View allAll Photos Tagged groovy
LOL! Old costume of mine and a silly cgi!
Myself dressed up as Princess What's Her Name from Earthworm Jim.
I looove those games...
I totally want to remake this costume! This was from back in 2006. My skills are better now!
More from Saturday's Carnaby St festival. This couple were dying to be snapped - though speculation whether that's her Dad or not soon ensued...
Item #PP078
Groovy Galore
Poppy Parker™ Dressed Doll
2015 W Club Upgrade Doll
Approximate Ship Date: Summer 2015
Edition size: TBA (Determined by the total amount of orders received)
Doll Tech Specs:
Body Type: Poppy Parker™
Head Sculpt: Poppy Parker™
Quick Switch Feature: No
Skin Tone: Caucasian
Hair Color: Golden Blond
Eyelashes: Yes, Hand Applied
Bientôt l'heure de r l'ouverture de ce lieu baroque, chic et élégant, tout en noir et or… l'ANGELUS !
I had this living Barbie head without a body, so I put her on a knockoff articulated Barbie body for now. I got her outfit on eBay. I think it’s homemade. Whoever made it did a great job!
Enjoying my new dresses to the max! This dress is again from Vince Camuto and paired with some Tory Burch flats I pull off that 70s vibe ☮️
I LOVE this girl!!! I never expected to like her as much as I do. I think she's my favorite Poppy to date. She's in a coveted spot in the dining room since she arrived!
Just a bit of fun really - messing about with this shot I took this afternoon of my middle girl, Alannah with her man.
This has a real hip 50's/60's feel for me - so I thought I'd post it.
Groovy man!!!
sitting around on floor cushions like this looked hip but was awkward and uncomfortable for any length of time, food and drink was hard to manage, and you shouldn't be wearing shoes, or trousers you don't want baggy knees in. so people went back to chairs.
Someone TAKE THAT BOOK AWAY FROM ME!
Well, another Twinkle. Groovy Sweater. Not a dress, because I had to manage with four skeins of Soft Chunky in beautiful Sea Foam.
Black and white macro photo of a VW Monster rubber floor mat. Seattle Commercial Photography by weshoot.com .
Direct scan of an end paper from a booklet. Love the brown "rock texture."
From "Say It As It Is! Learn to Speak Hawaiian," Hawaiian Isles Publishing Co., Ltd., Honolulu, HI, 1978. My edition is the 1982 reprint. This book was published before the return to traditional Hawaiian spelling and stress punctuation.
Copyright © All Rights Reserved by José.
Tumblr: josedamian-photograper.tumblr.com/
Facebook: www.facebook.com/jdamianalvarado
Copyright © All Rights Reserved by José.
Tumblr: josedamian-photograper.tumblr.com/
Facebook: www.facebook.com/jdamianalvarado
I’ve always found it very interesting how fashion changes, not only every 10 years, but every season. I mean, who gets to decide what is “in” and what is “out”? Did the people in the 70’s really think that SUPER flared jeans were a good idea? These are the kind of questions that I ask myself! Some fashion can be awesome and look amazing at the time, but then you look back and ask yourself…did I really wear that? This is why I decided to do my project on the fashion of the decades starting with the flapper girl in the 20’s and ending with the modern teenage girl. While taking my pictures, I may have exaggerated the time period a little much, but I wanted people to get the idea. Like I said, my project starts off with the 20’s, sassy flapper girl (Audrey Gerlach) getting ready for her show. Her dressing area is filled with makeup scattered all over to emphasize that she is in a rush. The next picture is a photo based on the 30’s. She (Audrey Gerlach) is on a staircase wearing an elegant gown. She is looking at the window for a reason. Although there were some wealthy people in the 30’s, most of America was in the Great Depression. Her looking out the window is sort of a symbolism for that time; you were either very rich, or very poor. The next photo is the well tailored 40’s girl (Grace Sullivan). You probably cannot tell, but she is outside of a church. I was looking for somewhere to take the 40’s picture that looked sort of “tailored” like the outfit. My next photo is the happy-go-lucky 50’s girl (Kendall Phillips). She is at a diner, enjoying her hamburger and milk shake. I think that the lines in this picture are awesome in that they lead your eye very well. I decided to take the next shot of the 60’s outdoors, even though it was snowy. I think that the white background of the snow puts more emphasis on the model (Madison Heaton) and her colorful outfit. My 70’s shot is a girl (Jen Norehad) in her room talking on the phone. This picture was actually taken at Flower Child vintage store in Lakewood in a room full of records. I think that the records behind her and all of the bright colors pushes the viewer over the edge that this shot is 70’s. All I could think about when I took my 80’s shot was “Let’s Get Physical.” The mirrors in this shot are at a cool angle because it captures almost every side of her. The reason that I had her (Margaret Sullivan) place her hands on the edge of the frame was to make it look as if she was pushing the picture away. This next picture is my 90’s shot. When I took this picture I was thinking about a mix between the shows Friends and Full House. I thought about what kind of clothes they wore and how in Friends they spend more then half of the time in a coffee shop! Also, the big coffee, Starbucks craze started in the 90’s. Things like turtle necks, over sized sweaters, big jewelry, and leggings were all in style in the 90’s. The final picture of my project ends with the typical teenage girl look of today. I think almost any teenage girl who looks that this picture can say; “Yes, I have worn something like that before.” Once again, I did put a huge emphasis on the technology use of our time, hence, the girl (Rose Sullivan) talking on her cell phone and listening to her iPod…but you get the point. Once I put all of my pictures together, I decided to put them in a scrapbook as if someone was keeping track of the decades. The reason that I wrote the titles in pencil and not in color is because I want people to focus on the pictures themselves and not the titles. I chose a very blank background once again to emphasize the pictures. The final thing I will mention is that I left in the many blank pages in the back of book to leave room for the other decades -- and fashions -- to come.
Dig those bell bottoms. I got her for a steal because her neck was hanging limply and she had a tangled ponytail. Someone had replaced the wire in her neck with plastic. Thirty minutes and some new wire & a comb, she looks good as new!
(I think I now have like 1 million of this same face doll. I'm a stickler for what I like!)
Farbenmix pattern-Roxy.Fabrics are green/red dot is Fabric Finders, pink check is Michael Miller and the Stained Glass print is by Patty Young-Mezzanine. The reindeer embroidery design is from www.emblibrary.com
Materials to make are available at www.sewblessedfabric.com