The Aussie Saga Continues, with Cheribomb Retro!

Cheribomb Retro, Vintage fashion for today's busy woman

We here at Happy yellow Dress are soooo excited to announce our partnership with Aussie retailer Cheribomb Retro! These guys specialise in fun, classy, sexy vintage style clothes for the curvy gal. 
 

This is their pretty logo as seen on the Cheribomb website!

This is their pretty logo as seen on the Cheribomb website!

Cheribomb Retro is run by a husband and wife team, who have invested time, money and professional expertise into slowly building a brand which will one day hopefully expand into bricks and mortar. They are what you would call a slow burn, but that is definitely beginning to take off. You can find them on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter,

What sets Cheribomb Retro apart is that they stock high quality brands with quirk, and make an effort to get to know each brand's sizing, and how it fits. Each and every last dress, top, skirt, and accessory that is found on Cheribomb Retro has been hand picked by the owners. So who are these owners you ask? Read on...

Cheri Kerr has 20 years in digital marketing and website building and has worked on some of the biggest brands in the game such as Weight Watchers, NRMA, Telstra, Yahoo! (when they were good), Reckon. She has written two books about the internet industry and has an overriding passion for vintage clothes. (see: https://www.cheribombretro.com/cheri/from-fremantle-to-fancy-2/).

David Kerr is a retail IT veteran in the Australian fashion industry, and has spent the last decade and a half working on retail IT and operations for brands such as Polo Ralph Lauren, Oroton, Marcs, Aldo shoes, Morrissey and More.

Also, check this out! Cheribomb Retro offers Zip pay! Something I've never even heard of! It allows you to pay monthly for the things you want today! Pretty nifty if you ask me!

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Welp! That's it for this installment. Thanks so much for reading, and feel free to leave comments or suggestions for future blog posts, or where you'd like to see Happy Yellow Dress sold!

Controversial Blog Post

Hello friends, I wanted to talk about something a wee bit controversial... I've seen a lot on social media and the blogosphere in general lately, about cultural appropriation. As some of you know, my brand is named after the happiest little yellow dress that I ever designed! You can see it down here: vvv

The Wanderer cheongsam style dress in yellow, by Happy yellow Dress

The Wanderer cheongsam style dress in yellow, by Happy yellow Dress

I designed this dress waaaaaayyyy back in 2004. It is inspired by what I consider to be the prettiest most feminine thing in fashion, the cheongsam. I had never seen one with a full skirt before, so I created my own version out of my faaaavourite yellow striped cotton.

My Love of the Cheongsam

Growing up in a tiny town, my only escape from the humdrum existence of small town living, was through books and classic movies, such as The South Pacific and Flower Drum Song. Although I was too young at the time to understand what these movies were all about, I was fascinated by the beauty of the fashions, which I had never been exposed to before.

The Wanderer  cheongsam style dress with full skirt, by Happy Yellow Dress

The Wanderer  cheongsam style dress with full skirt, by Happy Yellow Dress

The Wanderer  cheongsam style dress with full skirt in teal stripe, by Happy Yellow Dress

The Wanderer  cheongsam style dress with full skirt in teal stripe, by Happy Yellow Dress

I fully understand how wrong it is to mock an entire group of people by diminishing their culture to a costume, but fashion is not a costume. Fashion, (and I'm talking real fashion, not fast fashion), is something that hours of time, energy, money, sweat (and sometimes even blood and tears) are poured into the creation of, so the end product can be worn with great pride.

The Wanderer cheongsam style dress with full skirt in poppy, by Happy Yellow Dress

The Wanderer cheongsam style dress with full skirt in poppy, by Happy Yellow Dress

The Wanderer cheongsam style dress with full skirt in poppy, by Happy Yellow Dress

The Wanderer cheongsam style dress with full skirt in poppy, by Happy Yellow Dress

Of course I am always open to respectful discussion on these topics, but I have seen some very positive independent companies, as well as their customers being verbally attacked to the point of physical threats by people who disagree with their mixing of cultural elements into their collections.

Since those small town days of escapism, I have gotten the chance to travel the world, and have discovered first hand, that in reality, this is all fashion is and has ever been. A gigantic mix of cultural elements from here, and cultural elements from there. From the days of the silk road, to the present Rockabilly comeback in Japan. A collar is a collar, be it the cheongsam, Peter Pan, button down, edwardian high neck etc.  and fabric is fabric, be it tartan, batik, lace, silk, denim etc. Everything has come from one culture or another, and will be recycled, shared and re-used for centuries to come.

I have seen many of these companies who've been under attack, publicly respond with a canned apology, and promise to do better... but in the cases I have seen, there really is nothing to apologize for. To dictate who can wear what based on skin colour, is completely ridiculous and wrong.

Feel free to share your thoughts in the comments section below. Any abusive comments will not be removed to prove a point ;)  Thanks for reading!

 

 

 

Edith Head

If it weren't for Edith Head, Happy Yellow Dress wouldn't exist. She designed soooooo much of the gorgeous clothing worn on film by Grace Kelly, (our idol), Audrey Hepburn and the like. These old films inspired us to do what we do, bringing back that classic sophisticated, but fun retro look for everyday wear.

Edith Head wearing her trademark round glasses

Edith Head wearing her trademark round glasses

Edith Head started her career as a French Teacher, and eventually, (shadily), scored a job teaching art, (while taking art classes herself, unbeknownst to her employer). This eventually led to an assistant sketch artist role, also obtained by shady means, (she used her classmate's work in her portfolio), for a designer at Paramount. She would go on to work at Paramount as lead costume designer for over 30 years, only leaving after her 43rd year to work with her good friend Alfred Hitchcock, (another of our heroes), at Universal.

Here is Edith Head collaborating with Alfred Hitchcock

Here is Edith Head collaborating with Alfred Hitchcock

Here is a sketch by Edith of our alllll time favourite dress worn by Grace Kelly in the Alfred Hitchcock film "Rear Window". You can read more about that in our previous post here: http://www.happyyellowdress.com/new-blog/grace-kelly 

A sketch by Edith Head of her dress design for Grace Kelly's character in "Rear Window".

A sketch by Edith Head of her dress design for Grace Kelly's character in "Rear Window".

And here is the resulting dress as worn by Grace Kelly in the film:

Grace Kelly in the Alfred Hitchcock film "Rear Window"

Grace Kelly in the Alfred Hitchcock film "Rear Window"

Welp! That's it for now. Hope you enjoyed reading about one of our many idols! 

Do you have an idea for a blog post? What from the bygone eras inspires you? Let us know and we'll write about it!