23.2.12

Factotum

While I spend most of my free time seeking hills and seasides, I had an opportunity to wander around a small factory recently, and I took a camera along. 

I find workplaces fascinating (when they are not my own, of course), but I especially like workplaces full of function, with specialised tools and the specialist people who use them: this one was full of dials and graphs and other fantastically unfathomable equipment. I love a proper old-fashioned dial (one of the main reasons I am so in love with my mid-1990s car, which is switches and dials and levers all the way), none of that fancy electronic stuff, if you please.

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I also quite like the fact that although the inside of a factory is probably about as far away as you can get from the floaty pastels I've been seeing in all the spring magazine issues recently, when I look at these photographs I can kind of see some similarities. It's all the clean, functional lines I think, matched up with the colours of the equipment: pastel blues and greens, white paper, occasional silvers, with hints of black and red. It reminded me of Jil Sander, or maybe Celine; but it also reminded me of a few (cheaper) bits and pieces I've been seeing around the internets lately.

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1. Dorothy Perkins Light Blue Shift Dress
2. ASOS Bow Belt
3. Topshop Leather Purse
4. Zara Flower Brooch
5. Anthropologie Tie-neck Knitted Dress
6. Topshop Boucle Skirt
7. Zara Sequin Purse
8. A.P.C. Fancy Mariniere Tee


7 comments:

  1. Beautiful combination of photos and such a great way to look at fashion. I was raised in a tool/hardware store and I still have a penchant for those big red tool boxes.

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  2. I've always loved this combination of colors.

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  3. My grandpa's garage was filled with all manner of gadgets and gizmos, toolboxes and toys. He would be hilariously perplexed to see a skirt compared to any of those things, but I like where you're going with this: clothes that are clean and functional but still fun and inventive are the closet's working tools.

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  4. I would never had made that comparison between the clothes and the inside of a factory. It's ingenious though :) For me, factories recall depressing, dark scenes, and so I can't associate them with clean pastels. But I can definitely see the philosophical connections and the links between functionality.

    You always have such unique posts.

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  5. That's funny, I am really into red plus mint at the moment. Pretty impressed with the first dress being from DP's. I understand the link with form/function. I am always drawn to minimalism/clean lines over fuss and frills.

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  6. Mmm... Like the industrial/fashion combination. Contrasting but complimentary.

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  7. I can see the similarities. #5 is actually a pretty perfect match.

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