Friday, September 11, 2009

You didn't forego! -- Look of the Day  


Vintage dress from Japan, black chain belt from H&M, "Jimmy Choo" zipper pumps


V & I had a little impromptu photoshoot the other night. "GO. GOGOGOGOGOGOGO!!! Quick, change into that, alright now everything red, I want everything red here. Slimfast, yes! Cake mix, ok! Ok now lay down, put your leg there - NO! Not like that, put your leg there. Scrunch! Scrunch!" We took a few sets of photos, so that was actually pretty fun. Too bad my flat is so small I can't keep all my "fancy" dresses here.

I took the time to sort out outfits, iron them, and they're all hanging up at my mom's place. Grr! I just really need to get up there.

Yesterday I went to Mong Kok on a F/W 09 shoe search - disappointed is an understatement. I could only find platform pointed toe shoes that were even remotely inspired by the coming season. I did find tons of clothes, I ended up only buying a few things but they look adorable. I don't need more dresses, I need more shoes! But of course, in true style I didn't leave MK with just clothes... :)


I had a mighty good LOL over this cat cup, apparently it's good luck or money. I just thought he was making an awesome face. Cat Cup ($39HKD) / 2nd Floor Argyle Center [some random stall]

I spent a good 4-5 hours in Mong Kok yesterday, wandering the mall, then to the streets, drinking insane amounts of bubble tea. I finally told V, "I have to stop drinking this, I haven't eaten all day I have a massive sugar high." Those bubble tea drinks are so cheap and delicious, but on an empty stomach you go from sugar-induced euphoria to a cranky come down in the span of an hour. I'm sure we looked odd to say the least, hysterically laughing and falling over, then suddenly walking like zombies, all glassy eyed and confused.

Happy Lemon is hands down one of my favorite bubble tea places! The one I'm trying here is malt flavor with tapioca bubbles and toasted coconut - yummm


If you haven't tried bubble tea, go now!! I implore you! The standard flavor is tea/coffee mix with black tapioca bubbles, but Taro (purple) flavor is good, and if you make it to Happy Lemon they have English on their menu.

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Thursday, September 10, 2009

When didn't we merrimake? -- Look of the Day  


Here's a slideshow of my birthday fun... 9-10-09 It's so funny, three years ago I was 18 and so wasted I passed out on the floor. I was so wasted, that there were photos documenting me "cleaning up" after my party by way of finishing off drinks. I'm talking like 6 dirty vodka martinis a night, waking up the next morning with an entire bottle of Grey Goose vodka in my purse (?!), at the Four Seasons penthouse at some diamond sale... I love telling these stories because that is so not who I am anymore, I'm much more of a stay at home, watch a movie, bake a cake, smoke a joint, chill out, have a beer, go to the beach kind of a girl now.

I've lived in Hong Kong for five years, it goes by so fast but when I think back it feels like a different life. That's crazy, huh? The way you were feeling that felt so intense, the hurt feeling like it would never end, the happiness feeling like it would go on forever - it makes you realize that no matter what's going on it's going to pass and feel so fuzzy. This can be applied to fashion as well. I look at the hot shoes now, and I do think they're hot, but I realize this is just like everything else in 2 years these zippers, architectural shoes, bondage shoes are all going to be "So 2009..."

Anyway, here's some photos from last night :)


Wearing "Gucci" dress from Shenzhen, "Jimmy Choo" zipper pumps from Shenzhen, and python cuff from Bangkok

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Birthday Times!  

I'm not like other girls. I don't get a birthday I seem to get a birthweek. Spoiled? Yeah probably... But I appreciate it! My parents always sing the 12 Days of Christmas song to me in tune with my birthday. It began last Sunday with my presents from Japan (lots of kitchenware stuff) and has progressed all week.

