Princess Shmincess

Princess and Lolita are often synonymous to some people, and Princesslyness is frequently the topic of many a blog post. Today, when I went to check my blog roll I was surprised (well, not that surprised) to find two different blogs talking about how Lolita makes them feel like a princess, and both posts, as well as many of the previous posts I have seen about Lolitas and princesses, can pretty much be summed up with the tagline from the movie A Little Princess: "Every girl everywhere is a princess." Well, that's great for those girls that enjoy that, but what about those who don't want to be princesses? I'm not just talking about girls who would rather slay dragons and go on adventures, because it is argued that princesses can slay as many dragons as they want, I'm talking about the girls who simply don't like having such a term as "princess" applied to either themselves, or the fashion they wear.

I don't feel the need to prove myself to my inner 8 year old Caro-chan by living the fantasy filled life that I wished for when I grew up. Hell, if I did feel the need to prove myself to her I would be living in the Addams Family house, and riding my trained white tiger to astronaut/famous author/circus performer work every day.

I never wanted to be a princess when I was little, and I certainly don't now just because I wear Lolita. I don't want to whistle while I work or learn to bake or giggle politely behind a lace fan. I am much more prone to bitching openly, ordering Chinese takeout, and laughing loudly at inappropriate moments. I don't see what building yourself a Disneyesque (or otherwise) fantasy world really has to do with wearing petticoats and designer dresses from Japan. I would much rather live my life as it is, with some frilly dresses thrown in for fun, than to construct for myself an elaborate fantasy as an excuse to wear fancy clothes and like pretty things.

Princesses may need to stick together, but the rest of us, the dragon slayers, the princes, the adventurers, the wicked queens, the brooding vampires, the just-plain-old girls, the grrlz, the boys, the bois, and even the regular every-day grownups who are perfectly happy being a grownup, well, we're fine on our own.

Bodyline, The Lolita's Walmart Part, 4: Brand Knock-offs, Reproductions, and Rip-offs

Part 4 of my Bodyline series focuses on the touchy subject of knock-offs, reproductions, and rip-offs. There is pretty much no way I can word this to make everyone happy. I can say "Why spend hundreds of dollars on a brand piece when you can get an acceptable knock-off from Bodyline?" and people will shout "But you don't understand how ~special~ brand makes me feel! Besides a clothing company making the same thing as another is theft!", but I don't care. Everyone is aware that these skirts are rip offs, no one is trying to pass them off as originals, Bodyline isn't claiming Mr. Yan lovingly hand painted them, and as far as I am aware the original brands who made these prints stopped selling them years ago, thus aren't loosing any money because no one is even able to buy them directly from the brand any more. Besides, have the Lolita's who are crying "Theft!" ever looked in a mainstream non-high end fashion magazine? Pick up something like Teen People, there are whole sections devoted to how awesome it is when places like H&M are selling things directly "inspired" from high end runways. Many mainstream fashion trends developed by trying to find knock-offs of what rich and famous people are buying, Lolita is really not that much different in that respect. Knock-offs are certainly not unique to Lolita, so please, stop acting like you never even heard of fake Gucci bags and those "Smells Like..." perfumes you can buy at Walmart until Bodyline released a Fruits Parlor print with "Angelic Pretty" edited off and it opened up your eyes to the world of evil design thefts. Just because other fashions do this, doesn't make it perfectly OK, but it doesn't make it an abhorrent evil that knows no rival just because it's done to something you really like.

Enough with that rant XD If you're still with me, and haven't closed your browser in anger and rushed off to weep on a Gothic & Lolita Bible over the crimes committed against Asuka and Maki, today were going to be talking about the different knock-offs that Bodyline sells. The good, the bad, and the ugly ones.

The Good Knock-offs
These Bodyline replicas are actually very cute. They seem to be made of good quality materials and either look just like the originals, or are changed a bit but still look pretty damned good.

Originally an Angelic Pretty coat, Bodyline makes a pretty faithful replica. The hearts are moved up a bit, I think in order to be pockets.


