Author: Claire

  • Mr. D and The Day Job

    The other day I had the chance to sit in on some great conversations about television.  One concept that was brought up was the magic that happens when a show “gets it”.  That’s when a program is able to connect to its audience by offering a realistic portrayal of its audience’s life.

    Currently, I work in education. Apart from a few semi-steady gigs that I do not talk about I have spent the bulk of my time as a substitute teacher.  Still. It doesn’t matter if you’ve never taught a day in your life.  If you have friends who teach, surely you’ve heard stories. All sorts of crazy things can happen, both in and out of the classroom.

    On that note, let me introduce you to Mr. D–a program that airs on my nation’s broadcaster, CBC Television.  Here’s a clip from last year…

    My first instinct is to say that no teacher is ever that bad when they mark. And yet…I know otherwise.

    I love this show! If you haven’t seen it, you don’t know what you’re missing.

    Granted, there are some darker aspects of teaching.  But I’ve already seen and had a taste of Boston Public. A spoof of some of the lesser-known parts of the profession is a refreshing change.

  • Indie Fashion Boutique Spotlight: DORLY DESIGNS

    In the heart of Toronto’s Leslieville neighbourhood DORLY DESIGNS is your destination for unique designer jewelry and statement pieces you won’t find anywhere else in the city. Owned and operated by Fashion Designer Dorly J-Louis, her determination to bring you her collections is truly inspiring.

    Dorly Designs' WindowDORLY DESIGNS 1173 Queen Street East, Toronto Photo: Staff

    I began by asking Dorly about her background.

    Have you always been interested in fashion? Did you ever think about making a career out of it?

    I took a Fashion Arts class in high school. It was my favourite class in grade 12. For my final project I made a strapless dress with a burgundy taffeta skirt and black velveteen bodice. I vividly remember struggling to understand some of the technical instructions from my first pattern: making adjustments and resizing it to fit my measurements. What the teacher explained made sense for two minutes, then I spent hours at home trying to figure out how to apply what I had learned.

    So I tweaked [my project] and by trial and error I made it work. And better yet, I had the exact dress I wanted and otherwise wouldn’t have been able to afford to wear to the prom. It wasn’t ‘perfect’ but my teacher singled it out and used it as an example to show the new students what they could accomplish in the course.

    At the end of the semester we organized a fashion show for the school. It was such a success that my interest in fashion flourished even more. As a child, I used to sew clothes by hand for my dolls from scraps of fabric. And I could spend hours flipping through pages of magazines looking at clothes, jewelry, shoes and purses. Once I graduated from high school, I really wanted to go to Collège LaSalle in Montreal but the registration fee for their fashion program including living on campus was more than I could afford and I didn’t have any financial support. My father refused to sign my OSAP loan application to discourage me. So instead I applied to the Fashion Design program at the Richard Robinson Fashion Design Academy in my hometown, Ottawa. With only my mom’s blessing I worked two jobs that summer at minimum wage 7 days a week to save $7000 to pay for the 1st semester. The second semester and second year of the program would take care of themselves. I remember one day my mom looked at me and said: “You fear nothing.” And I didn’t because my plan had been to go to school. So I did.

    What inspired you to open Dorly Designs?

    Once I had graduated from the Academy I worked briefly as a Sales Associate for Fairweather. Ottawa is not a fashion Mecca like Montreal or Toronto, and the resources, government support, funding, jobs or opportunities in the industry were virtually nil so many graduates found work in the retail sector but not as designers. Setting up an internship placement in the field had already been challenging enough for many of the graduates. So to be able to compete in the workforce and make myself more marketable I went to university.

    I got my Bachelor of Arts Degree in Mass Communication and instead of taking time off to travel the world like some of my friends or become a public servant, I came to Toronto to complete a post-grad in Journalism to make sure I was educated enough to never set foot in a classroom again. From there I worked in the banking industry, and other office-type jobs, but my love of fashion and media arts was always there. After years of working in Toronto at customer service jobs I loathed, I decided to change that.

    Tell us more of the Dorly Designs story.  How did you get started?

