24 March, 2008

Shop review - Grandma!

One of the endearing things about the Japanese, of course, is the way they adopt English vocabulary and use it in their own quixotic way. There are websites devoted to the 'Engrish' that results. Often it's not quite clear why they choose the words they do, or whether they realise what they evoke to a native speaker of English. I would not expect to find cute clothes for young women and girls in a shop called Grandma!, but there you go. (In fact, at first I misread the name as 'Grand mal,' as in epileptic fit!) On consideration, I think the name is meant to indicate that the clothing is vintage-styled, but don't worry, it will not make you look like a nanna, unless you mean your nanna when she was young and foxy and turning heads at the Saturday night social.


The Grandma! main store is in Broadmead, a Japanese-built sim based on London. As you walk around, it really does look and feel like a relatively affluent part of London - maybe Knightsbridge? I need to spend more time in London to be certain.
The concept of the shop is what's so adorable: according to the Picks in creator Hanae Nishi's profile, 'This shop imitates a vintage bookstore. You are a cute girl, who lives in the bookstore...' Well, I LOVE vintage bookstores, and I LOVE to be told I'm a cute girl, so this was clearly right up my alley.
So I dressed myself, cutely enough I hope, in a blouse and capris from GiGi Couture, and went! Click on the pictures to see the full versions.

outsidegrandma
You can see an authentic London Underground sign in the background - there is an entrance to a Tube station near Grandma!, but it's currently blocked off with warning tape, and a cautious peep suggests that it's under construction. In any case, what need have I of public transport? I live in the shop. I'm like Bernard Black, but a cute girl.
readyforwork
Unlike Bernard, though, I keep a clean shop. When you enter Grandma!, you'll find a cash desk to your right. If you click on the till, you'll get an LM for the shop, and if you click on the little pink bag speckled with butterflies, you'll receive a free pack containing the floral apron (on jacket and skirt layers), armful of books and duster shown here. You'll have to turn off any AO you wear to carry these correctly. And you'll be all set!
atthedesk
You can sit yourself down behind the desk (the stool has an embedded pose) and await customers.
'Are they real leather?'
'Dey're real Dickens.'
noteontill
Grandma, whoever she may be, likes to leave little notes. That refers to the SL goods - I can't imagine a second-hand bookstore lasting long without occasionally buying books back, or at least allowing trade-ins.
atthedesk2
After sitting at the desk for a while, you may begin to wonder, is there a staff loo?
toiletdoor
Of course there is. Notice the cute pink bow on the back of the staff apron! I can see now that I should have waited a little bit longer before snapping this, because the peeling paint texture on the wall hadn't quite loaded.
inthetoilet
Don't worry, I have my pants on, I'm just demonstrating the dunny pose. Grandma's left another of her little notes.
This, likewise, didn't seem to want to load completely, but if you squint you can read 'Don't bring the stuff in. Please.'
Grandma evidently knows me well; if I am not expressly forbidden to vanish into the loo with a slightly foxed novel, it will be hard to get me out of there.
One flaw in the otherwise delightful attention to detail is that there's nowhere to wash your hands, so it's a good thing I didn't really pee.
Incidentally, while I write this up I'm watching the BBC's new Robin Hood, and while I love the continuing tribute to Tim Curry that is the Sheriff, the anachronistic costumes are constantly bugging me. Why does Sir Guy of Gisbourne constantly wear an Old West duster coat? Such coat technology simply did not exist in mediaeval Europe! Let alone the obviously machine-sewn seams on Robin's shirts. Oh well.
bytheheater
The bookshop's heater doubles as a little stove, so I can make a hot drink or cook a pot of something bubbling. Num! Hanging on the rail over the heater you can see the first samples of the vintage clothes on offer - some very sweet little coats. I like the blue one at far right! Now, where does that ladder go? There are no more shelves up there.
onmybed
That's where the shop-girl's little bed is! All right, it's a bit minimal, a mattress with an afghan and two cushions, but I look comfortable enough, don't I? I absolutely love this, I've always ALWAYS loved bunks and high platforms and tree-houses and anything that lets me climb up and peep down at people. Perhaps in a previous life I was one of those cats that like to get up on the top edge of doors and pounce on people's heads as they enter a room.
lookingatshelves
I've been seeing this method of displaying clothes for sale more and more recently, but only in Japanese or Japanese-influenced shops. Why don't more people do it? It's so cute! What, you may wonder, is beyond that curtained doorway? Why is the floor tiled?
inthebath
Why, it's the shopgirl's little bathroom! I had to put up the CLOSED sign before undressing and hopping into the water, though. Don't want customers popping in while I'm in the altogether.
atbackdoor
Washed and refreshed, I'm back on the job and on the lookout for customers. Come on, ladies and gents, who wants a 1958 Bunty annual in fair condition?

