Sometimes I find it more instructive to ask myself what I’ve learned in the year prior than to set out to define a suite of new year’s resolutions — though I have those, too, with the bleary optimism I tend to muster at this time of year. The point, regardless, is to sit down and take stock.

And that I have done, at the hands of a very good writer.

There is a line in Rachel Cusk’s Outline where the narrator states: “As it happened, I was no longer interested in literature as a form of snobbery or even of self-definition — I had no desire to prove that one book was better than other: in fact, if I read something I admired I found myself increasingly disinclined to mention it at all. What I knew personally to be true had come to seem unrelated to the process of persuading others. I did not, any longer, want to persuade anyone of anything.”

When I first read this, I felt something click into place. Cusk had given shape to a phantom emotion I’d assigned to semi-permanent peripherality. This is how it feels to be thirty-five: wedged midway between the compulsion to persuade and the decision to not, leaning more and more aggressively into the latter. I read this line and sat back in a kind of shocked bemusement, realizing that I had spent such a vast reserve of energy in my 20s and early 30s convincing others of things — of my taste, of my skill, of my intellectual acuity, of my religiosity (or not), of my style, of my authenticity. Some of these coercions were unavoidable in the sense that I was debuting my talents for employers and in-laws and of course one very lovely future husband and how can one not assiduously makes one’s own case when the stakes are so high?

And yet, now. That I am married (for nearly ten years!), with well-established relationships with a cast of beautiful people I can only assume and hope will be the major players in my life, with no intention of returning to a job interview situation (how bizarre to type that out…), I sit here and think, “Yes. It is a blessing not to want or need to persuade anyone of anything.”

Cusk’s intent seems to rise from a kind of world-weariness to which I (blissfully) lay no claim. I am jaded thanks to a rough brush with entrepreneurship and the usual school of hard knocks that life presents us as adults, but not emotionally torpid in the way of her narrator.

But still. This seems to be a big message from 2019: go your own way; let others go theirs. There have been growing pains at the hands of this revelation: dwindling friendships, a kind of mounting insularity in the way Mr. Magpie and I conduct our social lives, the occasional way I feel that I am rude in the company of acquaintances when there is something distasteful happening in front of me. (For example, and let me preface this by asserting that I am no saint and I pass judgement just as much as the next woman, but I will never be party to a mom-shaming conversation. I avail myself of a kind of ashy sangfroid in such circumstances, which have regrettably arisen multiple times in the past year, and I tend to say something embarrassingly haughty that I then repeat to myself in a weird mixture of embarrassment and self-assurance for days after. But I cannot abide.)

Yes. 2019 has taught me that I am old enough not to need to worry about persuading others of who I am or what I like. I am who I am; I like what I like.

I think I learned much of this from Mr. Magpie — so damned self-assured, so comfortable in his own skin. And maybe (ha!) the intensity of bringing two children into the world and caring for them even when I feel so exhausted and overwhelmed that I cannot give a name to my emotions. This, too — this aspect of motherhood has worn thin the veneer I used to so carefully varnish. It has, against all odds, borne to me a kind of deep self-assuredness that I am who I am; let others go their own way. I think this is because so much of my experience with mothering my children has been instinctual and, for better or worse, unrehearsed. I find words dropping out of my mouth straight from my own mother. And I find other phrases and interactions materializing out of the ether. Why do I call my boy “Mr. Man?” Why do I use a certain sing-song voice? Why do I know just by the sound of his cry across the monitor whether he is hungry or jammed up against the edge of the crib, his arm or leg stuck through a slat? More to the point, though, with two small children, there is not enough time to preface a reaction to yogurt smeared on a wall or the mind-blowingly routine abnegation of using the toilet or getting dressed with thought. I am nearly always swinging from vine to vine with a kind of breathlessness I don’t particularly enjoy but that has revealed to me who I am. Impatient, imperfect, but loving and forbearing and determined. I raise my voice more than I care to these days (“It’s time to put on your pants. Your pants. Emory, your pants. Your pants! Emory, let’s put on your pants, ladybug. Emory. Really. Your pants. It’s not time to play. Just put…your pants…just….EMORY, PUT YOUR PANTS ON!”) but I have also seen in myself a kind of gritty resilience. I find that when things truly go haywire (dog is barking, Hill is screaming for milk, chicken is burning on the stove, mother-in-law calling, and Emory toddles in to let me know she’s peed her pants), a kind of bizarre calm takes over and I am one way or another able to make it through to the finish line, in no small part encouraged by the scale of the story I will be able to tell Mr. Magpie when he gets home.

At any rate. This year, I think, my tailbone outsized my wishbone. I spent more time doing than dreaming, and certainly less energy worrying about persuading others of my own worth than I have in years past.

What was your big lesson in 2019?

Post Scripts.

+Potentially a good way to get into the reflective mode in 2020.

+If the above is not your speed, maybe invest in a Smythson notebook to store thoughts and plans and goals? Writing things down helps me tremendously…

+Nordstrom sale happening! Love this dress for a little girl and I think I’ll wear these slides all summer long, and with everything from maxi dresses to white jeans. I also have this set in my bag — I love love LOVE this product and use it close to daily. (More beauty obsessions here.)

+Loveeee your responses to this post. Keep ’em coming.

+I predict we will continue to channel Little Women in fashions this year. Enter Brock Collection and Emilia Wickstead and HHH nap dresses.

+Separately, I’m pretty sure Judy Garland wore this dress in Meet Me in St. Louis, one of my all-time favorite movies. Funny that I would also wear that dress in 2020 and feel 100% comfortable. What comes around goes around.

+Similarly, this feels very Julie Andrews as a governess in Sound of Music. In the best way possible. Like, I think I need it.

+This floor-length linen maxi is the stuff of dreams. I feel like I could go on a Safari in 1930 wearing this. Need for 2020.

+This is fun.

+My favorite purchases of 2019.

+Sale at Caitlin Wilson! Eyeing these pillows and this duvet for mini’s big girl room.

+Musings on turning 35. Next door to musings on turning 34.

+If your toddler does not yet have a set of these — do it. Mini plays with these for long, long periods of time, as she does with her Maileg mice. This is a great starter gift for the latter!