    I resigned from a CIBC Call Centre job but not before I secured an agency to represent me for modeling and acting. Looking back, this was one of the gutsiest moves I made to date. My last day at work was a Friday. Monday came and it hit me – I had no job to go to. I went from working at a full-time ‘secure’ job with benefits, to not having any guaranteed source of income. I still had rent to pay, and was in need of gas to put in my vehicle, and food to put on the table. However, I finally had the free time to plan and research how to get my jewelry into retail stores. Money ran out faster than it came in. And at first, I went at auditions with no success. But the first gig I landed was a US National Commercial. I paid off my credit card and my student loans in full. Through various modeling and acting gigs after that, I saved and invested money because I knew too well what it was like not to have any to make ends meet. Without a ‘real’ job I also saved for a down payment to purchase my first condo to live downtown.

    Still an unknown in the Toronto fashion scene, I approached independent boutiques like Fresh Collective, Fashion District, Purple Thumb (now closed) and Black Daffodil who carried products by local fashion designers. I was still modeling regularly for the Shopping Channel and acting to make a living. I stayed the longest at Fresh Collective; two years at their Kensington Market location working every other Saturday in the store to promote my line and try and build a clientele. I inhaled everything I learned and realized quickly that it wasn’t impossible or unattainable to own or run my own boutique. The first three stores had similar arrangements; I was paying over $800 in rent monthly to showcase my products – on top of my mortgage. It came to a point where the math didn’t add up against my sales and I decided I might as well open my own store instead of paying such a high overhead.

    An opportunity came with the recession of 2008. A slew of businesses had left a trail of empty locales and by 2010 there was a lot of inventory to choose from. I had set aside $15,000 for the project which included finding a lawyer to review the lease, registering the business, paying 1st and last month’s rent, hiring tradespeople to retrofit the space, buying all the fixtures, supplies, mannequins and store furnishings, setting up all merchant banking, as well as services including utilities such as hydro and a security monitoring station. And thanks to my obsession with watching interior design shows on HGTV, and my experience as a frugalista, I did it within budget! No one will give you a manual that caters specifically to your needs or a step-by-step flow chart for how to get any of this done. Use your logic and make use of every good recommendation you receive. I embarked on this project without anyone knowing about it. So if it had crashed before its completion, that failure would have been mine to bear alone.

    I had many potential locations to choose from; Queen Street West or Kensington Market? The Danforth or St-Clair Avenue? Mount Pleasant or the Beaches? It honestly came down to price. Queen Street East in Leslieville is where I found an ideal space which needed some love, but was perfect for a start-up. I will always remember the face of my electrician when he saw the original bare bones of the space. A month later he was in awe of the final results and said to me “I had no faith. You will do well here”.

    How long have you been in business?

    May 25, 2010, is when DORLY DESIGNS first opened its doors to the public. I never take this small success for granted. And I thank God for having been able to set it in motion.

    What sort of items do you sell?

    Bel Moun Collection is the house label jewelry line, which I create and manage. ‘Bel Moun’ means ‘beautiful person’ in Creole. It is inspired by a mix of mediums: semi-precious stones like turquoise, coral, agate, amethyst, jade, jasper, carnelian, black onyx, amazonite, labradorite and other quartz crystals. I love to incorporate freshwater pearls, brass, copper, gunmetal, or sterling silver in our work to create unique pieces—earrings, bracelets, and necklaces.

    I also retail an upcycled line of accessories: shrugs, vests, totes, and arm-warmers, made in-house from 100% wool sweater scraps which have also been well received by our customers. I find the public responds well to the ingenuity of repurposing goods into something ‘new’ again. A favourite of our Beaches clientele is our soybean hand-poured candle collection, which is exclusive to the house label. Our penny cuff links and penny lockets were a huge hit this year ever since the one cent coin has been discontinued. We were sold out of the entire collection before the Christmas shopping season ended.

    Purple ShrugA Shrug of Many Sweaters – Upcycled sleeveless, above the waist, zip-up shrug. Made from 100% wool sweater scraps, felted, patched & sewn. Photo: Houman Photography

    Cobalt-2-(2)-11-inchesRhythm & Blues Necklace – Blue Agate Lace round and angular semi-precious stones, plated silver & pewter duo chain links, crystals, stone powder clay floral, pewter leaf base. Bel Moun Collection. Photo: DORLY DESIGNS

    Who is your ideal customer?

    My ideal customer is, above all, a confident woman – whether she is 18 or 65. She is feminine and loves to accessorize. She is not shy. She can adorn herself with a statement piece and wear it. She doesn’t cower behind her imperfections. She is aware of them but also knows how to camouflage what others conceive as insecurities. She understands which colours looks best on her in order to accentuate her best assets. She knows she has a figure – not flaws. She is stylish, someone who loves and appreciates designer artistry not readily found anywhere else in the city. My ideal customer is a trendsetter who is fashion-savvy and is open to suggestions and advice to create and achieve a look that is unique to her—not the masses. I own an independent boutique. My ideal customer is also an independent shopper.

