WHAT I WORE: Dumpster Design

23 August 2013


I recently received an email from Dumpster Design asking if I would like to do a style shoot with one of their dresses. Would I? Yes please! I was first introduced to Dumpster Design at Brighton Fashion Week and always thought the models looked like they were having so much fun walking down the catwalk in their recycled couture. To be offered to wear one of these innovative designs was something I could not turn down. 


The suggested dress was showcased at Brighton Fashion Week 2012. It's made from strips of blue jay cloths that had been worked on to a paper mache corset. The jay cloths were also shaped into petalss making it look like feathers of an owl (thought this to be rather appropriate for a Hooting Miss Owl). I decided my bird fascinator from Kate & Aud was the perfect accompaniment to my outfit. It was surprisingly comfortable and felt incredibly glamorous even though it was made from recyclables. It took over 3 weeks to create and it's Buy it Now price when first resided was £900!! Over a year later, and still in pretty good nik after being in one catwalk and one exhibition, it now retails at £700. 

In my last post I got to interview the brainchild of Dumpster Design, Daisy Harris-Burland. If you haven't read it yet, you can find it here. There's even a sneaky preview of the current collection Daisy is working on, 7 Deadly Sins!

What do you think of Eco fashion? Have you ever made a dress from items you've found lying round the house? I would like to think Eco and sustainable fashion are here to stay especially when designs are being so innovative and not your usual hemp trousers. If you would like Daisy to make you a bespoke garment, may it be for a special event, prom or even wedding, prices start around £700 and can be made from any material and any style! Visit her website for more info

Big love!

AKA Hooting Miss Owl











ALL IMAGES WERE TAKEN BY ATTACK PANIC PETE AND ARE SUBJECT TO COPYRIGHT.
PLEASE ASK FOR PERMISSION BEFORE USING!
THANK YOU

Interview with Eco fashion warriors, Dumpster Design!


In 2007, Daisy Harris-Burland started something that a lot of peple told her not to do. Now down the line she has really made a name for herself. You may know her as the brainchild of Dumpster Design! Dumpster Design brings us 100% Eco friendly couture and it really takes recycling to another level. Each garment is handcrafted and manipulated with materials she has found, giving them a new lease of life. Her dresses start from £700 and she has worked with big names like Benefit Cosmetics, Suzuki, Brighton Fashion Week and Waitrose. I had the chance to interview the lovely Daisy and this is what she said....

HMO - Hi Daisy. So, I first discovered you at Brighton Fashion Week 2012 and you recently showcased again at BFW2013 in their new Eco fashion show, Sustain, which I also saw. You must have been pleased that Eco and sustainable clothes has been recognised in the fashion industry to be given its own show?
DAISY - Yes, it is great to see that sustainable fashion is finally being recognised as a viable option in the industry. More than anything it raises peoples awareness, many people do not realize that it is even possible to create a collection 100% eco friendly. So it was amazing to have a whole show dedicated to doing just that.

HMO - Brighton is certainly the perfect place to showcase your designs. Are there plans to go international?
DAISY - Absolutely. I would love to go international, as I’m sure any designer would. However I think I need to crack the UK before I go gallivanting off to other countries. It would be interesting to see how my designs change in accordance to the location as every country specialises in different materials.
Dumpster Design at BFW2013 Sustain Show. Images courtesy of Clive Flint & Gareth Gregg
HMO - What inspired you to develop the idea of Dumpster Design?
DAISY - Haha...well, when it comes down to it Dumpster Design was formed because I was (possibly still am) a massive cheap skate. I was 16 and had my prom coming up… everyone was buy £400 dresses and I didn’t have that sort of money so I went into my kitchen and made a dress with what I found under the sink. This was all very well and good until my friend spilled a drink on me at prom and I was left standing in the middle of the dance floor with my cardboard dress disintegrating around me (I ended up having to go to reception and ask for substantial amount of duck tape). But that’s where it all started, with the attention and interest that one dress generated I knew there was a business to be made.

HMO - One of the things I liked about your show is that you could recognise what some of the dresses were made from. Is that something quite important to you? Is it intentional?
DAISY - In all honesty I try and make it so you don’t immediately realise what the dresses are made from. As everything I use is still in its raw state (I don’t paint it or change its natural appearance in anyway) it means it can be very obvious what it is. If you stuck a roll of kitchen roll to a top you’d know it was a roll of kitchen roll stuck to a top if you get what I mean? I love the fact that you don’t realise that these are all throw away house hold items until you get up close and really see the intricacy involved in every design. I love watching peoples reactions when they realise a dress is made from jay cloths haha

HMO - What has been the most unusual material you've used to make an item?
DAISY - Man, there have been so many. Umm...most unusual I guess would be deckchairs, maybe? Oh or liquid latex-that was an odd one!