Aah shoe replicas. Unless a pair of shoes are made out of leather, I won't spend 100+ on them. No injection molded pleater shoe is ever going to be worth much to me. Brand or not, they are cheaply made, and they should be cheap. Bodyline's knock-off of these famous Baby, the Stars Shine Bright shoes are nearly identical.


Don't confuse this Innocent World knock-off with a "bad" knock-off just because it uses the same fabric. Not all brand dresses custom print their own fabric, but instead buy it from a fabric shop. The fabric used in this Bodyline knock-off is almost gaurenteed to be the exact same fabric as the brand version. Metamorphose, and I think a couple indies brands, have also used this same fabric.


Originally an Atelier Boz JSK, Bodyline makes a pretty good copy. As is typical of Bodyline knock-offs, it doesn't look like it has much poof. Maybe they just don't use a very poofy petticoat, or maybe, as a cheaper version, skimp on the skirt yardage a bit.


An oldie but a goody! This was a skirt Bodyline used to sell years ago, and it's a knock-off of an old Angelic Pretty skirt. The lace is a bit cheaper the the original, and the bow looks a little deflated, but other than that, it looks cute to me.

The "Bad" Knock-offs
These are the knock-offs that make people the most upset, print knock-offs. While Bodyline has never made a knock-off with the original brand's logo on the print, they are still not fooling anyone.


No one ever bothers to mention this print when they talk about Bodyline knock-offs. Originally an Angelic Pretty print, Bodyline edits out the "Angelic Pretty" and turns it into a simple JSK.


Another, bit more recent, print originally from Innocent World that is often forgotten about when people talk about the evils of Bodyline. It was released along side the Fruits Parlor skirt, but hardly gets any attention. Once again, "Innocent World" is edited out of knock-off and replaced by a little bow.


Probably the most infamous Bodyline Knock-off, and the one that caused some uproar on EGL, Angelic Pretty's Fruits Parlor. The Angelic Pretty version, when it bothered to pop up for sale, would often go for hundreds of dollars more than it's original price on the second hand market. Owning this fruit covered stripe and polkadot extravaganza from Angelic Pretty was a status symbol, no doubt about it. Then Bodyline released a version for $50, the skirt was sold as low as $11. And soon everyone had the skirt (which I promise you is not as fugly as the dress) in every colorway Bodyline Sold it in.

The Ugly Knock-offs
These dresses are either a total failure, or the original design was so WTF it's a wonder why anyone would want to make knock-offs of it in the first place!

While the Bodyline dress is not really ugly at all (depending on your opinions on the fabric, which tends to be love it or hate it), but it looks nothing like the Angelic Pretty original. I actually laughed out loud when I saw this dress next to the dress it wishes and hopes that it will one day grow up to be.

Eh, points for trying I guess? This Bodyline knock-off is an ambitious replica of a very elaborate Baby, The Stars Shine Bright dress. Poor fabric choices and a general lack-of-effort makes the Bodyline knock-off look very blah.


I am saving the worst for last with this Moi-même-Moitié replica. The original, while, in my opinion is not that great, it at least doesn't look like a misshapen bunch of satin rags attached to a pencil skirt.

Knock-offs, unless they are commissioned by a very fine seamstress, are pretty much never going to be as nice as the originals. Do you really expect to be able to buy a $300+ dollar dress for $50? Of course not. If you have been into Lolita for any amount of time, and own even a small amount of brand dresses, you know that they prices they charge aren't too ridiculous for what you are getting, soft, thick cotton and yards upon yards of high-quality lace. But knock-offs are a way of getting a similar style of dress for much cheaper. If you can find, afford, and fit into the original dress, then by all means, go for it, it will most likely be a thousand times lovelier than any knock-off. But sometimes one of those 3 things will set you back, you might just not have the hundreds of dollars, the right waist size, or the dress might be from so long ago in the Lolita time line you have very little chance of ever finding it. Or maybe you just want a piece or two in a style that you are still flirting with and don't yet feel comfortable dropping a large chunk of change on it ("I love it for $30, but not for $300!"). If this is the case, there's really no shame in a replica or a knock-off. If you love and want a dress, buy it, even if, for some reason, you have no choice but to buy a knock-off.

