-
I'm a voracious thrifter, music aficionado, heathen, and owner of a 1984 Westfalia Vanagon. I'm a writer and a designer, but mostly just a secret cat lady. Vanagon Champion is about all of these things with a little bit of thrifty goodness and old-fashioned magic for good measure. Learn more about me here.
-
-

-

Category Archives: Uncategorized
Thrifty Thursday: Take the Pledge to Break Up with the Mall
YOU GUYS. I am so insanely excited about today's post. I met Julie through sponsorship bidness, and when I heard about her amazing thrifting challenge, I knew you all had to know about it and follow along with her. I asked Julie to share her experience with us, so sit back and read, and maybe even take the pledge! I know I'm thinking about doing it myself. ENJOY!
Hello my ampersand-loving friends! My name is Julie, and I run a little thrift fashion blog called We So Thrifty. In short, thrifting is one of the constants in my life, and so I write about it. For years, my closet has slowly, surely, been drifting away from brand-new mall items to pre-loved, pre-worn thrifted pieces. Well, whether you call it a whim or a resolution, on a January night not so long ago I made a pledge to break up with the mall completely for one whole year. I look an oath, I made some rules, and I even made a button. I was unofficially hovering around this decision for so long it was time to end the relationship completely. My motivations were simple: all my favourite, best-quality pieces came from thrift stores, and all the cheap impulse buys I regretted immediately came from the mall. It was time to cut out bad stuff entirely.

I'm just past the 4-month anniversary of my break-up, and these past few months have not only reaffirmed my decision to try out a year-long mall-fast, it's made me believe I may never need the mall again. Here are a few of the reasons I have no regrets.

Discovering a personal style: I've always appreciated clothing. I've always enjoyed getting dressed. But only since taking this pledge have I really developed a personal style. I can identify one major reason for this: when I thrift shop, it's 100% up to me to decide what I like and what I don't. When I went to the mall, so much of what I could choose from was already decided for me. If Aritzia decided stripes were in season, they would cover the store with them. If they didn't? Too bad. No stripes for you. When I'm thrift shopping, only I decide what's in style . It's not about what fashion executives deem on trend, it's about how I want to look, and what I want to wear. It's such a freedom! Sure, I have to spend more time contemplating what works and what doesn't, and I read way more blogs now to glean inspiration, but it's forced me to be creative, take risks, and have way more fun.

History: In a thrift store, the history of fashion reveals itself one worn-out label at a time. Not only are my choices in dress no longer limited by what's in this season, I don't even have to worry about what's in this decade. I'm given the chance to rock shift dresses from the 60s, shoulder pads from the 80s, and everything else in between. In fact, my shopping adventure isn't really over until I've Googled the label on my latest find. I love discovering my dress came from a pantsuit designer in the 70s, or that my Christian Dior jacket is from a defunct line of office attire for the working 80s woman. I've learned more about fashion through thrifting than any magazine could tell me. So many stories to discover!

I don't know what size I am: I really don't. When I was mall-crawling, I'd fret over moving from a large to extra large, or a 10 to a 12. When I'm thrifting, I start at the front of the store, and move to the back. I make my selections by eyeballing the item and determining how it will work on my body. The peachy blouse above is from the plus-size label Lane Bryant. I also own a handful of petite items. So, I'm somewhere between a size 4 and a size 14. When you throw vintage sizes in the mix, things get even crazier. Jen at My Edit has a great post on this: It's liberating to throw all those numbers right out the window, and just focus on what works for you. I've even thrifted maternity clothing before. Baby or no baby: if I like it, it's coming home.

Stayin' classy: It really bugs me when people assume thrifters are cheap. That's honestly not my main motivation. Sure, I like stretching out my pennies. Sure, I brag about my steals. But I also thrift because it offers me quality. Instead of overpriced H&M and Forever 21, I get underpriced Betsey Johnson (like that wicked black dress) and Ralph Lauren. I really don't think that requires any more explanation. It's math, people.

