Queen of Cashmere Daybook

June 16, 2010

Beachy Orchids

Filed under: Destinations, Frocks, Personalization, Various & Sundry — Tags: , , — Queen of Cashmere @ 2:16 PM

The elegance of orchids and the laid back casualness of the beach seems, at first,  like an odd pairing.   At Topiaire in Southampton last week, they perfectly paired rustic  beach signs with an abbondanza of orchids.

 Topiaire 2

New York Hamptons 079

 

Conrad the man/boy left for three weeks of sailing in the Caribbean.   We shopped for the perfect board shorts for weeks.  Unfortunately, I didn’t discover these until yesterday. I wonder if he would wear these amazing beachy-chic board shorts from Shortomatic?   

Shortomatic Orchid

 

I found Shortomatic via Style.com and think it’s the most brilliant concept.  Upload your own graphics and design your own board shorts.  A wonderful spin on my love of all things personalized.  The shorts come in sizes to fit both men and women.  For the effort,  I don’t think that any design I could come up with would please me more than these white and hot pink shorts emblazoned with variegated phalaenopsis. 

The beach + orchids =  my new favorite flavor!

 

 

May 21, 2010

This Brand Has Gone To The Dogs

Filed under: Destinations, Details, Personalization, Shopping, Various & Sundry — Tags: , — Queen of Cashmere @ 4:52 PM

On Tuesday, while strolling along the Rue St-Honoré in Paris, I came across Goyard.   The brand has maintained shops there for-absolutely-ever.  I remember them from my first forays into Parisian shopping.  I was about 14 at the time.  This was well before the Barney’s and Bergdorf fueled renaissance which brushed the dust off their stodgy image and raised the glam factor significantly.

 There are two Goyard shops.  You can see the main store in the reflection of the glass storefront of #352.

 Goyard Storefront

The sign on the facade of #352 lets you know it’s distinctive from the mothership across the street.

Goyard sign cropped

The entire first floor is dedicated to canine follies and indulgences — le chic du chien.   And you know how I feel about my petite follie, LouLou, ne c’est pas?

There were custom collars galore.  All bespoke and personalized according to the master’s taste and inclination.  

Personalized Dog Collars

 

There were doggy travel bowls made portable in Goyard signature cases.  Perfect for our Queen of Cashmere road trips.

Goyard Travel Bowls

There were custom dog carriers which in my universe is referred to as a  ”sneaky-bag”.  My current bag just isn’t cutting it.  LouLou and I have been discovered many a time and been thrown out of the very  best of places.   All Goyard dog carriers can be made to order and completely customzied which means the sneak-quotient can be upped considerably.  Embarrassing removals could  become a thing of the past.

Goyard interior

Below is Joseph who offered to make a harness to fit LouLou if I sent him one of hers for sizing.  He is extremely charming and accommodating.  Anything for LouLou that my heart might desire can be had. Goyard Joseph

Later, The Consort asked, ” How much was a harness?”  He hates it when I don’t ask the price of anything.  In his eyes, it’s my gravest failing.  I promised to work harder at reform in the future. 

 

 

April 4, 2010

Paris via Nashville

Filed under: Adoration, Frocks, Personalization, Shopping, Various & Sundry — Tags: , , , — Queen of Cashmere @ 9:40 PM

Last Thursday, I woke up with a yearning.   It was very early and the sun was just rising over lake Michigan outside my bedroom window.  Golden spring light was seeping into the room around the draperies.  I donned my first white jeans of the season, a frilled tuxedo shirt in robin’s egg blue cotton lawn and ballet flats.  By the calendar, most Chicagoans would deem me a month or more too early to wear such an ensemble.

My sleep addled husband, who has never, ever been a morning person, opened one eye and asked me where I was going.   “I’m driving to Nashville to see Susan.  I need some new clothes”, I replied and the ensuing silence made me think that he had gone back to sleep.   He wasn’t sleeping, he was estimating miles and dollars.  Yes, it’s almost 475 miles one way.  Quite a distance for an impromptu road trip.

