Haven
Super_Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- Feb 15, 2007
- Messages
- 13,166
Black Jade|1314841997|3006979 said:You should have asked us to put our age (at least in a general way) if you want to check if they are still in style, because what you really want to know is if younger women are wearing them.
I wear necklaces all the time--but I'm 54.
I love pearls particularly. I always did, even when they were really OUT in the seventies and eighties (at least until Princess Diana brought them back in, I still constantly wore pearls.
But then, I wear brooches, too. I am always going into antique shops and getting vintage brooches, and even dress clips (I bet no one on here knows what a dress clip is.)
I agree with the poster who said, jewelry depends on what we wear and goes really out of style when it doesn't go with the clothes of the moment. Think, flapper pearls and very low waisted dresses, 60's bellbottoms and love beads, etc. etc. Sometimes it goes out forever,w hich is why its good jewelry can be remade for different generations.
For the record, I don't wear the pearls that are stylish again nowadays, to some extent, usually among older women especially the very successful. The big South Seas and Tahitians. I wear the more traditional pearls, smaller and more discreet. I'm on the little side.
I do also wear pendants.
I'd love to see the torsade, it sounded wonderful.
Black Jade|1314915860|3007773 said:Lots of wardrobe items are disappearing around us.
My teenage son (age 16) won't wear a watch. It's too oldfashioned and anyway he has the time on his cellphone. he says only older people wear them and usually if they want to show off because the watch is expensive.
He won't wear an overcoat and jacket. It's all hoodies. If the weather is extra extra cold, he'll wear TWO hoodies.
At his back to school night, the teacher could not convince any of the students to sign up for the new lockers they built in the school. No one has a coat to put inside them.
I don't know anyone under thirty who owns a slip and I know they don't sell them in stores anymore. I mean the little half-slips (my generation didn't wear the full slips anymore either). I see people's thongs and more showing through their pretty little light dresses regularly and they don't seem aware that they are showing off more than they might want to and that there is a solution (slip). I lent one to a young girl once and she wore it OUTSIDE her skirt and posted photos up and everyone her age was saying, Oh, what a pretty little overskirt.
Flipflops now go everywhere, even church, funerals and weddings.
Putting on mourning apparently means to wear a pair of sunshades (with your flipflops) to the funeral.
Maternity clothes have disappeared so far as pregnant women are concerned--they all wear stretch lycra to show off their 'baby bumps' while the girls who AREN'T pregnant wear what look like maternity tops to me.
Necklaces may not go with the extremely low-dipping necklines now in vogue. I mean, it would look odd to be wearing a little pearl choker when you are decollete practically down to your nipples in any and all situations--honestly I'm scared when salesladies bend over that the girls will actually pop out in front of me. The little pendants that people wear usually go right down exactly to where they call the most attention to the cleavage--necklaces wouldn't do that.
Oh, well. My generation is not in a position to complain about changes in fashion. Being that we are the ones who stopped wearing hats even in winter, especially the males; stopped wearing white gloves (they were fussy, but they did help with stopping germs from passing around quite the way they do now); put on jeans, which were only for workmen previously and wore them as bell-bottoms, like sailors and with the knees ripped out (though many of my generation complain when the kids do this now); invented dressing down on all possible occasions for counter-cultural reasons; brought in long unkempt hair (as in hippie chick). Then when we stopped that, we all went into suits, men and women that were seriously the most unflattering things for women in those days EVER seen. Anyway, we left little for the younger generation to do other than go into wearing pajama bottoms around as pants and the ubiquitous flipflops.
My husband teaches all my sons how to tie ties, but I fear that this is now a useless skill and none of their friends their age know how to do it. But it doesn't matter. They never wear ties.
Well, if fashions never changed, what would we be in? Togas? Fig leaves?
Whatever. I'll jsut keep dressing how I like, which definitely includes beautiful necklaces, especially pearls. (though I also have jade, coral, chrysophrase, onyx and many other lovely things, which I also wear).
[/quote]Black Jade|1314924853|3007857 said:I'd be flattered to be compared to Anna Akhmatova, she was a genius poet.
She was treated very cruelly by Stalin.
quote="crasru|1314921986|3007832"][
Heheheh - I find I'm an all-or-nothing at all kinda gal, which is to say, either I like my necklaces dog-collar tight, or I want them 20" to 80". Given that I still remember being compared to a Modigliani, but am neither asymmetrical nor a whote, I'm guessing that means I must be long-necked ....
I love this one... she was neither asymmetrical nor a whote, is was a famed poet and one of the most beautiful women in St. Petersburg in the beginning of the XX century.
http://www.abcgallery.com/A/altman/altman1.html
missy|1314919527|3007799 said:Black Jade|1314915860|3007773 said:Lots of wardrobe items are disappearing around us.
