Guardian Girl

Sincere apologies

Posted in Uncategorized by guardiangirl on November 6, 2009

Dear reader(s),

Today is my last day in my job, and it’s straight on to the next one on Monday. For this reason I’ve been spending my spare time tying up all manner of loose ends.

Please accept my heartfelt apologies for the uncanny quiet. The project has by no means come to an end (in fact I spent £35 on a Stella McCartney babygrow only yesterday!) but over the next few days I might find it more tricky to keep up the inane babble of commentary.

On one’s first day in a new job, one is generally not encouraged to march up to the nearest person and enquire if they wouldn’t mind photographing one straddling the sink in a pair of silk harem pants.

Still, I’ll try my best, I promise.

X

GG/IW

 

Search engine lolz #2

Posted in Uncategorized by guardiangirl on October 15, 2009

I don’t know who you are but congratulations for reaching this blog on your journey in search of:

“ahoy there join the navy”

“where did lauren luke bought that flower”

“whingfield today”

“current trends of terrines”

“meaty stomachs of bikini models”

“beautiful maid pouting”

“mussels that look like labia pictures”

“my legs”

Denim: let’s go to workwear #3

Posted in Uncategorized by guardiangirl on October 15, 2009

I forgot my scarf today so had to borrow Cari’s as an emergency prop, but what a good job it does. As always the model’s clothes are cut much more finely than mine and the whole thing works much better on her proportions. This outfit might not be too flattering but at least it’s comfy. No grand complaints.

Look liek you're ready for anything

Look like you're ready for anything

 

Look liek you're ready for bed

Look like you're ready for bed

Conclusions:

  • If I’d bought that Gap crombie I was supposed to get this week I’d really look the part today – but I don’t regret a single minute of that decision.
  • No recipe from last night as  I went for delicious Viet food. Back on the horse tonight and tomorrow.
  • And talking of those much-overrated creatures, I’ve officially ruled riding lessons out this week on the basis that I can’t afford to spend £50 trotting around London on a snorting beast attached to a bit of rope for an hour. And the hats don’t suit me anyway. And no one would want to go with me. And I don’t like doing group activities with strangers. So that’s one failure for the week.
  • Another failure: checked out Alexander Wang clothes on Net-a-Porter. No way I can afford any of this lot either. The Guardian is promoting a ridiculously expensive lifestyle this week. Perish the thought of how extortionate it might be to become Telegraph Girl.  Perhaps one day we’ll find out.

Sunday

Posted in Fashion, Recipes, The Measure, Uncategorized by guardiangirl on October 12, 2009

Today was a day of great expectations.

I recruited my most fashion-savvy-yet-honest homosexual chum and off we skipped, arms linked fabulously, to buy lots of Measure stuff. Here follows a breakdown of successes and failures succeeded by a heinous photo of me looking like I’m taking a crap in the woods.

Gold cuff This was achieved with Adam’s help, as French Connection had one I thought relatively nice, and he gets 50% off thanks to designing for Nicole Farhi, which is part of the same group. He thought the cuff was revolting initially but came around in the end. However he put the kiboshes on a gypsy-ish necklace I wanted to buy on account of its having some turquoise bits hanging off it. He said I looked like a middle-aged administrator in it. So?

Turquoise jewellery However I did find a fairly nice pair of heart-shaped turquoise (-coloured) earrings that look like something you might find on a narrowboat, only I found them in Accessorize. As I find some of my dearest friends on narrowboats, this has positive associations for me. When I say find, I mean they are there getting on with their lives, not that I scour narrowboats for new friends, which I don’t have the spare time to do.

A dress with a “rush of gold sparkle” Adam and I decided they meant one with a subtle gold glitter or thread spun through it, and I tried on several such garments in H&M (Adam’s conclusion: “That sleeve doesn’t do much for you, darling-heart.”) However I’ve sworn off high-street clothes wherever possible thanks to Nin and Phoebe’s reality check, so we headed to Beyond Retro where I found a dress so lovely that Ad and I decided to reinterpret the rules – it has a gold ruffle and cuffs rather than a “rush of sparkle” but hey, it looked nice. It even – dare I say this – had a faint air of the Pamela Ewing about it. I’m going to wear it for my 30th, and if I don’t get compared to Pamela every ten minutes I’ll have a tizzy fit.