I was busy this week as well, all last weekend I spent with my parents and my boyfriend. Then Monday I had to prep for the video shooting I did on Tuesday for the Sense of Touch commercial. I'll upload the "behind the scenes" photos when I get them - oh man... Haha I'm kind of afraid of it coming out. I am NOT good on video. I was playing the role of a pale girl (who also needs a brazilian wax!) and goes through multiple scenarios of people saying, "Girl you look tired." "Why are you wearing THAT?! Don't you have a bikini?" Whatever, I embraced the tired, frumpy inner me and by the end of it I got a spray tan, a facial, and my nails did. The moral of the commercial was more that you can go from pale foundation and dark under eye circles, to tan, blonde and in a bikini.

Then the next day I went in for a real tanning treatment, got my hair done, and next week I have an all day spa appointment on Wednesday since I have a photoshoot on Thursday for the spa. I think I could get used to this lifestyle haha! The girls who work at Sense of Touch are SO SWEET! I usually leave photoshoots grumpy or in tears after being verbally assaulted "You are so bad model, I will have to spend so much money la you so fat the photoshopping take so many hours!" But these girls were super sweet, allowed me to improvise, were funny, bought lunch, dinner and a taxi for me to go home - it was such a refreshing experience!

Yesterday was my actual birthday, I ended up spending the day alone. Not because I didn't have other options, but I don't like birthdays. I like other people's birthdays, but my entire life I spent moving every 2 years and eventually I stopped telling people it was my birthday. I had my very first birthday party when I was 14, so big birthdays make me uncomfortable. I had fun last night though, I went out with my boyfriend for some insanely spicy Sichuan food


We ordered spicy softshell crab, tan tan noodles, cucumber with garlic, and chili dumplings

I really love Chili Fagara, it's not traditional Sichuan but it is SO good. They have an awesome set lunch as well, I haven't been in a while but it's a good deal if you're able to handle hardcore spicy in the middle of the day.

Today I'm moving slowly, I took a ton of photos so I will be able to update more frequently :) I'm going to be blogging as part of a small community that hopefully will become popular in Hong Kong. My focus is going to mainly be beauty/celebrities, so I'm excited about that. Hopefully with the right marketing we can make a little money from all this writing!

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Wednesday, September 2, 2009

September 1!  

My birthday is in nine days :) I'm very excited. I prefer to have a lot of little birthdays with all of the different people I love instead of one big birthday. When you have one birthday you don't get to properly pay attention to everyone, and anyway it's so much more fun to have a birthday week. I was thinking about all of the things I could possibly want, and nothing I want is really tangible. I know everyone says like, "All I want is peace & love" and that's crap, but I just want this to be a good year.

Wait... Shouldn't I say that at New Years? Oh well, I said it at NYE and I'll say it again: I just want a good year. I want some sort of a full-time job where people pay me on time and there isn't constant drama, I want my boyfriend to be happy and decide what he wants from his job/life, I want my friends to have good relationships and be happy, and I want my parents to be happy. That in itself makes me happy, not all that other crap. Someone told me once (I was drunk, I don't know if this is a perfect recollection) that there's a philosopher out there who said your success and happiness in life is directly related to those around you. It's true, when your friends/family/boyfriend are down - so are you.

Oh wait. I just thought of something I want, I want that little 12 year old dog I saw online once with the one eye and the broken jaw. I've been thinking about him for weeks and can no longer find his picture :( The story was the poor little guy was abandoned and needs a foster home, ohhh how I would love to take care of a little doggie and smuggle him on the train/bus with me everywhere.

Aside from all that birthday sentimental stuff, I went to Yuen Long with V today and we ended up taking the lightrail into the city. I didn't take photos of myself today because I'm recovering from the most horrible stomach flu in the known universe. I'm talking laying in bed, fetal position, crying, and dry heaving. On the upside my body feels sparkly clean! Downside is that I'm tired, dizzy, and could a rat's ass about how I look. I felt so bad and nasty today I wore a... hat. AND I wore a baggy shirt AND to top it all off I wore shorts. So unlike me. But now I'm feeling better and tomorrow the pencil skirts, dresses will be in full effect.