I read Yaa Gyasi’s Homegoing for a book club with my sisters and sister-in-law and the reviews among us were varied, though generally positive. The book is a proliferation of stories across generations of a family from its roots in the Gold Coast to its (forced) cuttings and replantings in America. In it, Gyasi examines racism across a range of contexts and with stirring and occasionally controversial nuance: she addresses subjects as uncomfortable as the complicity of Africans in the slave trade to the relative “mildness” vs. severity of different slave owners in the Antebellum South to the problematic “passing” of lighter-skinned African Americans as white. But mainly, the book is a pastiche of incomplete narratives and clipped laments. Originally, I found this aspect of the book unbecoming in the sense that I found that the different chapters (each of which follows a specific character/family member) did not “hang together” particularly well and that it was strenuously difficult to keep track of the relationships. While reading, I considered this a technical shortcoming of the work, feeling that the novel was over-ambitious in its expansiveness and that there wasn’t enough stitching to bind. But my sister-in-law made the rousing point that there are so many abbreviated or lost or silenced stories from the violent history of this subjugated class that the text is necessarily, unsatisfyingly “rough” around the edges in its linkages. And I agree with that interpretation upon review.

I found the stories themselves uneven. The earlier ones that took place in the Gold Coast were exceptional. They were lucid, imaginative, original, and at times appealingly fabular. The latter chapters that take place in America felt more caricaturish, i.e., “ok, we need someone from the Great Migration now; here’s an outline of her character…go.” I couldn’t help but suspect writerly fatigue. At the same time, this is Gyasi’s first novel and she is young and I am bowled over by both her ambition and her dexterity.

On the whole, though, I found this a fascinating, impressive, multi-layered text. Some of the writing was positively brilliant — and often at the expense of its own characters, in the sense that I found that the most disturbing scenes were the most tightly written.

I would strongly recommend this book as a book club pick because there is a lot of meat on the bone here — but if you’re looking for a vacation read, I’d look elsewhere.

What did you think?!

More to Read…

+I am currently reading Rachel Cusk’s Outline and it is excellent. Very excited to discuss this soon!

+We have a family White Elephant book exchange every Christmas and it is an absolute blast — plus very interesting to learn what my siblings and siblings-in-law are interested in reading. Mr. Magpie’s contribution was Underland, a non-fiction exploration of “the Earth’s underworlds as they exist in myth, literature, memory, and the land itself.” This book was impossible to track down in hard copy prior to Christmas! It was back-ordered online and I went to three different book stores in pursuit — no luck! At our book exchange, it was one of the most often stolen/traded! So — this book has serious appeal it seems. I’m intrigued and intend to read it soon as well.

+I picked this book presenting the narrative of an Appalachian woman (a submission from my sister) that I am very excited to dig into soon. From the book jacket, it seems like an interesting examination of story-telling/story-crafting/language.

+My mom has been raving about A Woman of No Importance, her submission to the exchange. The novel tracks the true story of “a Baltimore socialite who talked her way into Special Operations Executive, the spy organization dubbed Winston Churchill’s “Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare.” She became the first Allied woman deployed behind enemy lines and–despite her prosthetic leg–helped to light the flame of the French Resistance, revolutionizing secret warfare as we know it…the breathtaking story of how one woman’s fierce persistence helped win the war.”

+My pick for the book exchange was this non-fiction about the lives of the women who modeled for celebrated portraitist John Singer Sargent, recommended by multiple Magpies. I felt it would have appeal for most of my family.

+In my personal tsundoku once I finish Outline and Fair and Tender Ladies: The Essex Serpent (which my well-read sister-in-law described as a fantastic modern Gothic novel and the book jacket casts as a novel “set in late nineteenth-century England, about an intellectually minded young widow, a pious vicar, and a rumored mythical serpent that explores questions about science and religion, skepticism, and faith, independence and love.”) and Shari LaPena’s latest thriller.

+Unrelated to reading:

++How amazing are these mary janes?!

++I am obsessed with my HHH nap dress. It is so soft and comfortable and — dare I say it? — chic?! I wear it around in the evenings. Loretta Caponi makes a similar style I’ve been seeing on chic peas, but more appropriate for wearing outside the home. A perfect vacation dress (especially for an expecting mama!)

++We were late adopters I fear, but mini now drinks out of a proper cup (no sippy top) and I needed to upgrade her feeding gear in general. I bought these bamboo cups, these small bowls, and these divided plates. All are (importantly!) microwave and dishwasher-safe! I have been very impressed with RePlay’s sippy cups (hold up well, simple design, easy to clean, unbreakable) so I am thinking I’ll love the RePlay plates.

++This stunning gown is on sale!!!

++Now is the time to buy discounted ornaments for next year. I am buying this (had to — Tilly girl!!) but how amazing are this one and this one from the same collection?! I’m dying!

++Speaking of Maisonette’s sale, I’m also eyeing a few items for the children: Sammy + Nat pajamas, which I’ve never tried but which get strong reviews — especially love these for Hill; anything from BusyBees’ sale selection (so well-made and timeless — Hill already has 3-4 of these stocked up for this summer and this dress and this tunic are in my cart for Emory); and Petite Plume jammies for next Christmas (love this).

++Still available, still haunting me.

++Love this fun sweater…mini can twin with me in this.

P.S. Random things that make me happy and the best sources for affordable stationery. OH, and: drive gently, dearie.

Currently in post-holiday disarray. We returned from DC on Friday, and we’ve unpacked and more or less snapped back into our new routine, but there are toys and gifts in search of new homes and a backlog of laundry and the general helter-skelter of mixed emotions after Christmas. As I recently mentioned, we have also made the decision to try to finish outfitting our apartment the first quarter of 2020 and suddenly I am sheepishly aware of how long I let our dining room go unfinished, and all of the other bits and bobs we’ve been meaning to get around to. (Example: that old cedar dresser that has followed me like an unwanted shadow from home to home since I married Mr. Magpie has a new home in mini’s bedroom, but several of its knobs had been missing for some time. We finally — finally — installed these. How this took us several years to accomplish is beyond me, as I am a very organized and detail-oriented person. But you know how that kind of thing happens at home? You grow used to the gaps and “that’ll dos” and workarounds, accommodating their mild inconveniences?)

At any rate, a mish-mash of items on my radar at the moment…

THIS WINE OPENER MADE ITS WAY INTO MY STOCKING AND IT IS SO EASY TO USE!! STRONGLY RECOMMEND — I’VE NEVER LIKED THE RABBIT ONES

THESE DARLING STOOLS ARE ON SALE! CONVENIENT AS A SPOT TO REST A CUP OF TEA BY YOUR READING NOOK, OR A BOTTLE BY YOUR ROCKER, OR ANYTHING ELSE YOU CAN IMAGINE

HOW CUTE ARE THESE $10 FLATS? FOUND VIA BORN ON FIFTH!