’90s Madonna No conical bra-tops on the high street as yet but I allowed myself to buy Immaculate Collection on vinyl even though strictly that’s ’80s Madonna. I think it was released in 1990, just scraping into being Measure approved. Kind of. I just wanted the record really.

Mienna boots I was quite up for these but the moment Adam clapped eyes on them he declared them the most repugnant thing he’d seen in a long while, stamped his desert boot on the floor and banned me from even trying them on. Since I was fully expecting to look more overfed heiress than Twiggy chic in them, I went along with his judgement and with an enormous sigh of relief saved myself £140 into the bargain. How the Guardian gets off putting “only” in front of £140 during a sentence about boots is anybody’s guess anyway. 

Gap crombie Good job Ads was with me or I wouldn’t have known what a crombie was. I mean, I knew it was a coat but I couldn’t have been sure exactly what style. We found the coat in question and it’s a nice garment, thick and warm and relatively well cut. The problem is it made me look like Little Miss Whatever High Street. Very boring. Not inordinately flattering to my shape, although not ugly either. A darker grey tends to suit me better, while this one is a pale felty-marl-pebbly shade. All in all it looked fine but I couldn’t bring myself to spend £98 on it. It really would have been a waste of cash I can’t afford to spend. I would shell out that amount pretty happily if I put it on and thought “yehhh” rather than “erhhmmmm”.

Barrettes As Adam pointed out, I think Katie Grand and chums are thinking of a different breed of barrettes from those found lurking on the lower racks of Boots’ haircare section/Accessorize. A very poor selection to be seen, all of which would have made me look rather First Violin, even with messy locks. I kept my money in my purse and decided to wait for them to hit Topshop instead.

I decided I ought to check out what’s going on in the head of this Katie Grand and bought a copy of Love, the magazine she edits, which WHSmith was doing a great job of hiding in some irrelevant place in the shop. I would have got it from a newsagent but I needed to pay by card. I read it later that night in the bath and got a bit spluttery about it. What is Pixie Geldof doing being treated like style royalty? Tavi on the other hand – what a girl. Apparently I’m not allowed to write good things about her without her permission and I’ve never read her blog properly but on the strength of that interview alone – top marks.

GQ Style I looked around but could only find GQ Plain. I didn’t like it much – I read it in the bath later too. It’s exactly the same as Vogue but with more erotic photos of men and slightly more openly misogynistic copy.

Aztecs at the British Museum I went along on my own having been dropped off by Ads with tears in my eyes. It was an interesting exhibition in the main and the turquoise mosaic masks were really incredible, but overall too much grey stone and too much writing on plaques obscured by crowds. One thing stood out: in the era of Moctezuma the Nahuatl word for gold meant “excrement of the gods”. I’ll remember this next time I need to refer to my new Godshit cuff. For £12 a think the British Museum could have pumped some interesting smells into the exhibition, or put a few fairground rides in, even if only slow, small ones. The shop was a bit lame too, apart from a range of sequinned decorations I had my eye on – the mask and the peacock were ace but I can’t see them in the online shop – can you?

That evening I rejected making potted mackerel in favour of hot buttered rolls with ready-smoked mackerel. The decision was a result of missing the Sunday supermarkets and being at the back of the queue when the Lord was doling out motivation to pot fish. I was at the back of all the most important queues, I tell you.

I swapped my Dallas boxset with Adam and Thomas’ DVDs of Absolutely Fabulous series 1 and 2, Ring of Bright Water and last year’s Criminal Justice, the first episode of which I watched that evening with my mackerelly rolls. Never have I seen such a frustrating, tense, brilliant thing. I was clutching on to this giant cushion thing I have all the way through. I have to stop writing about it though or I’ll go on for even more years.