My teenage son (age 16) won't wear a watch. It's too oldfashioned and anyway he has the time on his cellphone. he says only older people wear them and usually if they want to show off because the watch is expensive.
He won't wear an overcoat and jacket. It's all hoodies. If the weather is extra extra cold, he'll wear TWO hoodies.
At his back to school night, the teacher could not convince any of the students to sign up for the new lockers they built in the school. No one has a coat to put inside them.
I don't know anyone under thirty who owns a slip and I know they don't sell them in stores anymore. I mean the little half-slips (my generation didn't wear the full slips anymore either). I see people's thongs and more showing through their pretty little light dresses regularly and they don't seem aware that they are showing off more than they might want to and that there is a solution (slip). I lent one to a young girl once and she wore it OUTSIDE her skirt and posted photos up and everyone her age was saying, Oh, what a pretty little overskirt.
Flipflops now go everywhere, even church, funerals and weddings.
Putting on mourning apparently means to wear a pair of sunshades (with your flipflops) to the funeral.
Maternity clothes have disappeared so far as pregnant women are concerned--they all wear stretch lycra to show off their 'baby bumps' while the girls who AREN'T pregnant wear what look like maternity tops to me.
Necklaces may not go with the extremely low-dipping necklines now in vogue. I mean, it would look odd to be wearing a little pearl choker when you are decollete practically down to your nipples in any and all situations--honestly I'm scared when salesladies bend over that the girls will actually pop out in front of me. The little pendants that people wear usually go right down exactly to where they call the most attention to the cleavage--necklaces wouldn't do that.
Oh, well. My generation is not in a position to complain about changes in fashion. Being that we are the ones who stopped wearing hats even in winter, especially the males; stopped wearing white gloves (they were fussy, but they did help with stopping germs from passing around quite the way they do now); put on jeans, which were only for workmen previously and wore them as bell-bottoms, like sailors and with the knees ripped out (though many of my generation complain when the kids do this now); invented dressing down on all possible occasions for counter-cultural reasons; brought in long unkempt hair (as in hippie chick). Then when we stopped that, we all went into suits, men and women that were seriously the most unflattering things for women in those days EVER seen. Anyway, we left little for the younger generation to do other than go into wearing pajama bottoms around as pants and the ubiquitous flipflops.
My husband teaches all my sons how to tie ties, but I fear that this is now a useless skill and none of their friends their age know how to do it. But it doesn't matter. They never wear ties.
Well, if fashions never changed, what would we be in? Togas? Fig leaves?
Whatever. I'll jsut keep dressing how I like, which definitely includes beautiful necklaces, especially pearls. (though I also have jade, coral, chrysophrase, onyx and many other lovely things, which I also wear).
LOLOLOLThat is too funny and oh so true! What is with the younger generation LOL. I mean, 2 hoodies are just not as warm as my Northface KWIM? And I need my little half slips! Believe me, I'm doing everyone a favor when I wear them under my skirts that show everything when the sun hits it just right
![]()
And don't get me started on those pajama bottoms that I see kids wearing outside as pants. I mean, c'mon. Really?
Of course, nothing compares to when I see kids wearing their pants down around their knees. I could have gone my whole life without seeing their ugly underwear and butt. Do they even have parents who give a damn? Or has everyone just given up?
Yes, I agree we should just keep dressing the way we like and hopefully good taste will come into vogue again someday![]()
crasru|1314943455|3008096 said:Black Jade|1314924853|3007857 said:I'd be flattered to be compared to Anna Akhmatova, she was a genius poet.
She was treated very cruelly by Stalin.
quote="crasru|1314921986|3007832"][
Heheheh - I find I'm an all-or-nothing at all kinda gal, which is to say, either I like my necklaces dog-collar tight, or I want them 20" to 80". Given that I still remember being compared to a Modigliani, but am neither asymmetrical nor a whote, I'm guessing that means I must be long-necked ....
I love this one... she was neither asymmetrical nor a whote, is was a famed poet and one of the most beautiful women in St. Petersburg in the beginning of the XX century.
http://www.abcgallery.com/A/altman/altman1.html
decodelighted|1314919854|3007806 said:I've been wearing pendants exclusively for a few years but all of a sudden got the urge to wear some beads this summer. Alternating between my pendants and a silver strand of graduated beads and a strand of grey freshwater pearls. With bolder prints and thicker fabrics/sweaters -- sometimes a more substantial necklace looks best to me. But I'm (gasp -- as of today! -- 44. I mean 40. Because I've decided to backslide a bit.)