My home decorating urges come in fits and spells.  I can be happily living in my apartment for weeks and then — BAM — I suddenly want to refresh the pillows, and update the coffee table books, and rethink the pantry organization, etc., etc.  We use a lot of blue and white in our home, so I often find I gravitate towards decor accents featuring that timeless combination.  One of my favorite finds, incidentally, is a vintage Parisian street number that reads “18” (similar to the “80” shown below) — Mr. Magpie’s number when he played ball.  He’s superstitious about it, in the way all ballplayers tend to be, and so he was delighted when I added it to our gallery wall.  (Etsy FTW.)

The Fashion Magpie French Street Number

One of my other favorite blue-and-white pieces is this shockingly affordable chinoiserie print umbrella stand — it’s currently on sale for under $60, and I’ve owned it not once but twice, and Tilly broke it both times.  This now permanently sits in my Amazon cart until I’ve decided Tilly is mature enough not to break it.  But — by all means, my friends, snap it up now if you don’t have a wild banshee of an airedale terrier.

My bar is also RARELY without a pack of these chinoiserie print Caspari napkins; I highly recommend you stock up as well.  Nothing looks prettier than a cocktail in vintage glassware atop one of these.

Below, I’m sharing a couple of new obsessions I’ve been lingering over and contemplating adding to my home.  Many of them are from Etsy or Amazon and therefore surprisingly affordable.  Bonne shopping!

My Favorite Blue + White Finds for Home.

You can click on the images or see details below — I’ve also added a number of other finds/alternatives in the narrative below, FYI!

01.  Set of 2 Audubon Bird Prints.  Mr. Magpie have four of these we framed and have up in our dining room, and I adore them.  I also love this one, which comes framed in a fantastic reclaimed wood frame.

02.  My new go-to gift for hostesses in the summer.  How beautiful is the jar?  And lovely to spoon over Jeni’s ice cream or pound cake!  Tie with a bright red ribbon — or a crisp white one.

03.  Mr. Magpie are often stuffing our dry cleaning into reusable grocery bags.  I’d like to buy this oversized laundry bag as a durable, roomy upgrade.

04.  Lee Jofa bunny pillow covers!  Mon dieu, I love this print.  I’ve had my eye on them for at least a year.

05.  I can’t believe the price on this chic saturated blue runner.  Would make such a cheery statement on entry!

06.  These slim, clear hangers are supposed to be the bees knees.  They make your entire closet look roomier, airier, and apparently you can fit a ton more clothes thanks to their slender proportions.

07.  What a genius hack for drawer organization — and one that will fit any drawer’s dimensions!  I have a set of these in my cart and can imagine using a few in drawers throughout the house: my desk, the bathroom, my bedside table, etc.  I also love these for my medicine cabinets.

08.  Food storage never looked so chic.  I love the idea of using these when toting a potato salad or pasta side to a picnic/potluck dinner.  Or — hey! — even just making my fridge a little happier.  I almost always dice up melon or pineapple or berries at the beginning of the week; these would make the fruit bowl so inviting.  As an aside, I am still obsessed with our glass snapware for leftovers.  They are oven-, microwave-, and dishwasher-safe, they don’t warp or bend, and they’re super sturdy.

09.  These rolls of tearable linen napkins are such a clever idea if you’re trying to gussy up an outdoor tailgate/picnic situation.  They come in all different colors!

10.  I love these French parfait jars for storing things like brown sugar, dried herbs (think bay leaves and chili peppers — things that are bulky but need to be stored in an airtight solutions), and mini’s cheerios.

11.  The aforementioned umbrella stand.  So chic!  And, honestly, borderline necessary in a Manhattan apartment, as the alternative is storing them in a closet, and let me tell you — closet real estate is PRECIOUS.  I’d much rather have our umbrellas out on display in a pretty stand and conserve closet space for unsightly things like mops and bags of dog food!

12.  Are you tired of hearing me drag on about Hill House Home’s Waverly collection?  I want a set so badly!

13.  This screeprint of lily of the valley flowers takes my breath away.  Love.

14.  I love this funky Jonathan Adler condiment bowl.  I could imagine using it for a single peony, or for bobby pins and hair elastics, or for snacks — versatile!

15.  I recently bought a bouquet of dried French lavender, and I keep it in a small vase at my bedside.  I love when I roll over and catch a little waft of its delicate, calming scent.  I think I’ll order a couple of these lavender sachets for my clothing drawers!  (Incidentally, another great hostess gift idea!)

Other random home decor discoveries…

+This is such a sleek way to earn a little extra counter space where you might otherwise clutter your salt pig, pepper grinder, and olive oil by the stovetop.

+If only I could convince Mr. Magpie we needed more appetizer plates

+All-white-errything for your desktop.

+Mackenzie taught me about the genius of this cord cover set — a great way to hide unsightly cables/cords!  Also, check out her chic blue and white living room!

+Monograms belong everywhere.

+I would legit die to own this in the ice blue.  Too bad it would compromise 1/3 of our remaining available counter space.

P.S. What’s in your refrigerator?

P.P.S.  In case you’re on the hunt for decorative storage baskets!

P.P.P.S.  I still wanna be India Hicks.

The other night, Mr. Magpie came home to me moping around the apartment with a headache and a nothing-can-go-right attitude.  It had all started around 4 p.m., when I was already tired after a day on my own with mini and Tilly, and I opened our overstuffed pantry cabinet and three boxes tumbled out and fell on my head.  Seconds later, Tilly shredded an important receipt that had been on my desk and minimagpie managed to get a hold of a mercury glass candle holder, which she promptly smashed all over the floor.  It was a miracle she wasn’t hurt, but the minute I had her safely in her crib, I sliced my finger on a shard of glass and then grumpily spent the next half hour using tongs to pick up the remaining shards in the thick-pile carpet, then sweeping, then vacuuming, then vacuuming again.  I even changed mini’s sheets and carefully wiped down her bed and floor in the event that any shards had been on her clothing.  Meanwhile, mini had frozen the iPad and Tilly had eaten a fish stick off the kitchen counter.

Harrrrumph.

I was Alexandra and the no-good-very-bad day.

Mr. Magpie came home and angels trumpeted.

“I’m so glad you’re home,” I said, eager to offload my woeful tale onto a sympathetic ear.  He listened, patiently, nodding and offering appropriate condolences that reminded me — if I’m being honest — of how petty I was being, and then suggested a glass of wine.

“No,” I sniffed.  “I have too much to do.”

“Come on!  I think you should change your plans and plan on having a good night.”

