The Fashion Dictatorship

I don’t get it. I don’t get why people follow fashion regardless of whether the latest trend suits them or not. I don’t understand why people seem so loath to pick a ‘look’ for themselves, based on what they feel comfortable in, or what they feel they looks good, not what society tells them does. Granted not EVERYONE follows fashion, but for those who don’t, it’s sometimes hard to find something in the shops that doesn’t scream ‘fashion victim’, and this frustrates me, as the only other options you’re really left with are ‘make it yourself’ (not always possible), ‘trawl the charity shops’ (obviously a bit of a hit or miss affair), or spend hours searching online for that one item you just can’t currently get on the highstreet.

Man in strange outfit on catwalk

How far would you go? If this was the next thing in the shops, would people wear it because that is what is “in fashion”!?

A recent struggle to find a simple black cardigan got me thinking, I wonder how many more people have stories of times when they have wanted something specific but because that particular item is not in fashion, or the current trend is to make it some god awful colour, they have simply not been able to get it? I live in leggings and skirts. I quite often find myself either having to stock up on the kinds of skirts I like during summer, because come winter time the shops have decided everyone wants to wear trousers, or I have to make them myself. Why isn’t there a highstreet shop that actually makes a point of selling items that don’t conform to the fashion of the season?

girl searching through rail

How long do you search for before you give up?!

There are some exceptions to that rule, I think. For example American Apparal sell basics in all the colours under the sun all year round. But it’s expensive, and you pretty much have to be built like a beanpole to wear most of their stuff. There’s Gap, who tend to have some basics all year round that aren’t too subject to what is in fashion, but then they also sell items with their name in whopping great letters across the chest and I don’t appreciate being a corporate advertising board. I’m sure there are others, but at the moment I am struggling to think of a shop that doesn’t in some way tag onto this whole ‘what’s in fashion’ thing. You do of course have ‘alternative’ shops which don’t follow the ‘mainstream’ fashion but instead aim themselves at some sub-genre such as goth or hippy. But then you pay the price for shopping somewhere niche. And then there are charity shops, but as has been said, they can be very hit or miss even for just finding your size, nevermind an item which actually works for you. Some people I know seem to have better luck than others in charity shops though! Perhaps there is some secret!

So I’m intrigued and I must ask you, my readers, what sort of ‘fashion sense’ do you consider yourself to have? Do you follow fashion  regardless of whether the new ‘neon fishnet vest’ makes you look like a flabby throwback from the 90′s rave scene, or do you make do with bits from here and there in an attempt to have your own style? Do you have a shop you think is just perfect all year round that you are always guaranteed to find something in?

purple shellsuit woman

If you had actually taken a step back for a moment and asked “Do these look good?” rather than just wearing on because they were in fashion, do you honestly think the answer would have been “Oh yes, that shell suit material and purple sheen bring out your curves and the colour of your eyes most beautifully darling”? …Didn’t think so.

If you could have your own personal seamstress/tailor what would you have them make that you struggle finding in the shops? Is there an item of clothing you have in your mind that you just can’t find anywhere!? I know I’ve had that problem! Go out looking for something rather specific to find it just doesn’t exist! I’d love to say the answer is in the handmade marketplace but I find that clothing is often too expensive to buy everything handmade – not that I don’t think it’s worth every penny. Then I think ‘well I’ll just make it all myself’ to then find that actually, I’ve not quite got the technical skill for that particular item. One day! Maybe!

Handmade for Men

It’s no secret that the handmade community is a bit of a female dominated world, both in buying and selling terms. I’ve always struggled to make things that would be suitable for guys with my current craft skills (mainly crochet and sewing), and I find that when looking for a handmade gift, it’s more more difficult to find things for the guys in my life than the ladies. So, I’ve put a little effort into finding some great gifts for males which I have listed below, but what I am also doing now is putting some REAL effort into trying to think of things that I can make myself, cos I don’t wanna be leaving the guys out now do I?!

