Farewell

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Although this was a blog kept for the purpose of a class, I have thoroughly enjoyed the places it took me and the people it allowed me to meet.  Throughout the course of running this blog, I was awarded the opportunity to dive into a topic that I’ve always had a fascination for- vintage.  Whether this meant exploring the presence of vintage inspiration in music, clothing, furniture, events, or businesses, there was always something new to learn and find amidst the old.  Not only did I get to extend my love of writing for a new medium, but I also was able to find a newfound interest in the act of capturing the subjects of my posts in photos.  By doing all this, I have only gained a greater appreciation for the importance of the retro style within the mix of new.  These are some of the topics that I had the most fun reporting on:

The Evolution of Music Festival, Camp Jam in the Pines, and Its Reminiscent Festival Fashion

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Camp Jam in the Pine’s spring festival, a three day camping, arts, and music event,  is just around the corner, meaning that, in a little over a week, self proclaimed ‘Camp Jammers’ will be pouring through the entrance of the Buena Vista Campground in Buena, N.J to begin setting up their sites and preparing for a weekend of fun and music.

Since 1999, Lori Dean’s music festival, Camp Jam in the Pines, has been in existence. Her festival was initially just a front yard gathering, that has steadily grown to the capacity of larger campgrounds, and to occurring not once, but twice a year with both fall and spring events. Along with this expansion, her responsibilities have expanded as well. “It’s a lot, a lot of work. It’s a labor of love,” Dean says.

Among the tasks to fulfill are duties such as completing last minute organizations of the volunteers, making sure the vendors and merchandise are all set and ready for customers, and perhaps most importantly, seeing to the conclusion of the artist bookings for the music lineup, which in its 15 years is where Dean has noticed the biggest change in her festival. “When we started, we just had three bands, local bands, that we knew all the members,” Dean explains.

Throughout the course of the years, Dean and her partners have been able to schedule more groups to span the length of three days, and even more recognizable names. Dean proudly recalls her very first concert in 1976 with the New Riders and the Grateful Dead. “There came a day and a time, and I could not believe it, that we hired the New Riders for our festival. I’ve been listening to them since I was like 15 years old, and that was the biggest thing for me… We went from little local bands to the New Riders playing on my stage,” Dean says.

Dean also points out that it is with some aid from Camp Jam that some bands, such as Sister Sparrow and the Dirty Birds, have had the opportunity to build a dedicated audience.  “We’ve gone to shows at World Café Live… when Sister Sparrow was playing and half of the audience were Camp Jam people,” she explains.

After having played Camp Jam multiple times, and playing the upcoming festival, Arleigh Kincheloe, lead singer of Sister Sparrow, remembers their first time playing Camp Jam. Even at the time, when the band was scarcely known by the crowd, Kincheloe relays that there was little hesitation by the audience to accept them.  “Immediately the crowd was just like so excited and so enthusiastic and that makes us have more fun. I remember being like, ‘this is the best.’ Also, John and Lori are so sweet and they support us and they come see our shows in other places as well so it’s really like their friends of ours now at this point,” Kincheloe says.

It isn’t simply the artists who are touched by the communal aspect Camp Jam offers, but those in the audience as well, the campers. Gina DiCristo, an attendee since 2009, points out, “Every time I’m there, I just feel kind of happy, because you get along with everybody. It feels like everybody is your friend, you make new friends, you see old friends, and I feel like I could walk around and go hang out wherever, do whatever, and have fun doing it.”

More with Gina DiCristo:

Listen to Gina DiCristo talk more about one of the other fun aspects to attending Camp Jam- the clothes! As she points out, the festival wear is very 1960’s and 1970’s “hippie” inspired, so click through the photos to get examples of pieces and the familiar places they come from to create the Camp Jam look.

 

 

 

 

 

Cherrie Edwards Demonstrates the Basic Steps to 1950’s Makeup

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Cherrie Edwards is a makeup artist who attended Manhattan’s Makeup Designery, where she studied beauty, fashion, and special effects makeup, and also freelanced with companies such as Yves Saint Laurent and Mac.  Watch as she demonstrates the basic steps in creating a 1950’s inspired look– a makeup era defined by bright eyes and a bold lip.  With simple products, Edwards shows how anyone can complete what she describes as the classic and feminine image.