If you are interested in checking out many more of Bodyline's replicas, mostly for a good lulz, check out this site. It's a very comprehensive listing of most of the knock-offs Bodyline has put out over the years. I never even knew some of these pieces were knock-offs! Some pieces that I always though of as "Classic Bodyline Fug" are apparently pretty accurate replicas of real brands. I guess that just goes to show you that just because it's brand, doesn't mean it's tasteful.

Ask Miss Caro-chan: Following The Rules of Lolita


Today's Ask Miss Caro-chan is from someone calling themselves Confused, Confused asks
Your question: Why does everyone so strictly follow the rules when the 'rulebook' is from like 2006?
I assume you are talking about the Lolita Handbook? Which is the only Lolita rulebook I can think of off the top of my head. I'll start off by saying that not everyone follows the "rules", there are always people who break them, some look good breaking the rules, others... well, are living proof of why such rules exist. The Lolita Handbook isn't even really a set of rules, it is a few guidelines and suggestions made so that people just getting into Lolita can have a better understanding of the style.

Some people get too hung up on the fact that others call them "rules" (the handbook doesn't actually use the phrase "rules") and take offense to this, thinking that someone's trying to tell them how to dress, and thus, refuse to listen to common sense suggestions like "wear a petticoat", "Your skirt shouldn't be so short your butt hangs out" and "whiteface looks stupid". You are not "being yourself" just because you are willingly doing the exact opposite of a suggestion, you are still being swayed by the rules just as much as someone who takes the suggestion to heart, you are simply swaying in the opposite direction.

Lolita, as a fashion, doesn't even have too many "rules" beyond basic shape and a variety of aesthetics to choose from, they are not so much rules as simply what Lolita is. Once you start going outside of these vague and generous outlines, you're just not in Lolita territory any more. It's as simple as that. Many other fashion's don't have girls demanding that unrelated things be considered part of the fashion just because they enjoy them both, but Lolita seems to have it's fair share of people like this. It's one thing to take something you enjoy and try to combine it with Lolita, it's another to use the term on whatever you please just because you feel like it. After all, you wouldn't call a medieval gown Rockabilly just because you like both Rockabilly and medieval gowns. Even if you made that gown out of cherry print fabric, it still wouldn't be Rockabilly because it simply isn't.

The guidelines set in the Lolita Handbook are certainly not out-of-date just because the project was started 3 years ago. Sure, some Lolita fads and trends have passed, and some things are now more or less accepted than others, but the Handbook is about the Lolita basics, which, as a non-mainstream fashion, are prone to sticking around much much longer. I do often hear people saying that the Lolita Handbook is out-of-date, and I honestly don't see it. Besides a couple things that could be classified as simply a matter of opinion, it seems pretty spot on to me. If you do feel that the Handbook is out-of-date or just plain wrong, I would be interested in knowing which bits, not to argue with you or anything like that XD I am simply curious which parts of the Handbook people disagree with.

Some people, on both sides of the argument, really need to lighten up about the rules. Some people need to realize that leopard print and sheer blouses are sometimes acceptable in Lolita, and other's need to stop taking fashion guidelines as a personal insult against your freedom to wear whatever you want. It's a silly fashion that follows a variety of different aesthetics, not a science, or an instruction manual for setting up a Blu-Ray player. Try not to worry about it so much.

Lolita Craftaton Part 1: Felt Cakes. Plus A Few Pictures of My BJD

If you've been keeping up with me on Twitter, you might notice my constant craft tweets! That's because I have about a month (now considerably less!) to make enough cute crafts to fill up a vendors table. Today I just want to show off one of things I have been making, one of the more useless things I might add, but they're very fun to make, none the less. I'm talking about felt cakes.



My goal is to make 8 pieces, so that I have a whole cake worth of slices! So only 5 more to go. Do you think I can do it? I'm not too sure if I can, or even if I can think up 8 different kinds of cake to make! I do have the urge to make mini cake top hats. Tacky, yes, but they look really fun to make! And I really like making felt whipped cream dollops, they are just really satisfying for some reason.