I WAS SO IMPRESSED BY THE QUALITY OF THIS ERIN GATES RUG FOR THE PRICE THAT I AM CONSIDERING THIS ONE FOR MINI’S NURSERY

VERDICT IS IN: VERY INTO THE QUALITY OF THESE MOON & BACK ONESIES FOR HILL (THICK BUT SOFT)

LOVE THESE EXACT INEXPENSIVE SOCKS FROM H&M FOR MINI — SOFT, GREAT COLORS, AND HAVE GRIPPIES ON THE FOOTBED

BOUGHT MR. MAGPIE THESE SWEATS IN THE NAVY AFTER MANY FRIENDS RAVED ABOUT THEM — AND HE IS OBSESSED

FOREVER IN SEARCH OF AN INEXPENSIVE DIAPER BAG BIG ENOUGH FOR TRAVEL DAYS WITH KIDS — I FEEL LIKE THINGS ARE ALWAYS TOPPLING OUT OF MY GOYARD! — FINALLY GOING TO TAKE THE PLUNGE AND BUY SOMETHING PRACTICAL LIKE THIS (FUN PATCHES!) OR THIS

LOVE THIS GIRLY PRINT POUCH

I’M DEAD

UBER CHIC SWIMSUIT

STILL A FEW OF MY FAVORITE SWEATSHIRT AVAILABLE HERE AND HERE

MINI TODS-ESQUE LOAFERS FOR A BITTY BOY

ONE OF MY FAVORITE STOCKING STUFFERS FROM MR. MAGPIE: THIS NEW YORK CANDLE

MR. MAGPIE BOUGHT ME THIS COOKBOOK FOR CHRISTMAS AND WE ARE BOTH OBSESSED WITH IT…MAKING THE CHORIZO-STUFFED DATES FOR NYE TOMORROW!

A GREAT DUPE FOR THOSE ULLA JOHNSON BOOTIES I LOVE

THIS PRETTY FROCK SOLD OUT QUICKLY ONLINE – NOW AVAILABLE IN SMALL QUANTITIES/SELECT SIZES; GREAT FOR A WINTER WEDDING/EVENT

SO PRETTY

OK, BIG BARGAIN FOR MAJOR LOOK: THIS STUNNING DRESS, NOW MARKED DOWN TO $110!!!

PRETTY SWEATER FOR MINI (ALSO LIKE THIS IN THE GREEN)

P.S. The best snow gear and CHIC statement tops.

P.P.S. An easy and elegant dinner party.

P.P.P.S. Things to unlearn.

My Latest Snag: Drugstore Eyebrow Wand.

I have been using Chantecaille’s eyebrow gel for the past year but when I finished my last tube, I hesitated before reordering. $40 for eyebrow gel? Is it that good or that different from any other gel I’ve used in the past? I decided to put it to the test and ordered Maybelline’s eyebrow gel, which gets very good reviews. Stay tuned for an update, though I have a hunch it will be just as good. (I also love E.L.F.’s $2 clear gel but right now need something with a little color to fill in some spots.)

P.S. More favorite affordable beauty buys here.

You’re Sooooo Popular: The Tartan Top.

The most popular items on the blog this past week:

+The Dyson Airwrap! Lots of mixed opinions on this — have heard from some Magpies that it’s really best for people with some dexterity/talent in styling their hair; have heard from others that friends SWEAR BY IT.

+My tartan top! If that’s too “holiday central” for your taste post-Christmas, consider this floral variation.

+This stunning Zimmerman-esque eyelet dress (under $200). Perfect for a warm-weather getaway.

+Cozy pom pom socks for your rainboots.

+Prettiest dress for a birthday girl.

+A slouchy sweater. Perfect with leather-effect leggings.

+A dreamy playhouse for a little one.

+Mr. Magpie’s winter coat.

#Turbothot: Nerve.

As I head into the New Year and refine the handful of resolutions I have for 2020, I find myself returning to a potentially apocryphal quote attributed to J.K. Rowling: “Anything’s possible if you’ve got enough nerve.”

My experience with entrepreneurship has steeled me to the point that I tend to roll my eyes at such platitudes. Because they are simply not true. I had nerve, work ethic, intelligence, commitment, funding — and I still ended up winding down our business. Success is a lot more complicated than having nerve. I could write a lengthy treatise on the subject as it pertains to start-ups in the technology sector (and I actually did write several paragraphs here that I have since deleted — too bitter for my own taste, too fatiguing to those uninterested in the subject), but suffice to say that if all “it” took was nerves, there would be a lot more success stories out there.

That said.

The quote stirred something in me.

I would not describe myself as nervy or plucky. I have more of a low-key, slow-burning, quiet drive. But reading those words, I felt something buckle up, heels digging in. Do the thing!

So I thought I’d leave this charge on your doorstep in case you need it at an arm’s length as you head into the new year, whether you’re thinking of asking for a promotion, or broaching the subject of marriage with a loved one, or speaking out against injustice in your own life or that of a neighbor, or contemplating launching a new business or stepping into a new profession or moving cities or — oh, all the quietly brave things we do that feel like they will end us but never do.

I’d like to think back on 2020 as the year of nerve. Hoping you’ll join me in this, fellow women of substance.

Post-Scripts: An Oversized Coat + A $12 Staple.

+I did like a quadruple take when I saw Hailey Bieber (above) wearing an oversized camel coat over her exercise gear. I need a coat like that! Options: this Kooples, this Merceau, this Mango.

+A $12 staple. Chic with suede boots or pointed toe flats or Golden Goose sneaks.

+Adore this sweater! The collar! The swing-y shape! So good.

+It’s hard to tell with a sample, but I received one for this cleanser and was very impressed. I like the way it left my skin feeling squeaky clean (though not tight/irritated). I am in a committed relationship with this cleanser, but I might buy one of the TBs for travel.

+Crazy good sale at Moda right now. I love this dress, these flats, and these earrings in particular.

+Cute rugs and baskets for a nursery.

+This belted wool sweater is delicious.

+More of what I want to wear RN.

+

As a graduate student, I took a poetry course on Keats and Wordsworth, contemporaries in the Romantic period. I knew I wanted to write my thesis on high modernist poetry and poetics, but I was keen to learn more about its forebears and referents — especially since much of modernist poetry positions itself as the aftermath, the detritus, the scattered shambles of a world order that the Romantics seemed so confident would outlive us all.