Yuen Long city is pretty cool, I went to the restaurant chain Taipei. I looked online, I have no idea what it's official name is, maybe I made that name up. But V told me they have 97 different flavors of bubble tea and an endless combination of french fry toppings. I stuck with the standard bubble tea, V had the taro one, next time I would like to try the Pineapple Green Tea - it looked sooooo refreshing. Since being sick I just get excited about drinks, icy cold drinks like Slurpees, smoothies, bubble tea, Coca Cola - it's so ridiculous. Food I'm sort of like, "Eh.." but give me a Slurpee and I'm in heaven! Tomorrow I'll make an effort to go back to Yuen Long city and take a picture of Taipei, I know there is also one in Fanling so there must be more than two in the whole country.

In addition to prowling Yuen Long for fashion delights (Nothing too exciting, we're switching seasons here soon) I found myself gazing at an advertisement. It was one of those strange moments, like when you meet your long lost evil twin... "Hey I know you... You happen to look a lot like me..." When suddenly you realize, no that's not an evil twin, that's not a body snatcher, that IS you.

Dun dun dun DUN...


This was taken quite a while ago and I did attempt to get paid for the photoshoot but I was swindled out of my money by a Paco Chan who owned Redstar Modeling Agency. I was told it was a catalog photo and was pretty surprised to see my photo in China, Macau, Hong Kong and Singapore. They said, "Get proof" and so I did - then they stopped responding to me


Oooh that made me mad today. I looked at myself for a good five minutes and then I starting shouting at the image, shouting obscene angry things at it. Apparently that's just how shit goes down in Hong Kong, you sign up with a modeling "agent" and then you do photoshoots and when you try to get your money for an international ad campaign... It turns out it was never a registered business, and the guy running it is a complete f*ckwad. Hooray!

See, there I negated the sentimental happiness from my birthday :) Now I'm going to go watch True Blood and imagine what I would do if I had vampire powers...

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Thursday, August 27, 2009

We encamp brokenly. -- Look of the Day  


Wearing black ruffle top from Zara / White crucifix from Argyle Center @ Mong Kok / Blue stretchy skirt from H&M / Chunky platform wedges from Zara


Nothing much has been going on this week, it's been so ridiculously hot that going outside is like walking into an oven. Both of the air conditioners in my flat are broken! One is dripping (that's a $10,000HKD fine) and the other sounds like a rocket ship is about to take off in my bedroom. I decided I would try life without an air conditioner for a day to save money on my electricity bill, I thought I was going to die. A cold shower later I gave up and turned it back. I'm really sorry environment, I know my CFCs are killing you... but it's you or me.

I just got side tracked as I was sent to AOL's Celebrity Snap Judgment link. Just your usual online hot or not voting slide show - but WHOAAAA. I forget that sometimes celebrities don't pull off the looks they're trying out. It feels good to know that they're like us in a lot of ways, they may have an entire team to make them look good but they still have bad days.


I also wanted to point out my makeup. I think anyone who has trouble finding the right makeup should give Bare Minerals a shot. I started using their line in December because nothing was giving me an even look, everything would wear off in different places, or looked cakey - this stuff has been so great, even through the summer. I have tried just about everything, cheap, expensive, and I have never used such a great series. Their foundation combined with the setting Mineral Veil will keep your makeup on through the 100% humidity!

Bare Minerals is only available from Sephora in Hong Kong:
Sephora Hong Kong
Hollywood Plaza
Sai Yeung Choi Street South
Mongkok, Kowloon

T: (852) 27718061

Monday - Sunday: 11:00 am - 00:00 am

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Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Great Fake Debate  

Hong Kong is home to endless luxury shopping malls. Not even shopping malls, they are super malls, vast seas of marble flooring, the cool breeze of air conditioning, infinite luxury shopping. Hong Kong malls are a force to be reckoned with, they are a phenomenon that to any foreigner seems insane. How can Escada be making money when it has five stores on Hong Kong island alone? Oh wait... Escada files for bankruptcy. Despite some luxury brands suffering from the current economic state, many of them are still flourishing in the tropical shopping environment of Asia.

