Sarah Kendal from the House of Beth sent me several photos from the June 27 fashion launch I wrote about on Tuesday that featured a collection of Virginia Woolf,-inspired fashions.
They look quite Woolfian and writerly to me. What do you think? You can find more photos of the event on the House of Beth’s Facebook page.
Today I am longing for London. The reason is the House of Beth fashion launch featuring a collection based on inspiring women in history, one of whom is Virginia Woolf.
I got an invite via email today. And the launch is tomorrow, June 27. Which means I can only be there in my dreams. Luckily, I can view lots of images to inspire my nocturnal flights of fancy.
The event showcases collections based on Woolf, Audrey Hepburn and Sappho and will be held at the House of Beth location in the BBC radio building on Marylebone high street. It includes “free drinks, beautiful cupcakes, scrumptious strawberries and a striking new collection inspired by the Ancient Greek love poet, Sappho.”
Detail of dress bodice in the Virginia Woolf Collection
House of Beth describes itself as “an online ethical fashion marketplace selling pre-loved clothes on behalf of charity shops and ethical brands.” The company also styles charity shop clothes into
collections based on inspiring women, such as Woolf, Hepburn and Sappho. The store’s models are of various ages and sizes, and their photos are not airbrushed.
The foundation and its awards are inspired by Virginia Woolf, and this Woolf quote appears prominently on the foundation’s website:
Women have sat indoors all these millions of years, so that by this time the very walls are permeated by their creative force, which has, indeed, so overcharged the capacity of bricks and mortar that it must needs harness itself to pens and brushes and business and politics.
Intellectual freedom depends on material things. Poetry depends upon intellectual freedom, and women have always been poor, not for two hundred years, but from the beginning of time … That is why I have laid so much stress on money and a room of one’s own. Virginia Woolf, A Room of One’s Own, 1929
Even though Woolfians declared June 21 Clarissa Day, this week’s crop of Woolf sightings include no media mentions of that first-time event.
Instead, my daily Google alerts were swamped with links to stories mentioning the Edward Albee play, all of which — as always — I have omitted from my listing. What’s left are just 30 sightings, despite the fact that it has been more than two weeks since I posted the last Woolf sighting, Riches include Woolf and the Jubilee of her time.
The Many Sides of Jack Dorsey, Wired News (blog) Press briefings transform into critiques of Virginia Woolf novels. A comment about Dorsey’s game-changing startup, Square—which lets anyone accept credit …
An Introductory Feminist Reading List, ThinkProgress
A Room of One’s Own, Virginia Woolf: Woolf is arguing for educational access and economic independence as necessary preconditions for women who want to …
Theatre: Plough Plays, Varsity Online
Strolling into the favourite village of Richard Brooke and Virginia Woolf, we are greeted with the magical sight of what seems to be a congregation of …
Rainy tales, Daily News & Analysis
My favourite monsoon read is To The Light House by Virginia Woolf.The stream of consciousness technique incorporated makes it very dreamy and surreal.
Doing up your study your way, Times of India
No, not the kind that Virginia Woolf had referred to but a small, quiet room where you can spend some time with your favourite books away from the madness of …
24-hour intellectual capital, Times Higher Education
… said the title of the festival had been inspired by his own research on novels such as James Joyce’s Ulysses and Virginia Woolf’s Mrs Dalloway – both of which …
It’s surrounded by the world-famous, romantic garden and was where Vita Sackville-West (close friend of Virginia Woolf) did most of her writing. IMAGE: National Trust John Hammond Hidden at the bottom of Irish playwright Shaw’s garden was a rotating …
Paris’ Village Voice Is ClosingHuffington Post (blog)
It is full of character: its eclectic collection includes not only the latest English novels, but also such relatively esoteric perennials as John Mepham’s Virginia Woolf, Michael Gray’s Song and Dance Man, and the wonderful mysteries of Fred Vargas.