He had a point.  I needed to plan on having a good night if I wanted one.  It reminded me of something a good girlfriend of mine said to me.  She’s a little on the clumsy side (which I say with love, and to which she would also readily admit), and she told me that she’d recently broken one of her mother’s champagne flutes.  “Oops!  I didn’t mean to!” she cried, bending to pick up the pieces.  Her mom had replied: “Well, sometimes you have to mean not to.”  My friend shuddered a little bit when she told me this — it was an earnest mistake, after all! — but she said it had changed her outlook, had made her a bit more cautious, a bit more careful, and that she was less clumsy as a result.  It felt the same, in a way, with my bad mood.  I could have just continued to let bad things pile onto my day, or I could mean not to.

So I changed plans.  I asked Mr. Magpie for a little quiet time to myself.  I neatly copied the remaining items on my to-do list into tomorrow’s column (I use this and love it because — even though it’s enormous — it offers me enough space to fully outline my daily plans), closed my laptop, and retired to my room.  I changed into my favorite white cotton robe and then scrubbed my face and started from scratch, with a fresh face of makeup — including my new favorite foundation (has anyone else tried this?!  I’m OBSESSED.) and my tried and true serum.  I gussied up my hair with dry shampoo, which I then blow-dried (the secret to not making dry shampoo look like…dry shampoo) and, of course, the best round brush known to man. I put on my favorite body oil and then changed into a feminine dress similar to this and put on oversized floral earrings almost identical to these.

After putting mini to bed, I tidied our living room, lit a candle (we’re now burning this and it smells DIVINE — not overly floral; very fresh and summery), put on the new Leon Bridges album, and poured myself a glass of wine.  Normally, I feel rushed to get dinner on the table shortly after mini’s down for the night in order to get into bed by nine for an hour of reading before I drift off to sleep.  But tonight, I sat down in the blue armchair by the window overlooking the courtyard and did nothing.  We polished off some outrageously delicious lomo iberico (charcuterie) and some smoked ricotta on little Italian semolina crackers.  We decided to order in rather than cooking the steak and beets and asparagus in our fridge — which we rarely do.  We chatted about this and that — nothing and everything — and sat down to a late supper.  I stayed up later than usual that night, watching You’ve Got Mail for the trillionth time and enjoying what Mr. Magpie and I call “bed wine” — i.e., the evening’s final glass of wine, in bed, with pajamas on.

Somehow, a day of minor devastations gave way to an evening of small perfections.

A few days later, I listened to a Goop podcast in which a therapist explained that she often asks female clients struggling with the roles they fill: “Do you experience pleasure?  Do you give yourself permission to be excessive, or reckless, or non-responsible?  Do you always go to bed at a certain time because you have to wake up the next morning or do you still on occasion just allow yourself no curfew so that you don’t have to feel that you’re a child in your own house?”

I immediately sprang into defensive mode: “Well, I can’t just be irresponsible; I have a baby and a dog to look after, and what would happen if I didn’t answer when the realtor called or the landlord emailed with a question, or if we didn’t have enough paper towels, or if I forgot the milk for mini…!”

After a minute, I swallowed — hard — as I realized I had been flailing wildly against her innocuous (or non-innocuous, come to think of it) query.  It dawned on me that the small perfections of the other night had been largely correlated with my minor transgressions against the order of things in our household — an order that I and I alone enforce.  (Mr. Magpie is noddingly acquiescent with the routine, but he’s far more likely to live in the moment than I am and — as shown above — far more likely to encourage a last minute change in plan.)  The twenty minutes to myself that is usually family time.  The evening outfit change.  The languid happy hour.  The order-in dinner.  The late supper and later bed time.  The bed wine.  I’d even left the dirty dishes in the sink!  I had given myself permission, that night, to just do what I wanted to do.

Now — I’m an organized, disciplined person, and planning is in my nature.  I’ll never toss routine to the wind or “just go with it,” as a general proposition.  But I learned the other day, after the podcast prodded some self-reflection, that I need to give myself permission to “break the norm” on occasion.  I was deeply struck by the therapist’s phrasing: “do you just allow yourself no curfew?”  Do you just allow yourself.  I had not thought about how strictly I had been policing my own behavior until that moment — and for what?  For why?

Today, if you’re anything like me, I’d like you to give yourself permission to go off the tracks in some small way — dessert for dinner!  An extra cocktail!  No curfew!  Fries instead of salad!  Clothes on the floor!  No alarm!  Play hookie!  Whatever it is — allow yourself to not feel like a child in your own home, because sometimes you really need it.

Post Scripts.

When I want to go “against type,” I wear my denim jacket (also love this embellished style), or a plain white t-shirt with distressed jeans, or Golden Goose sneakers.  I usually dress with a bit more polish and femininity; these pieces make me feel different, edgy.

Have any of you played this game or this game?  I’m thinking of buying one or the other for our upcoming friend vacation!

For inspiration, I have had this book on badass women (from Hilary to Gaga) in my cart for a long while.  But I’m also giving myself permission to read fluffy sidecar books, like this, or the latest Elin Hilderbrand.

Dog owners: do you have any indestructible toys you love for your pups?  We adore the Fluff N Tuff plush toys, which tend to last a long while, and nothing beats some good old tennis balls (a ball lasts about a week in Tilly’s paws — Jeff Bezos must mistake me for an avid tennis player).  But everything else that pledges indestructibility fails.  Has anyone tried this?  Suggestions?

This reminded me of Mr. Magpie; we get ramen about once a week, and this made me laugh for some reason.  I don’t even understand the joke it’s making but I like it.

I have about five blue-and-white striped oxford-style shirts, but…this one?  Yes pls.

Reflections on another big moment of self-discovery.

Glow drops?!  I must try this.

 

 

 

Happy happy joy joy — Net-A-Porter has launched its sale and I’m in an elevated state of panic slash excitement.  My top picks:

Les “It” Items from Le Net-A-Porter Sale.

+I was on the fence about these Balenciaga knife heels (shown above and below), but I’ve come around — and now they’re 50% off!  They make such a loud statement, but I love the sleek satin fabrication and the delicate bow.  Oh, they’re THE “It” shoe to own.

The Fashion Magpie Balenciaga Knife Mules 1 The Fashion Magpie Balenciaga Knife Mules 3

+This chic-as-all-get-out mohair sweater (check out the bow in the back!) from hot label Ganni was all over the place this past winter — snag for next season!

The Fashion Magpie Ganni Sweater 1

The Fashion Magpie Ganni Sweater 2 The Fashion Magpie Ganni Sweater 3

+I’ve spotted this Nannacay pompom-straw tote on a number of fashionistas — and now it’s marked down to $150!  This Danse Lente bag is also an amazing find (and has a considerable amount of cache RN), and I’ve had a crush on this Muun straw tote for months.

The Fashion Magpie Nannacay Bag 1

My Top Picks from Le Net-A-Porter Sale.