The course was a slog; the professor horrifying. Whereas the rest of the faculty treated us like adults and were generally lax and even collegial about tardy papers and the like, this professor strode in and began lecturing at 3:00 on the dot with scarcely an introduction. He was a hawkish type, with silver-gray hair and a severity not unlike Severus Snape when you first meet him in Harry Potter. Mr. Magpie claims that as a child, he could tell how angry his dad was by how many fingers he was using when he shook his hand at him in disapproval. One finger was a mild reprimand. All four fingers — “a knife hand,” as he puts it — was a five alarm fire. Let me tell you that this professor lived in a perpetual state of knife-hand fury. On the first day of class, as we collectively performed a line-by-line analysis of one of Wordsworth’s poems, taking turns reading stanzas and then unpacking them in what felt like the longest and tensest two hours of my life, one of my classmates lackadaisically admitted that she had a different version of the book than had been assigned, and so her page numbers were off, and could anyone let her know which stanza we were on?

The air left the room.

I busied myself nervously with my bundle of Le Pens and gridded notebook, looking up only to note that the professor’s eyes had narrowed to pin points. With the unnerving calm of a man about to implode, he suggested that if she hadn’t found it important enough to find the proper text, that perhaps she was in the wrong place.

Place, delivered with a smoldering stare. It was almost as if he needed to bite down on that word to keep himself from unleashing the wrath of god.

Noted, I thought, mentally clearing my schedule to make time for whatever assignment he had on deck — and oh my God. His assignments. I remember most clearly because of the exquisite boredom I suffered at its hands reading multiple draft versions of this drab poem in order to analyze its evolution. I recall thinking on multiple occasions during this and other exercises that Keats must be why most people dislike or dismiss poetry. His language is flowery; his sentiments predictably effusive about the natural world; his syntax in turn disagreeably formal and artificially contorted to accommodate rhyme or scheme.

Earth has not any thing to show more fair:
Dull would he be of soul who could pass by
A sight so touching in its majesty:
This City now doth, like a garment, wear
The beauty of the morning; silent, bare,
Ships, towers, domes, theatres, and temples lie
Open unto the fields, and to the sky;

…are you asleep yet?

“Dull of soul” would I be were I to spend another minute with these couplets.

And yet.

Age rounds the edges, doesn’t it? I look back at this grueling assignment and the no-nonsense professor who issued it with something like reverence. Ah, yes. Just paying my dues. Just doing things the long and hard way because that’s the way you’ve got to do them. Don’t kids have to do things like this anymore? In my day…

And so there is an admittedly irritating sense of nostalgia-streaked smugness when I think back on those experiences.

But there is something else, too.

Tedium. When was the last time I was bored sick? When was the last time I had to wait (a long time) for something? (Aside from awaiting micro’s arrival, which was a different kind of agony altogether.) I mean, when was the last time I was asked to sit and stare at something without any say in it?

The notion intrigues me because I am straining to teach my toddler the concept of waiting. I’m sure this has long been a challenge for parents the world over, as toddlers have no concept of time and an absurd appetite for immediate gratification. But as mini grows up with Prime Now delivering groceries within two hours and the ability to skip a scene or a clip on YouTube with the flick of a finger, I wonder whether my children will struggle with waiting, with boredom, in a way I never did simply because technology had not yet developed mechanisms for on-demand anything. Do you remember thumbing through Delia’s or J. Crew catalogs, placing an order, and then receiving it some fourteen days later? Or — better yet — filling out one of those Scholastic Books forms on the recycled gray paper and then being surprised a month or so later when the books actually arrived? Or having to wait the two minutes for a video cassette to fully rewind before returning it to Blockbuster? Or the irritating dial and screech of 90s-era Internet? Waiting was a part of life. And the attendant boredom, too.

I find myself looking down at mini while we are commuting back from school on the Subway and taking bizarre pleasure in noting that she has nothing to occupy her in her stroller but her own curiosity and imagination. “This is good,” I think.

I feel the same way about Church. I do trot out activities to occupy her in the pew because there are other, prayerful souls to consider in close proximity. But there are many moments where she hangs cat-like off the back of the pew, or stares glassily at the tall people around her, or otherwise signals that she is not entertained by her surroundings. Again — “Good,” I think.

Right?

It is good for children to sit in quiet boredom, hands unoccupied? Isn’t it? Or is this an inheritance from my own childhood that I am passing along simply because it was part of the fabric of my life? (Isn’t there a saying about idle hands and the devil…?)

But no. Boredom, tedium can be blessings. I am convinced as I think back on especially my Keats/Wordsworth experience that boredom tilled the soil of my already active imagination, planting in it images and references that ripple through my consciousness now quietly and without detection. I did not care for the poetry, but reading it was another step into the wideness of language and metaphor, and the possibility of discriminating between the good and the bad therein. That is to say: as I sat and stared at the overwrought tapestry of Romanticism, I developed a prehensility with my own budding interests in literature. I was 23, but I had not yet cultivated a sense of discernment in my literary tastes. Everything was good, it seemed to me. Who was I to judge the quality of a book? And how? I only knew that I reacted pleasantly to some books and trudged through others, but I presumed those responses to be the jejune knee-jerk of a dim-witted child. When provoked as to whether I liked something or other, I would default to the positive, presuming any colorlessness in my actual interaction with the book to be illegitimate or juvenile. It was not truly until the arduousness of graduate school that I developed the intellectual confidence to say: “This feels good to me, and this is why.” And so staring at four barely-different versions of Keats’ poem forced me to say: “This does not feel good. And this is why…”

And so when I see mini glazing over en accidie, am I wrong to think of her boredom as a long-term analeptic? That these moments of nothingness will serve in the long run as prompts to create, to wonder, to muse?

I hope so.

Because we will be continuing in these exercises of intermittent tedium until further notice.

Post Scripts.

+I have long been obsessed with this fur-trimmed Saks Potts coat. That is all.

+Constraint and the unseen doula. (Or, what I learned from one of the best classes I took at UVA.)

+I just adore this dress.

+Who is in your personal canon? Rest assured neither Keats nor Wordsworth make mine.

+Love these little (inexpensive) knit rompers for babies!

+My plaid top is on sale!

+TheRealReal is such a great place to score gently-used Burberry coats for little ones.

+Just bought mini her first oxford.

+A great every day boot for a little girl.

+What I want to be wearing RN.

+Two blue sweaters I’m eyeing: this and this (both under $50!)

+I absolutely adore these napkins. (Helloooo woman of substance!)

+OOO these shearling-trim Sperry boots are adorable! (And on sale!)

+I wore these earrings SO much last summer and they are absurdly discounted right now!

+More great life lessons here and here.