23 March, 2008

Sim review: JAPAN DREAM KENJIN

I've thought of something else I'd like to do with this blog - review sims that I've found interesting, fun, impressive or odd. I'm beginning with JAPAN DREAM KENJIN, which I found by chance by clicking on a brightly coloured poster in a store in Broadmead.
On beaming in, you find yourself standing by the sea wall of a colourful, cheerfully tatty Japanese small town. There's a bus shelter, some junk like broken down bicycles and wooden crates, a small shop selling stuff like inflatable swim rings... and four unlabelled magenta poseballs.
If you sit on any of these poseballs, your avatar will promptly squat behind the sea wall and pee.
A short distance away is a yellow ball actually marked 'pee' (which causes you to pee in the upright, masculine manner) but those magenta balls really took me by surprise, and made me wonder what sort of place I had wandered into. I noticed that I had a little heart-shaped health monitor in my menu bar - do people fight here? Do they pee fight here?
There's an unusual atmosphere of bright and cheerful grunginess, as if this sim was designed with a lot of nostalgia for somebody's crappy hometown. It's like being in a somewhat run-down Miyazaki movie. You can wander past backyards nodding with sunflowers and into houses filled with shabby, lived-in furniture. Nothing appears to be for sale, even the stock in the liquor store/tobacconist's. Old advertising posters, cracked concrete and rusty corrugated iron are everywhere, yet all the colours are super-saturated and cheerful. The purpose of all the structures wasn't immediately obvious to me, but then, I'm not Japanese.
It's a strangely immersive environment. The only sounds are of the wind and the lapping sea. I was able to figure out that the place was made by someone called clubkenjin Loon, who unfortunately speaks only Japanese. Who knows what's going on there? It's quite fun to poke about. Various shops and stalls offer poseballs allowing you to mind the counter. In one place is a dustbin labelled 'DON'T touch me' - if you click it it will explode, noisily, and take about 10% off your health (though this will come back within seconds). And that's about it!
No pee fighting.

22 March, 2008

A skin bargain which impresses me

I just discovered a lovely little pop-Japanese-influenced shopping sim called Cherry Buttons (I don't know whether that is meant to evoke Apple Bottoms...). I certainly recommend it, and right now I want to particularly big-note a shop therein called GiGi Couture (that link goes to the main shop in Broadmead; the Cherry Buttons outlet is easily found thanks to a teleport-links signboard at the sim's beam-in point). The clothes are gorgeous, with highly realistic textures, and quite reasonably priced (most things are L150 or under). The thing that really got my attention was upstairs - the skins.
You see, outside the store when I first visited was a signboard for a model search, and one of the conditions was that you must be wearing a GiGi Couture skin in your entry shots. 'Rip-off,' I thought, 'this is an attempt to trick us into spending L1k+ on a skin.' I went upstairs and to my joy and surprise found totally good-looking skins for L50 or L25 each. They have palm prints and at least a suggestion of genitals and everything, and really interesting makeup. The reason for their cheapitude is that they're mods of Eloh Eliot's 'another skin,' which you can get for free from Another Shop. Yes, completely free, and they are really lovely skins with pretty makeup, available in dark brown, tan, fair and pale shades. And each one comes with multiple makeup options, and the choice of freckles, and omg they will be another entry all to themselves. Does everyone in the world know about these already? Seems like they should!
But right now, the GiGi Couture skins. In these shots, I'm wearing Charmy Gray eyes from Annerose, okappa hair from *BP, and the Innocence shape mentioned in my first post.