Susan is Susan Sutherland of Style Paris.  Her Parisian line of made-to-order clothing is worth going the extra mile (or 475) not to mention fits in nicely with my mantra of “make it your own”.   The clothing, all made in France,  is custom tailored, feminine and über-elegant.  Just like Queen of Cashmere sweaters, each Style Paris garment is made for the wearer in their choice of fabric and color.  Patterns are altered for each customer before the fabric is cut so a perfect fit is assured.  Being a tough fit, I have come to rely on Style Paris for my better clothing.  Additionally, these garments are top notch and come out of a factory that produces clothing for Louis Vuitton and Balenciaga so everything is exquisite.

SP linen jacketNashville 001

Currently, there are two Style Paris shops — one is in Palm Beach and the other Southampton.  However, if your travels aren’t taking you to either locale, all is not lost,  there are other ways to see the line.  Susan is the Grande Dame of the trunk show curcuit.   Each season, Style Paris sets up shop for a few days in cities around the U.S. and suites in some of the chicest hotels are turned  into a Parisian salon. The collection is shown by invitation and all are welcome.  To have your name added to her inviation list you can e-mail your request to info@styleparis.com .

Additonally, Style Paris can also be found online at Taigan, a new shopping website that is certainly one of the most breathtaking on the Internet.   Created and curated by a Nashville based group of shopping cognoscenti, Taigan is a veritable treasure trove of goodies guaranteed to seduce you.  In order to take a peek inside, you must first become a “member” but trust me, the experience is well worth the divulging of your name and e-mail.  Just take a look at the roster of retailers currently featured. Divine!

But now back to Nashville; the drive was 7.5 hours and once I passed the flat, fallow fields of Indiana, spring began to bloom.  Rolling hills, horse pastures and split rail fences welcomed me into Kentucky.  The blue grass had turned into verdant velveteen and magnolias, forsythia and dogwood were like floral fireworks.  By the time I crossed into Tennesee my white jeans began to not feel so silly.  Finally, I pulled into the driveway at my destination.

 Nashville 014

One of the Taigan-esses had opened her home for a private sale for two of the Taigan retailers.  There couldn’t have been a more perfect venue. 

Nashville 013

Each end of a fabulous sunroom was set up as a shop.  That is Susan in the image below dashing about. She did pause long enough give me a hug hello although she never slowed enough for me to get a good picture of her. 

Nashville 003

At the other end of the room, was Susan van der Linde and her charming husband Tom.  The ladies of Nashville were eating up her couture hats and handbags for The Derby.   However, I was mesmerized by her collection of Fascinators.  For the uninitiated, a Fascinator is a headband with a decorative fixture that approximates a hat.   How I wish I had the place to wear one!

 Nashville 007

Nashville 012

That evening, we were all invited to the Belle Meade Country Club for dinner.   Sitting at the next table was a lovely couple.  They came over to our group and the lady proclaimed that Style Paris has “saved her life”.  Her daughter’s wedding was in three weeks and until that afternoon she had nothing to wear.  She had purchased a pink Style Paris suit which will be manufactured in time and arrive altered and pressed.  It’s not an uncommon story and the sort of customer service that makes a person drive almost 1000 miles in two days for the Style Paris touch.

And thus, Susan has good naturedly labeled me her favorite driving fool.  Next week?  New Jersey.

March 8, 2010

How To Wear A Diamond Crown. Seriously.

Filed under: Personalization, Precious Things, Queen of Cashmere, Various & Sundry — Queen of Cashmere @ 7:15 PM

I love crowns and am really vested in them.  My logo was only the first of many crowns that I appropriated and assimilated and it truly would have been a shame if this Queen gig would have been a flash in the pan.  Intially, I chose the logo crown because it was very Josephine and it’s been the jumping off point for endless others.

Early on, some asked me, perhaps a little bitchily, just who the heck had made me Queen.  Well, I’ll tell you what I told them.  “I’m self anointed.  It’s a Napoleonic concept.”  I really revel in that.   It gives me the jollies and starts my days right.  Embrace the concept and you too can be Queen (or King) – just not on my patch of cashmere.