We spent a lot of time and energy working on outfitting our new apartment just after we moved in back in October and then we let time get away from us between visitors, the holidays, and that strange way in which you can mentally adjust to clutter or gaps in a room until suddenly you have guests over and you realize, “OMG. We still have that trio of area rugs rolled up against the wall over there.” Yikes.

I made it a point to go slow and steady with decorating this time around, but now I’m feeling frustrated with the fact that we still have awhile to go. We got some major pieces in place (my favorite and, surprisingly, my second favorite) and picked up a lot of practical items, like a new vacuum, a shower caddy, a Simple Human recycler, and a flatscreen TV for our kitchen, which Mr. Magpie then mounted to the wall (I was very impressed with him and I love being able to watch the news while making breakfast in the morning).

Anyhow, now I’m back on the wagon, determined to find the remaining big items for our home in the next few weeks. In my search for missing pieces, a couple of finds I’m in love with:

THIS STORAGE BENCH or THIS ONE FOR MICRO’S NURSERY

THIS PENDANT FOR MINI’S ROOM

THIS STUNNING LAMP FOR OUR DINING ROOM, WHERE WE WILL BE HANGING AN ENORMOUS PORTRAIT WITH A LOT OF GREEN IN IT

DON’T HAVE A HOME FOR THESE SCONCES BUT THEY ARE EPIC

WOULD DIE FOR THESE SCONCES IN MINI’S ROOM (THERE IS WIRING FOR THEM!)

EITHER LOUIS XIV CHAIRS (INSPIRED BY PHOTO FROM AN AMY BERRY INTERIOR ABOVE) OR BAMBOO CHAIRS FOR OUR DINING ROOM

CONTEMPLATING A ROUND TABLE — MY FRIEND AND INTERIOR DESIGNER JEN HUNTER SUGGESTED IT BECAUSE OF THE ROOM’S DIMENSIONS…COULD THIS BE IT? OUT OF MY COMFORT ZONE!

A CHIC INEXPENSIVE HEADBOARD FOR A GUEST ROOM

THIS FUN SCALLOPED RUG

THESE PRETTY KNOBS

KIND OF DIE OVER THIS UNEXPECTED CHANDELIER/PENDANT FOR OUR DINING ROOM

OMG THIS SKIRTED CONSOLE

THIS STUNNING MIRROR FOR A LITTLE GIRL’S ROOM

THIS SLEEK SIDE TABLE FOR OUR LIVING ROOM (DRAWN TO THE STORAGE, BUT ALSO LOVE THIS)

THINKING OF SWITCHING UP THE PILLOWS IN OUR LIVING ROOM TO THESE

P.S. There is a great sale going on at Boden. Love this for a little girl and this pack of onesies would make a great layette gift and a cable-knit sweater always makes my “capsule” wardrobe approach for winter. Meanwhile, mini will essentially only wear “pretty nightgowns” to bed; some of these prints are adorable!

P.P.S. Eyeing these short and sleek rainboots as an alternative to my “tall” Hunter ones (more of my favorite rain gear).

P.P.P.S. So many incredible sale finds at Net-A-Porter. This lovely is 50% off and would be so pretty in an engagement portrait in the spring…more bride goodies here.

P.P.P.P.S. Inexpensive ways to personalize your home.

Sending you love and best wishes for the happiest Christmas. I know the holidays can be tough for some, so sending extra love and extra wishes to those of you quietly carrying a burden of one kind or another.

I know it’s not yet the end of the year, but I spent a few minutes reflecting on the blog today and revisiting some of my favorite posts. Thought I’d round them up here in the event that you are glazing over while watching twenty four hours of A Christmas Story or on hour seven of your journey to O’Hare, where it is inevitably snowing right now, and need a little distraction…

WHEN YOU NEED TO BE REMINDED THAT YOU ARE BEING TOO HARD ON YOURSELF

IF YOU ARE GRIEVING AND WANT TO FEEL LESS ALONE IN IT

A LOVE LETTER TO MY HUSBAND

THE SIX WORDS THAT GOT ME THROUGH MY C-SECTION

WHERE IT’S EASIEST TO FIND GOD

CHANGE IS A TWO-FACED WOMAN

DRIVE GENTLY, DEARIE

INTIMACY, IN ALL ITS SAVAGE ABANDON

And, a smattering of random links:

NEVER THOUGHT OF MYSELF AS A CLOG GIRL BUT I’M OBSESSED WITH THESE AFTER SEEING THEM ON A MOM AT SCHOOL PICK-UP

IF YOU NEED A FUN TOP

THE BEST JEANS

LAST MINUTE IMPULSE-BUY FOR MINI’S CHRISTMAS HAUL (SHE’S BEEN VERY INTO DRESSING LIKE ME LATELY, WHICH I ADORE)

A STYLISH WAY TO KEEP CORDS TIDY (MONOGRAMMABLE!)

THE MOST POPULAR ITEM FOR HOME I’VE EVER FEATURED

HOW CUTE IS THIS INEXPENSIVE BEDDING FOR A TODDLER?

A PALETTE EVERYONE NEEDS TO OWN — PERFECT EVERYDAY EYE SHADOW

A DARLING ROCKING HORSE FOR A LITTLE GIRL

THIS RUG FOR A PLAYROOM GIVES ME MARIMEKKO VIBES

PRETTY PEARL HAIR CLIPS

THESE RATTLES! I CALL HILL MY KOALA — HE DEFINITELY NEEDS THE KOALA!

A CHIC ADDITION TO A GAME NIGHT, ALONG WITH A PITCHER OF MARTINIS

A FUNNY GIFT FOR A FRIEND WHO HAS BEEN THROUGH THE RINGER

THE NEW STAR PRINT IS FUN

My father used to read us “The Night Before Christmas” on Christmas Eve — but not just the poem. He read us Louise Turnbull’s fictionalized account of Clement Moore’s writing of “The Night Before Christmas” from this exact hardcover, out-of-print book whose periwinkle blue cover was frayed and cracked in the way of all well-loved books.

The story is startlingly bleak for a children’s book with such cartoonish illustrations: Professor Moore is away lecturing just before Christmas when his daughter, Charity, comes down with pneumonia and the doctor intimates that she may not live. Moore is unaware of his daughter’s precarious condition until he returns home, having just missed crossing paths with a member of the family’s staff dispatched to inform him — and he arrives notably bereft of the one gift his daughter had requested: a Christmas story. And so he sits down and writes the poem “The Night Before Christmas,” to his daughter’s delight and ultimate recovery.