The Sound of a Sentence, New York Times (blog)
What do you notice about the relationship between music and meaning in this passage, from Virginia Woolf’s “To the Lighthouse”? …the monotonous fall of the waves on the beach, which for the most part beat a measured and soothing tattoo to her thoughts ..
Fear no more the heat of the sun, Calcutta Telegraph
Consider Mrs Dalloway walking the streets of London on a Wednesday in June, 1923, in that eponymous novel by Virginia Woolf. The sights and sounds of London swirled around her as she went out to buy flowers for her party. Yet her mind tunnelled to the…
Is literature elitist? Of course it is, Daily News & Analysis Virginia Woolf recognised this ages before any of us when she said, “A woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write fiction.” Q: What’s the worst thing anyone has ever said about you? A: A review of Ancient Promises, which gleefully …
Hay Festival 2012: Street style, Telegraph.co.uk Virginia Woolf introduced us to Orlando, one of the world’s more elegant cross-dressers. Hemingway gave us Brett, “damned good-looking. She wore a slipover jersey sweater and a tweed skirt, and her hair was brushed back like a boy’s.
Antigonick by Anne Carson – review, The Guardian
Carson, a poet influenced by authors as diverse as Sappho, Euripides, Emily Brontë, Gertrude Stein and Virginia Woolf, is known both for innovative translations of ancient texts and for her restrained but searing confessional poetry (try “The Glass …
‘The Chaperone,’ by Laura Moriarty,New York Times
Familiar as this seems — staid Midwestern matron confronts permissive urban world, ineffable longings stir — Moriarty’s plot appears at first to provide an opportunity for exploring what happens when, as Virginia Woolf put it, “Chloe likes Olivia …
Today’s Page: June 8th, Iran Book News Agency
She translated Virginia Woolf’s “The Waves” over a 10-month period in 1937. In 1951 she published, in France, the novel “Memoires d’Hadrien”, which she had been writing with pauses for a decade. The novel was an immediate success and met with great …
Hat Fair fun, Daily Echo
Meanwhile ShadyJane’s Edinburgh Fringe hit show of 2011, Sailing On, comes to a local ladies toilet near you for an evening in the company of Ophelia and Virginia Woolf (tickets from Theatre Royal Winchester). Dutch company Close Act will bring a new …
Tahmima Anam on complicated literary heroines, Telegraph.co.uk
Fragile, sexually ambiguous, and with her heart in the past, Mrs Dalloway (1925) is an ephemeral presence in Virginia Woolf’s masterpiece. Yet she sparkles with life, prompting her old lover to note her presence, simply and repeatedly: “there she was”.
One Last Day at BEA: Jimmy Fallon, Kirstie Alley, and More Jokes About Fifty …, Vulture
If her last novel, On Beauty, was an homage to EM Forster, this one owes a debt to Virginia Woolf. And it redeems a history of writing books that she feels didn’t turn out quite right. “I’ve never really been able to get the book on the page that I had …
Like the chevalier, we are all cross-dressers now, Evening Standard
Like Virginia Woolf’s Orlando, he spent the first half of his life a man, the second as a woman. Once a stooge of Louis XV in his personal secret police, he was later part of the French mission to the court of the Empress Elizabeth of Russia.
Summer of love stories, Chico News & Review
Bechdel is a literary wonder, effortlessly weaving together strands like the history of psychoanalysis, the novels of Virginia Woolf, mother-daughter rivalry and her personal love trials, with a mixture of self-effacement and wit that never rings false …
Meet the Staff at Highbrow Magazine: Q&A With Writer Mike Mariani, Highbrow Magazine
Authors: Vladimir Nabokov, JD Salinger, William Faulkner, Virginia Woolf, Sylvia Plath, Marilynne Robinson, Annie Dillard, Hunter S. Thompson, Lewis Carroll, it goes on. Artists (filmmakers): Terrence Malick, Henry Selick, Quentin Tarantino, ..
And this photo, provided by Kris Lundberg, shows Shelley Ray reading Vanessa and Marla Yost reading Virginia. For more photos and a highlighted video, visit the company’s Facebook page.