This is the Ganguro Girl skin, for loitering in Shibuya texting on your keitai, crouching in the middle of the street laughing loudly with your mates, trying all the free samples in the 109 department store and picking fights with Kotobuki Ran. The hair is completely and utterly wrong for it (ganguro gals bleach their hair as light as they can get it and then add funky colours like candy pink and baby blue) but I couldn't be bothered to change.

This is 'Dramatic Eye,' which I love for its lashings of smoky eyeshadow and faint freckles. It's a good skin for an early 60s Priscilla Beaulieu kind of look.

This one is sort of equal parts Gothic Lolita and Venice Carnivale, and it's based on the GiGi Couture logo. There is also a symmetrical version, with 'lace' over both eyes in a kind of butterfly shape, which is totally spooky/sexy and you should wear it if you want to score with Batman or Gomez Addams.

And this one is called Marylin, which I think must be a typo for Marilyn, as it's a classic 50s glamorous makeup style. Wear it with a big skirt and pearls. As you can see, with the right haircut it can also pass for flapper style. I shall wear this combination if I ever wish to pass for Catherine Zeta Jones in Chicago.
So those are the delightful and cheap skins of GiGi Couture, and tomorrow, if I get my act together, I'll show you the Another Skin freebs.

In which I presume to dictate to those more talented than I

'Those more talented than I' being people who actually know how to make good clothes and items for Second Life and can get it together to run a shop.
A few things that I think are really, really important for running a Second Life shop WELL:
1. Unless it is so small that one can stand in the doorway, turn on the spot and see everything for sale, make it absolutely piss-easy to navigate in your shop. Have a map at the front door with YOU ARE HERE and everything clearly labelled, and make sure you keep the shop organised that way (if you reorganise, update the map). Classify items very clearly by type. If your store is really big, like Simone or Bare Rose or something, have teleport points around the store where your visitors can click a button or signboard to be taken directly to different departments. Simone does this (or did the last time I was there) and Bare Rose doesn't, and it's hard to think of a shop that needs it more than Bare Rose. B@R rocks my socks, but only if I'm randomly browsing; if I'm actually looking for something in particular, even something which I KNOW they stock, it is far too frustrating.
2. Offer a freebie or two, and make them good - as good as the stuff you are charging for. I know you may feel reluctant to give something really good away for nothing, but it generates a lot of goodwill and encourages repeat visits, if my own behaviour is anything to go by.
3. Offer items in a range of prices, so you can attract people of varying budgets. People who can only spend L10 at the moment will remember how much they liked your shop when they have L1000 to spend.
4. If you make clothing, try to create separates that mix and match well, and show them worn as such on your vendor boards and in the general decor of your shop - if they look good as an outfit on your models, people will be encouraged to buy more than one thing.
5. If your vendor pictures show models wearing outfits including pieces from other creators, it's a nice touch to include a notecard detailing where the rest of the stuff came from. Perhaps other creators will do the same for you. Consider making a deal with someone whose style complements yours.
And... and that would be really nice.
On an unrelated note, in the last scene of Run Fatboy Run Simon Pegg wears a turquoise jumper and it makes him look like Tintin.
If it were possible for Tintin to age into his thirties.
Which it isn't.
Simon Pegg looks like him.

Untone Quilt

Phew - it's been a little while since I posted. Since my last blog, I've had my misedashi, or maiko debut! Yaaaay! (Imagine me flailing my arms like Kermit the Frog introducing a guest star.) It was a successful evening and I'm very grateful to everyone who attended, especially my onee-san (mentor/big sister) Theodote Carthage, who goes by 'Waka' in the geisha world. I do invite you to have a look at her shop, Cartunno Couture. I was also honoured by the attendance of Xuemei Yiyuan and Gee Nakamura, the oka-sans (manager/mother) of Little Yoshiwara and Satoharu geisha houses. It was so encouraging to see them there! Rock on. \m/ (^v^) \m/
Continuing my love of Japanese sims and fashions, here are some adorable items from Untone Quilt. No, I don't know what inspired the name. Untone Quilt. Awesome.
(My hair, skin and shape are still the same as in my first post. Only real difference there is that my eyes are 'Charmy Gray' from Annerose, because I got tired of the slightly bloodshot look of the BP* freebies.)