HMO - What would be your dream material to use?
DAISY - My dream material...hmm...it would probably be from the inside of a space satellite or huge computer. Anything that would leave me with loads of micro chips and memory boards, along with meters and meters of wiring. I would love to see what I could make with that!

HMO - You must do a lot of experimenting. Do you find it quite easy to manipulate materials in the way you want them to go? Is there a material you're still tackling?
DAISY - When it comes to manipulating materials I am fully at the mercy of the material in question. If I try and fold something and it is clearly saying ‘I aint foldin’ like that!’ then that’s it, cant do it. I have to find another way to work with it. It is all about pushing each material to its limits stretching it to the exact point just before it breaks. But I have to listen to the material and work in a way that suits it best, as every item has different properties. But that’s what I love to find out, and that’s why each of my designs are so different depending what they are made of. But for material I am still tackling.. I just made a dress out of cling film and that wasn’t easy to say the least, its just so...clingy?! I was about ready to wrap it round my head and call it a day on more than 2 separate occasions haha.

HMO - Where do you source your materials? Do you go out looking for things, do people donate?
DAISY - Oh my word, here there and everywhere! Im always sending out some bizzareo request to my friends and family. ‘This week its lottery tickets guys!’ or ‘don’t forget to pick up any old porn mags you have lying around on your coffee table, I'm making a 'Lust' dress'. They are used to it by now! It is surprising how much stuff you can generate though just by asking around. And of course, if I'm making a dress for a company, then they supply the branded materials themselves.

HMO - What are your career highlights so far? Anything you're still aiming for?
DAISY - Career highlight? Well, once I was sat in a park and a total stranger walked past me and said ‘excuse me, are you Daisy Dumpster?’ that’s not my name, but still, that was pretty cool. Oh and obviously working with huge brands such as Benefit Cosmetics, Dior, L’Oreal and Suzuki blah blah.

HMO - What advice can you give other budding designers out there?
DAISY - It sounds cliché but just don’t give up. I had so many people tell me ‘no’ when I was first starting out. I even had to quit my degree course (which was fashion?!) because they didn’t like what I was doing. But I carried on and have never looked back.

HMO - Any exciting projects coming up?
DAISY - Lots of exciting things at the moment. I am currently working on a 7 dress collection based on the 7 deadly sins, this is for the Radical Designer Awards in London in October. I am also doing Front Row fashion show in November and…save the best ‘till last… I have just had conformation on a collaboration with Dior, DIOR?! It still surprises me to say it! VERY excited to get stuck into this one!


You can follow Daisy and Dumpster Design's journey on Facebook and Twitter. If you are interested in getting a bespoke garment made please contact Daisy via her website. I also get to try out one of Daisy's dresses in my next Style post. You can find it here!


WARNING!! You are about to witness a sneak preview of current work in progress on the  new 7 deadly sins collection







ALL IMAGES ARE SUBJECT TO COPYRIGHT
PLEASE DO NOT USE WITHOUT ASKING PERMISSION
THANK YOU!

Temperley London's 'Byrds' collection

22 August 2013



Feast your eyes on this!!! 

Have you seen Alice Temperley's 'Byrd' collection? It's just beautiful! I'm just a little bit in love with it. Inspired by Tippi Hedren's performance in Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds, Temperley, mixes vibrant fabrics, structured Italian Jacquards and soft British checked wool to create an allure, savviness, vulnerability and prowess. Backdrops of rich navy and cobalt reminds me of the blackness of the ravens and crows that attack Tippi Hedren's character in The Birds. 

LOVE IT! 
AKA Hooting Miss Owl











REVIEW: Jake Spicer's Drawing Circus

On Tuesday night I attended Jake Spicer's Drawing Circus, a monthly life drawing class at The Old Market Place. This isn't your normal class where you have a nude model in the centre of the room, but per-planned tableaux and costumed models, creatively put together to bring a wonderfully inspirational night for creatives of Brighton.
Our theme for the night was Old Orleans. We had 3 sets and 5 models narrating the myths, legends and folk tales of this mystical city and the collaborative organiser of the evening, Suki Price, thought out each pose for the models well, along with a themed playlist consisting of Hot 8 Brass Band and Louis Armstrong. Perfect drawing music!
It was an intense evening containing lots of 3min and 15min poses with 3 intervals in between, giving you plenty of chances for drinks at the bar. There was a good mixture of attendees, everyone from the young to the old, from beginners to the experienced. This is not a taught class but somewhere people can come together and simply make some marks on paper with their chosen weapon, may it be pencil, charcoal or inks. The £5 price tag is an extremely good price for what you get and I will certainly be returning. I've always wanted to be good at fashion illustration and life drawing certainly gives you good practice in drawing the human form.
If you want to find out more information about the Drawing Circus please check out their website for their class timetable. There's also weekly taught classes at Jake Spicer's studio at New England House and their Facebook page is very good at keeping you informed on up and coming events. So instead of just going down to your local boozer, head down to TOM bar and pick up a pencil and see what kind of marks you can make. It's incredibly satisfying.

