/45599014960729471/
Here's the inspiration. In what is frankly one of the most beautiful Doctor Who stories, the 11th Doctor and Amy Pond meet Vincent Van Gogh after seeing something sinister in the window of one of his paintings. If you want to watch it, if you are UK-based you can watch it here.

Amy wears a beautiful teal coat by Jasper Conran. Underneath it, she wears a dark red v-neck top together with a loose-weave red scarf.  On her bottom half, she wears a frankly obscenely short denim shirt and brown knee-high boots.
Hard to see, but she wears a small gold A initial necklace and a tan bronze-buckled belt which I can't see in any pictures.

Amy Pond Outfits: Outfit from 'Vincent and the Doctor'
Image borrowed from
http://amypondoutfits.blogspot.com/2010/06/outfit-from-vincent-and-doctor.html

Image borrowed from:
https://impossipondrobe.livejournal.com/2445.html
And here's my version:


I have to say that when I came downstairs in this, CBC asked me, "Why are you dressed like a tart?"
Firstly, I never use language like that to describe anyone, so I demurred but I take his point that it is all a bit SHORT! If I wasn't at home in lockdown, I would have added black leggings to this to make it a bit more appropriate for going out in public.

Most of this outfit was given to me or borrowed.

Let's go through it.
The coat, for the eagle-eyed and those with good memories, is CBC's Newt Scamander coat which I wore for World Book Day 2019. Not the charity-shopped velvet jacket I wore last time which I redonated.

The jumper and skirt were both given to me back in 2014 by my Canadian work colleague when she returned home and needed to get rid of things. I do not own a denim skirt- so you get black. The jumper is the wrong shade of red. I do have a top in the right shade but the neckline is wrong. Oh well- maybe I'll wear it the next time I wear this outfit, for variety.

The scarf was one I bought for £1 in one of those cheapy clothes shops- I have it in bright green too- they were bought back in 2010 or so, so a long time ago!

The belt is one of my Mum's that I found in a drawer in my old house.
The penultimate item (except for my suitcase which once housed Sarah Nelson Grasmere Gingerbread) are my brown Italian leathers boots, bought from eYe Boutique in Romford in about 2008. The area by the zips at the side is very flaky and old now but the rest of the boots are perfect still, which is super annoying.
The final detail is the necklace. I don't have an initial necklace, but I have this gold necklace which sort of emulates an A shape so I wore that.

What do you think?

xx



Monday, December 12, 2016

Advent Calendar Day 12: Christmas glitz


Everyone always talks about their Christmas party outfits.  Since I have a terrible shopping habit anyway, I don't set out to buy anything special for Christmas- I just tend to go through my many clothes to find something for going out.

This Saturday, CBC and I returned from our mortgage meeting (yes, we have had an offer accepted on a house....) with 5 minutes to get ready to go out to the pub with our friends who were picking us up.  
I rifled through my wardrobe and drawers to unearth the following items worn.
I've only worn this beautiful sequinned teal skirt once before- for a Eurovision party.  It was charity-shopped with my flute-girls and they totally persuaded me to buy it as I was worried I might not wear it!  The top is a Bardot-necked top from Monsoon that I paid full-price for about 8 years ago- it's rare I buy full-priced Monsoon.  The shoes are from Asda, a few years ago.  My Punkypins snowflake necklace is the ultimate party glitz.  Although it only took me 5 minutes to put together, I thought it worked quite well.
Tonight (this is written on Sunday), I have a Christmas dinner out with my old church friends so I hope to be wearing something glitsy and fun again. As before, sourced from my many items!

What is your Christmas party outfit this year??

xx

Monday, February 22, 2016

Looking forward


Greetings from my new garden! It's my first post in my new house (as the last ones were written in Northumberland).

 It's so pretty out here and you can see the crocuses are coming up that I told of before.
Lent is a time of looking forward.  Lenten actually comes from the word "lengthening" as the days are getting longer and I like that lent comes as the word for us here in the northern hemisphere is coming better in that sense, in terms of the days getting longer, bringing hope, more time, more possibilities.

