Charming Charlie: A Comeback Story

Photo by Andrea Piacquadio on Pexels.com

With tragic new headlines every day about stores closing their doors — Lord & Taylor, SteinMart, Century 21– Charming Charlie has launched an online comeback after declaring bankruptcy and having to shutter doors a few years ago.

My family and I first fell in love with Charming Charlie stores in Texas, so when the store opened a location in Tucson Mall, it was the place to go for cute clothes, accessories and gifts. The store’s color-organized clothing also made it really easy to find outfits for football games. You’d be seriously surprised how difficult it is to find CUTE RED CLOTHING for Arizona football games in this town. (Not that I have to worry about that this year – 2020 slowly killing me…)

But anyway, check out the store online! Some very cute clothes, good prices and even the masks are unique!

Target’s Latest Coup: Winky Lux

Winky Lux, the campy cosmetics brand founded in 2015 by two friends, is a nice little surprise at Target stores these days! The fun brand known for its flower petal-infused lip balms used to be purchased only at Nordstrom and other high-end boutiques, but now is widely available to our T-town masses. According to the brand’s website: “Winky Lux was born with the idea that since every beauty product is technically a little gift, from you to you, it should always look and feel as special as the person receiving it (who is also you).” Genius!

Roux The Day: Tucson’s Ashley La Russa

One of the first things you notice about Ashley La Russa’s Facebook page is her positive, ambitious drive to make things happen.

Founder of Tucson’s Roux Events LLC and the dynamic force behind #BlaxFriday, La Russa often posts her activities each week – all focused on community progress. The beautiful, accompanying illustrations by Afro-French artist Nicholle Kobi only confirm that this vibrant woman is on the move.

“Roux Events was founded in 2019 with the primary focus of supporting community leaders and organizations that value equity, diversity and inclusion,” she said. “Roux Events is an event management company that serves as a foundation for collaboration within our community.”

A graduate of Sam Houston State University in Texas, La Russa was invited to Tucson in 2008 after meeting the artistic director of Arizona Theatre Company when she was an intern in Florida. She accepted the position of assistant state manager and devoted a decade to the group, serving in several capacities there.

“I fell in love with Tucson within the first week of moving here,” said La Russa. “The pink and lavender sunsets are remarkable with the backdrop of the mountains. Tucson also has a wealth of culture based in Tohono O’odham and Sonoran traditions. Proud to live in the first UNESCO City of Gastronomy and enjoy delicious dishes from world-renowned chefs.”

Notably, she picked the name “Roux” for her company because in culinary terms, it’s the essential base of butter and flour that enriches many Creole dishes with hearty flavor and texture – a strong foundation for a successful result.

And Roux Events is successfully bringing projects like “BlaxFriday to the public forefront. “As a Black woman-owned business, we started #BlaxFriday to spotlight local Black-owned businesses” that have traditionally been ignored and unrecognized. Besides a kickoff event earlier this summer, La Russa has helped engineer a BlaxFriday app and hopes to expand into Phoenix too. She consistently uses her social media to promote numerous burgeoning businesses here.

All the while, she is also working to create stand-out events. “The key to creating a memorable event is the experience,” she said. “This could be achieved by theatrical productions, connections with new community members and swag. Swag is a must. Everyone loves a goodie bag filled with surprises and gifts.”

More recently because of the pandemic, she is adding the “digital experience” to her portfolio, as “…the virtual event space is booming,” La Russa said.

 “While we are unable to meet in large gatherings for events, this time has truly shaped my mindset to value positivity and advocacy. The things that used to bother me or stifle progress are now pushed aside to allow the abundance of blessed guidance.”

New Top Tote is the Best Hat Trick

I bet Meghan Markle would have appreciated this stylish new invention the day she attended Wimbledon with Duchess Kate a few years ago. The former Duchess of Sussex carried a beautiful hat, which I think she intended to wear, only to hold onto it the entire time. Well, I can thank my friend Karen for sending me this brainchild of stylist Lindsay Albanese, lindsayalbanese.com. Albanese has launched Top Tote to solve the summer hat-carrying problem. The swag little clip ingeniously snaps your hat onto your purse for easy toting. The Top Tote comes in several different styles and ranges in price from $48 to $59.

Pacifica Beauty Holds its Own

Pacifica Beauty is among the myriad vegan beauty brands that adorn the shelves of Ulta, Sprouts and other retailers, but now seems more popular than ever. I have found more than a few Pacifica products that function just as well as more expensive versions. Launched in the late 1990s by Brook Harvey-Taylor, who grew up on a Montana cattle ranch, the brand is popular with our Gen Zers—which is how Pacifica first crossed my radar. A birthday present last year included a Rose Flower face mist that actually felt gentle and hydrating, as opposed to other sprays that can be drying. (I will never forget sitting in a doctor’s office with my kids as they kept staring at my face. Finally, they asked why my skin was peeling off. Yep, it was from another rose facial spray!) I have since bought the eyeshadow palettes for friends and recently tried the Alight Multi-Mineral BB Cream. All good – no skin peeling. Pandemic got you down? LIKE, UNDERSTATEMENT! Pacifica might be a fun brand to try right now.

