Sunday, September 09, 2012

Travel journalism

In preparation for my trip to Paris, I've been reading memoirs, hoping to find inspiration from other people's stories about the city. I've always wanted to live in Paris, so I try to live vicariously through these real experiences by writers, artists, and architects. I think I'm too focused on Paris though. I still have to plan out Lyon, Milan, Venice, Florence, Rome, Brussels, Burges, and Amsterdam!

"Scenes from a Paris Market" from Beers and Bean

On journalism assignments that require travel: "For short, intense periods you're welcomed into worlds that are completely different from your own. Ordinary people tell you their extraordinary stories. And although they will quickly forget you, you don't forget them. Their lives—touching, heartbreaking and sometimes uplifting—will somehow stay with you." - Almost French by Sarah Turnbull (2002)



Sunday, July 08, 2012

Louis Vuitton Fall

Really loving the whole vibe of their fall collection because I'm a bag lady myself and I can't help but be enchanted with the whole romantic notion of travel.

Photo

Thinking Fashion

Studies have shown that what we wear (and what we think of what we're wearing) has a link to how intelligent we perceive ourselves to be. I first found this story in the Vogue website and decided to look for the study myself to satisfy my curiousity. 

"In preliminary findings from a study published on the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology’s website, subjects who donned white coats that they thought belonged to doctors performed better on tests than those who wore street clothes, or those who thought the coats were associated with artists. Their heightened focus was evident only when subjects actually put on the coat in question (not merely when they were in the same room)," explains Katherine Bernard in a VOGUE.COM article. 

"This phenomenon is called enclothed cognition, meaning that if your brain links Miuccia Prada's or Phoebi Philo's collections with powerful, intelligent women, you’re likely to take on those attributes when you wear that Prada pleated skirt or Céline jacket," the article continues. 

All this talk of the Lab Coat reminds me of artlab's Bio Hazard Coat

Hm...   more on this "enclothed cognition," in the said study by Hajo Adam and Adam Galinsk, they defined the term as "the systematic influence that clothes have on the wearer's psychological processes," and proposes that clothes have diverse impact on the wearer via the (1) symbolic meaning of the clothes and the (2) physical experience of wearing them. 

The first worked on experiments that centered on wearing the lab coat (generally associated with attentiveness and carefulness), and they predicted how wearing a lab coat would increase performance on attention-related tasks. The predicted result was obtained through three experiments, (1) physically wearing the lab coat increased attention compared to not wearing a lab coat (2 and 3) wearing a lab coat (referred to as a doctor's coat) results were better than just wearing a lab coat (referred to as a painter's coat).

Lab-coat

I wouldn't mind wearing something like this coat by CDG (via Street Peeper)