Something that the vicar said today.  "Look forward from today, don't look back."  It's  easy to look back on the past and hold grudges and resentments and build these up. Oh so easy.  But one thing I'd like to do this lent is to look forward and move on from here and as the reading we read today said, be gathered up like chicks under their mother's wing and know, even when things are hard that I have Jesus' protection.  That is, for me, comforting.
 I thought I'd share the beautiful crocuses with you looking forward to the coming of Spring.





and the first daffodil!


Sending you many best wishes and thanks for your continued support and friendship- you lot are great!

xxx



Linking up to Visible Monday with Patti and all her lovely readers!



Sunday, January 18, 2015

The story of a coat, some trousers, a hat and what lies beneath...



I used to be really regular with joining in with my lovely blog friends The Two Birds' Inspiration Monday. Increasingly, I've somehow just got to Monday and not managed it, not managed to find something appropriate so I thought I'd really try to make a concerted effort to join in when I can, even if the relationship between the inspiration and myself is rather nebulous.

Today, Emma Stone wears a textured woolly coat with generously long but thin scarf (obscuring what top is beneath), jeans and shiny ankle boots.
Inspiration Monday 19-1-15 a
As you can see, what I wear is er, slightly different but:
Woolly, textured coat: longer and different colour, no zip, but yes.
Thin and long scarf: yes, though wrong colour (thank you for the gift Sophie!)
Shiny ankle boots: wrong colour but yes (thrifted)
Skinny jeans: NO! But shinyish trousers in a shade blue ish.

I'd like to tell you the story of this coat.  It was given to me by my friend E, who we went to stay with in Petworth, Sussex.  It comes from Jaeger and she bought it with her first paycheck in the 1960's  after working in London for a month. She spent her entire month's wages on it,but she felt beautiful and grand in it.  It held her in good stead for many years and she loved it, particularly when times were hard and she couldn't possibly afford anything like it. It has remained in her cupboards ever since.  Unfortunately, her daughter is the wrong size for the coat, so when I went there, she got it out to show me and asked me to try it on and then asked me if I'd like it as it didn't fit her now and it seemed a shame to just be hanging in the cupboard.  What a privilege, I thought, to be the custodian of an item that was so precious to a 20-something E, to look after and wear something with such memories. It is missing a button and another is hanging off, the lining in one sleeve is ripped but it is otherwise a beautiful, warm, well-made coat which I am honoured to have been asked to rehome.

Inspiration Monday 19-1-15 b
The story of the trousers is a little sadder.I bought these in the ASOS sale. They are, as you might see,rather short for my long legs. Alas, I was trying them on and ended up getting involved with the washing up and emptying of bin as CBC was having a bit of a kitchen crisis trying to cook risotto and empty the bin, whilst  I wearing them in the trying on stage. I wrestled the stubborn bin and binbag out into the garden to vanquish all binnish rebellion. Unfortunately, just as I had pulled the stubborn beastie from its bin hideout, the bin bag, rather like a sword-pierced knight, leaked onto them. So they are staying.

The hat was knitted by a friend. She began her late-life knitting career by making blankets for African orphanages.  She then branched out into hats.  She couldn't follow a pattern, just did her own thing.  She knitted CBC and I 2 hats each one Christmas.  Don't think this one has featured on the blog before but its little sister did - yep, she knitted me two- identical, except that this has a longer crown to it, whereas the other has a more skullcap feel to it! 

Oh and what you don't know is....


I'm wearing my Christmas jumper under the scarf!!!!!!!!!!!

xxx

inspmon_XJdT71_zpscbf30840

P.S: Thanks for the recent, kind comments and fun participation in What is it?
I hope I have managed to visit everyone who has commented whose blog has a comment system I can use with my settings (Lily, your Disqus does not allow guests- please can you change the settings to allow them!) Lizzie, I LOVED your tartan coat- so nice!! And I really enjoyed your photo a day!

Sorry to the follower I somehow offended who has swanned off elsewhere! Come back, I'll behave!