I would love the following items, many of which I’ve featured in recent posts!:

THIS LOEFFLER RANDALL TOTE

THIS POPLIN DRESS

THIS LISA MARIE FERNANDEZ MINI

THESE AQUAZZURA MULES

THIS ELEGANT SELF-PORTRAIT

THIS DARLING CANVAS BUCKET BAG

THIS DRAMATIC ZIMMERMANN

THIS FLIRTY RED DRESS (LOOKS LIKE VALENTINO, RINGS IN AROUND $100!)

P.S.  Already in my closet, but now on sale: these heels (my favorite evening sandals); these lace-up flats (under $50!); this straw tote; this Saloni (mine is in navy); this Gul Hurgel.

I am smitten with everything the high-end label Brock Collection puts out.  I just cannot get enough of its old-world, romantic, couture sensibility, and — you know me and florals, and they do a lovely floral.  The line was founded by a married couple who met while studying at Parsons School of Design (my sister’s alma mater!), and they artfully describe their brand as “a rarefied space of lived-in romance and thoughtful whimsy; it connects the dazzling (and not always easy to traverse) threads between uptown polish and boardwalk ease.”  

The Fashion Magpie Brock Collection 8

The Fashion Magpie Brock Collection 7

I first learned about the line through its “mommy and me” collaborations for Moda Operandi and Maisonette, and I swooned over the thought of myself and mini decked out for a summer wedding in them.

The Fashion Magpie Brock Collection 5

The Fashion Magpie Brock Collection 6

But I quickly began to aspire to its lovely read to wear pieces, available at Moda Operandi, Net A Porter, and Neiman Marcus.  I would die to wear this peplum-waist floral dress or this lace-trimmed floral midi (on sale!) or this taffeta maxi.

The Fashion Magpie Brock Collection Dress 1

The Fashion Magpie Brock Collection Dress 2

And I love the idea of pairing this statement blouse with a trim white pencil skirt for an elegant look.

The Fashion Magpie Brock Collection Blouse

If The Brock Collection is a little out of reach right now, I have been swooning over the pretty and far more affordable styles from the label Valencia & VineThis yellow top reminds me an awful lot of the style shown just above — but is $125.  I also love this maxi, this asymmetrical midi, and this bow-shouldered top.

These heels would go perfectly with any of these styles — and they’re on sale!

Finally, don’t forget your floral earrings.  I snagged these and these, but these are a steal.

P.S.  I love that these dresses would work for a town mouse or a country mouse 🙂

P.P.S.  Are you a rule follower?

Immediately after we accepted the offer on our house, Mr. Magpie and I decided to plan a short vacation to The Hamptons with our best friends for the fourth of July.  I’m not sure what about selling the house triggered the get-out-of-dodge feeling that washed over us, but we synchronously came to the same conclusion: let’s plan a getaway and completely disconnect.  I’ve been mentally architecting a perfect day during our upcoming trip, and it goes something like this:

Wake up early.  Even before babies necessitated it, and before married life occasionally required it, as Mr. Magpie’s stirrings or personal agenda would rouse me before I’d naturally wake, I’ve always preferred an early call time.  When I was a graduate student, I would wake at six a.m. and read or write or grade papers until nine or ten a.m., when rumbles of hunger would necessitate a break.  And then I’d usually be done for the day with my academic work, freed to attend class, run errands, jog–save for the interminable reading.  I was never done with reading.  But I still love waking early when I can.  Nowadays, it feels like a tremendous luxury to wake on my own terms.  Just this morning, for the first time in maybe a year and two months, I woke at 6:13 a.m., flipped on my Kindle, and read for thirty uninterrupted, selfish minutes.  Just me, the noises of the city — the rumbling of a garbage truck, the distant sound of a back-up beeper, an occasional whistle or shout — and a book in the gray-white light of morning.  I’d like to do this on my perfect day in the Hamptons.  Wake at 6 and read in bed.

The Fashion Magpie Perfect Day 5

Read mini books.  I love mini’s eager face in the morning, peering over her crib.  (She’ll sleep in this while we’re traveling, though.)  After her morning bottle in our bed, I usually read her books (some of her current favorites) and help her “feed” her two babydolls with this set, a process that can often go on for stretches of ten or twenty minutes.  (Place bib on baby, laugh at the sight of it.  Then “mix” food with spoon and spoon food into baby’s mouth, while murmuring.  Then press bottle forcibly to baby’s lips.  Then tear bib off.  Then place bib back on.  Repeat.)  We’ll quietly complete this daily ritual in our rented Hamptons house.

Walk into town for coffee.  We’ll throw mini in her travel stroller, still in her jammies (these are my current favorites of hers), and I’ll throw on an easy jumpsuit and my go-to sandals (these are a great dupe for far less) with my favorite shades (back in stock!).  We’ll bring the dogs (our best friends have an English bulldog, and we’ll have our Tilly), grab coffee (iced soy latte pls and thank you) and a pastry from a little coffeehouse while it’s still quiet and un-busy, and take in the sights.

The Fashion Magpie Perfect Day Coffee

Head to the beach.  I’ll throw on my favorite one-piece, we’ll pack up beach-day essentials, and load a portable speaker with a mix of pop music and country (our best friends are also from Ol’ Virginny, and none of us can get enough of Maren Morris or Kacey Musgraves while hanging outside).  We’ll pass a couple of hours in easy conversation, watching mini take in the sand and surf for the first time in her life, pausing for brief stretches of Kindle reading.

The Fashion Magpie Perfect Day 2

Go for a run.  While mini takes her nap, I’ll peel off for a run.  I’ll wear Indoor Voices leggings or my favorite running shorts (weather depending), my favorite running hat, and my APLs (select colors on serious sale!).  I also never run without my dorky but awesome running pouch, which enables me to run hands-free — I keep a credit card/a bit of cash (my Dad insists I do this), my phone, and my keys in here — and use my wireless earbuds and running watch.  (I also own an Apple Watch, but find the Garmin a little more intuitive to use.)

The Fashion Magpie Perfect Day Jog

Have a late, light lunch outside.  After a quick shower, my hair will magically air-dry into perfect beachy waves.  (JK — I’ll blow dry it as I do every other day — all my secrets are here.)  I’ll change mini into her new La Coqueta set, and we’ll throw together an easy summer lunch — tomatoes and feta and olives tossed with oil and vinegar and fresh herbs alongside a hunk of bread or leftover chicken from last night’s dinner tossed with mayonnaise, celery, walnuts, and grapes and spread onto crackers.  We may break into the midday rose, or linger over a plate of honeydew — who cares?  We’re on vacation time.