"And sales of designer clothing, jewelry and other luxury goods in China will climb 7 percent this year, while worldwide luxury revenue could fall 10 percent, Bain & Co. forecast. Last year, luxury sales surged 25 percent in China while they were flat worldwide." - Taragana Blog

This morning on my daily blogroll I came across this post from one of my favorite bloggers, Perez on his new fashion blog, CoCo Perez. Obviously the allotted sum of $400k is not the point, LVMH was more making the point of cracking down on counterfeits. This is same deal as with bootleg movies, the best they can do is nail the people buying the bags. The suppliers of these counterfeit bags are not stupid people and deal in multiple areas of "shady activity". I then came across an article by Harper's Bazaar on fakes and the entire ring of illegal activity behind it.

"It is estimated that up to 7 percent of our annual world trade — $600 billion worth — is counterfeit or pirated; that fakes are believed to be directly responsible for the loss of more than 750,000 American jobs; that everything from baby formula to medicine is counterfeited, with tragic results; that counterfeiters and the crime syndicates they work with deal in human trafficking, child labor, and gang warfare; and that counterfeiting is used to launder money, and the money has been linked to truly sinister deeds such as terrorism." - Dana Thomas

I don't know how I personally feel about fakes, on one hand child labor, terrorism, and human trafficking sure sounds bad... But let's be honest here, I go to Shenzhen at least once a month. I have people I like up there, I've been taken to remote warehouses to look at handbags where people are armed with weapons. I've also watched police run people down in the streets and arrest them right then and there, yeah counterfeit goods mean serious business. Do all those horror stories and the 750,000 Americans out of work stop me from buying fake goods...?

Do you watch your favorite TV shows online illegally? Do you download albums off torrents? Do you find ebooks online? Do you go to the market to buy imitation shoes?

I'm not saying I do any of those things, but come on we live in Hong Kong. It's difficult to escape the temptation of saving not just $100 bucks, but thousands of dollars by purchasing a fake instead of the real deal. What difference does it make between buying a fake LV and the real thing? Your sense of pride? Perez says in his article, "Counterfeits are not cool! Plus, anyone with even the most rudimentary fashion experience can spot the difference between an authentic and a fake." Perez has not been to China and compared a real Balenciaga motorcycle bag to a fake.

VS
Photoshopping aside, which is the real deal?

Fakes also expand into the world of "authentic retail". Or is it acceptable to buy an imitation item when it's from a store like Asos, Topshop, H&M, or Steve Madden? All of them are notorious for copying trends. In the US retail chain Forever 21 has many items that are "inspired" by luxury brands - is that counterfeit? It's copying a design and selling it for a cheaper price. Or is that ok because it's from a real store?

It's a curious debate, because where do you draw the line? Are those of us not willing to drop a couple grand on a real bag supposed to deprive ourselves of the newest trends? Just because we're not an elite platinum member at Lane Crawford do we have to settle for less? I think not. Like the music and movie industry, I feel that fashion needs to change. Information, entertainment, and fashion must become more accessible to the middle-upper middle class, otherwise they will simply be a thing of the past. Look at television, the future is the Internet - there is already hulu.com which allows users to watch their favorite shows online with a few sponsored commercials. The only problem is that hulu.com is exclusive to US residents, leaving those of us who do not reside in the Holy Land of Entertainment to go about watching our favorite TV shows via streaming online or - gasp - buying it bootleg.

The answer to me is obvious. If you want me to pay to subscribe to HBO so I can watch True Blood, then let me watch it online. I mean since NOW TV offers such a great selection of shows and always so up to date. Make those Louis Vuitton (which I fondly have dubbed Lousy Vinyl) bags a little more affordable and people won't resort to buying fakes. Don't charge me $90HKD to watch a movie when I could actually watch in the comfort of my own home, at almost perfect quality FOR FREE.

So I'll stop there, because to me the answer is painfully obvious. Why should/would we pay for something when it's out there for free? Because it's wrong?

Yeah sure.

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Monday, August 24, 2009

One Stop Shop -- Dream on!  