I wear a crown almost daily and before you get a vision of me as Queen Victoria stting behind the computer in a jeweled coronet and lace lappets, let me explain.

Queen_Victoria

Currently,  I wear a diamond crown pendant mixed in with stands of pearls.  It’s a jeweled version of my logo crown and I stumbled on it purely by accident a few years ago.  My good friend Frank Pollak offers amazing, fine Art Deco and other vinatge jewelry on 1st Dibs.  Frank has a gorgeous Art Deco conference room that overlooks Rockefeller Center on 5th Avenue and when I’m in New York and need a place to show cashmere to buyers he often, generously,  lets me conduct my appointments there.  Lucky me.  I rarely leave empty handed either.  My diamond crown was a real score.  Hung from a chain around my neck or pinned to a black beret military style,  I rarely step out without it. 

Crown Brooch Compressed

 

Do you remember my post on Sandi Miller Burrows?  She of the fabulous monogram pendants.  Well, since my first post we have become friends.  Although my pendant is still on the drawing board, I have been inclined to have her design one that incorporates a crown.  I wouldn’t be the first woman to desire a jeweled monogram surmounted by a crown. 

Princess Margaret was quite the bon vivant of her day.  One of the first modern,  royal celebrities, she was strikingly beautiful and unburdened by the royal responsibility that was carried by her sister Lilibet.  Popular and and a real rebel, she was once quoted as saying, “disobedience is a joy”.  She had a penchant for handsome young rogues, living in the fast lane and diamonds.  As Princess Royal she was perfectly within her rights to sport a crown on her head and a dashing gentleman on her arm, but sometimes she opted for a crown on her lapel and a rogue in, oh never mind.

Below is a portarit of Princess Margaret, looking deceptively angelic, and the auction tear sheet for a diamond bauble given to her on the occasion of her 21st birthday.  A curvaceous M surmounted by a diamond diadem, it was auctioned off a few years ago.  I wonder who is the lucky person who wears it now?

Princess_MargaretHRH PRINC MARG M+CROWN

And then there was Catherine the Great of Russia – another royal of legendary libido.  In researching this post, I discovered that in her older years, she actually had someone “test drive” her lovers to make sure that they were of suitable prowess before they were admitted to her bedchamber.   No sense in wasting a night with someone beautiful who could not deliver, is there now?

But to get back on track: while Catherine the Great preferred her crowns on her head, her ladies-in-waiting wore a monogram brooch to signify their service to the empress. I wondered why not a “C”?  I imagine that “E” is for empress though as far as a monogram goes, it seem pretty generic.  I could envision myself wearing something like this, except with a CS,  hanging from a chain around my neck.  Suggesting antiquity my pendant would be chunky, with rose cut diamonds that are slightly irregular, set in blackened, rhodium plated white gold.  Divine, no?  Sandi, are you listening?

Ladies-in-waiting

February 4, 2010

Mad Love: Luscious Flowers and Monograms

Filed under: Details, Personalization, Shopping, Various & Sundry — Tags: , , — Queen of Cashmere @ 6:02 PM

jaysonhome_madlove_banner

Jayson Home and Garden in Chicago has a way with, well,  just about everything.

During the summer, the brick-paved, outdoor garden shop is an urban oasis of topiary and green lushness.  I never thought about cut flowers from Jayson Home until, like a breath of fresh air,  an e-mail blew into my inbox this morning.   Mad Love it proclaimed.  Yup.

Leave it to Jayson Home and Garden to add just a little extra something  to make their arrangements stand out.

How about a fragrant arrangement in a julep cup?   Bedside perfection.  And if one is good, a pair is better.

julep cup

Or a lush pastel bouquet gussied up with pink and green ribbon?  TrèsParisien, mes amours.

Ribbon Tied

Va-va-voom red always sets my heart racing.  How about you?  Red

 

Living only a few minutes from the shop, I popped by this afternoon and look what I found.  You know these monogram hors d’oeuvres  plates are right up my alley.  What better excuse is there to have a few friends over for cocktails?