There is a lot packed into this brief and mildly grim story, whose plot points shaped my impressionable imagination as a child in ways I am only now comprehending–but all of it is about exchange. There are messages lost or buried: the father’s unawareness of Charity’s condition, his forgetfulness about her Christmas request, the delayed departure of the family’s emissary. And there are messages received: the off-screen lectures from Moore to his students, Charity’s contraction of an illness (in a certain sense, something “received” from outside), the doctor’s fatalistic diagnosis, and, of course, the father’s ultimate gifting of a Christmas story to his daughter. Even the daughter’s name, Charity, directs us to the notion of giving and receiving. Ultimately, this is a fable reminding us that giving to others will restore health and happiness in the home.

But as a child, I was primarily troubled by the severity of Charity’s illness (“she could die…” I remember thinking, with wonderment — death! something that seemed only possible for old people!) and the vision of her feverishly sitting on death’s doorstop in a white, Victorian-style nightgown with her eyes rimmed in purple while her father was not only away but entirely unreachable was terrifying. This picture of abandonment haunted me, especially as my father read these words while I was tucked safely under his arm alongside my sisters, enjoying the rise and fall of his voice as he’d arrive at the reading of the poem itself:

Twas the night before Christmas…

The rhythm was slow and somewhat exaggerated, especially as he’d navigate the tongue-twisting bits: “the lustre of midday to objects below” and “as dry leaves that before the wild hurricane fly,” the syntactical complexity of which startles me now as I read the same to my own children.

And so I felt even then the jarring difference between the cozy cocoon my parents had built around me that night and every night of my childhood and the bone-chilling concept that perils like pneumonia and purple-rimmed eyelids and suffering on one’s own existed.

But isn’t that always the context for Christmas?

Yet in thy dark streets shineth //
The everlasting Light

Just a few nights ago, Mr. Magpie and I celebrated Christmas ourselves a bit early with a cocktail downtown followed by dinner at Gramercy Tavern. It was a not-great night for various reasons — nothing serious, just frustrating interactions and bad service and rude people and a foolishly overpacked weekend and the usual soul-deadening sights of the gritty city on the subway. (Also, I stupidly wore a floor-length green velvet dress similar to this for the occasion and spent most of the time in standing-room-only subway cars and running through the 42nd Street stop with the hem in my hand, grimacing at the mysterious liquids and stains that grace the floors and then — just when we emerged at 23rd street — I let down my guard only to see somehow had “hocked a loogie” on the steps and just…for the love of Pete! Are we animals?! You couldn’t wait ten steps and spit into the street?! You had to do it right here so someone would step right into it?! I mean, my God! Where do I live?!) In short, New York can sometimes feel like a slap in the face. Like the most inhospitable place on earth. Like a never-ending battle you never signed up to fight.

But on the taxi home, as we zipped up Park Avenue, a wreath the size of a studio apartment came into focus dead ahead of us, shining like a beacon from the front of Grand Central. And there was something about its sudden and unanticipated beauty, its charm, its improbably generous existence in a city that often feels viciously indifferent to your wellbeing and spirit, that moved me. To think that there is a line item in the Grand Central budget for a wreath — and that there are staff hours dedicated to ordering and hanging it — somehow stirred me into a weepiness I did not anticipate. Even in that monolithic building, there is Christmas cheer, a willingness to delight and welcome the Christmastime visitor–or, you know, the New York transplant worn down by the city’s inelegances.

And so there I was again, in that old see-saw of Christmas emotions, overwhelmed by its goodness and beauty by virtue of contrast.

And so I sing again:

Yet in thy dark streets shineth

The everlasting light

The hopes and fears of all the years

Are met in thee tonight

Merry Christmas, Magpies.

Post Scripts.

+In case you’re panicking about what to wear to NYE, a few picks from shops that have quick shipping:

THIS RIXO

THIS DEEPLY-DISCOUNTED SALONI

THIS TIERED AND TINSELED BEAUTY

THIS SPARKLY WRAP (LIKE RETROFETE, BUT LESS EXPENSIVE!)

THIS MORE UNDERSTATED BUT STILL FUN STYLE

+A very cute diaper bag option (love that it can be monogrammed!)

+I wore these Gucci tights with the velvet dress mentioned above. I love them so much! I bought them on a lark thinking I’d wear them for a season but find they add a little interest and sauciness to anything.

+More memories with my Dad.

+This wildly popular sweatshirt was just restocked in a pretty new color. It always sells out quickly! (I own this in ecru.)

+Guys, even the cashmere is 40% off at Polo! This is the time to invest in one of these classic cardigans for your little prince.

+Chic finds for brides.

+Love this well-priced sweater (especially in that unexpected green?!)

+A plush robe for a little boy (love it in that emerald green color).

+Itty bitty uggs for a little one!

+Testing out these onesies from Hannah Andersson’s diffusion line for Amazon. I have been looking for some back-ups that are softer than Gerber but less expensive than 1212 (my absolute favorite), as Hill continues to outgrow everything he wears and I way underbought on the base layer front for him this season. Any other recs? Will report on The Moon and Back! Hill owned a pair of their pajamas and they were fine. Not quite as soft/snuggly or attractive in person as I’d been hoping. Thinking these onesies might be different though.

+I live in these slippers during the winter months.

+My tried and true favorite products.

+Considering buying one of these for mini for next Christmas…beautiful!

I can’t believe we’re closing out 2019 in just over a week. Today, thought I’d share my absolute favorite purchases this year:

LELE SADOUGHI HEADBAND (SEEN ABOVE — ADDS INSTANT INTEREST TO ANY OUTFIT…ARE YOU TIRED OF HEARING ABOUT IT? HA!)

STAUD SHIRLEY BAG (ALSO SEEN ABOVE – SO FUN, AND NOW ON RIDICULOUS SALE!)

SLEEPER BRIGITTE LINEN DRESS (NOW ON SALE! I OWN IT IN A FLORAL PRINT)

THIS $32 DOEN DUPE

EMILIA WICKSTEAD X CHARLOTTE OLYMPIA MULES (I OWN IN A FLORAL – SO CHIC AND COMFORTABLE)

MY FAVORITE LONG-SLEEVED TEE (OWN IN MANY COLORS)

MARIA HIGH RISE DENIM (SO FLATTERING)

THIS FOLDING TOILET SEAT COVER FOR MINI WHILE TOILET TRAINING (#LIFESAVER)

MY BELOVED BLAKE DRESSER (A DEFINITE UPGRADE)

DRAWER ORGANIZERS

LOVE TO DREAM SWADDLES

YUMBOX SNACKBOX FOR MINI (SHE LOVES THIS THING, IT NEVER LEAKS, AND THE VARIOUS ITEMS IN THE COMPARTMENTS NEVER GET MIXED UP!)