I have been incredibly bored today, I just couldn't make my mind up about what to do. I felt like I should go out and do something productive, so I said: "Ok we can go make spinach artichoke dip!" A simple task, really. A deceptively... simple... task... Park n shop apparently no longer carries frozen spinach! After I had bought everything else, I stood in the freezer aisle and had a very out loud, WTF moment when I saw that there was broccoli, brussel sprouts, mixed vegetables, even hash browns. But spinach? Noo, of course not spinach.


I just wanted to stay at home today! Is that so much to ask? To have one day of not going on a mission?!

Scenarios like these make me miss the US like crazy! If I went to Safeway I wouldn't need to go anywhere else, I would just go to one store and be done with it. In Hong Kong you really need to go to about 3 different grocery stores before you can get what you want. Park n Shop has the basics (sort of...), City Super carries the more luxury basics, and then there are gourmet stores like Oliver's and Great.

I remember when I first moved to Hong Kong, I lived in Discovery Bay and there was one Park n Shop with a limited selection and a handful of restaurants (Ebeneezers, Jaspas, McDonalds). It is a true story that after living in Hong Kong for about 3-4 months I lost about 20 lb. My friends back home were all shocked, my mom was really proud of me, but the truth of the matter was that for 3-4 months I ate tuna out of a can because I couldn't figure out where we were supposed to buy "normal" groceries. By the time I actually discovered City Super I had adapated to a healthier life style, but talk about culinary culture shock! You go from having everything at your convenience to having NOTHING. Okay, and in addition I used to be a picky eater. I didn't try a piece of cheesecake until I was 16 and simply would not eat a peanut if my life depended on it. Far cry from my current state of peanut/peanut butter obsessed!

Anyway, today when I was grumbling about having to trek out to Causeway Bay to go to City Super I almost burst out laughing on the train. It was only a little less than five years ago I had no idea City Super existed! Hopefully my tags in this post will reach someone out there who is desperately researching "Hong Kong western grocery stores", no one needs to suffer the 'can-of-tuna-for-every-meal' fate.

Park n Shop: Is pretty much everywhere. I could get onto a serious rant thinking about everything I dislike about them. Oh boy, they make me so mad some days. I come from a country where everything is King-Sized and aisles are laid out with scientific precision - let me just warn you now, Park n Shop is the anti-Christ. It's good for drinks, eggs, bread, cookies, chips, soups, pretty much anything that you're not picky about. An added bonus is being able to purchase these things online > here <

City Super: Does an ok job at providing some interesting goodies expats miss from home, although I have got to say their stocking ability... *sigh* much to be desired. Go on a "bad day" and there is nothing in the store. Also, avoiding peak times is a great piece of advice. I seriously think that people must come to visit City Super or something, why is everyone just standing around? WHY? It's a grocery store, you get in, you get what you want, you leave. I swear, it's like everyone stands around in awe. I like to buy cut fruit here, things for my delicious salads (fresh spinach, good cheese, deli meats), they also have a cool variety of frozen food.

Threesixty: Hong Kong's first organic super market was a pretty exciting find. I think it opened 3-4 years ago, I ran all over the place trying to figure out what the "Landmark" building was. Some people are very picky about eating exclusively organic, Threesixty gives a lot of good options for vegetarians & vegans as well. As a "normal" person who isn't picky about anything about food, the only thing I like is that sometimes there are Manager's Special items. I once bought an amazing frozen chocolate cake that was normally priced for $120HKD for $40! It was one of those cakes that takes you places beyond amazing chocolate flavor, it was a triumph and delicious. Ok, so on a less personal note I think they have a great selection of ice cream.

Oliver's: Gets me all sorts of excited! Oliver's is very gourmet and I'm sure there are people who buy all of their groceries there, but that person is not me. For me, going to Oliver's is a big treat and usually after a fat paycheck :) They have what I consider to be the best ready made lasagna in all of Hong Kong. I have tried every single one from every grocery store and I am proud to shout from the rooftops that Oliver's makes the best. It's only $48HKD for a portion that could serve two. They also have an extensive collection of alcohol, some things that you cannot find anywhere else.