Coyote Brown and Orange Paracord Bracelet with Coyote Tan Thin Spine

Coyote Brown and Orange Paracord Bracelet with Coyote Tan Thin Spine

 6 oz Stainless Steel - The Beard Love Flask (TM) - on Green

6 oz Stainless Steel – The Beard Love Flask (TM) – on Green

Men Cowl Scarf Neckwarmer - recycled vintage German airmail bag - Deutsche Post

Men Cowl Scarf Neckwarmer – recycled vintage German airmail bag – Deutsche Post

Men's hemp pants

Men’s hemp pants

serotonin molecule necklace, styled for men

Serotonin molecule necklace, styled for men

Coincidentally, it’s my partners birthday very soon, but don’t worry, I haven’t spoilt the surprise! So, what sort of things do you think I could make for guys with my crochet and sewing skills folks?! Crochet items for summer is hard enough, but for blokes?! My my! That’s quite the noggin scratcher!

Please share your handmade finds for men in the comments, I’d love to see what’s on offer out there, you know, with a special birthday coming up and all xxx

Pop-up Shop!

Pop-up Shop you say?! What’s that then?! Well, for those of you not familiar with the term, let me be the one to introduce you to a wonderful world of discovery! A Pop-up Shop is a temporary shop in a retail unit. Quite often (so I have seen in Liverpool anyway) these shops sell handmade, unique, and arty items. The kind of things you don’t usually find on the highstreet, one of a kind finds, things made by local people and often with local materials. It’s not always the case – you do also get some tacky Christmas themed pop up shops, or corporate businesses occupying a retail unit for a short time to introduce a particular product or brand, but the ones that I find most interesting and feel really being something to the community and town centres are the ones which showcase items from local artists and crafters who perhaps wouldn’t be able to have their own entire shop. It makes for eclectic collections, interesting shopping, and breathes a little life into town centres which sadly so often are almost clones of one another. It also makes use of empty spaces which are becoming an ever more present occurrence in the highstreet, and that can’t be a bad thing, nobody likes to see empty spaces being put to no good use at all.

Print Shop and Social was a Pop-up Shop in Liverpool on Bold Street in 2011, opened by local designer Gary McGarvey.

Pop-up Shops can last anywhere between one day and a few months or more really, I guess it can depend on the original plan of the shop, how well it does, how many people are involved, or how much stock there is to sell. They’re great little ventures, and if you spot one in your local town or city centre then I would urge you to go take a look, you might find something really unique, or simply be inspired by the creativity of the people involved.

Lately I have been presented with the opportunity of having my Linziloop Handmade accessories in a Pop-up Shop in Liverpool and I’m really excited about it. The Pop-up Shop has been acquired by the lovely people of Made-Here, a website where I currently sell my handmade items. It will be in the Liverpool One complex which sees an average weekly footfall of 550,000, which I’m sure you will agree is quite impressive! I had been wondering for a little while about how to get my items in front of a different audience to that of craft fairs and this may well be the perfect thing to try out next. It has so many benefits too – customers will be able to pay by card (which I can’t offer at craft fairs), people will be able to physically touch and try on items (which obviously they can’t do online), and it is in an area where pretty much people come solely to shop!

Made-Here Pop-up Shop interior design

This is an image of how the shop might look inside, doesn't it look lovely?!

I’ve made some new items especially for putting in the shop, so I’m very interested to see how they will sell. I’m also really excited to see how the shop will look (I had a little sneak peak as it was being built last week!), and to see what other wonderful items my fellow crafters have been making. The shop will open on Saturday March 10th, so if you’re anywhere local to Liverpool then please do come along one day and show your support. I’m not entirely sure of the total time it will be there, so get down before it’s gone! You can join the event page on Facebook or follow Made-Here on Twitter to keep up to date with how it’s all going.