Other things I have been making, which I will probably make separate posts about about are rings, brooches, sweets charms, rose hair clips, and a few veiled fascinators. Maybe even some small bound books if I think I have the energy to do that XD I am trying to focus more on making cute stuff for the convention. After it's over I'm going to focus more on Gothicky and Classic accessories.

I am also trying to think up ways to set up a table. If I was mostly selling Gothic stuff, I would be all set. I would take one of my lace table clothes, put a tapestry or two over it, and use some of my collection of antique books to display things. But that might look a little out of place, so I will probably go for something a little simpler

Finally, because I was messing around with my new camera, a few BJD photos. I have a rather large collection of ball jointed dolls, and most of my girls wear Lolita clothes. This is my Alice in Labyrinth Chloe, my current favorite. She's wearing a Dollheart blouse (to hide the fact that he head is heavily blushed and her neck... not at all blushed), under a Dollmore dress.


I love me some hip and "artsy" off center photos.


And sometimes I even bother taking pictures of her whole face. I love her sleepy eyes.

I'm awful at posing this girl. She's on a Dreaming Doll body, which is completely useless for posing, but it's beautifully sculpted. So she just sits around looking pretty most of the time.

Extravagant Teas For Extravagant Princesses

Lets face it, you are a delicate princess with expensive tastes. You're not snobbish, oh certainly not! but anything coarse would simply offend your delicate self. You need the finest clothes made out of soft, thick cotton, edged in beautiful and soft lace. Your hair is brushed 100 times each morning, to make it so soft that it doesn't irritate your fair and ladylike face. You sit at your vanity, laptop perched among fine perfumes and powders, on a velvet stool filled with soft down. You sip, what? Why tea, of course! Out of a beautifully painted porcelain cup, edged in fine gold. But not any kind of tea will do! Only the finest tea can quench your thirst. But where to find such delights in this harsh day and age? No worries! Because Caro-chan has braved the deep dark internet to help you in your eternal quest for a tea as refined as you, and nearly as expensive as your dress.
  • Chrysanthemum Silver Needle $21.95 for 3 oz. The Chrysanthemum's white petals yield a refreshing and buttery cup with a sweet fragrance, resulting in a blend that dazzles with its savory aroma, rich body and smooth delicate flavor.
  • Monkey Picked Oolong Tea $25 for 2oz. This is the ultimate oolong tea. When infused, the unbroken, evenly-sized leaves gracefully unfurl to reveal the most complex Oolong bouquet available. Its legendary name refers to Buddhist monks who trained monkeys to harvest the youngest leaves from the top of the wild tea trees.
  • Rose Silver Needle $21.95 for 3 oz. White tea from China's southern Fujian province Silver Needle is only harvested for a couple of days each spring and boasts young tender buds plucked right before opening. Also known as Bai Hao Yin Zhen, our Silver Needle white tea has exquisitely shaped buds enveloped in white down. Scented with pink rose petals, this blend captivates with its savory aroma, rich body and smooth, delicate taste.
  • Gyokuro $35 for 3 oz. Green tea from Japan, Gyokuro, also known as "precious jade dew" because of its unique blue-green color and naturally sweet taste, is the highest quality Japanese green tea. Made only with the earliest buds of the first spring flush season, Gyokuro usually grows in the shade for around 20 days before hand-harvested. Due to reduced sunlight, less photosynthesis occurs resulting in increased amounts of amino acids. chlorophyll, and caffeine. This impacts Gyokuro's color, taste and aroma producing a sweet, delicate tea with a soft, mellow body.
  • Shincha $32 for 3 oz. Green tea from Japan, Shincha is a type of sencha green tea, picked from the "first flush" spring harvest in Shizuoka, one of Japans highest quality and most sought after teas. Rich in amino acids, catechins and antioxidants, this rare, first flush green tea exhibits a characteristic bright, emerald green color, strong aroma and refined sweetness.
  • Queen of Babylon $15 for 2 0z. A whimsical tasting rare white tea blended with immunity boosting pomegranate seeds, sour cherries, sweet carrot bits, apple and pineapple pieces.
  • Silver Yin Zhen Pearls White Tea $22 for 2 oz. The world's rarest and most famous tea, Silver Needle, is expertly hand-rolled into delicate downy white tea pearls. When steeped, they gently unfurl to release a sweet, fragrant, mellow brew.
Oh my! But what if you find your purse lacking the sufficient funds to cover your need for dainty teas? Fear not! You need not give up your dainty pursuits of the perfect cup of tea, for there are many teas, in lovely flavors, that even the most frugal of princesses could afford.
  • Coco Chia Rooibos $8.95 for 4oz. Coco Chai rooibos tea is a handcrafted, caffeine-free chai tea made from South African rooibos blended with shredded coconut, red peppercorns and aromatic spices including ginger, cinnamon and cardomon. This twist on a classic chai tea will surprise with its intoxicating aroma and spicy but sweet flavor.
  • Wild Blossoms & Berries $8.95 for 4oz. Wild Blossoms and Berries herbal tea is a fruity infusion comprised of black currant, lemongrass, hibiscus, chamomile, mint, licorice root, and spices that produce memorable refreshment. A well balanced tart and sweet herbal infusion, Wild Blossoms and Berries herbal tea is a Mighty Leaf favorite iced tea blend.
  • Japanese Wild Cherry Green Tea $5 for 2 oz. Sencha green tea flavored with candied cherry pieces and rose petals. This combination produces a tempestously sweet infusion.
  • California Fields $8.95 for 4 oz. Chinese black and green tea is blended with California sunflowers, cactus flowers, and rhubarb creating our signature California Fields black tea blend. A lovely fruity tea that is subtly complex. California Fields makes a delicious iced tea with its black and green tea base.
  • Earl Grey Creme Black Tea $4.50 for 2oz. A smooth and rich combination of classic Earl Grey black tea and Bergamot oil with a touch of dairy-free creaminess coming from the vanilla pieces and cream flavoring added.