MONGRAM PLATES 003

You can always shop online but be forewarned, the array of merchandise is so beguiling,  you will want everything you see.

January 13, 2010

A Meeting Of Minds or Why Everyone Should Have A Really Big Bust

I left a comment on a blog the other day.  The post was on my favorite topic of monogramming and personalization.   It is often said that the meat of  a blog can be found in the comments and I couldn’t agree more.   A comment left,  in response to mine, by Civility Design reached out and grabbed me. Like minds.  Stylistic soul-mates.  Who were they?

Of course, I had to sleuth them.  Their website let me know my instincts were right.  Don Raney and Jaymes Richardson, the talented,  monogram loving duo behind Civility Design and I were destined to meet.   We like so many of the same things.  The best part?   They are my neighbors.  Not neighbors in the scope of cyber, which could mean anyone living under the same weather pattern, but truly two-blocks-over neighbors.  I shot off an e-mail  and they responded with an invitation to talk about our love of all things personalized.  I knew that this meeting was going to be a good thing.

Now, let me just interject that I have a bust fetish.   A major one.  I do have two antique, carved busts of Romans perched on sconces in my living room but what I really lust after is a great big terracotta bust on a pedestal.  Put a bust of an 18th century Frenchman with a wild wig full of curls and a Gallic nose in my living room and I would never need another thing.  Don and Jaymes employ busts galore to lend a sense of history to their interiors.  That was my first clue.

civility designs Tudor Bust

 

 Second clue?  A fearless love of punchy color and gloss.  I’m feeling those horn chandeliers, too. 

 Kitchen pic 1 for Caron

But it was doggy love that sealed the deal.  Mavis Astor meet LouLou.

Mavis LouLou 

Not pussy-footing around, we selected a place to meet for coffee the very next day.   The Elysian Hotel recently opened a few  blocks away we were all interested in walking over and having a look-see.    From the moment I entered (and was greeted by those amazing busts)  I knew I wouldn’t mind playing Eloise at the Elysian.  Is the casting call for that role still open?   F5CS7882

That afternoon, in a wonderful setting, we laid out  plans for a Civility Design/Queen of Cashmere  media collaboration.  The topic?  Personalization beyond monograms.  

Out of the ether of the Internet, real friendships emerge.

October 28, 2009

Jaeger-LeCoultre and Precision Personalization

Filed under: Details, Personalization, Precious Things, Various & Sundry — Queen of Cashmere @ 8:38 AM

Monogram Pendant tear sheet crop

 The Swiss manufacturer of precious timepieces, Jaeger-LeCoultre created a watch in 1931 that is perennially popular for engraving and monogramming to this day.  The famous Reverso watch , with it’s swivellling cover,  is the perfect canvas for an artfully engraved personalization. 

The image at left was sent to me by Sandi Miller Burrows to illustrate the scale and precious detail in her spectacular diamond pendants.  In a tear sheet from a 2004 publication, the pendant is cozied up with a factory monogrammed Reverso watch.  

Once I started to search a bit for information about the personalized Reverso, my inquiries lead me to the only independent engraver that is sanctioned by this venereable watchmaker to adorn their timepieces.  J.C. Randell, is an master engraver so talented that he makes the Reverso watches literally sing.  Opera.  

I spoke to the artist at length about his art, his passion for engraving, his philosophy and even his dog Lola.  He guided me through an extensive tour of his website which is simply packed with amazing examples of his work. 

skull&boneslargeJ.C.’s customers range from movie star heart-throbs (who I swore I would never name) to Nobel Prize winners.  The work they commission him to do tells a story of their lives, their successes  and their passions.   Yes, J.C. does engrave classic three letter monograms but the most interesting personalizations are more unique. 

When asked how long it takes him to complete his engraving, J.C. told me that he doesn’t measure the process in hours but in weeks.  The work is done under a microscope and is finished engraving so fine that it feels almost smooth to the touch.  To understand this, he suggested that I run my fingers over the presidential portrait on a crisp new dollar bill.  I did.  Incredible!  