GREAT: I looked all over, but I can't find the website for the store. It's located below Seibu in Pacific Place (Admiralty) very hard to miss! I remember searching "Western grocery store Hong Kong" a million times and only hearing here and there snippets of this fabled store: Great. Was it just a great supermarket? Or was it the Great supermarket? I had no idea, but it sounded great. Once I found it, there's been no end to the love affair. I usually go any time after 8pm, then all of the ready-made food is on sale! I usually buy 2 large custom salads ($40 each), a carton of soup ($30), a loaf of bread ($20), and if any of their wraps look good ($40, enough for 2 people) I get one of those too. I can't begin to emphasize how much I love that grocery store, it has absolutely nothing I need aside from a quick dinner. I probably go at least once a week. It is truly a gourmet grocery store.

Gateway: There is no website for Gateway, but this was quite a find for an American missing food from home. It's located at exit E1 in the Sheung Wan MTR station, you'll notice a yellow wall with a black and white checkerboard sign saying "Gateway" and a flight of stairs down. This is almost like a mini-Costco or Sam's Club. There's no refrigerated goods, but paper plates, cleaning products, candy, cereal, alcohol, soda, condiments, baking supplies, coffee - all in bulk. You can also put in orders with the desk and when they make a new order they will notify you so you can pick it up.

That's about it for Hong Kong grocery stores... It's a pretty sad line up. I didn't return to the US for 3 years straight, I had completely forgotten what it was like to be there. Heh. I walked into a Long Island Walbaum's and stopped dead in my tracks, mouth wide open, eyes glazed over. My poor boyfriend kept prodding me along, "Ok, ok, we can come back tomorrow if you want. We have to hurry, come on. You don't need that, put that down, we can buy it later." Nothing in the entire world is like an American grocery store. I don't think I will ever get over how many options there are for everything! I have been like a neglected child for too long, unaware of the choices out there. Now I have an entire bookmark folder that I have named Food Porn and is an assortment of photos, recipes, and food websites (Mmm Ben & Jerry's!)

On that note, I will leave you with this delicious recipe for Spinach Artichoke Dip:

INGREDIENTS
* 1 (8 ounce) package cream cheese, softened
* 1/4 cup mayonnaise
* 1/4 cup grated Parmesan cheese
* 1/4 cup grated Romano cheese
* 1 clove garlic, peeled and minced
* 1/2 teaspoon dried basil
* 1/4 teaspoon garlic salt
* salt and pepper to taste
* 1 (14 ounce) can artichoke hearts, drained and chopped
* 1/2 cup frozen chopped spinach, thawed and drained
* 1/4 cup shredded mozzarella cheese

1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C). Lightly grease a small baking dish.
2. In a medium bowl, mix together cream cheese, mayonnaise, Parmesan cheese, Romano cheese, garlic, basil, garlic salt, salt and pepper. Gently stir in artichoke hearts and spinach.
3. Transfer the mixture to the prepared baking dish. Top with mozzarella cheese. Bake in the preheated oven 25 minutes, until bubbly and lightly browned.

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Sunday, August 23, 2009

Lei Yue Mun -- Fishing Village  


The weather was finally nice (crazy hot though) so when I met up with my parents on Saturday my dad suggested we go out to Lei Yue Mun on the Kowloon side to look at the village. Lei Yue Mun is a little channel of water that runs between Junk Bay & Victoria Harbor, on the HK Island side it's a holiday village, I think they offer horseback riding lessons. On the Kowloon side it's a fishing village where fisher people sell their goods, if you choose to sit down in the restaurants you pick your own fish and they prepare it for you. It's not exactly cheap anymore, it's a big thing to do for tourists so unless you have someone who's been before you might get gouged on the price. We just bought a grouper and a couple of scampi to take home and BBQ.