First up! The 'madrigale green dress.' This is a soft, flowy, swishy sundress, with a gorgeous layered skirt that flutters sweetly as you walk. It has a very springlike vibe, and I'm wearing the hell out of it. I've teamed it up with Orchid Dreams' 'SaSa Wedge' shoes in Spring Dots pattern, and a peacock feather necklace (on a Jacket layer) that I acquired in a freebies package somewhere, some time. On investigation (I love how the new-style Search feature enables this), I think it can be found in a place called Tableau. Look for a box marked 'Yay freebies (girls).' The little green ribbons in my hair (they're tintable, so I changed their colour to match) came with a 'Pigtail Braids' prim hairstyle bought many moons ago, whose provenance is difficult to establish (the seller didn't enclose an LM), but it MIGHT be from Empyrean Emporium.


Next, the cutest little denim overalls. These come with plain legs, or legs with a schweet embroidered pattern.

Only hitch is, they don't come with any shirt, and the bib of the overall won't cover your nips unless your breasts are very low-slung. Accordingly, I've wriggled into a freebie 'cutsew' top from Bis-Daisy==casual wear. I think the lace edge on the collar is very pretty.

You can also get an overall 'capri' prim set, to roll up the legs! Ideal for paddling.

If you want to be more girly, try the overall dress version, which comes with tights with little Bambis on them. Again, no top included, so you will need to put on an undershirt or shirt for modesty. (The overall bibs come on shirt and jacket layers, to make this easier.)

These are the 'puchidenim' (puchi is a Japanese transliteration of 'petit') shorts, which have cute prim puffs around your legs. I have the flower style - there's also a striped denim style with a blue waistband.

And finally for this post, the 'puchidabopan' trackpants, which can be worn layered with the puchi shorts or on their own!

You could also leave off the ankle puff prims to wear them as leggings. Sporty and versatile. (Although they don't look quite right with these shoes!)
That's just a sample of the Untone Quilt range, so if you like the look of these pieces I warmly recommend that you pop along to the main shop and see what else is in stock.

09 March, 2008

Making a Maiko

Mai=dance, ko=girl. In the classical tradition of Kyoto, Japan, a maiko is an apprentice geisha, a highly stylised figure of youth, beauty and innocence, on her way to becoming a fully rounded entertainer, hostess and artist. It's impossible ever for me to be a maiko IRL, because I'm a) not Japanese, b) not in Japan, c) unable to speak Japanese and d) too old now, but in SL, you can be anything your avatar can portray. This post is a guide to the accoutrements of a maiko in Second Life, with where-to-buy advice. If it helps a few people to get set up, yay!
If you want to become a maiko, you'll need to sign on with one of the in-world okiya, or geisha houses. I'm assuming here that you want to focus on the performing arts/entertaining aspect of geisha, not using geisha as a code word for 'Oriental-styled prostitute.' Subtle sexuality or eroticism is part of the profession of a geisha, but they're really and truly not hookers.
My okiya is the Mitsuba (just like Liza Dalby!), and I've also had good experiences with Little Yoshiwara and Satoharu. There are several other okiya and ochaya (teahouses) in SL, and you should investigate carefully before deciding to join one. Some will charge you a fee for your training up front; most will require a percentage of your tips/earnings (like an agent). Try to find a place where you feel comfortable with the attitude of the people running the show. I, for one, don't respond well to the very authoritarian style of management present in RL traditional okiya, so I know I have to avoid an oka-san (mother of the house, manager) who is RPing an old-school RL oka-san!
In most cases, you'll have a probationary period called 'minarai,' in which you are expected to carefully observe working maiko and geisha - minarai means 'learning by observation.' If you're still into it after that, you'll be promoted to maiko and assigned to an onee-san, 'big sister' or mentor geisha. She'll teach you, correct you, and cover for you if you mess up :) And you'll need to get all equipped! So...