Today’s outfit: I put it on for ten minutes to get the snap. I wore something totally different into town. There’s no need to ask why. An abomination:

Bare

Bare

Mare

Mare

 

Conclusions:

  • French Connection has some pretty nice jewellery.
  • No one has nice barrettes yet.
  • GQ is kind of  lame.
  • Love is a bit better.
  • Vintage dresses are much better.
  • I wish I’d spotted Jonathan Ross at the BM. Adam called having just seen him go in wearing a pair of rubber waders. Drat.
  • What’s with H&M sizing anyway? A size 12 dress fitted me perfectly yet a different size 16 clung to me like a terrible black contraceptive device.
  • Faith boots are controversial.
  • I will pot cheese, fair enough, I will. Manana.

Saturday

Posted in Fashion, Interiors, Recipes, Uncategorized by guardiangirl on October 12, 2009

After polishing off several good-morning! glasses of Baileys, a latte and a fry-up with my dearest friend Liv and scouring the paper for this week’s life, I headed home to recreate as best I could the Space rooms in my own flat. I did a relatively good job of getting the vibe right (read with emphasis on the word “relatively” and set your standards low) but I have insufficient space in my flat to get enough distance between lens and scene to take a picture that might demonstrate this success. Trust.

The only element I properly slacked off was arranging my books in colour order, which I think looks beautiful and I definitely want to do – I just couldn’t quite bring myself to take all my books off the shelves and put them back in a different order. I might do it later in the week. I will. I will.

Here are some rather sparse-looking photos to demonstrate my attempts:

Study

Study

Skive

Skive

Living

Living

Dead

Dead

Horrid wardrobe, that.

Breakfast

Breakfast

 

Feckless

Feckless

 

Boudoir

Boudoir

Abattoir

Abattoir

 

The other thing I did was dress up in a hideous outfit and strike an equally frightening pose, photographing the tragedy with the aid of my camera’s self-timer.

Feel free to listen to the appropriate soundtrack as you view the image (http://open.spotify.com/track/5CoHWtIo2xRgBqVtm4OgcF):

Dare

Dare

Don't you dare

Don't you dare

Got the pose backwards as usual but I don’t think this is the main concern really, is it.

I was supposed to cook potted crab/lobster for dinner but I couldn’t get these things fresh and I’m not keen on the tinned versions. As I result I settled for toasted bagels with butter.

Then, in an overwhelming show of dullard decision making, I opted to stay in on a Saturday night instead of going out with my chums. It’s my 30th birthday next weekend so I anticipate big luvz then and decided I was allowed to forgo sociability in order to epilate my armpits (genuinely painful) and watch the last episode of Dallas in my boxset (genuinely upsetting to say goodbye to this era of my life).

Conclusions:

  • I think I’ve said all I need to about potting food.
  • My suspicions about this week’s nude fashion were correct.

First impressions

Posted in First impressions, Uncategorized by guardiangirl on October 12, 2009

Crumbs, I have to learn to ride a horse.

And it looks like a very expensive week.

I sat down with a double helping of black pudding and made a list of everything I need to buy this week if i’m to be properly accurate.

For the Measure alone I need:

  1.  Some ’90s Madonna
  2. A conical bra
  3. Riding lessons
  4. Alexander Wang gear
  5. Turquoise jewellery
  6. To go and see the Aztec exhibition at the British Museum
  7. Barrettes
  8. Dishevelled hair
  9. Some Katie Grand/Katie Hillier-related stuff
  10. GQ Style
  11. A horse with Hermes accessories (I so wish I had the means to do this one)
  12. Grey Gap Crombie
  13. £140 over-the-knee boots
  14. A gold cuff
  15. A dress with “a rush of gold sparkle”

Good job I saved a bit of cash last week.

It was nice to see the Space special feature involving some rooms that looked like something I might want to have in my flat, although taking design inspiration from famous authors might run the risk of getting ideas above my station. If you visited my flat you’d see what I mean.