Ladies-Jaeger-LeCoultre-OrnateA- with flowers-large

October 23, 2009

A Toast To The Finest Monogram Crystal

413009It’s been a busy few weeks and there hasn’t been much time for blogging lately.  Cashmere season is in high swing and it keeps me going pretty much at full tilt.   It’s also at this time of year that I get out and work with my retailers.  Along the way, I catch up with wonderful friends and find treasures in their shops.

In the Detroit area, Touch of Lace is a place to feather your personal retreat.  My good friends Lauren Fisher and Linda Weissman have been filling their luxe, little  linen shop with items so impeccably tasteful and luxurious that there is nothing for sale that I wouldn’t happily take home and live with contentedly forevermore.  

This is where I discovered Varga Art Crystal.  Not only is it beautiful, it is monogrammed by hand using a diamond wheel to engrave each piece.

As quoted in the Palm Beach Post : “Varga’s canvas is made of lead crystal, his brush of diamonds, and his audience of gold”. 

The Varga brothers are third generation master glass artisans.  Worldwide, crystal makers of this caliber can be counted on one hand.  When I first picked up a flute, I thought it was St. Louis or maybe Baccarat because the weight, feel and aesthetic were perfect.  I learn new things every so often.

Varga Monogram Crystal is available in a rainbow of colors by special order. 

  • Prices $135- $165 per stem.
  •  A Touch of Lace
  •  Bloomfield Hills, MI
  •   1 (248) 645-0734

*Mention Queen of Cashmere when making any Varga Monogram Crystal purchase from A Touch of Lace before 11/04/09 and recieve a 20% discount.

 

 

September 27, 2009

Modern Monogram Marries Fine Jewelry. Exquisite Offspring Result.

Since seeing the movie Julie & Julia, I have been obsessed with two things — monogram diamond jewelry and making Boeuf Bourguignon.   Yesterday, the weather felt a little Fall-like so I made the stew.

Now, about that diamond jewelry.

Meryl Streep wore a monogram pin in the movie that definitely caught my eye.  One of my favorite blogs, Privilege,  covered the subject when the movie first came out.   I have borrowed the Privilege image and suggest that you visit The High WASP’s blog and read the post.Meryl Streep as Julia Childs 

Not long ago, I spoke to Ann Roth, the Academy Award winning costume designer who transformed Meryl Streep into Julia Child.  The pin was commissioned for the movie using  Julia Child’s initials and was inspired by one in Ms. Roth’s personal collection.  She  was unsure if Mrs. Child had actually owned a monogram pin of her own — though we agreed it wouldn’t be a stretch of the imagination.  Ms. Roth, a dynamic octogenarian,  was definitely amused to think  that anyone found monogram jewelry newsworthy as it was look from a bygone era and one she remembered well.

 Ms. Roth, diamond  monogram jewelry is indeed alive and kicking in this millennium.   

 Monogram Pendants

Sandi Miller Burrows and Peggy Pickman Reiner, are two New York based jewelry designers who create the most exquisite monogram pendants I have ever seen.  Working with each customer, they render hand sketches until the design is perfect. Executed in US workrooms and using precious metals and the finest gemstones, they have supplied custom peices to Harry Winston.  

This custom jewelry is without equal in the monogram realm.  The PP monogram pendant, above right, makes the Tiffany keys look downright humble.  These pendants, strung on diamonds by the yard, black rubber straps or multiple chains,  represent bespoke monogram luxe in it’s finest and most modern incarnation. 

 I’m sure I will be bringing you much more about this jewelry.  The  complete line (monogram and otherwise) is to die for.  I can’t wait to show  you the monogram cuff links Sandi made for her husband out of black diamonds.

September 25, 2009

Queen of Cashmere at Leal Boutique

Filed under: Frocks, Personalization, Queen of Cashmere, Shopping, Various & Sundry — Queen of Cashmere @ 4:10 AM

I’ll be blogging from around the country for the next few weeks while visiting some of the wonderful boutiques  that carry Queen of Cashmere.  It’s always fun and interesting and there will be lots of exciting discoveries to share.  

First stop – Columbus, Ohio.  See you there!

 

Leal Columbus

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