BEDROOM RUG (PICS OF IT IN OUR ROOM HERE)

PETITE PLUME JAMMIES (COULD EAT HILL UP IN THESE)

FREIGHT TRAIN BOARD BOOK — BOTH CHILDREN ARE OBSESSED WITH THIS; THANKS TO THE MAGPIE READER FOR THE SUGGESTION!

MIELE VACUUM (THE BEST!)

EERO MESH WIFI NETWORK SYSTEM (HAS MADE OUR INTERNET SIGNAL AT HOME SO, SO STRONG AND INFALLIBLE)

WEST ELM SCONCES (LOVE THESE SO MUCH)

ERIN GATES BILLINGS RUG FOR HILL’S NURSERY

ULLA JOHNSON INDAH DRESS

STORQ MATERNITY/NURSING CAFTAN

EVERLANE QUILTED LINER JACKET

OAUI TREATMENT MASK

A FLORAL BROCK COLLECTION TOP SIMILAR TO THIS I AM ABSOLUTELY SMITTEN WITH

CHANTECAILLE LIP CHIC IN BOURBON ROSE

PAM MUNSON TOTE (I WORE THIS ALL SUMMER)

What were you favorite purchases/discoveries this year?

P.S. Pretty chinoiserie print earrings, my absolute favorite pumps of all time (non-designer!), and the chicest raincoat.

P.P.S. What are you reading?

P.P.P.S. Time is a thief and a second approach (written almost a year ago).

My Latest Snag: The Hill House Home Nap Dress.

I know I’ve mentioned this here and there but I had been eyeing the Hill House Home Nap Dress and had to pounce when it was released in its limited-edition tartan print for the holidays. I feel like Clara from the Nutcracker in it (and my hair is just long enough for a braid!). So good! I love the way Nellie Diamond has re-branded loungewear, and I am just so into that smocked neckline situation. I was so sad to have missed out this popular Doen dress last season, so the Nap dress kind of makes up for it.

If you’re a fellow smocking lover: this Doen dress is sure to sell out in a hot second (a printed variation on a dress of theirs that was also wildly popular last summer — look for less with this) or this smocked maxi which looks prim and stodgy (?) but Julia of Gal Meets Glam has proven can also look darling (and bump-friendly).

You’re Sooooo Popular: The Tartan Top.

The most popular items on the blog this past week:

+This tartan top. Quick! You can still get it in time for Christmas Eve if you hurry! I like pairing it with jeans for a dressed down situation, but in the store, they paired it with black velvet trousers and I did a double-take…

+Ben Amun crystal cluster earrings. (Look for less.)

+Red sequin dress. MAJOR statement. Love.

+THE best bronzer. Will never mess around with another one again.

+Gorgeous oversized tote.

+I use this instead of eye shadow 90% of the time.

+An inexpensive, glitzy look for NYE.

+Truth Serum, one of my favorite products.

Turbothot: Doing Things to Completion.

I shared a little bit about this in a recent Magpie Mail post, but a few weeks ago, I started reminding myself nearly five or six times a day to “Do things to completion.” By that I mean: instead of folding laundry and placing it in a basket in the hallway, I would tell myself: “Fold it and put it away right now.” Instead of observing that we were running low on paper towels, I would tell myself: “Get a new spool from the linen closet so it’s under the sink when needed right now.”

As I settled into this frame of mind, I couldn’t believe how many tasks I was unknowingly and unnecessarily fragmenting throughout the day, in turn creating a lot of loose ends to tie up down the road.

A lot of this do-it-now work is in service to “future me,” who will be happy not to trip over the laundry basket late at night or find herself with dripping hands and no Bounty. But it has the added benefit of making “right-now me” feel more accomplished and organized and a lot less mentally burdened by the minutiae of running a household with a large dog and two small children and an exacting husband — the heft of which still startles me. Sometimes I march through our morning routine and can hardly believe that in the two hours I have been awake, I have not stopped moving — and yet the only thing I have actually accomplished is getting my small family fed, dressed, and out the door (and then the non-trivial task of tidying up what’s left behind). By taking the spare thirty or sixty seconds to “do things to completion,” I feel much calmer heading into the day.

I’m wondering if anyone else will find this suggestion helpful?

As always, other tips on maintaining a sense of serenity at home welcome.

Post-Scripts: An Affordable Winter Boot.

+This boot ($40!) is a good dupe for much more expensive fur-trim styles.

+Love these leopard boots for a little one.

+Such a chic puffer coat. Love the collarless neckline, the length, the athletic trim. CHIC! On the opposite end of the spectrum, I’m still daydreaming about this glitzed-up puffer.

+This fleece-up jacket is perfection. Love the oversized pockets, which remind me of my beloved liner jacket, which I basically wore without cease for a month straight.

+Another Everlane favorite: these thermal tees. I pretty much have one on most days of the winter beneath a chunky knit sweater. They are super thin, breathable, and comfortable. A great base layer.

+Love the star print on this peter pan collar onesie.

+These earrings are pretty and so different from anything else I’ve seen.

+Swooning over this dress for mini for spring.

+Absolutely love these vintage-style French placards — especially the “Merci.” Not sure how I would style it in my home but what a sweet reminder…

+I had forgotten about Caudalie’s Beauty Elixir — one of my favorite discoveries last winter! — until I found it at the bottom of my makeup bin, lost in the shuffle of the move. Perfect for setting makeup and refreshing skin.

+Kind of loving the idea of a pair of spa slippers for home…these would make me feel like I am at a hotel!

+I have been all about tartan this Christmas. Buying a set of these for next year (on sale!)

+How gorgeous is the wrapping on these soaps?! Almost too pretty to use. Would be an elegant way to outfit a guest bathroom…

Thought I’d send you off into the holiday week with a fun little getting-to-know-you-better post. (Your responses to my “Getting to Know You” post were a delight to read, and every now and then, a new-to-the-blog reader will chime in on the post and it’s just the dearest, most amusing way to get to know you.) Imagine it’s me and you sharing a coffee…spill all, my friend!

If it’s on the menu, I always order…caesar salad as a starter.

Most overrated virtue. Assertiveness. Much prefer humility and a light touch.

I wish I were more…like my mother.