    TriumphbBLOGGERTriumph Necklace – Jasper stone medallion, freshwater pearls, crystals, copper bead caps and chain. Bel Moun Collection. Photo: Jineen Matar

    Where do you see Dorly Designs in the next ten years?

    The immediate need for DORLY DESIGNS is staffing. I have been fortunate to have had a rotating team of Fashion Interns to assist me and it’s a mutually beneficial program that I plan to continue. Right now I am looking for Fashion Interns for both Winter and Spring semesters. I am also keen on business growth in the form of collaborations or partnerships in the beauty or service industry. I am also committed to staffing the jewelry and clothing production aspects so that I can dedicate more time to the creative and management side of the business. An online store presence this year has helped us gain a new following beyond city boundaries. Where will we be in the next ten years? You and I will have to sit down again and recap what I’ve accomplished then.

    For further information on Dorly Designs, visit their web site.  If you are in Toronto, the boutique is located at 1173 Queen Street East. Feel free to drop by.

  • The Abandon

    http://youtu.be/dtD-mN3sFY8

    I’ll be honest. I’ve never seen a sci fi series that featured an all-black cast. Meanwhile, I’ve seen sitcoms galore. (The subtext of that fact vexes my spirit.)

    Enter The Abandon.

    Their website offers more information about the show.

    Too often people of color are the “redshirts” of their series. In The Abandon it’s apparent to me that people will die or go missing. But when that happens, it’s not a matter of “Bye-bye TOKEN.” Instead, the show’s racial dynamic allows the loss to be portrayed as a genuine absence.

    After viewing the pilot, I couldn’t help but wonder: What are content creators saying when they don’t include minorities as their series’ leads? What about when we’re not included at all–especially in the realm of fantasy or science fiction? Is it that we don’t deserve to have intriguing, supernatural experiences?

    I’m thankful for the advent of The Abandon. It’s an idea whose time has come.

  • RUNday: Resolution #1

    There are many goals that I’d love to see come into fruition this year. And in this season of surrender and promises to self…Here’s one thing that I’m going to do my best to give up.

    C0109_JunkFood_01
    Source

    Junk food.

    A small thing to some, I know. Still.

    Eating trash hasn’t served me well. It’s left me looking a lot like the before pic on this page.

    Along with my cousin and her cronies, chickentuna‘s photo is my new fitsperation. I lost a few pounds last year. However, her “before” photo is similar to my present.

    I came back into this post to edit the above so I wouldn’t sound that bad. But big or small, a tummy is still a tummy, no?

    I almost wish I was the type of person whose mass increased at an even rate. Because at least then, my body type would make sense to me.

    But no. If I eat too many bad calories, a dash will show up on my thighs, a wisp on my butt…

    And a TON on my tummy.

    Which is fine for some people. But I’ll be honest. I don’t like having a one-of-these-things-is-not-like-the-other physique.

    And it’s been funny. I’ve tried not to tweet about my dietary concerns. Because I’m slim everywhere else, I worry that people might look at my profile photo and assume I’m one of those women who whines about what she eats while sporting a perfect figure.

    Meanwhile, these new rules that I’m trying to adopt really aren’t all that new. Some today refer to the practice as “eating clean”. I call it common sense.

    I was raised by a health nut. I eat well most of the time. And yet…I remember the week last year when I baked at least 3 different times. During that period, I binged on just about everything. (Here, the word “binged” means “sat down and munched half-to-all-of what I made within a few hours”.) I enjoy a salad as much as any other girl. But when it comes to “bad” foods, I have almost no impulse control.

    So here we are at the dawn of 2013.

    I can’t bring myself to start P90X. Instead, I want to give chickentuna’s method a try. I’ll keep doing normal exercises. I won’t make any special effort, apart from me being at my best. My main changes will be culinary.

    They say abs are made in the kitchen. I intend to see if it’s true.

  • Dear Followers:

    The wait is (nearly) over.

    I’ve set up a new editorial calendar for 2013. I drafted it with every intention of following it. Starting…This Monday.

    Don’t you love how motivated I am…?

    I know it’s been a minute or ten since I’ve written something substantial. For that, I’m sorry.