What are we to do with this coltish contemporary kid? How can we shape her into the model of a modern maiko? First, she has to learn to stand like one!
To successfully wear a kimono in SL, you'll need an appropriate animation overrider. Poses in which your feet spread apart are no good, as they will stretch out the texture of your kimono skirt and make it look dreadful. (IRL, they would make the front of the robe gape open and show your legs OMG! scandal.) Here I'm using the Endless Dreams Geisha AO, which goes for L300. I bought it before I knew about the ugokiya busidou woman's kimono AO, which doesn't have the elegant hand gestures, but also allows you to hold your head up so you don't always look up at people from under your brows. And it's L50. I report, you decide :) The main thing is that these AOs keep your feet together when standing and give you a walk that doesn't mess up your skirt.
Hmm, what's next in our maiko makeover... those tracky-daks have got to go.
An off-duty maiko will usually be dressed in a simple blue and white cotton yukata, the most basic and casual form of kimono. The one I'm sporting here is a freebie made by kimono craftswoman Rumi Simpson, available at the outdoor bathhouse in Nagaya. Rumi's other kimono designs are definitely worth investigating, but not suitable for maiko/geisha wear because the structure of their sleeves doesn't look right when you dance in them. She also makes scripted musical instruments, including shamisen that are a must for SL geisha. Your onee-san or oka-san will probably help you with the purchase of these bigger-ticket items, sometimes as a gift, sometimes as a loan to be paid off once you are earning.
Now that our maiko is in her yukata, she needs to head for the hair salon to get styled.
What a transformation! IRL, maiko are required to grow their hair long and have it washed and set into this style weekly. During the week, they sleep with their necks resting on a leather-padded wooden 'pillow' so that the style doesn't get squashed. Maiko hazing by mean 'big sisters' can include sprinkling rice bran around the 'pillow' so that if her head rolls off to the floor, the bran will stick to the camellia oil used as pomade and the whole hairdo will have to be unpicked, washed and reset.
The style is called 'momoware,' or split peach, and is built around a section of hair very firmly tied at the crown of the head. Over time the hair roots of this section are damaged by the strain and maiko develop a little bald spot! Nowadays this can be fixed by cosmetic surgery, but for old-school geisha it was a badge of honour, a sign that you'd made it through the discomfort of maiko training with your faculties intact.
Once a maiko graduates to geisha level, she is allowed to do what she likes with her real hair and sleep much more comfortably, as geisha wear custom-made wigs when entertaining.
For us, of course, it's as easy as attaching a prim hairdo. I'm wearing the maiko hairbase 2.4 from *booN, which is the best I've found. Others available in SL include Del's Mikiko from Delectica, and Orchid Dreams' Simplicity and Regal Maiko Hair. Mikiko comes in ornamented and plain varieties, so you can add and subtract decorations as you please. However, it isn't quite as pretty as the 2.4, in my opinion. I haven't worn the Orchid Dreams hairdos, but they look good on the vendor pictures and are L150 each. Flower & Willow has maiko hairdos too, and like the rest of Hatsune Yoshikawa's work, they're lovely.
She's starting to look more like a maiko, but there's something vital missing...

The iconic maiko makeup. This skin comes from Orchid Dreams, and it's the junior maiko version, with only the lower lip painted red. Senior maiko also have the upper lip's Cupid's bow painted, and less pink contouring powder around the eyes and cheeks. You'll notice that the white foundation is not blended away at the hairline; this is deliberate, the makeup resembling a mask or doll. The ears are left bare. The effect is of little flashes of naked skin appearing through a very stylised, elegant façade, and yes, that's where the subtle eroticism comes in. Again, after graduating to geisha you no longer wear this elaborate makeup, except on special formal occasions. The geisha look is overall much more subtle, understated and natural than the maiko style, and reflects the fact that a geisha is a mature woman of the world, rather than a pretty doll. Maiko's looks are played up because they are not yet expected to have the advanced social skills of geisha, yet a top geisha can outshine the most glamorous maiko simply by being so damned elegant, vivacious and fascinating.
*booN also carries a maiko skin, and so does *Sakurako* Skin and Shape. There used to be nice ones at Tête à Pied, but they seem to have disappeared in the changeover to Fleur. As you might expect, your maiko skin will be one of those big-ticket items. It is not cheap to set up in this biz. Do try on demos to make sure you are happy with the skin before laying any money down.
Her coiffure needs one last touch.