The Fashion Magpie Perfect Day 4

Meander through town, or hit up the farmer’s market, or stop by the vineyard.  We’ll do something as a group in the afternoon to get out of the house and take in the local sights.  But it will be easy, unharried — “do you want to check out that spot where they harvest oysters?” Mr. Magpie might ask, looking up from his cookbook.  (He reads cookbooks like books — this is his current favorite; we’ve been making pasta from it every Saturday or Sunday for the past month.)  We’ll pile into our rented Jeep (I specifically reserved one for the vacation) and head off in pursuit.

The Fashion Magpie Perfect Day 8

Enjoy happy hour.  Back at the house a few hours later, I’ll change into a dress (probably something floral — likely this), give my mom my daily call (we always speak around 5 pm), and we’ll sit outside with gin and tonics or caipirinhas or a glass of cava and some easy appetizers — say, manchego cheese with quince paste on little toasts or slices of chorizo, toasted up in a hot skillet, or — our current favorite — guindillo peppers and anchovy-stuffed olives, strung together on a toothpick and soaked in olive oil.   The dogs will scurry around after tennis balls, wondering what this heaven of unleashed bliss and fenced-in grass is all about, while mini enjoys her dinner al fresco in a high chair (the bonus of ours?  it travels well — it’s easy to dissemble).  The music will change from rousing country and pop to Ella Fitzgerald or Robin Thicke or Madeleine Peyroux, or a mix of all of them.

The Fashion Magpie Perfect Day 3

Put mini down.  After a bath in her portable tub (how darling?) and her requisite good-night story, I’ll feed mini her bedtime bottle and put her to sleep.  I love the quiet time we spend together just before she’s down for the night — she’s snuggly, drowsy, sweet.  I can get away with covering her face in kisses and tucking her over my shoulder for a few minutes of quiet embrace.

Cook dinner.  We’ll transition from cocktails to wine and fuss around the kitchen.  Mr. Magpie will be the main event, preparing something dramatic and incredible for the entree, but my bestie and I will alternate between preparing a salad or shucking corn and sitting in conversation over glasses of wine.  Is there anything that makes you happier than passing a long evening in the company of your best friends over a home-cooked meal?  No.  There is not.  There is nothing!  We’ll linger over the table for hours, eventually migrating to the couch inside to take in an evening thunderstorm, or to the chairs outside for a post-dinner drink or two.

Go to bed.  We’ll peel off not too late.  I’ll scrub my face using the wash I CANNOT LIVE WITHOUT and change into pajamas.  Even though the house is rented, it will magically have these sheets I’ve been drooling over for the last year.  We’ll sleep with the windows open to the sounds of nature — crickets chirping, maybe a cicada here or there — and curl into one another to fall asleep.

That’s it.  A completely perfect day for me.  No phones, lots of conversation, intermittent stretches of reading, a long run, no agenda but enough to do — and with loved ones.  Note: I stole all the pics above from Pinterest, but they capture pretty much my expectations for the Hamptons (I’ve never been!)

What’s your perfect day?

Post-Script.

PSA: These keep selling out / going into backorder.  I had to snag them in the blue.  If you’re tired of the oversized floral earring, how about these?!!?

I do NOT need a canvas tote, but…this?!  I kind of can’t stop imagining myself wearing it while on vacation.

Bergdorf’s is having an epic sale right now, and I continue to return to this dress.  (Get the look for less with this, though.)

All of these dresses are under $100 — and I just came across this punchy $68 steal!

How about this statement blouse — under $60?

An appropriately-styled windbreaker for mini for the holiday weekend.

Does mini need these vacationing mice?  #dying

Still swooning over the bows/print on these $25 sandals.

My Latest Score: Chanel Mascara Base.

I am mildly to aggressively obsessed with my lashes.  They are probably my favorite feature, as they have always been naturally long — and, when I have the time and inclination, I love to amp them up with extensions, which are pretty much the ultimate in luxury beauty.  (But — very hard on your lashes.  I can never go more than a couple of months with them before I get finnicky and worry my lashes will never grow back.  Don’t worry; they do.  But it takes time.)  I am fairly confident I’ve tried about 90% of the mascaras on the market, and the absolute best IMHO is DiorShow.  It’s inky and dramatic but not clumpy, and it doesn’t flake like so many other (inferior) mascaras.  I recently added Chanel’s Mascara Base to my rotation and am legit dying over the results.

The Fashion Magpie Chanel Mascara Base

Also shown in the snap above: Nars’ gloss in Turkish Delight (I’m not normally a gloss person, but I love the frosted natural look of this gloss!) and Bobbi Brown’s Extra Lip Tint in Bare Pink, which is super moisturizing and adds just the right amount of polish.

You’re Sooooo Popular: 

The most popular items on Le Blog this week:

+The most perfect swimsuit ever.  I actually featured this in my weekly secret magpie micropost series, which I distribute to my email subscribers.  I use that series to feature just one product a week that I’m dying over — something specific and small that doesn’t necessarily merit a full post!

+My favorite summer sneakers.

+A stunning floral dress.

+The easiest breeziest coverup, which I would actually wear around the house even when not at the beach, with my hair up in a top knot and bare feet.

+The cutest linen stripe skirt!

+An under $20 adorable straw hat that sold out but was just restocked with a new grosgrain band color!

+Curtis Sittenfeld’s new new.

+A unique gift for a hostess.  Imagine tying it up with a dramatic white bow!

+Monogrammed tumblers for your next al fresco meal.

#Turbothot: The Weird Thing We Do After Vacations.

Joanna of Cup of Jo recently shared “the weird thing” she and her husband do on vacation, which sounds interesting but I’m not quite sure it’s for Mr. Magpie and I, because, recently, I suggested that for Father’s Day, I take both mini and our dog out for the afternoon so that he could pass the day in blessed silence doing whatever he’d like to do.  His response was a sad frown and then: “No, but I want to be with you guys.”  (And it’s not that we don’t enjoy time apart or time to ourselves, but that — on that particular day of all days — he felt it would be a disservice to spend it separate from one another.  I have a sense he’d feel the same about vacation time.)

That said, the prompt led me to realize that there are all different types of vacationers, with different vacationing styles and priorities.  In high school, a friend of mine returned from a weeklong trip to France and blew my mind when she told me all that she’d seen and done, as she rattled off various sites and museums and excursions and performances she’d taken in.

“How did you…do that much?” I puzzled, in wonderment.  Our family vacations tended to be long, do-nothing days at the pool punctuated by occasional family excursions to see a rodeo, or go to the chili cookoff, or sit on the Main Street curb for the fourth of july parade, or head out into the Rockies for a family hike (we spent most of our summers in Colorado) — but never more than one attraction per day.

“My mom schedules everything down to a tee,” she explained.  “It’s awesome.  We get up at six and get our day started.”