Ask Miss Caro-chan: Making The Most Out Of Storage Space

Today's Ask Miss Caro-chan comes from College Frill, she asks:
I've recently received news of getting a roomate after a semester of only me. Now, I'm having to move my things around in my new found, smaller space. What would you suggest as a good space saver in a dormitory? Would a steamer trunk work for my sewing and Lolita things?
It really all depends on how much sewing stuff and Lolita you've got. If you only have a few dresses and a few yards of fabric, I would say to go for it, but beware that steamer trunks take up a lot of room and might not hold a whole lot. If you want a new steamer trunk, it's probably going to cost you a pretty penny, typically around $100. An antique one is going to be a bit cheaper if you hunt around at yard sales, but unless you put some work into it and refinish the inside and scrub the living daylights out of it, I wouldn't keep my clothes in there. This is coming from experience as my mom is an avid collector of antiques and has several antique steamer trunks. We mostly keep books and old VHS tapes in them as they tend to be rather musty and the lining tends to crumble. Not exactly the ideal place to keep hundreds of dollars worth of clothes. But, if you don't mind the cost, and don't have a whole lot of clothes to fit in it, a new steamer trunk would be a very lovely place to store your Lolita wardrobe.

If you have a bit more clothes, and are looking for something a little cheaper, you might want to consider a clothing rack. They are, sadly, not as pretty as a steamer trunk, but they do hold a lot of clothes, are rather compact, and they are cheap (about $30-$40). Make sure to get a sturdy one though, as Lolita clothes tend to be very heavy. There are several things you can do to clothing racks to lolify them a bit, you can start by spray painting it a color to match your wardrobe, maybe baby blue or deep burgundy. Wrap the sides of the rack with ribbons or fake flowers. If you can, suspend a bed canopy to the ceiling above it to keep dust off your clothes. If you can't, or just don't want to, attach a bed canopy to your ceiling, you can drape one over your clothes rack, or even use a pretty lace table cloth. In my bedroom, I have a wooden clothes rack that I cover with a lace table cloth with a Virgin Mary design on it.

If you have even less space to keep your clothes, go in search of some under-bed storage boxes. You can easily find the clear tupperware kind, but if you want something a little prettier, look for the sturdy cardboard ones. Find it in a pretty print, or even plain and decorate it yourself with paint, decoupage, or with fabric scraps.