I opened Hugh’s cooking pages with my usual tired sigh. More potting this week. Potted crab, potted mackerel, potted cheese. It honestly makes me feel weary just looking at these recipes. I don’t mind putting a bit of work into cooking if the result is a delicious stew or a pie or a cake or a something. I don’t know what it is about the bloody River Cottage that gets right up my nose –  it might be the word “river” or the word “cottage” or more the combination of the two – but I just don’t want to pack a load of stuff into a pot only to fork it back out again. I grew up in a cottage – I’m not exactly an urban type – but even as a shire dweller I can’t imagine I’d have been very keen on potting stuff other than mud pies. Perhaps it’s more of a generational divide than a geographical one, as my dad is quite keen on preserves and terrines and so on. Chocolate pots could be an exception in my eyes as chocolate definitely benefits from being served whimsically. But as for a nice bit of fish or a good hunk of cheese – just put it in a sandwich for pete’s sake.

Yotam annoyed me too by requiring a day’s preparation to strain yoghurt. I’m becoming quite petulant about all this great fussing around food. My heart is with Mr Lepard this week. A bit of hard work begets a bit of nice pie. Seems fairer.

Fashion – happy to see the Guardian doing quite an unGuardiany shoot (even if they did feel obliged to go satirically haywire on the spray-tan and pink lipstick), although I’m pessimistic about the degree to which I’m going to be able to recreate this. The tall, skinny-legged, blonde and bronzed elements look kind of important, as does the supply of expensive-looking nude-shaded clothing.

Denim – easy-peasy. The high street looks are pretty much always simpler and therefore easier to replicate. It’s in copying the designer stories that I tend to end up looking like a total dimwit.

Conclusions:

  • I am twitching my purse strings with every page turn.
  • I just want to eat a sandwich.
  • I’m getting a bit bored,  over-tired and tantrummy, and I want Weekend to ring the changes more often. Life feels like one long recipe, one torturous shopping trip.The ennui, dahhhling, the tedium – how will I survive?
  • On Friday night I found my friend Richard reading Hesiod (Richard is way cleverer than me). Hesiod tells his readers what to do, including when to cut their fingernails, and he does it far more lyrically than the Guardian. If I don’t have a holiday as Daily Mail girl soon, I’ll be Hesiod Girl one week instead.

Grey Matters

Posted in Uncategorized by guardiangirl on October 2, 2009

Dear Guardian, I think we get the message about grey clothes. This must be the seventeenth time I’ve had to get dressed in a grey outfit for this project.

It really must be the new black. Despite that, I’m actually wearing black today as I don’t have a charcoal grey jumper. I also forgot to put the geek specs in my bag on the way out, so today’s outfit just looks like your average throw-it-on boringness.

You might be able to catch a glimpse of the Reiss belt looking Dorothy Perkins-like.

Grey matters

Grey matters

Please  accept my apologies for the blurry photo.

Grey crappers

Grey crappers

The toilets are probably the most interesting thing in this photo. And it’s a Friday too – might have to change into something a little less unremarkable before I go out tonight.

Conclusions:

  • I’m strangely excited about buying the paper tomorrow to see what I’ll be wearing and eating for the next week. I’ve caught the bug again.
  • Can we have some more interesting clothes and locations again? I want more hanging off benches, sitting on carpets and lounging on sofas please.
  • This week I managed to get away with spending £60 on a belt and slightly more than that on ingredients, but nothing more. I saw friends by cooking them food at my house and didn’t have to buy anything else for the Measure or for my lunches, which was a great relief for my finances.

Stone fruit yoghurt cake

Posted in Uncategorized by guardiangirl on October 2, 2009

Yum, yum, yum. This was another very successful dish – Dan Lepard’s yoghurt and stone fruit cake. He was telling the truth when he said it was easy, and when he said it’d knock your socks off.

My only complaint is that you have to leave it in the oven for a perilously long time while you contemplate the tub of ice cream you bought to accompany it, and by the time the cake’s ready the ice cream has gone somewhere else. To the afterlife. All the ice cream.

I didn’t have a round cake tin so I used my ubiquitous rectangular one instead, which has done no harm to the cake other than make it cook quicker – the recipe said to leave it in for about an hour but mine was done to perfection after 45 minutes or so, with fluffy undercake and a sugary, browned crust on the top.

The lemon zest, yoghurt and semolina combine to make the tastiest thing ever, reminding me of the ‘moist lemon cake’ I requested from my ma when I had glandular fever aged 15 or so, and got. Sometimes things you had when you were very poorly remind you of feeling horrible, sometimes they remind you of love, and the latter is true of lemon cake for me.