I’ve always gravitated more towards my parents’ style, though I know that this predilection has been shaped by the vacations I grew up with.  Luckily, Mr. Magpie shares a similar outlook: we aim for one or two activities — maybe a museum in the morning and a historical site in the afternoon — and let ourselves wander, rest in the hotel room, or sidle up to a cute bar for a midday glass of wine if we’re so inclined.  We like a relaxed, ambling pace; it feels blissfully different from the harried life we live at home.  But the one weird thing we always do?  We leave a day earlier than we might otherwise so that we can spend the final day of “vacation” back home — doing laundry, unpacking, re-acclimating — but mainly, doing nothing at all.  For us, vacation means a true break, a slowing down, a restoration, and that last glorious day of nothingness seals the deal. I can see the appeal of using vacation time to experience the world and bond with your loved ones over new adventures you can’t access anywhere else, but — we prefer to use vacation time to recharge the batteries.

How do you vacation?

(And where are you vacationing?!)

 

#Shopaholic: The Floral Statement Earring.

+I’m sure you’re thinking — ENOUGH, ENOUGH WITH THE FLORALS — but these earrings!!!!  (More amazing floral finds here; and I already bought these floral statement makers.)

 

+If I were a surfer girl, I’d wear this wetsuit in a heartbeat.  So chic!  (P.S.  Rashguards for your minis here!)

+An EPIC find for wedding guest attire.  I’M OBSESSED.  The color, the neckline, the shape!  And well-priced for what it is!

+Remember the pastel blue H+M biker leather jacket everyone lost their mind over a couple of season ago?!  Club Monaco has NAILED its own version.  Super chic.

+I have a dress SUPER similar to this style and I love it so much — I feel Italian in it, like a Missoni granddaughter who might also wear a turban and keeps her hair long and boho-like.

+SPRINKLE blouse!

+Were you a fan of Fate + Furies?  I loved it.  (Incidentally, Barack Obama once said it was his favorite book.)  The author is out with a new book!  So curious to take it in.

+I’m coveting this illuminating face balm.

+Ordering one of these for mini’s ever-growing bow collection…

P.S.  The elegant, lopsided dance of motherhood.

P.P.S.  That time I read a young adult novel…and my thoughts on reading highbrow vs. lowbrow fare.

Happy Friday, Magpies!  A couple of new obsessions on my radar that I had to share with you to ease our way into the weekend…

Pick No. 1: Pared Sunglasses

Pared is new-to-me and I’m smitten with their statement styles — especially the Puss & Boots style shown on the chic pea above and below in splashy pink (more colors here).

The Fashion Magpie Pared Sunglasses Pink

Pick No. 2: The Emilia Wickstead Dress

Oh how I would die to own an Emilia Wickstead.  I love her ladylike sensibility.  (I also love her name and its spelling.)  This petal pink number would be so elegant and so versatile.

The Fashion Magpie Emilia Wickstead Dress

Pick No. 3: The Loupe Statement Earrings

Do you know about the eboutique The Loupe?  I just discovered it and was dying over the collection of elegant statement earrings — and most are under $100!  I just ordered a pair of floral earrings recently, but if I hadn’t, these pearl-centric flower studs would have been in the running!  I also love these raffia and chiffon drop earrings, but the real winner?  These hand-beaded seed pearl earrings, which are now on sale for only $36.  I had to buy them!

The Fashion Magpie The Loupe Earrings 3

The Fashion Magpie The Loupe Earrings 1

The Fashion Magpie The Loupe Earrings 2

Pick No. 4: The Erdem for Nars Highlighting Pencil

Designer Erdem (known for his stunning floral dresses) has partnered with Nars for a line of limited edition “Strange Flowers” cosmetics, and at the very top of my lust list is this multi-use highlighting pencil, which I imagine using under my eyebrows, in the inner-corners of my eyes, and even on my cupid’s bow.

The Fashion Magpie Erdem for Nars

Pick No. 5: The Monrow Supersoft Sweat.

We’re edging out of cooler temperatures, but I still love wearing sweats while padding around the apartment in the evenings, and Monrow is my favorite brand.  I think I need this shell pink pair, although I also love the whimsy of this gray pair with the heart embroidered at the calf.  (Incidentally, though Adidas has never really been my vibe, I like the look of the Monrow sweats paired with these nude Adidas campus sneaks, below.)

The Fashion Magpie Monrow Sweats 1

The Fashion Magpie Monrow Sweats 2

Pick No. 6: The Mercedes Castillo Slide.

I am smitten with these pink satin slides from Mercedes Castillo ($295) in bubblegum pink.  So darling with a frothy white dress or a pair of jeans and a ruffled blouse.  Also available (and on sale!) in a punchy red and a demure taupe here.

The Fashion Magpie Mercedes Castillo Slide 1 The Fashion Magpie Mercedes Castillo Slide 2

Pick No. 7: The Tweed Coat.

Oh my goodness!  This ladylike pink tweed coat ($129!) is haunting my dreams right now.  I like to imagine myself wearing it over a white shift dress or with dark wash skinnies and a dramatic, frilly blouse.  Chanel vibes for under $130 — I’ll take it!  I also like this style in the ivory, on sale for $108!

The Fashion Magpie Tweed Jacket

Pick No. 8: The White Lace Puff Sleeve Top.

I love the Zimmerman-esque style of this delicate white puff-sleeved blouse ($55!)  It brought to mind this $68 steal of a dress, which was just re-stocked and would look incredible on a tall, leggy person!

The Fashion Magpie White Lace Top

Pick No. 9: The 9Seed Marbella Dress.

I have been straining to see if there’s a way for me to rationalize the purchase of one of Lisa Marie Fernandez’s Erica dresses, which I especially love in this polka dot print or this pink print, but I’m increasingly thinking about 9Seed’s Marbella dress as a similarly-shaped substitute.  I like it in the chambray blue below or crisp white.

The Fashion Magpie Marbella Ruffle Day Dress

Pick No. 10: The Everlane Relaxed Linen Shirt.

I’ve written about this before, but I’m in love with my boxy Everlane shirt in the pink and white stripe.  Everlane generously sent me one, and I wear mine with white skinnies and my Hermes slides and I’m out the door without thinking twice.

The Fashion Magpie Linen Shirt 1

The Fashion Magpie Linen Shirt 2

P.S.  Amazing floral dresses and accessories.

P.P.S.  What to wear for the fourth!

 

 

Mamas, when did you first spend a night away from your baby?

I am half embarrassed to admit that I’ve not yet spent a night apart from her, but not for lack of openness to the concept.  We simply have not had the occasion or the appropriate logistics in place to spend the night apart, as we live away from our parents and have been so swept up in a move and all its associated transitions to even think about taking a trip by ourselves.  And honestly, I hadn’t even thought about it until a friend said:

“I can’t believe you’ve never spent the night away from her!  I’ve always thought that would be important — to spend alone time with my husband after we have a baby.”