You still have your "Safety Brands": If you took offense at my digs at F21 and H&M, I meant no harm! I've thrifted plenty of those department store brands. That white blouse above is a prime example: Zara, tags attached, $89.99, silk. I just got it for just $7. So, I still wear H&M, Zara and F21, but I get them at clearance rack prices every single time. Zara is so well represented at thrift stores, I now have six Zara items in my closet, pre-breakup I had one. Those six items together cost me less than the one item I bought retail. More math.
At the risk of sounding overly grandiose, this journey has been a life-changer. It's renewed my passion for fashion (I am aware that sounds like Barbie commercial...), and brought back the joy of getting dressed every morning. If you feel inspired to join me, DO IT. If you're intimidated by the timeline, start small! Try it for a month and go from there. Or, don't make any sweeping declarations at all - just get yourself to a thrift store and start exploring. Whatever you do, make sure to tell me about it. That way, if I ever hear the mall callin' me with her siren song, your successes will keep me motivated to make it through the year, and maybe all the years after that, too. Happy thrifting!
Posted in Uncategorized
32 Comments
on owning it.
Here are some thoughts for you on a Wednesday. Lately I've been seeing a bit and/or A LOT of bloggers in weird slumps. As in, I'm not good enough, blogs are too perfect, I don't fit in, I don't know what my blog is, etc.
Hey, I've been there. I AM there. I never got out of there. But here's the bone I have to pick with that mentality...
WHY DON'T WE ALL JUST OWN IT.

Be original. Blog about what YOU want to blog about. So you're not into thrifting/crafting/DIYs - SO WHAT?! And maybe you hate doing outfit posts or talking about pinterest. SO WHAAAAAT? OWN IT. Own whoever you are, whatever you want to blog about it, and DO IT.
I know it feels like there's some unwritten law about blogging. I don't really know where it came from or why we perpetuate it, but how about you and I stop that tomfoolery right here and now? There are NO rules about blogging. Throw out any notions any other blogger gave you in their e-course, blog posts, whatever. The bottom line is - your blog is YOUR online place. YOUR identity. And YOUR chance to create whatever the hell you want to create.
Stop feeling inferior. Stop feeling like you "don't fit in." This isn't high school. Sure, maybe some out there would make it feel that way, but have you ever noticed the unfollow/unsubscribe button? That's the beauty of blogging. You can choose very, VERY freely about who you do/don't follow. So if you feel like someone is dragging you down and making you feel inferior, then why in the world do you torture yourself with it?

And ok, if you don't want to blog about the typical blog stuff, then FORGE YOUR OWN WAY. I know that I personally don't want to read about the same thing in every blog in my reader, and I think I speak for everyone when I say that something different and unique would be a big breath of fresh air. On that same note, if you don't feel like you ARE unique, well, YOU ARE. Write about thrifting/DIYs/fashion and add your own voice to it. Talk about your thoughts/feelings/cares/concerns because that in and of itself is what makes you a blogger. It's not about who has the cutest clothes, the prettiest hair, the best DIYs, the greatest photographs. And if it is, then that's cool--to each his own. But I, for one, would take a genuine voice over a pretty picture any day.
Ultimately, it's not about ideas so much as it's about execution.
Just own it. Own your personality, your style, your blog's theme/vibes, whatever. Own it. Work it. It works if you work it.
And hey, if you're feeling like..woah, Amy is really harsh today, then turn that frown upside down. I LOVE YOU ALL. I speak these things mostly to myself in addition to all of you. Let's stop comparing and feeling bummed about where we all are right now. Let's stop fretting over if that post is good enough or oh, I don't fit in to this blog crowd. Just be yourself. Post about what interests you. Forget about being "successful" because what is a successful blogger anyway?
How about you and I pledge today to own it, yeah? BE WHO YOU WANT TO BE. Throw out the rules of blogging and own it.
What are your thoughts on this? Am I crazy? Should there be blogging rules? Let's hear it!
Posted in Uncategorized
65 Comments
The Divine 9: A Project by Sandi of Adalou Vintage
Do you know Sandi of Adalou Vintage yet? If not, get real. Go follow her. She's an absolute gem and champion of all champions. And today, she surprised us all with the most magnificent surprise of 2012:

It just so happens that Sandi is an AMAZINGLY talented illustrator and blog designer, and she started this secret Divine Nine project that I am crazy honored to be a part of. She illustrated 9 other bloggers and had the drawings etched onto wood pieces to create these glorious brooches.
Check it out!

To say I was honored kind of wouldn't even be sufficient in the least. THANK YOU, SANDI! You are infinitely talented.

To read about the entire process and to learn more about the project, be sure to visit Sandi right here.
She'll also be offering custom brooches like these later on, so follow her and visit her shop to keep up to date on all of that goodness.
(PS--she's also giving away one of her illustrated bunny brooches here as well as a birdie necklace here. Go enter!)
Posted in Uncategorized
11 Comments



















