It sounds like fun, it was fun, but I made a vital error. In all the excitement of buying fish, the guy throwing lobsters on the floor at me, playing with the 6' fish in the tank, I forgot to ask the fish monger to clean and scale the fish. For some reason that is beyond me, it wasn't until we were all the way home that I thought, "Gee how am I going to eat this fish...? Wait, how am I going to prepare this fish? Oh shit, who's going to clean the fish?!" When the time came, I had two knives - a cleaver and a small sharp knife. I gutted that fish like a mofo. Yeah, I was shouting, "Oh my god this is so gross! What is that?! What is that?!" While my mom tried to help, she just reached her hand inside and tried to pull the guts out, bile shooting everywhere. Then I realized I had to scale the fish. Scales everywhere! On my face, in my hair, all over the kitchen. Dis-gusting. I will never, ever forget: Ask someone else to kill, gut, and descale fish.

Aside from that traumatizing event the fish turned out very nice. I was really thinking about photo documenting the entire process, but I was just too freaked out beyond words. I have major respect for the women who gut fish in the market for a living!


Ribbed tank from Cotton on / White crucifix from Argyle Center @ Mong Kok / Flowered dress from Phuket / Woven Sandals from TST

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Thursday, August 20, 2009

Majorly Crushin' -- Iosselliani  


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"Master of the opulent, mystical, and baroque, Roman jewelry line Iosselliani follows a cultural legacy of defining beauty with the tastefully over-the-top. Established in 1997 by Paolo Giacomelli and Roberta Paolucci, the revered label melds traditional metals and gems, often layering one delicate strand upon another until an ornate piece forms an unexpected look that's misshapen, refined, and altogether enchanting."
- Refinery 29

I have been absolutely in love with with Iosselliani jewelry ever since I discovered it a few years back. It started with an Elizabeth Cole Jewelry obsession and quickly found similar items, finally bringing me to the Iosselliani obsession.

To me Iosselliani is mythical, something that you'd find in a buried treasure chest - raw gems, rough metals, skulls, and claws. I can just imagine doing a photoshoot for them, being entirely covered in chains and sparkling jewels... This is the stuff of dreams. In particular I'm fond of their rings, the very first ring I saw was a silver claw clutching a tiny pearl. A simple ring, but it's one of those rings that you dream about, thinking how people would exclaim, "Oh wow that is some ring!" Over the past two years of watching the collection, Iosselliani has changed to include more delicate elements like feathers as well as more frightening skulls and geometrical stacks.

On their website I discovered that they have outlets in SE Asia! Yay! This is so exciting because on two separate occasions I have gone to the Pixie Market in NYC looking for anything Iosselliani only to discover that everything was sold out. Imagine my devastation... I flew 16 hours to go to NYC, and then no jewelry. Sad, sad times. Now there are three outlets where Iosselliani is being sold in Hong Kong:

Destination Hong Kong
S01B, 1/F LCX Fashion Walk
9 Kingston Street, Causeway Bay

Joyce Boutique
Shop 334 Pacific Place
88 Queensway, Admiralty

Lane Crawford
Pacific PLace
88 Queensway, Admiralty


Iosselliani is not an inexpensive brand of jewelry, one ring will set you back anywhere between $150-$500USD. They are definitely not the most expensive name out there, but for a unique piece of jewelry it is a worthy purchase in my book.

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Hypermeters are polytheistic. -- Look of the Day  


Wearing blue & lace dress from Argyle Center @ Mong Kok / Brown leather belt from Shenzhen / Gold bangles from H&M / Woven sandals from Ome @ Granville Rd

Last night I met up with V for some dumplings from my favorite dumpling house in central, Yuan Dumpling. I always get broccoli and the vegetarian dumplings, they are SO good. I also like their hot and sour soup... It's really hot here, not exactly hot and sour soup weather. V also ordered the 1000 year-old egg with tofu, mmm... I will try anything, but I explained to her it's not the flavor of the egg - it's the texture. Why does the egg turn to jelly? WHY? Something about an egg suddenly turning green and gelatinous... I don't know, maybe I'm too white, but I just cannot get down. Sure I'll eat marrow, cartilage, but whenever I see those eggs I just get seriously grossed out. (Check out this video from the Tin Hau branch of Dumpling Yuan)

Dumpling Yuan T: 2525 9018
69 Wellington Street (across from Da Nang Vietnamese restaurant & the old Deli@Wellington)
Central, Hong Kong

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