Her voice has been echoing in my mind, making me wonder if it’s bizarre that I’ve not yet left her for a night, or whether I shouldn’t prioritize a little R+R with Mr. Magpie after a year and two months of go-go-go-go since her birth.  I know that many of my friends took brief getaways when their babies were a couple of months old — to catch up on sleep, to get some alone time, to take a breath.  I’m sure we would have cherished that time, but the opportunity just did not present itself.

I will, though, be leaving her with Mr. Magpie for two nights in July to attend the bachelorette party of one of my dearest friends.  I’m ecstatic to be able to celebrate my friend in person, and I’m also very much looking forward to the three hours of solo train time, where I intend to buy a glass of wine from the snack car, read my kindle, and enjoy some train snacks (a hunk of truffle-flecked cheese I’m obsessed with from Whole Foods and Red Oval Farms stoned wheat thin crackers?  a bag of popcorn?) or maybe a pre-packed salad from SweetGreen (part of my personal #SBB routine).  But I’d be lying if I said I’m not a little leery of it.  Maybe I should have found some excuse to spend the night away earlier after all?

But after this first time, I feel I owe it to Mr. Magpie to get away for a night, just the two of us.

What about you mamas?  When did you first stay away, and under what circumstances?  How did you feel about it?

Post-Script: Travel Gear for Solo Mamas.

A chic weekender — I also LOVE this, shown at the top of the post!

A monogrammed cosmetic set.

My favorite travel tote (enormous/roomy and the zip top is genius for stowing purposes!)

I stow advil, bandaids, pens, etc in this pouch — easy to access and keeps things tidy.

I keep liquids in these pouches to contain potential spills.

For dirty laundry!

I keep my lingerie in a separate monogrammed linen pouch similar to this I received as a wedding shower gift. (I’ve also heard good things about this brand.)

Of course I’ve got to give a shout-out to my favorite packing cubes: these and these.

Screen wipes, sanitizing wipes (to wipe down train seats!), and facial radiance pads!

Cute pajamas!

I’m so sad I missed out on these — though they promise a re-stock in June and I’m signed up for alerts! — because I’d love to travel with it!  (And I can’t quite convince myself to buy this.)

I never ended up buying a backpack — I just can’t find one I love and that has all the right compartments for toting around mini’s stuff! — but this is pretty darn cute, and under $100.  It would also be a lovely travel companion!

I almost always travel with a pashmina/scarf that can double as a blanket on chilly trains/planes.

My Kindle, loaded with new reads — lots of good suggestions in the post-script here!

On travel days, I tend to wear jeans, a button-down (in pink and white or blue and white stripe!), and comfortable flats (I love my Gucci Princetowns — they have some amazing new prints, like these, and I also love these and these).  Comfortable, adjustable, and unfussy.

P.S.  For upcoming travel WITH mini, I am looking to buy a couple of “surprises” for the lengthy car rides.  I have my eyes on this (thanks, Jen!) and this.  Any other must-haves for car travel?  For the beach, I just discovered this darling sand kitMore great mini beach gear here.

P.P.S.  Don’t forget my new beach gear obsession!

P.P.P.S.  More stuff I never travel without and the absolute best baby travel gear.

 

Mr. Magpie and I sold our house on Monday.  As with our move to New York, there was nothing straight-forward about its sale.  Though we managed to have the house cleaned, landscaped, photographed, and posted for sale within about two weeks of making the decision to move to New York, it sat vacant on the market for weeks and we were too preoccupied with the botched move and our transition to a new lifestyle and a new city to make any decisions about it.  We had called on the realtor we’d used for the purchase of our home — a genuinely nice guy — but it became apparent within a couple of weeks that he wasn’t as good of a fit on the sale side: he’d mis-priced our house, and we were convinced that our home was not being marketed properly.  We knew something had to change, but we continued to punt all decision-making about the house down the road: it felt like too much to take on.  Neither of us felt like “breaking up” with the realtor, and we hung our hats on the idea that winter in Chicago is the worst time to sell a house, and that things would pick up with the spring thaw.  But truthfully, we simply did not have the capacity to think about anything else.  When we arrived in D.C. for Christmas, my dad asked Mr. Magpie: “So?  How are you?”  Mr. Magpie took a deep breath, looked my Dad dead in the eye, and said: “Exhausted.”

And we looked it.

The weight of changing careers, moving across the country, walking away from our business, deciding to sell our beloved home, accommodating a completely foreign (pedestrian, urban!) lifestyle — and all while parents to a baby under a year who did not sleep through the night until nine months and a dog under two who took the move rather badly (she did not eat for three days straight) — had worn us thin.

It took us until January, when we finally felt we had our feet under us, to pull the plug on our realtor and interview a couple of alternatives.  We were embarrassed by the fact that every other realtor immediately commented on the fact that we needed to stage our home in order to sell it: “People feel like the house is cold and empty and, oddly, smaller than it is when it’s unfurnished,” and “People see a vacant, empty house and think the sellers are desperate.”  Yikes.  Moreover, there were touch-ups and stylistic changes we needed to take care of around the house that we’d not thought of.  We ended up needing to spend a substantial amount of money to get the house ready for sale, to re-price it, and then to re-post it.  But once it was re-posted, we received and accepted an offer within two weeks, and then closed within a month.

We were both startled by our emotions after accepting the offer.  I felt my chin wobble, Claire Danes-style.  Mr. Magpie heaved a deep sigh.  Neither of us felt as relieved as we had anticipated we would.  I felt beat-down about the entire process, frustrated for not having had the foresight to know that we should have interviewed multiple realtors from the get-go, and then for lacking the backbone to part ways sooner, frayed by the financial burden of supporting a mortgage and the cost of our new apartment in New York for many months, but — principally, and unanticipatedly — I felt sad.  Our home was no longer our home.  I knew in my head that we would never live there again, but my heart said something else.  In something akin to peripheral vision, I had vague, hazy mirages of minimagpie back in her gingham-wallpapered nursery.  Of sitting in that green striped rocking chair in front of her enormous window, with her in my arms, in the purple-bright glow of dusk.  Of the pitter-patter of her feet across the hard-wood floors, of her head peering around the corner of the steps on Christmas morning, of her sweet voice trailing down the stairs from her nursery.