See you there!

AKA Hooting Miss Owl




TOP IMAGE COURTESY OF JAKE SPICER AND ALL OTHER IMAGES WERE TAKEN BY MYSELF
ALL IMAGES ARE SUBJECT TO COPYRIGHT
PLEASE ASK FOR PERMISSION BEFORE USING!
THANK YOU

REVIEW: iPhone camera lenses

18 August 2013



Mini Owl and myself had a little camera day yesterday. It was one of the options we picked from our 'Summer to-do list' and it gave me a chance to test out my new lenses that Mr. D had bought me for my iPhone.
These lenses are brilliant! You get three in a pack: one macro, one wide angle and one fish-eye. They are very easy to use and you simply attach them to your phone via a magnetic ring you have to stick around your camera lens. They come with an attachment for your keyring making it easier to keep them on you at all times, as you'll never know when you'll be hit by that overwhelming sensation of inspiration.

I love the idea of them, but find them a little fiddly. To use them I have to take the case off my phone which always puts me on tenderhooks. I would definitely take them on photography trips but not for the odd photo. For the results I think they are very reasonably priced. Mr.D paid quite a lot for mine in a shop in Brighton, but they can easily be found on Amazon and EBay at around £10.99.
Do not buy if you have an iPhone 3GS! The packaging says they are suitable for that modal but the lenses don't really work on them. The curved back adds a black obstruction on the results but they work perfectly well with the iPhone 4/4S and 5.

Macro




Wide Angle




Fish Eye


What do you think of the results? I'm definitely looking forward to experimenting with them, especially the macro. I think they will give interesting and fascinating results.

Big love!
AKA Hooting Miss Owl





ALL IMAGES ARE SUBJECT TO COPYRIGHT
PLEASE ASK FOR PERMISSION BEFORE USING!!!
THANK YOU

DIY: Summer to-do list on lolly sticks

15 August 2013


Do you have children on their Summer holidays at the moment?  Molly has been on hers for a couple of weeks now and I was SO worried about keeping her entertained for such a long period of time. Then, whilst browsing the web, I came across this fabulous tutorial from Good + Happy Day on how to make a Summer to-do list using lolly sticks and it's been working like a charm so far, especially at times where we've been too busy to plan anything during the week.

So. Want to make a to-do list too? This is how you do it...

First of all sit down with everyone from your family and write a list of things that you all would like to do. Add some new things amongst some old favorites. It is a great way to learn and try new things and also see new places. Need some ideas? This is what we included in our list;
  • Go rock pooling
  • Go to the beach
  • Learn to ride a bike
  • Go berry picking
  • Bake a cake
  • Have a picnic in the garden
  • Swim in the sea
  • Play with the penny arcades on the pier
  • Go on the trampolines
  • Fly a kite
  • Make sun prints
  • Stargaze
  • Write a song as a family
  • Collect and press pretty flowers
  • Have a BBQ
  • Make fruit popsicles
  • Have a camera day
  • Visit a farm
  • Go to Lewes and have cream teas
  • Visit a flea market or car-boot sale
  • Go on a bug hunt
  • Go camping
  • Read a chapter from a book as a family
  • Cycle along under cliff path and have a picnic
  • Go to the Zoo
  • Family game night
  • Family movie night
  • Mail a letter
  • Have a sleepover
  • Treasure hunt
  • Make brownies
  • Paint and decorate rocks found on the beach
  • Make homemade lemonade
  • Work on Molly's scrapbook
  • Make masks
  • Make giant soap bubbles
  • Go for a walk over The Downs
  • Go to Ashdown forest
  • Go on a boat ride 

Next it's time to decorate! Molly and I had lots and lots of fun doing this bit. We used watercolours and painted simple shapes and patterns. You will most likely have to leave your sticks to dry over night. Once dry you can start writing your to-do's. I just used a black Sharpie pen to do this.

Then, on days when there is nothing to do, pick a stick! Yesterday we picked out, "Play with the penny arcades on the pier" and we had an excellent day. We raided our big jar of coppers and headed down to the pier to see what we could find.  Molly had great fun and was ecstatic when she and Mr D won a cuddly toy on the Dolphin Derby!



This is something we will definitely repeat every year. I'm looking forward to adding new things to our list as Molly gets older. Do you write a Summer to-do list? And what fun things do you include?

Happy summer holidays!
AKA Hooting Miss Owl





ALL IMAGES ARE SUBJECT TO COPYRIGHT
PLEASE DO NOT USE WITHOUT ASKING FOR PERMISSION!!
THANK YOU :)