If you have lots of accessories, invest in a few hatboxes. Hat boxes can be easily stacked on top of one another somewhere out of the way. Decorate these to your hearts content so they look pretty, and not just like a stack of boxes.

There are lots of ways to store your clothes if you don't have a huge walk in closet! You just have to get a bit creative sometimes, and be willing to let either the clothes, or the storage containers they are in, to be displayed out in the open. With Lolita this isn't usually too much of a problem, as the clothes are pretty enough to put on display!

Dressing More Mature In Lolita

A quick note about this post: This is not meant to be a "Rules of Lolita" post, as some people seem to think. This is, what I thought was quite obviously, tips for when you don't feel comfortable dressing in pink and pastel and the general over-the-top Sweet Lolita that is so common at the moment. In short, this is how to dress more mature than the common Sweet Lolita. Not how to do it right, period. If you do wear OTT Sweet and love it, good for you, this article was not aimed at judging you for it, so ladies, please, don't get your bloomers in a bunch over it.

Some girls will gasp at the idea of a Lolita who's role model isn't a Disney princess or a pink confectionery. To some girls, it's all about acting young. If that's your thing, go for it, but some of us want something a bit more sophisticated. Were not all skipping down toy isles, whistling our favorite Disney song while looking for the perfect shade of pink Barbie tiara that will match our newest teddy bear covered dress. Some of us look places other than the toy isle for our Lolita inspiration. If you want to make your outfits look a bit more mature, here are a few dos and don'ts. It might seem like there are a lot of them, but you really only need to remember a couple of them for a coordinate to start looking a bit more mature.

Wear tights or over-the-knee socks. I know I say this all the time, but I live by this tip, especially since I haven't been 15 in quite some time, but wear over-the-knee socks or even tights. Socks that fall below the knee tend to look very juvenile. Which is fine and dandy if you're one of those rare girls who happens to be in her twenties but looks 14, but for everyone else, it's probably going to make you look goofy. So keep those socks above your knees!

Wear muted colors. If you love the look of pastels, but don't want to look like you fell into a pile of baby clothes and just wore whatever stuck, go for muted pastel colors. Soft dusty rose, gentle slate blues, or even mauve. Darker muted colors such as burgundy or a dark navy are also a good way to add color to a more mature Lolita outfit without feeling like a nursery print wallpaper.

Stick to classical prints, or none at all. Obviously you don't want kittens and teddy bears dancing in their pajamas and eating cakes on the hem of your skirt. I would even avoid things like plaids (unless it's very dark and simple plaids), gingham, and stuff like cherries or strawberries. Instead choose pretty classic florals or even just solid colors.

Wear cream, ivory, or off-white instead of white. White blouses, socks, and shoes are pretty much the stand by matching pieces to a Lolita coordinate, but try something a little less stark, like a cream, ivory, or off-white instead. Paired with a skirt or JSK in a muted color, it will give the outfit a much softer look, and hopefully be less reminiscent of a school girl. Going through the Bibles I couldn't find an example of this, mostly because pictures in the mooks are so highly contrasted it's hard to tell! So instead of just blouses, here are two, rather lace monstery, dresses, one in offwhite, and one in white, even though they are similar dresses, the offwhite one looks much more mature.

Avoid large Peter Pan collars. Huge, lace ruffled Peter Pan collars have a much younger feel than high necked collars, square or sweet heart necklines, or even just smaller Peter Pan collars that aren't covered in yards of lace. I, personally, think that a square or sweetheart neckline is the best option. You can even mimic this neckline with a JSK, go blouseless and wear a bolero or cardigan.

Keep the poof minimal. Don't feel like you need to have a super inflated cupcake silhouette, of course, you need poof, but you don't need hyper amounts of it. Wear a less extreme petticoat and make sure that sleeves on dresses and blouses aren't super poofy. Maybe even try a skirt with a box pleat instead of gathers.

Don't over accessorize. Don't be a victim of accessory overload, while that might be normal for Sweet Lolita, with the more mature or Classic styles too many accessories tends to look silly. Keep it simple with a delicate necklace and maybe even a bracelet or a couple rings.