When we walked to the UPS store to have all of the closing documents notarized, I had a funny set of butterflies in my stomach.  I felt like I was about to do something enormous.  And I was — I was about to sign away the promise of a future I had been building in my mind for years.  After a rather unconcerned gentleman named Axl notarized all of our documents, we quickly stepped out of the way of the rather long line that had formed behind us, shuffling the papers into a folder and unceremoniously dipping them into an envelope to ship them overnight to Chicago.  Mr. Magpie had to run an additional errand, so I walked back up eighth avenue towards our apartment by myself.  The city was just as it was ten minutes prior: the same taxis whizzing by with their screechy breaks and bouncy suspensions, the same throngs of unwieldy tourists meandering across the sidewalks at Columbus Circle, the same smell of manure from those dead-looking horses that draw carriages through the park — the same, the same, the same.  But I felt different.  I felt as though I was drifting, anchorless.  That a cornerstone of my life had just been hastily removed from the premises.

I have puzzled over my reaction to the sale of this house many times.  My parents were complementary, joyous — “What a happy day!  Congratulations!”  And my cousin clapped her hands and said, “You must be so relieved!”  And my good friend Erin said, “Oh, what great news!”  And — they were right to say these things; the house was holding us back, in a way.  It was a very expensive reminder of the hasty move to New York, the rather abrupt transition to a new life with new careers.

It’s just a house, I say.  We’ll have many homes in the future, I assert.  Onward and upward, I offer.  I’m always quick to say these things, but the truth is that I carry a lumbering, unwieldy emotional tie to it.  It was our first home, and we were so proud of it.  We got into a bidding war over it.  We laid on our backs on its roof the day we closed on it, drinking champagne and holding hands and dreaming about our future there.  We talked in hushed voices about the kids we’d bring home there, the holidays we’d spend in it. We brought our puppy home there.  We took pains to decorate it thoughtfully; we invested in the furniture and art, agonized over the small patch of wall that Tilly gnawed on one afternoon, took loving care of the roof when it needed patching and the backyard when it needed mulching.  Mr. Magpie dragged hundreds of pounds of high-grade soil to our roof to build his “urban farm,” complete with oversized planters and a watering system.  We built our business there.  We quit our jobs and hustled day and night to pursue our ambitions there.  We held family reunions there.  “Wow.  What a great house,” my father intoned, looking around with approval the first time he stepped into it.   We hosted dozens of dinners with dear friends there, lingering over trays of saffron-fragrant paella or shallow dishes of hand-rolled pasta or juicy ribeye steaks and too many glasses of wine.  We got pregnant there.  We brought our baby home there.  We became parents — and true adults — there.

Its quiet, cool presence saw us through the happiest and saddest times of our lives, and I suppose that leaving the house is saying goodbye to all that and I’m overwhelmed by the tangle of emotions that finality elicits.

The French say au revoir when bidding farewell, which literally means: “until the next time we see each other.”  And I had pecked that out on my keyboard to close this post, but I sat here wondering whether that was right.  It’s possible I won’t ever see that house again, or if I do, I won’t see it as it was — our house — the inviting center of our life in Chicago.  But then again, I will see it again, even many times each day, as the backdrop in so many of the memories of the pivotal moments in our lives.

Alors, au revoir, ma maison!

Post-Script.

Ordering this breezy jumpsuit for an upcoming family reunion.  We’ll be taking a trip to the National Zoo and it looks comfortable/practical for running after babies and also chic.

This kaftan!  I love the detailing at the collar.  It reminds me of this easy-to-wear boho blouse.

These bowls look a lot like a more expensive set from Anthro.

Grace from The Stripe swears by this stuff.  I’m intrigued.

Gap Kids has so many adorable shoes for toddlers — how cool are these?!  I want them in my size and I’m not saying that to be cute.  They could be Aquazzura!

Do any of you have kids that ride horses?  Check out this Etsy shop for the most incredible personalized equestrian gear.

Such a pretty, ladylike jacket.  ($60!)

This highly-recommended steamer is on sale!

P.S.  The Polo sale is back on!

P.P.S.  I loved your reactions to my description of matrescence.  Please read the comments!!!  You all are some smart, brave, wise women.  (Not that I didn’t know that already.)

Every few weeks, I sneak in a post on polka dots.  (Ahem.)  What can I say?  I’m obsessed.  They never go out of style and they always bring to mind a certain French je ne sais quoi.  And, I mean, Amal Clooney rocks it (see her in top photo below), so…need I say more?  She’s wearing a TDF Johanna Ortiz number (this season’s update), but you can get the look for far less with this top and this skirt.  Click the images to access details, or see my notes below!:

+Johanna Ortiz dress.

+Lindsey Berns Giverny basket bag.

+Lisa Marie Fernandez one-piece.  (Ultra-covet!)

+Jeffrey Campbell polka dot heel (steal!!!)

+Rixo polka dot blouse.  Super hot label — and also available in dress form.  Get the look for less with this or this.

+Tabitha Simmons slide (on sale!)

+My top pick: this Self Portrait lovely.

+Aquazzura mule — LOVE!

+Serpui Marie bow basket tote.

+LoveShackFancy midi.  (If you’ve never ordered from Farfetch before, don’t fear — I feel like the site seems sorta weird, but they have excellent customer service and fast shipping, and I think you can get 10% off your first order by signing up for emails.)

+Wayf wrap dress — a steal!  Under $100!

+Sam Edelman espadrilles.  Timeless.

Not shown above, and in a completely different colorway: this Lisa Marie Fernandez.  Absolutely darling!  Reminds me of something Charlotte York would wear.

Polka Dot Buys Under $100.

My favorite wallet-friendly polka dot finds…

+This elegant maxi.  I love the buttons down the front!  Breezy chic.

+This $35 steal from Target (!!!)  Check out the bow in the back!  So sweet.

+This puff sleeved top.  Love the drama — looks super high-fashion.

+This flutter sleeve dress.

+This elegant midi.

+This headband.

+This polka dotted lovely.

P.S.  In case you’re traveling with your baby this summer.

P.P.S.  How to look like a million bucks for under $100.

There is a wonderful poem by Amy Lowell on lilacs–only, it’s not about lilacs at all.  As with much poetry, the subject matter is evocative, coincidental, suggestive rather than mimetic.  I was reminded of this while walking Tilly along the northernmost edge of Sheep’s Meadow the other day, down a dirt path lined with fragrant lilacs.  I stopped to take a photograph — how could I not? — and I found myself thinking about the Lowell poem, about its languid elegance and its oddly poignant personification:

“Lilacs in dooryards
Holding quiet conversations with an early moon;
Lilacs watching a deserted house
Settling sideways into the grass of an old road;
Lilacs, wind-beaten, staggering under a lopsided shock of bloom
Above a cellar dug into a hill.
You are everywhere.
You were everywhere.
You tapped the window when the preacher preached his sermon,
And ran along the road beside the boy going to school.”
I dwelt on the narrator’s gradual internalization of the lilac, the unhurried blurring of the lines between her description of the flower and her description of herself, the ultimate conflation of the external with the internal.  It’s a thing of beauty to watch, as though the poem unfolds in a sort of time lapse, until she crescendos in this rousing final stanza:
“Heart-leaves of lilac all over New England,
Roots of lilac under all the soil of New England,
Lilac in me because I am New England,
Because my roots are in it,
Because my leaves are of it,
Because my flowers are for it,
Because it is my country
And I speak to it of itself
And sing of it with my own voice
Since certainly it is mine.”