The aesthetics of Japan are very closely linked to the seasons and the different phases of nature. The choice of kimono for any occasion - fabric weight, pattern and colours - is clearly dictated by the month. (You can read more about this in Liza Dalby's excellent book Kimono: Fashioning Culture.) Likewise, maiko wear a special kanzashi (hair ornament) for each month, showcasing seasonal flowers, greenery and even insects. This is the March kanzashi from *booN, with cabbage white butterflies and canola blossoms (aka rape blossoms, yes, there's really a plant called rape, but who wants it on their head?). You can also get monthly maiko kanzashi from Flower & Willow, but I prefer the *booN designs. Both collections are works in progress, with new designs coming out at the beginning of each month, and should be complete by the end of this year.
Now let's get dressed!

Now is the moment to say: I LOVE LOVE LOVE Flower & Willow kimonos. They are soooooooo boss. Each one comes with your choice of maiko or geisha-style collar, obi and sleeves, they have lovely vivid clear textures, some are available in floor-trailing hikizuri style, they just show so much attention to detail! They make me gush! This is the Jade Koi design, which I chose to complement the vivid colours of the canola kanzashi, and to evoke the green of early spring. There are lots of good kimono stylists in Second Life; F&W just happens to be my favourite. You should also check out Giorno Brando, Aoharu and Cherry Tokyo. An excellent place for kimono kaimono (shopping) from a variety of designers is Jocko Domo, which is conveniently close to the Mitsuba teahouse.
Geisha and maiko wear their kimonos differently from normal Japanese women. Most noticeably, the collar is loosely draped at the nape of the neck, creating an effect of 'back cleavage' which is considered most stirring. Geisha wear white collar liners, while maikos' collars are lined with silver-embroidered red. Once again, maiko are fancier but geisha are sexier.


When a maiko approaches, you're supposed to notice her makeup, kanzashi and swishing sleeves, of course, but the outfit is really designed to be viewed from behind, with the sumptuous display of the long hanging obi, the 'back cleavage,' the voluptuous 'split peach' bun, and the flash of naked skin at the nape of the neck. Phwoar, eh?
Maiko kimonos tend to be in bright colours, with vivid, busy patterns. Geisha dress in quieter shades, with more plain silk and less area covered by dyed or embroidered patterns. Because they're cool that way.

The other sign that a maiko is nearby is the chiming. Maiko wear special platform versions of zori sandals, called okobo, which have little bells inside that jingle at every step. These came from Orchid Dreams. You can also get plainer-looking okobo that actually chime at Nakamura-ya.
And that's about it, for now! I hope this information is helpful. As I've said, it's not cheap to equip yourself as a maiko, but you can console yourself with the thought that it's a mere fraction of the cost of doing the same thing IRL!

Hairdos from Shop Seu and BettiePage Voyager



I thought I'd combine the Shop Seu and BP* hairdos in one post, because they have a pretty similar aesthetic. They're also pretty affordable for prim hair! For fairness' sake, I wore an outfit that was equal parts of each - the turtleneck is from Seu and the tartan skirt from BP* :)
If you've read the earlier blog entries, you've seen the Mitsuami Pompa hairdo from BP*, so you know BettiePage Voyager has mad skills. Her hairdos are simple, cute and funky. They don't have a lot of flex, but have nice levels of true-to-life detail in little flyaway hairs - looking at the temples, forehead and nape of the neck is always rewarding. I find this tremendously cute.
I saw Shop Seu hairdos around for months, mostly in Japanese sims, before I actually tracked down the source, and that was only thanks to a post on the Linden Lifestyles blog. The relief! They're also thoroughly cute, and great to wear when you want to kid yourself you're just as cool as a REAL Japanese girl.



Here's the 'okappa' hairstyle available at the BP* store. I'm not sure if the name is a reference to the odd Japanese folklore creature, the kappa, but those dudes have bald spots so I don't think so. This hairdo gives me a strong Ramona Quimby vibe, but it's also kind of Evey Eliot (although both of them had brown hair). It would look excellent with a flapper dress, and is also extremely charming with a girlish furisode kimono or colourful yukata.
It's not flexible, but this isn't really a problem when the style is a short, crisp bob.
That's all the BP* hair I have to show you today, but she has several other lovely styles, so I recommend that you go and have a look!