Carry a "grown-up" purse. Bunny bags, bags shaped like candies, or anything with lots of rhinestones and ruffles should be avoided. Pick something very simple, with just an emblem or a single bow for decoration.

Style your hair simply. Don't feel like super hairsprayed pigtails and perfect ringlets are your only hair options. Style it simply but elegantly, a soft curl, two simple braids, or with your bangs swept off to one side. I, personally, find that side swept bangs look best with more mature looks, as bangs, especially very blunt ones, can look very childish.

Don't wear a huge head piece. If you want a more mature look, your first step, after not wearing pastel pink, is to avoid too many giant bows, ruffles, and other frilly stuff. The easiest giant bow to get rid of is the one you might be tempted to put on your head! Instead of a big bow, or even a ruffly headdress, look for a nice headband with a small ribbon bow off to the side. You could even go *gasp* headdressless! I know it's often taboo, but you can look so much more mature if you just have nicely styled hair. Try looking for one of those headbands that look like braids if you neither want to style your hair too much, or wear a headpiece.

Don't wear very short skirts. Keep the hemline demure! Angelic Pretty has been known for pumping out skirts that are barely 16 inches long. So keep your skirts at just above the knee at the shortest. Even go for a calf length skirt if you want something very sophisticated.

If you must have a cutesy print, buy it in black or cream. I know that I fall for cute prints every now and then, I just can't help it! If you must must must have the new Hyper Bunnies Teach Teddy Bears How To Bake Cupcakes print, buy it in black, or if they release it in it, cream or offwhite. You will have a much easier time making a pale dress look less infantile than a pink or pastel blue dress, and black colorways usually look less over the top than pink colorways.

So, there you go, Caro-chan's dos and don'ts for when you're trying to make your wardrobe a little more age appropriate. Of course, there's no real "age-limit" to Sweet Lolita, even for the sweetest Sweet Lolita, but some people simply don't feel comfortable wearing pastels and adorable bunny covered prints, and hopefully these tips will reassure people that they don't need to hang up their bloomers for good on their 18th birthday.

Innoncent World's Furniture Print



I know I usually just talk about Meta or Baby when it comes to the newest brand items, but this time I'm all about Innocent World. While browsing through the newest Gothic & Lolita Bible I was blown away by their newest print. Take a look at that print, it's different kinds of furniture! I love it because it's both charming and unique. And, the strangest thing is, I really love the pink and blue versions and don't really care for the black. The capelet is detachable, so you can wear it just as a JSK, and it comes in both an above the knee and a longer version.

Does anyone know what this print is actually called?

How Many Lolita Crafts Can I Finish In A Month?


Some of my growing deco hoard!

Late last night a Lolita panel and a table in the vendors room for the upcoming U-con just kind of fell in my lap. Which is pretty cool, except for the fact that the convention is less than a month away! So I am going to be spending the next month slaving over a hot glue gun and needle-nosed pliers to build up a selection of Lolitay crafts. This convention is much smaller than the 2 other anime conventions in the area, and this is the first year they will be hosting it, so I'm not exactly expecting it to be Lolita central, but it's still something fun and frilly for me to do for a weekend! I've never hosted a panel at a larger convention, and I too often forget to even go to Lolita panels, so this will be something completely new to me. Luckily I have my friend Rayray, of Part Time Lolita, to help me with the panel, who is a bit more experienced with conventions than me!

This is also a really good opportunity for me to start working on an idea that I have been toying with for a while, and that is to start my very own brand. A burando of their own is pretty much every crafty Lolitas dream and I hope to have, at the very least, a place on Etsy to call my own in a few months. Now, I'm no seamstress, so I will be selling the varied accessories that I like to craft together. If you've been following me on Twitter you probably are aware that my latest craft adventure has been making stiff brimmed bonnets the old fashioned and sometimes incredibly frustrating way with a buckram and wire frame. I have just about perfected my bonnet patterns, both a half bonnet, and a full backed bonnet, as well as a mini tricorn hat. For the brand I call my own I plan on making mostly Gothic/Classic pieces such as bonnets, fascinators, corsages, and beaded necklaces, but I do also plan on making and selling pinker, cutesier, and generally more kawaiier things like hair clips, deco pins, rings, necklaces, and possibly even a few cake slice headbands just because I really enjoy making them. I have even been kicking around a couple different names for my dream brand!