I love this personal anthem, this Whitman-esque song-of-myself.  The mapping of the natural world onto the complex inner workings of the speaker’s soul call to mind the book we’re reading for Magpie book club, a different medium and different tone altogether, but one that carefully interrogates this relationship between man and nature in many of its constituent short stories.

As I hopscotched from the lilacs in Central Park to the Lowell poem to the Sachdeva book and then paused to glance back over my shoulder, something inside me swelled.  Was it gratitude?  Was it that hazy romanticism I often feel when an author manages to evoke something precise, something I have felt but maybe forgotten, with just the right turn of phrase?  (I have felt that way many times while reading Sachdeva, and many times, too, while re-reading the Lowell poem.  Why do I feel tears prick my eyes when I read: “You are the smell of all Summers, / The love of wives and children, / The recollection of gardens of little children, / You are State Houses and Charters / And the familiar treading of the foot to and fro on a road it knows.”  There is something deeply intimate and familiar about Lowell’s writing here.  I nod; I know what she means by feel rather than intellect.)

But there was a doubling that afternoon, a mirroring, as if the books and poems I was reading and the natural world I was traipsing through were connected to one another like a paper garland that has just been unfolded, the delicate edges accordioning into something far more elaborate than anticipated.

I should read more poetry, I thought.  But poetry is a tough genre.  It’s out of vogue, out of favor.  It seems to mandate a quiet room and a level of attention out of sync with the pace of modern life.  There are also the problems of format and discovery: I don’t want to sit down and read a string of poems — one or two here and there are just enough — but poems are so often sold in collections meant to be consumed together, or daunting, academic-looking volumes that have nary a place in a home library.  Stand-alone poems are singularly difficult to ferret out, come to think of it — they’re more like buried treasure, presenting themselves in excerpt form in an epigraph in a book I’m reading, or in a flash of memory (as happened above), or in an oddball blogpost (ahem, hello!)

But I should read more poetry.  Poetry is a distillation of emotion; its format invites a focus and frugality wholly absent in ramblings like mine here.*  It can open me up, serve as a gateway to some as-yet-unaccessed memory or feeling or connection.  And it can send me deep into the lilac-laden heart of a May afternoon in Central Park, where nothing in particular happened, and yet I crossed some invisible intellectual threshold I can’t quite manage to explain.

So, I will read more poetry.

Who is with me?  Who reads poetry, and how do you come by it?

(*My academic training foists the following caveat: much of it is anyway.  Also, ICYMI and in case you were wondering what the hell poetics means…)

Post-Script: What to Read Next.

Looking for your next book?

First, please consider reading the our first book club book.  It is EXCELLENT.  Weird, smart, wildly imaginative, pregnant with subtext.  I cannot wait to discuss.

If that’s not your cup of tea, here are three books I’ve been saying “I’ll read next” for the last few weeks: a Reese Witherspoon book club pick, a classic that was apparently written about the jetset Jackie O. palled around with (you know I’m obsessed with all things Jackie), and a parenting book my sister-in-law recommended.

I’m also planning to read this Reese Witherspoon pick when I need a break from heavier things.

For my book club with two of my dearest girlfriends, I’m reading this.  Don’t scoff — it’s supposed to be EXCELLENT.   (And Roxane Gay approved!)

If you need something lighter, here’s my current fluffy sidecar, or check out my list of my top 10 favorite beach reads.

For heartier fare — these books changed my life.

And, finally, this book has major buzz right now because a show has just been released based on it!  Heads up — it’s pretty dark for best-seller status.

I have also been adding books on my radar to the books section of Le Shop.

P.S.  Does anyone know anything about area rug cleaning?  Tilly has been housebroken for years and then she peed on our carpet TWICE in the last week.  TWICE?!  What the hell.  I’m having a service come out to clean it on site because I’m terrified of having an apartment with a dog pee smell (sick), but I’m also contemplating buying one of these, which gets good reviews, for future spot cleans.  Any thoughts/recs?  I’m mainly concerned about the odor…

P.P.S.  Cute as a button.

P.P.P.S.  I just restocked some beauty essentials — my favorite brow gel and my must-have mascara — and am about to test two newbies: Chanel’s nourishing mascara base and Bobbi Brown’s extra lip tint.

 

 

 

 

I have about a dozen pretty summer dresses chilling in my digital shopping cart right now.  Some are higher-end, like the floral beauties I waxed poetic about here, but I thought I’d share a couple of summer dress steals — all under $100!

This OTS mini looks an awful lot like a MISA dress shown above (also love this season’s colorway) I was swooning over a few months ago — but at a fraction of the price!

A playful striped midi (looks like an MDS Stripes dress!)

An elegant polka dot midi (I would wear this all the time — so easy and flattering!)

This flirty floral

A striped shirtdress never lets me down (currently wearing one myself)

This striped, smocked-waisted dress is totally my speed

And — OK, this is $5 over-budget — this sweet polka dot number

This floral maxi

Not a dress, but I love this breezy jumpsuit!  It reminds me of a LoveShackFancy style I was eyeing earlier this week…

Shop Le Post.

P.S.  With all of these new dresses in the mix, you might want to snag a set of these — they are supposed to be amazing!  They’re super slim and the clear acrylic means that they are virtually invisible to the eye, removing some of the heft and clutter we all hate in our closets.  If Mr. Magpie wouldn’t think I was an insane person, I would chuck all of our hangers and replace with these, but — alas.  I’ll start with one pack and gradually weave them in?

P.P.S.  Do yourself a favor and invest in one of these.  I steam everything before wearing it.  I actually use this less expensive travel style (only $20!), but have heard the Rowenta one is *next level* and I’m inclined to trust that review because I invested in a Rowenta iron and my life has changed.  OK, that’s a little dramatic — but the results are super obvious.  And our nanny, who kindly handles all of mini’s ironing, raves about it, too.

P.P.P.S.  There are so many Hermes Oran sandal lookalikes out right now — these look to be the best quality IMO!  I splurged on Le Real Deal and wear them with EVERYTHING.  Jeans, sundresses, shorts, etc.  It all works.  If you also want to splurge, but not to the tune of $700, check out these fun Loeffler Randalls.  I’m in love with them.  Select colors are on sale!