Products Used:

DDF Pore Minimizing Age Defying Moisturizing Primer

Philosophy Hope in a Jar Foundation

Dermablend Translucent Setting Powder

Tarte Magnificent Palette – blush/ lid and crease eye colors

Smashbox Full Exposure Palette – eyebrow color

 CK 1 Lengthening Mascara 

Studio Gear Cake Liner

Laura Geller Matte Ruby Red Lipstick

Morgan Robinson Discusses her Vision for Frugal Resale

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Amidst the restaurants and shops of Collingswood, nestled in between is the brightly painted and inviting Frugal Resale.  With a large portion of 1990’s and other decade items, and a mix of men, women, and children’s styles leading up to today’s looks, Frugal offers a place to shop where there is plenty to choose from.  And as Morgan Robinson, the owner of the thrift shop points out, Frugal Resale is a guilt free shopping experience where as she says, “Apart from the cost of resale clothing versus retail, there are numerous environmental benefits,” plus the great music played in the store.  Right now is a great time to go and find some Spring items at an affordable and “green” price.  Here’s what else Robinson had to say about her thrift store.

Q:  How did Frugal Resale come to be?

A:  I was dissatisfied with my former job of 12 years and with the publishing industry in general. I had been in publishing for 20 years, but wanted a new direction. I had long considered a business in Collingswood, as my family and I had lived here for eight years and are active in the community.

Q:  Did you have specific goals in mind when opening the store?  What made you want to own a store like this?

A:  I wanted a hip and fresh thrift store so families could feel good about recycling and reusing clothing. The fact that the store operates on donations enables me to fulfill my goal of giving to charities as well.

Q:  How do you get the items that you sell in the shop?

A:  Everything in the store has been donated. I’m thrilled with the quality and generosity that we have received.

Q:   Do you get a lot of vintage pieces to sell?  Have you ever had a favorite item that came into the store to sell?

A:  The more vintage we carry, the more gets donated. My team and I all have pieces that we fall in love with. My favorite jacket in life was donated about three years ago.

Q:  What are the perks and benefits of shopping thrift?

A:  Apart from the cost of resale clothing versus retail, there are numerous environmental benefits. From the pollution of the dying process of clothing, to the fuel used in shipping clothing around the world. There is enough clothing in existence right now that we could go decades without having to produce new.

Q:  How does it aid in leading a green lifestyle?

A:  Reducing consumption is the first key to living green. But the close second is reusing and repurposing the things we already have. Thrifting is the best way to do this. Higher quality goods are available at less than one would pay for the cheap “disposable” fashion at may big box and mall stores.

Q:  What do you think sets Frugal a part from other thrift stores?

A:  Our clothing is very organized and carefully inspected. We get steady praise for how easy it is to shop our selections. It is clean and bright, and smells good. My team and I love to do displays and they are extremely good at it. And the music is great in Frugal.

Q:  Can you further explain the charity work that you do through the store?

A:  We donate two percent of all gross sales to a different local charity each month. Not a percentage of profits—gross sales. And any items that don’t sell get donated to a local shelter or clothing drive.

There are times that we have been able to respond to emergencies by putting together clothing donations for victims of house fires or natural disasters. When hurricane Sandy hit, the clothing donations overwhelmed the need. We sold those excess items and donated 100% of the sales to Occupy Sandy.

We have also provided clothing or shoes to local school children in need by working with the PTA.

Philly Vintage and Antique Flea Market on 4/12

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On Saturday, April 12th, the vintage and antique Philly flea market took over S. 2nd Street.  With vendors spanning the area from Pine Street to South Street, there were plenty of retro and unique finds to search through, sun to soak in, and even some live music to accompany the antique hunting.  You can catch the next flea market on Saturday, April 26th.

Here is just a glimpse at the buzzing shoppers and bargaining of the market:

Here are some great household items that I saw looking through the market, including one vendor, Rex Bockius, who was selling antique kitchen utensils from at least 50 years ago.  Through working the flea markets Bockius and his wife have noticed, “A lot of younger people are starting to see the value,” adding that when buying vintage items, “…there is a whole different quality,” and even contributes it to staying green and environmentally friendly.

After buying items to dress up your home, it’s time to find items to dress up yourself.  There were plenty of vendors offering great vintage accessories ranging from jewelry and handbags, to sunglasses and hats, and even belts made from men’s vintage ties.  Jo Bradley, the creator of the tie belts, says that she acquired the ties from one man’s collection.  With the fabrics, which come from the 1920’s to the 1980’s, she combined the patterns creating an array of colored and printed belts to add that extra splash to any outfit.

Once you’ve got the accessories, it’s time to buy the outfits to suit them.  The Philly flea market was a hot spot for finding vintage clothes.  There were wracks upon more wracks to sift through holding jackets, dresses, skirts, pants, women’s attire, men’s attire, and pieces that were from all different decades whether that be the 50’s, 60’s, 70’s, and pretty much any other decade there is.  You name it, one of the vendors had it.  Here’s a peek of the multiple clothing choices:

Some Fun Vintage Pieces in the Costume Basement

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Here are some great vintage looking pieces that we found looking through the costume basement of G.C.I.T’s drama program. Each of these items were found at thrift stores around the area.

