11 Tips To Train Your Thrifting Brain
I am planning a little post of the thrift and consignment stores that I visited when in NYC recently and I thought I’d show you one of the pieces I picked up at the Goodwill store.
A crocheted jacket/dress by Elif for Jordan Taylor.

Sometimes it is good not to know too much about a garment when you buy it.
When I saw this I knew the colour would be good for me and I liked the crocheted texture. It reminded me of something you’d see from the 70’s.

To me it just looked like an interesting boho layering piece that would go well with a bunch of other pieces in my wardrobe.
I just looked up that label online.
Guess what?

It is resort wear.
A swimsuit coverup!

Ha ha!

It’s a good thing I’m not going to let that influence how I wear this.
Keeping an open mind and seeing the possibilities that lie within pieces you discover while thrifting is where all the magic happens.

The more you thrift, the more advanced your “possibility radar” will become.
11 Tips To Train Your Thrifting Brain
- Take that item out of the context of the overstuffed rack you just pulled it out of. Hold it up to the light. Give it a chance to be seen on its own and judge it accordingly.
- Can you see that shape working well on your body?
- Can you see it with going well with other items in your wardrobe?
- Is it a colour you often wear?
- Does the fabric interest you?
- Is it something you will feel comfortable wearing?
- How many different ways can you see yourself styling that piece?
- Would it be something you would have chosen in a retail store? Don’t let the, “It’s so darn cheap I should buy it anyways. ” thought enter your mind. That is reserved for hoarders.
- Try it on. I know sometimes you don’t feel like trying on an item, especially in a thrift store, but often how something reads on a hanger and how it looks on your body are two completely different stories.
- When you have it on…does it make you happy? Do you feel good about yourself? Do you feel like it is accenting all your positives? Do you want to wear it as soon as possible? Then it’s a piece worth buying.
- Lastly, always check the seams and overall condition of thrifted items. It’s terrible to get it home and discover a hole or stain that won’t come out.
Soon you will know instinctively if a piece will fit with your style, your body and your life. You know what they say…practise makes perfect!
Is your brain trained for thrifting?
Do you have any thrifting tips you’d like to pass along?
The Travelling Yellow Skirt Freak Show – Fantasy Vs. Reality
If you don’t know about the history of the amazing Travelling Yellow Skirt Freak Show please read here.
Otherwise none of this will make any sense to you.
This is the story of the fantasy in my head vs. the reality of my life in my quest to capture my interpretation of the Travelling Yellow Skirt Freak Show.
The Fantasy
I was strolling through the forest singing softly to myself when I happened upon a lovely spot to sit and reflect for a moment.


Butterflies and birds flocked to my sunny skirt and floral crown.

It was magical.
I gazed up through the trees in amazement at the clear blue sky.

I was so overwhelmed with emotion I had to lay down, close my eyes and let the overpowering love of the universe rush over me.

It was all just a dream.
The Reality
Try#1

Now the real story.
I recruited my husband to take photos of me in our backyard from atop a ladder. I knew exactly what I wanted in my mind, an ethereal dreamlike photo taken from far above.
This was lost in translation apparently.
I tried my best to direct him on how to set up the camera.
Massive fail.
All photos from that shoot were overexposed to the point that it looked like the camera was pointed directly at an exploding sun.
#effingwasteoftime
Try #2
We gave it another go. I set up the camera myself. The exposure was decent, but the photos were hideous.
Things to think about when laying down and trying to get someone to take your photo from above while wearing a bustier and oversized maxi skirt:
Lava-like overflowing side boob.
Man shoulders.
One inch legs.
Maybe if my husband was actually shooting above me and not on an angle (the ladder wasn’t anywhere near tall enough) I wouldn’t have looked so bizarrely misshapen. I looked like the love child of a Francis Bacon and Picasso painting.
#howdoyouspelldivorce
Forget about the husband trying to help.
Try #3
I tried taking some photos on my own standing up in my “usual” spot.

Me no likey.
Try #4
I was determined to make this work on my own. Heck other bloggers can take their own atmospheric photos why can’t I?
I made a floral crown, changed my outfit and drove to my neighbourhood park.
When I opened the car door the extreme heat & humidity slapped me upside my face like a searing pancake fresh off the grill. The universe wasn’t going to make this easy but I stubbornly and foolishly thought,
“Oh yeah! Bring it!”
I traipsed through the bush slogging my tripod, shoes and camera while trying to hold up the tent skirt with my free hand, narrowly missing two large piles of dog poop on the way.
Battalions of hyper squirrels ran back and forth in front of me, a warning I was clearly off the beaten path and trespassing on their territory.
I found a spot I thought was far enough away from the trail to avoid attracting any unwanted attention. I began to set up the tripod, bending and contorting my already overheated body into extreme yoga poses while trying to avoid ant hills, dog poop, and sharp branches all the while still holding up the massive parachute skirt that was the heat equivalent of wearing ten plastic garbage bags taped together. Mosquitos the size of small birds swarmed around my head and feasted like kings on my sweaty flesh.
“Breathe, just breathe,”
I told myself.
“You can do this.”
Sweat dripped down my forehead from my floral crown and threatened to ruin my makeup. I hastily wiped it away with the back of my hand. My face and body was covered in a slick layer of perspiration. I had no kleenex, personal assistant, photographer or stylists on this shoot to scrape off the mud and dead leaves that were covering my cute heels that sank into the spongy ground as I tried to navigate my way through the fallen branches and undergrowth forest without falling.
I was on a mission. I was determined to make this work.
I sat down on a rotting log. It sank a bit under my weight, moist and putrid with decay. Perfect for a shot of the shoes and skirt!

“Hey!” I thought, “I’m starting to get the hang of this.”
After messing about for fifteen minutes trying to set up my tripod above the fallen tree I risked my safety and laid all the way down on the log on my back, half expecting a rabid squirrel to attack me from a tree branch above. I quickly started taking photos.
“This might work after all!” I happily told myself.
Just then I heard a guttural menacing growl.
What the…?
I slowly turned my head and saw a large, mean and rather perplexed looking boxer dog about six feet away from me, clearly disturbed by my presence. When I tried to move he started barking excitedly, like he’d just discovered an alien. The owner relentlessly called him from the trail but the dog refused to leave. He was freaking out over this half human, yellow and pink sequinned tree that was moving. The equivalent of a doggy nightmare, when the trees you’ve been peeing on all your life rise up and attack you.
The dog kept barking.
The owner kept calling.
The mosquitos kept biting.
I kept swearing sweating.
And that my friends…was the very last straw.
“That’s it! Eff this!”
I may have actually said that out loud at this point.
I couldn’t concentrate anymore. How was a professional supposed to work in these atrocious conditions? I’d have called my agent to complain but she was back home sleeping and snoring loudly. #lazypug
I packed up my gear.
The dog finally left.
I headed back to the car.
I passed another person on my way out of the park. They just looked at me knowingly, nodded and smiled like they were in on some brilliant inside joke.
(The joke is on you my friend! I got my photos! Ha!)

Uh-huh.
And that is what really happened.
I left my mark on The Travelling Yellow Skirt Freak Show…

So who is next? I challenge you!
This skirt has many more stories to tell. Make sure you are one of them! Contact Melanie, the keeper of the skirt, “it” girl of Vancouver, Queen Comic Blogger and brilliant artist that started it all.

Linking up with Visible Monday, Shoe and Tell, Turning Heads Tuesdays Your Whims Wednesday, What I Wore I Will Wear What I Like 52 Pick-me-up
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