Liverpool One Pop up Shop

The shop can be found at: 4 Keys Court (the cut through by Top Shop), Liverpool One. Come along!

Pinterest – An Addiction

For ages I managed to avoid Pinterest. I already had Facebook, Twitter and Stumble to procrastinate perfectly well with. It was just a visual pinboard, an online scrapbook, if you will. But these pin boards of beautifully arranged items along a common theme kept cropping up when I was using StumbleUpon, and more and more of them were inspiring and amazing me with their brilliant little collections of items that were pure genius or just visually stunning. Then one day, I was searching for a new dress, I was bookmarking the ones I liked, and then coming back to them later, using multiple tabs to compare them and I thought, “I could really do with all of these compared on one page” – and that’s when I had a mini brainwave – Pinterest! So I popped on, signed up for an account, and started pinning my dresses on a board named “Clothing I Love“. Helped me see all the dresses I liked in one place.

But since then, I’ve started putting together pinboards not as a means to help me, but just for fun, and I tell you something, for such a simple idea, it’s blinking addictive! Not in a bad way I guess, digital scrapbooking is a nice little creative thing to do, it’s nice seeing a coherent pinboard come together, test your curating skills. I’d recommend having  a go if you’re the type of person that likes putting collections of things together, you can use any image you find on the web in a pinboard, it’s such an easy thing to do, and then people start “liking” and “sharing” pins and you think, hey, I must be doing something right! Plus if you pick items from sites like Folksy and Etsy, it may help those sellers get a sale, how lovely :D

Anyway, here are some of my pinboards in the making:

Linziloop Pinterest Boards

Come join in! Share your boards! Share the love! I’m a convert (can you tell?!)

What has Linziloop been up to?

Happy New Year! Ok, ok, it’s a tad late i will admit but I’ve been a busy little bee i have, and it’s not about to stop hehe! So, what have i been up to i hear you ask?! Well, after the Right Said Thread Market in December i was all full of inspiration and my pockets were a little heavier from selling a very pleasing amount of things.  So off i went to the wool shop to buy some new colours and got to making. Lots of relatives had asked for me to make them something for Christmas so i had quite a lot of crocheting to do, but it was very enjoyable and i made some things i had never attempted before that turned out really well! I also had quite a few things to list that i had made in preparation for the market that i didn’t sell. Here are some examples of the new things you will find in my shop currently:

Honeysuckle meets purple crochet earflap hat

Honeysuckle meets purple crochet earflap hat

Woodland Pixie Crochet Hood

Woodland Pixie Crochet Hood

Honeysuckle Pink Crochet Chain Scarf

Honeysuckle Pink Crochet Chain Scarf

Wooly Mammoth Oddly Matching Crochet Fingerless Gloves

Wooly Mammoth Oddly Matching Crochet Fingerless Gloves

Hope you like what you see! So, other than that, would you like to see some photos of the Right Said Thread Market?! Click here or on the image below and you will be taken to the whole album!

Right Said Thread Handmade and Vintage Market Photos

Right Said Thread Handmade and Vintage Market Photos

I’m giving some thought to doing another Right Said Thread market, everyone seemed really pleased with the turnout. If you’re a handmade artist/crafter/ seller of vintage wonders then do please get in touch if you are at all interested in taking part in a Right Said Thread Market – we’re in Liverpool, and we have a facebook page too.

Back to Linziloop – I’ve made a little pact with myself that i will do my utmost to make and list one item per week on my Folksy/Etsy shops. So far I’ve managed it but we’re only in the second week so we shall see how that goes! Starting the year off well i noticed today that my purple wrist warmers are one of the featured items on the front page of Folksy today! That felt great!

I could go on, but i think I’ve said enough for now, i shall leave you on peace. Go make yourself a nice brew, have a browse through the great items on Folksy and Etsy (I’m sure you know someone with a birthday coming up soon, or perhaps do some early browsing for valentines day?!) and be inspired to try something new, it’s a new year afterall…

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