On to Shop Seu, and a little curiosity of the Japanese language. In English, onomatopoeia means words that imitate or evoke sounds, like splash, bang and toot. Japanese has onomatopoeia too, like doki-doki for a heartbeat, but they also have what you might call conceptual onomatopoeia, words that evoke rather than denote or describe things. In a manga comic, when a character blinks rapidly, 'piku-piku' may be written in as a 'sound' effect. 'Doki-doki' is equally used to evoke the way you feel when your heart beats rapidly. (They like to repeat these words.) There are onomatopoeia for textures too, hence this hairdo is called 'short mofumofu hair.' The closest I can come to rendering 'mofomofu' in English would be 'fluffy wuffy.' Just imagine how soft and fluffy these bunches would feel swishing against your cheek. They're flexible and bouncy and CUTE.




Here is the 'mitsuami' hairstyle, which as far as I can figure out (I don't speak Japanese), refers to the three strands of braids. This hairdo evokes Japanese girls of the past for me, although I can't put my finger on the decade or anything sensible like that. It reminds me of Hitomi's grandmother in The Vision of Escaflowne, okay? :) This is another one that looks great with a yukata. The little strands escaping from the plaits really make the style for me. It's not flexible. Depending on the shape and size of your avatar's face, this hairstyle can kind of cut into the sides of your cheeks, so you may want to make some adjustments when you wear it.




THIS is where all those chicks in Japanese vendor pictures got their hairdo. You're welcome. It's called 'yuruyuru odango hair.' Odango means a dumpling or bun, and yuruyuru has me stumped. Flexi strands flutter around your face and nape, but look a bit two-dimensional. This is my least favourite of the Seu hairdos, but it's kind of iconic.
I actually have slight buyer's remorse about this one. Oh well.




Finally, the long version of the mofumofu style, and oh, how mofumofu it is. Can't you just feel the softness from here? Pet your monitor screen. That's it. Softly flexible and very believable.

Ensemble details:
Shape, skin and eyes: as for first post.
Turtleneck: Shop Seu.
Tartan skirt: BP*
Shoes: 'Chloe' sculpted flats, Lassitude & Ennui. Yes, I do have a lot of their shoes.

A fairy from forest feast

Behold! I am...

...a fairy! A fiery fairy of autumn. Not a 'fae' or a 'faerie,' please note; I always regard those spellings as self-conscious archaisms that annoy me in the same sort of way as Aleister Crowley's affectation of 'magick.' Magic is magic, a fairy's a fairy, and Faerie is the name of a country (you might have heard of it, fairies live there). You don't lose anything worth having by spelling these words normally. I am now going to stop before I go off on a bitchkrieg about how J.K. Rowling doesn't know the difference between an elf and a hobgoblin, and will change the subject by saying, don't you love my skeleton-leaf wings?


Well, I do, so if you don't it doesn't matter :) They're based on apple leaves, as is the whole outfit. It's called 'Pix*ie apple Leaf of autumn,' because the Japanese are somewhat wayward with capitalisation, and you can get it from forest feast. I tend to favour Japanese content creators, not only because I like their style, but because their work is relatively cheap compared with that of American stylists. I'm not sure if the reason is the yen-to-Linden exchange rate, or simply a different perception of what it is reasonable to charge for Second Life items, but it's rather nice! This outfit, for example (which also comes with a shape and eyes that I didn't choose to wear) will only set you back L60. The snow crystal fairy outfit is slightly more expensive, at L100. I hope spring and summer fairies will follow!


The rest of my ensemble:
Skin, eyes and shape: as for first post.
Hairdo: 'Sayuri' in Red from Zero Style. If you wanted to cosplay Hermione Granger in SL, you could do worse than buy Sayuri in light brown.
Shoes: Signature Sandals in brown and gold from Lassitude & Ennui. These are free! They also come in black and white, with your choice of gold or silver buckles, and are a great wardrobe basic.