The Big Blazer is Back

They first made their debut on a Neiman Marcus commercial earlier this year with Kate Upton and stylist Erin Walsh, and now they are all over the magazines. Welcome back 1990s! The oversized blazer is back…

 

Photo by Konstantin Mishchenko on Pexels.com

A Little Lounge Around Guide

rw-studios-GaPevteWAIU-unsplash

Loungewear is loving this quarantine. Shopping sites usually teaming with cozy pajamas and luscious lounge sets are more frequently showing “Out of Stock” or “Wait List.” And I’m not kidding, I think every woman in America has purchased leopard loungewear! They are not to be found anywhere! I think tie-dye is second and camo is third in the desired cuddle-up categories. But here are some stores and brands that still offer some nice selections. (Photo credit: @rw.studios on Unsplash)

Some Sites to Try:

Dillard’s – Thanks to my friend V, this was a great place to start. Many brands are on sale right now too.

Kohl’s – If you go through Rakuten on this site, you can get cash back. The styles are nice and at the end of the selections are several sports team versions.

Red Dress Boutique – A cute boutique out of Georgia with adorable, pricier loungewear (www.reddress.com)

Nordstrom – Always a good choice.

Bare Necessities – Never before have I been to this site, but some good options. barenecessities.com

A Few Brands to Search:

P.J. Salvage

Z Supply

 

Fashion, Fascinators and Footwear: A Tucson Designer’s Fabulous Journey

Fashion designer Jeanne Bjorn was walking down Fifth Avenue in 1980s New York when a woman asked her where she got her stylish fur coat.

When Bjorn replied it was her own design, the woman gave her a business card. It was Jean Rosenberg, vice president of iconic Henri Bendel.

The meeting would become fortuitous — not in launching Bjorn’s fashion star — but in ushering the now Tucson-based designer into compelling work in Oscar and Tony-Award winning costume creation, beautiful millinery and shoe design.

“She came to see my clothing and she said, ‘I think your work is really amazing,’ ” Bjorn recalled. “ ‘This is how much money you are going to need to go forward, if you’re going to compete with say, Donna Karan or Calvin Klein.’” “And I looked at that number and I was stunned. It was so much. It was like a New York wake-up call.”

Bjorn grew up on a Missouri farm, fascinated with her mother’s bolts of fabric. She would meticulously touch and study their textures, designs and sheen. Her passion led her to a degree in textiles and fabric design at the University of Georgia and then propelled her across the country to San Francisco, where she would launch her own label of women’s designer sportswear. Her namesake line, J Bjorn, would be featured in shows and stores in Los Angeles, San Francisco and New York, where she had just relocated when she met Rosenberg.

After that Bendel moment, Bjorn instead sought out a job in costume design for stage and film with Barbara Matera Ltd. and would eventually help with creations for Broadway’s Dream Girls, The Secret Garden, the Tony Award-winning Crazy For You, Oscar-winning designs for The Age of Innocence, Hook and the New York City Ballet’s production of Sleeping Beauty.  “I used to joke with my friends that I had to leave fashion because the pay was lower and the hours were longer, but the creativity was over the top.”

Bjorn also continued to take classes at the Fashion Institute of Technology. She chose millinery by opening up the class catalog and blindly pointing a finger. She instantly loved it and soon began making hats for clients and select lines for stores. But after a health-threatening experience at a New York costume shop where she was head milliner, she moved to Portland, Ore.  There, she spent more than a decade teaching millinery and eventually shoe design, too. “I love designing and creating, but teaching is the best gift I can give someone because it passes the skill on, not to be forgotten.”

Indeed, some of her students included shoe designers from Columbia sportswear, as well as, rising young artisans who, after her instruction, ultimately moved to Italy to further their studies.

Now in Tucson, Bjorn has continued classes in hat and shoe making. Though she is awaiting her next move after the Covid-19 pandemic, the designer can look back proudly on a career that has seen her work featured in Women’s Wear Daily, California Apparel News, The San Francisco Examiner and The Oregonian, to name a few.

“We need a world of good designers,” she said. “Some of these skills, I worry we are close to losing them if we don’t teach a new generation.”

 You can find out more about Bjorn’s classes on her website, jeannebjorn.com.

For Easter, Pick a Local Basket

 

Easter Sunday is quickly approaching and some local entrepreneurs are offering some unique baskets to make this holiday and others falling under quarantine a bit cheerier. Here’s another chance to support the local businesses that make T-town special:

W Boutique has three luxe baskets to choose from for the fashionista or stylish bunny in your life. The baskets, which range in price from $175 to $250, include different compilations of favorites from the St. Philip’s Plaza boutique. You can also add a gift card. For more information and doorstep delivery options, you can DM the store on FB or insta or email at wboutiquetucson@gmail.com.

Basket Butler, run by local businessman Mark Ballis, offers custom gift baskets that can be perfect for Easter but also for any local healthcare heroes you’d like to honor. His website notes a surge in business lately for just that. You can peruse his gallery here.

Scout & Cellar organic wines has one of its most hardworking reps in Kelly Medvec. After Easter, she mentioned several appreciation weeks on the calendar for April and May, for teachers, administrative professionals and especially, nurses and hospitals. Her company offers clean-crafted, delicious wines and now, cute new cans and minis. You can reach Kelly at www.scoutandcellar.com/kellymedvec or phone 520-331-4289.

Stay well everyone! xo