Canadian Fashion 2010 Paper Dolls

Final Fashion’s mastermind, illustrator Danielle Meder, is at it again.  From designing Doc Martens to creating wicked Keds for charity to inventing Snow Queen apparel, it seems like this wily gal always has something amazing in the works!

This particular project is a comprehensive look at the Spring/Summer 2010 offerings from LG Fashion Week in Toronto.  Starting in October, Danielle churned out 17 unique paper dolls for 15 collections, including designers like VAWK, Brazen Hussy, and Biddell.  Take a look at some of the best (in my humble opinion):

What I love about Danielle’s drawing style is that it’s so smooth and fun.  Every person she draws not only looks like a real human being, but they seem like they’re having a good time with their clothes.  You can see how much she loves her work in every illustration.

And by the way, since it’s the holidays, you might want to pick up the entire paper doll book, available as a PDF ($17.95) through Final Fashion or as a softcover book ($42.95) through Blurb.  I’m definitely putting it on my wish list!

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Edited: December 16th, 2009

Jackqueline Hope is Big, Bold and Beautiful

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There’s something great about reading a memoir, particularly a story as inspirational as this one. The insight satisfies the voyeur in me. I can’t help it; I’m nosy.

Jackqueline Hope married young, at a size 12, and through a traumatic and abusive relationship (including motherhood), rose to over 300lbs in a few short years.  She was told by family, friends, and even strangers that she would “be so pretty” if only she’d lose weight. Against her better judgement, she succumbed to that pressure and yo-yo dieted for years, just to make other people happy.

But one day she realized, in a sudden epiphany, that she didn’t have to live up to anyone else’s standards.  She left her husband, became Canada’s first plus-sized model, opened her own business (Big, Bold and Beautiful), started a fashion line (Jackie Jackie), founded a modeling agency (Plus Figure Models), and inspired scores of other women to shut out society’s negative messages and embrace themselves.  She continued to improve her self-esteem while traveling along the racks from sizes 12-28, never returning to her former days of bending to others’ expectations.  Hope embraces fitness and a healthy mentality about food, as well as tackles the stereotypes and cruelties of the fashion world.  She believes that every woman deserves to feel lovable, sexy, and beautiful, no matter what her shape or size.

What’s intriguing and wonderful about Hope’s story is that, despite feeling the pressure and enduring the pain of feeling like she deserved the weight-based abuse, Hope never understood why other people didn’t think she was beautiful, no matter her size.  She had been looking in the mirror and liking what she saw; she knew for a fact that she was beautiful.  Unlike so many of us, she managed to avoid internalizing the media messages and the current beauty myth – rather than thinking I’m ugly, she thought If other people want me to be thin, I’ll try to do that for them. But I’m beautiful already.  While that isn’t particularly healthy either, it’s a perspective that we don’t often hear about in size-talk.

Here are a few snippets from the book to lure you in:

“I wasn’t going to hate [my body]  just because it didn’t fit into a wedding dress, nor was I going to hate it because others were finding it unattractive.”

“As long as I am healthy and active, who cares if I never make the swimsuit issue of Sports Illustrated?  I admire the woman who feels free to dance naked in the garden no matter what her size.”

“How conceited could I be to think that if would be my fault that someone was being rude and cruel [about my body]?  Instead, I began to think, ‘Wow, do they have a big problem.  I’m wonderful.  Why are they speaking that way?  Staring like that?’”

“I inflicted pain on myself to make someone else happy, when all along my body wasn’t the problem.”

“Life is not something to be put on hold.  Beauty does not stop at a size 14.”

Hope’s conversational writing style is perfect for this kind of story.  It’s deeply personal and unashamed, speaking to the reader honestly.  Although I’m on the cusp between “normal” and “plus-sized”, I found myself identifying with and rooting for Hope in her struggles.  It’s a short read (only 190 pages) and shouldn’t be missed.

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Take-home message: No matter what size or shape you are, no one has the right to tell you that you’re not good enough. You should always be free to feel beautiful.

Source: Hope, Jackqueline. Big, Bold and Beautiful: Living Large on a Small Planet. Toronto: Macmillan Canada, 1996.

In the Press:

Interested in being a plus-size model?:

Do you feel like you’ve internalized the beauty myth, or have you managed, like Hope, to keep it separate from your inner monologue?  Have ever considered modelling and rejected the idea?  Why?

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Edited: August 19th, 2009

Hey Hey Whatcha Say? Kate Sloan at the Riverdale Perk

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Images courtesy of Kate Sloan

Kate Sloan is in love. That wonderful, dizzying, terrible, intoxicating, confusing, beautiful, horrible kind of love that shifts and mutates and evolves all the time. She’s in love with the girl in her English class, the older guy treading the boards, the boy she can’t have, you, me, and everyone else. And between every buzzing moment of infatuation, it’s all she can do to pour her heart into a breathy song that manages to be touching and observant and nostalgic (for us older folks) and funny and endearing all at the same time.

She’s awesome.

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I had the privilege to see Kate perform this weekend at a small show at the Riverdale Perk, a cozy cafe tucked away just behind Danforth in Toronto. I always have a hard time relaying stories of concerts because they’re so experiential, so dependent on actually being there. I’m not quite so accomplished a writer (yet) to make you really think you were there. But I can tell you just how wonderful a time I had and how moving it was for me.

I’d watched more than my fair share of Kate’s homemade videos and live footage from her channel at Youtube, so I felt I was prepared for the show. But while I was familiar with a lot of the songs, I was caught off-guard by the open feeling of the performance. Kate’s work is deeply personal, bubbling up from sensitive high school senior, but unlike most people exhibiting moments that are admittedly “not [their] finest hour”, she’s unashamed. You can feel the sincerity radiating from her (although it may have been her fever; Kate was still fighting off a nasty flu at the show) and it encloses the audience, draws them in, and makes them a part of her experience. So many people “know” what high school relationships were like and therefore would be apt to dismiss this 17 year old’s lyrics. And that would be a mistake. As we sat sipping our coffee (or chai lattes, in my case), Kate escorted us through a whirlwind of longing, lust, and loneliness that the 15-60s crowd all tapped along with songs so cleverly crafted that the listener is transported back to a rosy memory of their own loves, past, present, and future. While she covered a few other artists’ work – John Legend, Fleet Foxes, and The Weepies – the focus was clearly on her own songs, her own expression of the deeply-felt emotions that we inexplicably forget once we pass into our twenties.

I feel like I’m making a big deal about Kate’s age, but it’s not intended as a slight. It was truly wonderful to hear her sing about feelings I thought were long past for me, and in a way that carried no hint of being jaded or forced. It’s rare to come across someone in the indie music world anymore that doesn’t come off as trying too hard. Kate constructs each of her songs with an openess of heart and spirit that is impossible to miss when you’re listening.

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But, like Levar Burton said on Reading Rainbow, don’t take my word for it…

Quick Breakdown

And you can have some Kate of your very own! She sells both a DVD of a live performance ($12!) and a brand-spanking new CD with 21 tracks ($10!) over at Etsy and MP3 downloads at Boost Independent Music. You can also check out her Youtube channel, listen on Last.fm, become a fan on Facebook, and stalk her on Twitter!

So what are you waiting for? Get in touch with being love all over again. Warm fuzzies and heartachingly beautiful melodies are just waiting for you to find them!

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Edited: August 10th, 2009