I was just going to plan this without any kind of official blog announcement until I had everything ready, but telling you all about it really makes me motivated. Announcing my intentions is my first step to making it official, I can't back out now XD!

If any of you are from Connecticut, you might want to check out U-con, it looks like fun! In the mean time, I'll be updating with my Lolita craft progress using the "craftathon" tag on my blog.

Tutorial: Turning Waist Ties Into A Headbow

Let's face it, I have a problem with waist ties. I can't tie a bow behind my back, and I like to wear cardigans or jackets over dresses, so waist ties just get in the way. So if a skirt or a dress comes with detachable waist ties, off they go, to be crammed away in a drawer somewhere. Well, I've decided to put those waist ties to good use and make some headbows out of them! This works best for fancy looking waist ties, the kind with a little bit of lace along the edges, and is a great way to get a matching accessory for an all-over print dress.


Supplies
  • Detachable waist ties (I've used the ones from my Bodyline FruitsParlor knock-off!)
  • Scissors
  • Needle and thread
  • A plain headband or a hair comb

This is my shaky mouse drawn diagram of what you're going to be cutting. All inches are approximate and depend on how big you want your bow to be. Most waist ties are of a tapered shape, with the ends being wider than the parts that button to your dress, so you're going to want to cut evenly from both ties. If you have a waist tie that is of an even width the whole way through, you can save time and bulk by cutting one 18" strip from one tie instead of two 9" strips. You can't do that if your tie is tapered, because then your bow is going to look lopsided and stupid. And no one likes stupid lopsided bows.


The first step is to take the plunge and cut those ties up! You're going to want to cut them about 7 inches long. However long the bottom part of the bow is going to be, plus an inch or so.


Overlap the raw edges and sew the ends together. Don't worry about it being a nice and pretty stitch, this is all going to be hidden. I used a really ugly and lame running stitch. You could even glue this if you were extra lazy.


Now it's time to cut the strips for the looped part of the bow. Cut two sections about 9" long each.


Now sew them into a loop. If your tie is tapered, the raw ends of each piece are not going to be the same size as each other, one will be smaller, just match up the small ends and the big ends and sew them together. Again, your stitches don't have to be pretty.


Now cut a 6" strip from the remainder of the tie. You aren't going to use all 6", but it's best to have too much than too little. Fold the sides over to the back until it's about how big you want the middle "knot" of your bow to be. Take a look at your other head bows to compare. You should really iron this to keep it flat and neat. But, again, I was lazy, so I just stuck it in a heavy book while I was sewing to make it flat.


Gather your loop and strip at the seam line you made. Run another running stitch, with stitches about a half an inch long, and pull gently to gather. You might think you can just do one running stitch through both sides of the loop at the same time, but that's going to make your bow really flat and weird looking. We want some poof to our bow so it actually looks like a bow!


It almost looks like a bow now! Set the gathered loop on top of the strip and use some embroidery thread to simply tie the two pieces together. The middle part is going to be all sorts of ugly looking right now, but you're not going to be seeing that when it's done.


Take your pressed strip for the middle and sew one raw edge to the back of the middle of the bow.


Wrap the middle strip all the way around the front and bring it back to the back. Cut it to size, just an inch longer than it needs to be, fold the raw edge under, and sew it down. And ta da! You now have a bow! You can either sew a hair comb to the underside, or slip in a headband. If you are using a headband you can use a little hot glue to secure it to where you want it to sit on your head.


This is my durrr face :D
My finished headbow! Now I finally have the perfect match for my skirt. Please excuse my grown out hime cut that likes to curl in weird ways XD If you've made a headbow out of your waist ties, let me know. I would love to see them! I have a whole tote bag full of waist ties that I never use. Maybe I'll buy some lace and get a little creative with them next time.
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