Least favorite word. The first thing that came to mind was “relax,” as in someone telling me: “just relax.” This hasn’t happened in a long while but the thought of it makes my skin crawl. More to the point: I did an extensive roundup of words I hate here. Particularly egregious: “synergy,” “hack,” and “studentry.” I forgot to add the word “utilize” to that list. “Use” works just fine 100% of the time.

What word do you most overuse? Extraordinary. I know this because Mr. Magpie claims I mispronounce it and laughs every time I use it — which, as it turns out, is too often.

Favorite street. I’ve always loved the feel of Georgetown between R and Volta — it’s partway nostalgia from my youth (I attended high school there and then lived there for many years post-college), partway the intrinsic charm of the gorgeous row houses and red brick pavers. Nowadays, there are certain blocks of the Upper West Side that positively fill my soul with joy whenever I walk down them with Tilly — especially right now, with Christmas trees in windows and wreaths on doors. But I think I will forever love East Cooper Street in Aspen, Colorado. The majesty of the Rockies, the quaintness of small-town bakeries and cafes, the glamor of high-end designer stores. Everything in one place. Perfect.

Favorite book as a child. Too many to count, but the ones that immediately spring to mind: Nancy Drew, the Boxcar Children series, The Secret Garden, Harriet the Spy, the Bobbsey Twins series, A Wrinkle in Time, and The Baby Sitter’s Club series. There was also a series about a girl who went away to horse-riding camp that I absolutely adored.

Go-to middle-of-the-night snack. Toasted english muffin with Plugra butter.

Least favorite trend. Athleisure.

Last time you laughed really hard. A week ago, at a gathering with some girlfriends and my sister, where we drank too much wine and talked about “Olive, Again.” The best part is that I can’t even remember what specific things were so funny — but when Mr. Magpie asked me how the night went, the first thing I said was: “We laughed a lot.”

Last thing you ate. A limited edition peppermint Oreo.

Last time you cried. Probably five minutes ago. I can’t keep track; I’m a crier.

Celebrity crush. Young Brad Pitt, Bradley Cooper, Penelope Cruz.

Favorite music to work to. Chopin’s Etudes.

Least favorite scent. Too much axe body spray. Blech.

Dream birthday cake. Yellow with buttercream frosting and sprinkles. Basically, funfetti.

Best gift you’ve ever received. Gifts in the abstract sense? Too many to count. My life is an embarrassment of riches. But in the material sense — probably my Kindle, which Mr. Magpie gave me a few years ago. It transformed me into a much better (more frequent) reader and helped me through breastfeeding mini.

Most people probably don’t know that I am actually…kind of silly. My sisters and I are loony tunes together.

Best purchase of 2019. Rug for our master bedroom. I feel like an idiot but why did I not realize how much better and cozier a bedroom is with a plush rug underfoot?

Favorite moment from 2019. Micro’s bird kisses just after he was born on May 31st.

Biggest challenge of 2019. Adjusting to life as a mother to two (specifically, accepting changes in my relationship with my eldest — changes I am still grappling with and occasionally crying over), getting through the sleepless exhaustion and mania of caring for a newborn, and moving in Manhattan while all of that was going on. (Glad I can put this behind me.) All good things in the long run, but emotionally and physically trying.

And…go! Answer all or pick and choose whatever you like.

Post Scripts.

+Investments that are worth it.

+Nail polish for little ones! I have been dreaming of the day I take mini with me for a manicure. She still feels a little young to enjoy it…but maybe we could do an at-home one with this set.

+This toile top is fun.

+How gorgeous are these ramekins?! $30 for 4 — and I always find a million uses for my ramekins and little dip bowls!

+Adore so many of the new prints by 1212.

+Some REALLY amazing deals on Emilia Wickstead pieces like this dress and this blouse.

+Now is the time to start collecting ornaments for next year — so many have already been discounted! This is one of my favorite ones — I gave it to Mr. Magpie a few years ago — and it is already discounted. I know I’ve written about this elsewhere, but I pick a new ornament for each family member every year. Maybe I’ll buy next year’s now! (This year’s? An oyster for Mr. Magpie, a koala for micro because he clings to me like a koala bear — I have to pry his fingers off my sweater or hair multiple times a day! — and so that’s become his informal nickname around here, and a ladybug for mini, because that’s always been our nickname for her.)

+Loving this new pink variation on a dress I’ve been seeing allll over the place on the chicest of chic peas.

+I added and removed this adorable toy car from my shopping cart fifteen times while shopping for micro’s Christmas haul. He’s way too young for it but I love its styling and the fact that it’s an homage to Aspen!

+Can’t believe this happened just about a year ago from now. I’m so used to Mr. Magpie’s new look!

+Living loudly vs. living quietly.

Items I’m drooling over at the moment…

TORY BURCH MILLER TWEED BOOTS (SEEN ABOVE AND ON SALE!!!; TOOK ME A MINUTE TO COME AROUND TO THE LUG SOLE BUT THEY ARE JUST TOO GOOD TO MISS)

THIS PEARL CARDI WITH A SILK CAMI

THIS STUNNING EMILIA WICKSTEAD MIDI (SO ELEGANT)

THIS FUN KNIT (DISCOVERED VIA LE CATCH) WITH THESE QUILTED HIKING BOOTS

THIS SLOUCHY, OVERSIZED SWEATER, PREFERABLY IN IVORY OR BLUE (SIMILAR STYLE ON SALE FOR $64 IN A GREAT PINK COLOR HERE)

HHH NAP DRESSES (I SNAGGED ONE OF THEIR LIMITED-EDITION TARTAN ONES AND FEEL LIKE A SAUCY VICTORIAN MAIDEN IN THE BEST WAY WHEN I WEAR IT)

THIS CHIFFON-TRIM DRESS

THIS $17 PUFF-SLEEVED CREW

AUDREY HEPBURN IN DRESS FORM (LOVE IT IN THE ICE BLUE!)

IF I WERE HEADED SOMEWHERE WARM…THIS AJE DRESS

P.S. What to wear to holiday gatherings, statement jewelry for the holidays, and some tried-and-true items I love in my life.

P.P.S. I am absolutely obsessed with this hair masque. Have I written about it?! It works wonders on dry, tired hair and always helps me with my tangle-prone mane. And, as with all Ouai products, it smells absolutely divine. (I also swear by their shampoo and conditioner.)

P.P.P.S. Inspired by Bishop & Holland, I ordered mini one of these little bead boxes and spelled out her name on top with these. Will then fill all of the little compartments with snacks for our road trip to D.C. — raisins, Yogis, pretzels, mandarin orange segments, etc. Thanks to B&H for the idea!