Needless to say I got through a fair portion of it for my dinner and my colleagues are enjoying sharing the rest today.

I packed in a punnet of peaches, one of nectarines and two plums. I did big-bit chopping.

I’d thought it looked like quite a healthy recipe and was enjoying my virtuous feelings as I bought fat-free yoghurt. Then I got home and realised there was 175g of butter in it, which luckily I had in the fridge. I also forgot to buy more plain flour but replacing it with the strong white stuff worked perfectly well.

Stone fruit yoghurt cake

Stone fruit yoghurt cake

A big square omelette

A big square omelette

It’s not, but it does look like one doesn’t it. I’m not afraid to admit that.

Conclusions:

  • Butter mountain.
  • Delicious mountain.
  • Why have I started describing things as ‘virtuous’ because they’re fat free? This is terrible! I haven’t even been watching Philadelphia ads. I need to check myself.

House of fun

Posted in Uncategorized by guardiangirl on October 2, 2009

“Wouldn’t it be hilarious to have 70s wallpaper with faces on it in the hall?”

No doubt.

I don’t have the final say on the walls of my flat, which is why it’s done out in mint-green woodchip, but if I did I’d cover it in 70s wallpaper and be rolling around laughing.

I have attempted to copy this week’s ‘house of fun’ look as best I can.

The results are pretty much as unsuccessful as ever.

A good vintage

A good vintage

 

A fine mess

A fine mess

The small yellow framed postcard, barely discernable in the half-dark, was actually made for me by a friend – that’s the closest I can get. It’s also the furthest I could get with my camera, as my flat’s so narrow. It’s a bit like a boat, with none of the charm.

Skull art

Skull art

Antler art

Antler art

These paintings were a gift from a much-adored friend. Maybe I should ask him to spray ‘Miss’ in big letters across them for me in a declaration of independence. I could even go one further and ask him to spray ‘Ms’.

House of fun

House of fun

House of one

House of one

'Hilarious' wallpaper

'Hilarious' wallpaper

'Depressing' woodchip

'Depressing' woodchip

 

Conclusions:

  • I’ll stick with what I got. It might not be glamorous, but at least it’s not black and yellow.

Thai red lentil soup

Posted in Recipes, Uncategorized by guardiangirl on October 1, 2009

This soup was 100% delicious. It didn’t take that long to make, tasted of a million wonderful flavours, didn’t explode all over the kitchen. I managed to find all the ingredients except the deep-fried shallots, and I’d already psychologically prepared myself for that eventuality. It also tasted delicious reheated for breakfast – yes, breakfast – this morning. I’m having it for lunch too, then I’m showering in it later and falling asleep in a tub of it. Tomorrow I’m wearing it instead of clothes.

I thought that might be one of those jokes where it becomes funny if you push it further, but it turns out it was one of the ones that isn’t funny.

Pics:

Thai red lentil soup

Thai red lentil soup

MY red lentil soup (it's not Terry's)

MY red lentil soup (it's not Terry's)

I think I gotta get 9/10 for food styling today even though the rear bowl of soup is all splattered in a most distasteful way and my photography’s still at 0/10.

 

Conclusions:

  • This soup is worth making.
  • Go to the ‘foreignerz’ aisle of the supermarket and get your coconut milk there – it costs a third of the price of the tins in the ‘white people cooking thai for friends this evening’ aisle.
  • While the lentils are boiling, watch the Dallas ‘Red File’ two-parter. Oh my Christ, this was the best telly I’ve ever seen! I’m still indebted to the Guardian for teaching me about Dallas box-sets. I watch an episode most evenings. I now refuse to embark on any romantic relations unless they promise to be just like Bobby n Pamela’s. I love Pamela. I shout at the screen and shake my fists at JR, and sometimes after an especially great episode I say to my cat: “Cripes, George, what a corker, eh?” , Wallace and Gromit style.  I love Miss Ellie and Jock, that old tyke! I think about them all when I’m not watching. I even kinda like Lucy these days, and Cliff’s all right too. It makes me wonder what other TV programmes might secretly be good. And how I’m going to survive when I get to the end of the first boxset.