 

Drama Teacher Kirstin Walsh discusses the Process for Finding Era Inspired Costumes

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Kirstin Walsh in the costume basement at G.C.I.T

Kirstin Walsh in the costume basement at G.C.I.T photo by: Hayley Lynch

Kirstin Walsh is the drama program director and a theater instructor at the Gloucester County Institute of Technology where she has spent the past 14 years directing a countless number of shows in which she has gained the experience in looking for and creating costumes with an era inspired edge that fits the particular period of a play. Sitting in the program’s costume, fabric, shoe, and accessory laden basement, Walsh explains the process of searching for the right pieces for her show, but also gives some helpful advice where to go, such as Berlin’s Red White and Blue thrift store, and on how to navigate the endless possibilities of thrift hunting and conceptualizing that vintage look suggesting,  “You just have to dive in and start digging through the racks.”

 

Celebrating Vinyl With Local Music Shops and Record Store Day

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Photo by Hayley Lynch

Photo by Hayley Lynch

On April 19th, Record Store Day is making its annual return.  Since 2007, Record Store Day has been shining a light on independently owned record and music shops, as well as celebrating the incomparable charm of buying physical versions of your favorite artist’s music.  Each year, musicians team up with the event and release special merchandise through the participating businesses nationwide.  This year’s list includes a mixture of classic and contemporary gems such as exclusive releases from Cage the Elephant, Man Man, Conor Oberst, and the Pixies, plus reissues from artists like Johnny Cash, David Bowie, the Velvet Underground, and Otis Redding.

Whether you’re interested in discovering or revisiting that inviting crackle as the needle goes down and the LP starts spinning, here is a list of some great record shops in the area, and whom will be participating in Record Store Day.

New Jersey:

Philadelphia:

Woodstock Trading Company: Discussing the Creation of the Store

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Mom and her cat sitting in her store, Woodstock Trading Company Photo: Hayley Lynch

Mom and her cat sitting in her store, Woodstock Trading Company
Photo: Hayley Lynch

As a customer who has just purchased an item at Woodstock Trading Company in Cherry Hill, N.J gets ready to leave the store, she makes sure to stop first and say goodbye to the owner of the shop.  Bending down to the owner, who is sitting in a chair nestled in the middle of the store, the customer gives her a hug and calls her “Mom.”  Although the owner is not actually the customers’ mother, this connection speaks to the atmosphere that has been created at Woodstock Trading Company, where everyone who comes in knows the owner as Mom.

“This isn’t a store to just buy things,” says Mom.  Instead, her store is a place built around community where customers can participate in events held at the location, such as drum circles and lawn concerts.

While the family aura of Woodstock Trading Company doesn’t hurt in creating this psychedelic home away from home, the unique memorabilia and all things counterculture make this the place to go for one-of-a-kind Grateful Dead and other band t-shirts, hippie and festival wear, hand-made glass beads and jewelry, incense, posters, and more.

The collection of Mom’s store didn’t come over night though, but was rather a process over time as she used her love of art and music to carve the path eventually leading to Woodstock.

“I must have been about 13 or 14 years old and my first exposure to modern music was at the Museum of Modern Art in New York… and they were playing electronic music, and we were doing movable sculptures, and I met crazy people like Andy Warhol… So, I was always kind of on the cutting edge of art and music,” she says.

She then went on to get her nursing degree from Brooklyn College, marry, and create a dermatologist practice with her husband.  But it was a run in with a group of nuns who she explains, “reintroduced [her] to psychedelia.”  “They taught me how to weld, and I started to work in “freak-out” tents for concerts, and I met a lot of the early psychedelic artists at that time.  [I] became involved in the art and music culture.  I worked on the medical team with Wavy Gravy and those guys,” she adds.

With the inspiration of the scene, Mom decided that, “There is something very special within the framework of the Woodstock community, of the Grateful Dead community, a sense of community that you don’t get anywhere in the outside world.  I wanted to give us a place to be that would forever be established.”  So, the practice that her and her husband owned eventually transformed into Woodstock Trading Company.

At first, the items ranged from black and white t-shirts in large sizes that they had to fly to England and California to obtain.  Now not only can you find t-shirts in all sizes, but items of all sorts to suit the hippie inspired desire.

Just as much as the store, which Mom runs with her husband and son, is another home to her customers, whom she describes as, “probably the nicest group of people you’ll find,” it is also her second household.

“I go from here to my house, and from my house to here,” she says.

Cherry Hill’s Woodstock Trading Company Welcomes You to Their Hippie Haven

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Welcome to Woodstock Trading Company in Cherry Hill, N.J.  Put on your Grateful Dead t-shirt and step into the dream world of any hippie, full of incense, tie-dye, hand made jewelry, and, of course, rock and roll. The family atmosphere of the shop allows you to feel comfortable while searching for the perfect psychedelic item to suit your taste.