Edit: I couldn't resist adding the frost fairy outfit to my collection, so here it is, in the rather lovely forest feast garden. There's a lot of foliage for me to freeze.... of course, this will only make the garden more beautiful.

The hairdo is 'Meghan' from ETD, and I changed my Signature Sandals to white with silver buckles.

08 March, 2008

Gothic Lolita with aiorina

Here are some Gothic Lolita outfits from a Japanese creator called aiorina. Her shop is called LossPass, and she has some lovely clothes for sweet Lolita and Elegant Gothic Aristocrat styles.
Here's a bit of cultural exchange for you - in America this type of dress is called a jumper, but in the British-English speaking world, jumper means sweater and this is a pinafore. I don't know what the flip the Japanese call it.

In these pictures I'm wearing the same skin, shape, eyes and hairdo as in my first post.
I love the pattern texture, so brocadey, and the crisp white blouse.


This is such a party dress, isn't it? The platform Mary Janes are a design called Hitomi (a girl's name meaning 'bright eyes') from Lassitude & Ennui. They're available in lots of colour combinations! I love L&E's shoes, and they offer some neat freebies too.
The following one is more Victorian or elegant. It gives me a wintry, Christmassy vibe.

I love the... the what would you call it, jabot? Lace doofer at the neck. Those are the Hitomi shoes in another colour.


And this dress feels like the older sister of the preceding one. I have to say, I dropped the ball a bit with my hairdo, it's not very Gothic Lolita... I'm just enjoying the braids and pompadour a lot.

Loli Nori Freebie Skins

Okay! In my last entry I talked a lot about Loli Nori's lovely free skin mods, so here they are! Remember, you can get these in-world at Bare Rose, or from SLBoutique (aka OnRez) or SLExchange.
Here is her latest, an adorable St Patrick's Day themed skin called Lucky. I'm focusing on the face and makeup here, as the body work is pretty simple. Decent basic shading, contours - the nipples look a bit greyish and unhealthy, but this is a free skin and I'm not going to bitch, especially as she has bothered to include a decent yet subtle vulva. There is no pubic hair on the skin, but if that bothers you, I recommend a quick jaunt to Fleur (formerly Tête à Pied) where you can pick up a free package of see-through underpants with pubic hair textures on them, in a variety of colours and cuts. The hairdo is 'Elated' in Copper from ETD, and the eyes came from Sakurako Design Shop.

Lucky Green features glossy green lipstick and glittery green eyeshadow. There isn't a lot of variation or subtlety to the skin tone, but again, FREE SKIN, and I love the makeup. This would be great for St Patrick's Day, or any time you want to look like an elf or absinthe fairy.
Lucky Plastered could be described as the same girl a few hours and a lot of Guinness later :)

I love the flush on the face. Don't take advantage of her, guys.

Or, if green lipstick is a bit weird for you, you may like the Lucky Red variation. This is a nice glamorous, colourful look for evening, I think! Holy lack of shoulders Batman.
Here's the Innocence skin, appropriate for sweet lolitas and proper young Victorian or Edwardian ladies. It comes in a variety of makeup shades. The hairdo is Beth from Zero Style, and those are the BP* January eyes from the previous entry.


Here's the Ganguro skin, with a Strawberry Blonde hairdo from ETD's Bedded Attitude line. I think it's a freebie these days, or at least very cheap. I love the sparkly pink stars on the cheeks. Hey, if you're not familiar with terms like Gothic Lolita and Ganguro, they have Wikipedia articles - suffice it to say that they're Japanese fashion subcultures.

Here's something lovely for Hallowe'en or your more Gothic moments, the Vampiress. This comes in a variety of makeup options, including your choice of bloodstained drooly chin or not :) The hairdo is Antonia, from Gurl6. This would look good with the long 'Vamp' prim nails from Fleur (but I forgot to put them on and can't be bothered redoing all the photos).

And last, the classic Gothic Lolita skins, with a choice of makeup including 'Mana Blue.' The hair is from Smoka.

So yay! These are free and they're quite lovely. The bra I'm wearing, and the matching knickers which you can't see, are from Edelweiss. That's another very good Gothic Lolita store, but that's a post for another day.