    On one hand, I think that writing is an act of love.

    On the other, it’s like my friend Joanne said during a conversation today. It feels like “homework”.

    And I’ll admit something terrible. There are times when I hate blogging. In those moments, I think it’s a pain in the ass–as opposed to other types of writing.

    Yet somehow I can’t stop myself from posting. I keep wanting to…Chat.

    One way or another, though, I know I’ve got to keep these creative juices flowing.

    Happy New Year!!

  • Dear Writer, Singer, Dancer, Dreamer.

    Here’s another video to remind you to keep moving forward.

    Take care.

  • Quit teasing!: Star Trek Into Darkness’ first REAL trailer.

    I’m glad I don’t have to watch a teaser any more. Here’s what I was waiting for:

    I still have the same question in my head as I did the last time.

    I would like to know…Just who is the “family” that’s mentioned? Kirk’s sister?

  • MAC Attack: “The More You Know” Edition

    In 2013, I intend to have a new life. One phase of my plan involves going back to school.

    I’ll discuss what I am going to study down the road once I’ve been accepted.

    In the meantime, I’m in the process of trying to take better care of myself. I have been considering my appearance. Somehow I’ve started working on a skincare routine. And of all the things in the world, the other day I decided that I should know how to put on a decent “face”. Beyond the odd venture into cosmetics, I’ve gotten the idea that I ought to make a consistent effort.

    Christmas cards and gifts be damned.* Somehow, the other day, I set aside some money to hook myself up.

    For foundation, my drug of choice is MAC.

    Their products may be expensive, but there’s a method to my madness…

    Whenever I try drugstore makeup I end up disappointed. Certain lines attempt to incorporate darker shades into their repertoire. Yet I think they do an awful job. And honestly? Brown #1 and Brown #2 are often either too light or too dark for my complexion.

    Interestingly enough, this lack of variety isn’t a secret. I nearly high-fived a salesperson the other day when she recognized that one type of foundation, “…made [my] skin look ashy.”

    But I digress…

    MAC matches me almost perfectly.

    And if, like me, you’ve got a casual relationship with makeup, you might want to pay attention to the useful part of this post:

    MAC’s Studio Fix shades are numbered. However between their liquids and powders, their numbers do not match.

    Let’s look at a picture, shall we?:

    macattack

    On the left is a bottle of Studio Fix Fluid. The shade is NW 43.

    The other night I was looking at MAC’s web site. I wanted to replace my bottle. (Although it doesn’t look like it, it’s empty.) However, I had decided to return to my first love–Studio Fix Powder.

    I almost purchased it. Yet something inside told me to check it out in person.

    The next morning my mother went on a shopping trip. I joined her.

    Here’s where things got interesting.

    I made a beeline for the MAC counter at The Bay. (If you haven’t been to a MAC kiosk, they have testers available for all of their products.)

    Immediately I rifled through the Studio Fix compacts. I grabbed one marked NW 43 and asked for a mini-sponge and mirror.

    The second after I started blotting my skin, I was confused. That’s when the salesgirl schooled me in The Ways of The MAC.

    “Powder shades are darker than [their] liquid [counterparts].”

    At that point, she sprang into action.

    The shade you see above on the right is C8.

    Which leaves me with some questions.

    I don’t know what MAC’s logic is. Wouldn’t it make more sense to have their product codes correspond across the board?

    And if the powder and liquid are different shades, shouldn’t they have different numbers?

    Perhaps MAC has some sort of master plan. But I fail to see it.

    And now, pardon me. I have to go practice doing my eyeshadow… 😉

    *The other day at the mall I thought about how selfish/broke/introverted I am. I try to remember to give to others. Yet as soon as I get some money, my first thought is about how I can use it to get something that I think I need.

  • Star Trek’s equal? Maybe.

    Because next summer can’t have only one blockbuster.

  • Trailer Tuesday

    Everything about this clip makes me want to see the movie. (Isn’t that what a good trailer should do?) From the actors, to the sets and clothes, to Morgan Freeman’s flawless voice…

    Now You See Me is supposed to be out on June 7th of next year. It looks like fun.

    …And I’m going to throw this one in for the heck of it. Will Smith’s words about “fear” really resonated with me.

    http://youtu.be/zaN0HV_N6UA

    Danger is very real. But fear is a choice.

    I wonder if either of these movies will give Star Trek a run for its money.