Thursday 28 March 2013

See It Through- The Transparent Trend

Cast your mind back to the 90s. Back to your see through bags and rucksacks filled with everything from the latest Jacqueline Wilson book, a tin pencil case complete with bendy ruler and multi-way coloured biro, a Dairylea dunker and a pink, glittery lip gloss you got free from Bliss magazine. They were the must have bag, the Mulberry ‘Alexa’ of our time… hmm. No? Ok, maybe not. But they were popular nonetheless. Fleetingly they came and just as fleetingly they went, but are now it seems, making a comeback; very much like the long awaited return of Atomic Kitten and 5ive. Naturally.

Back in those days, we didn’t have a care in the world about having it all on show. The more stuff you could pack in and show off, the better. Now, its all: Iphone. Check. Designer purse. Check. Really old lip balm on its last legs. Check. So we have to be that tiny bit more careful when we’re flinging ourselves around the dance floor with the whole of our lives possessions on show. Quite literally, at first glance, it doesn’t look like the best and safest way to cart your stuff around but if handled correctly (and responsibly), this Spring catwalk trend can look super cool. To put minds at ease, the bigger bags such as the totes and shoulder bags have their own mini purse connected inside, making those more valuable items that little bit more safe. Making even more of a statement, the colours appear far from shy as they stand out in neon pinks, yellows, and purples, much like those seen on the catwalk of the SS13 collections from Stella McCartney, Gucci, and Burberry.





The see through craze is making bold moves across a range of other accessories too including heeled shoes, pointed flats, chunky necklaces, and even umbrellas. And by gosh, we need one of those right now… in this lovely season we like to call Spring?

Friday 15 March 2013

Borough Wines, Hackney Downs: Who knew?

Having lived in Hackney Central for nearly four years now, you would have thought I was pretty in the know of where to eat, drink, and get merry around these joints and would have also come to the realisation that there is more to life than the Mare Street Spoons. (No really, there is...).

For years now, I genuinely thought that the tatty looking 'Borough Wines' place next door to the Hackney Downs Tesco Express was merely a ye olde wine shop, that had probably been open for yonks, entertained maybe a couple customers a month, and was more than likely on the brink of shutting down due to poor sales and no love. A poor man's 'Oddbins' if you will. But how wrong I was. Turns out, it is in fact a once railway engineers' warehouse and now, an unassuming, kitsch little wine bar and shop. Last weekend, some friends and I after weeks and weeks of saying "we should pop in after work...it's only there right?", us all nodding in agreement, saying our goodbyes and tottering off in the opposite direction of the bar, finally took the left turn out of the station and went for a few glasses of red.



At just gone 6pm on a Saturday night, the place was already buzzing. Dimly lit, the narrow looking bar was flanked with long, wooden benches, occupied by chitter chattering small groups, large groups, and couples, all in good and quite boisterous spirits but the bar still invited us in to its open, homely feeling arms. The bar area had a back wall of wine bottle layered upon wine bottle and the white washed walls were lit up by long, teardrop shaped lights, hanging from the highest of ceilings. A lady welcomed us in and sat us down to a table, decorated in tea lights and a massive A3 sized wine menu, ready and waiting for us to peruse its list of 30+ vinos. Now, I'm no connoisseur when it comes to a glass of rouge or any other wine for that matter, so we thought it best to take the waitress' recommendation after she clearly caught us all faux pondering the menu and putting on our best "I want something with a fruity blend but an oakey scent" faces. She clocked that we knew diddly squat and so pointed out to us the South of France 'AC Cahors, Chateau les Croisilles, Prestige 2007', (we were obviously still none the wiser) which she said was a "dark red, sweet black cherry flavour, creamy with hints of chocolate and a leathery finish". Sounded divine.



And it was. It was exactly as she had described and after a monster catch up (a friend had flew in all the way from South Korea), we ordered the bottle. Glasses ranged from £4 to £5.25 and bottles from £20; a good price for a particularly great tasting wine. And that's coming from Jacob Creek's number one fan... Feeling a little bit peckish but with dinner plans elsewhere, wine and chat got us all fancying something to pick at. The menu had a selection of tapas and light bites, all of which had been matched up with a potential love interest in the form of a recommended wine but we eventually ordered the cheese board. This came with a rich selection of four cheeses and a pot of sweet chutney, plus a basket of warm, rustic bread and toasted slices too.



Red wine stained smiles and appetites satisfied enough for the bus ride into Islington for dinner, it was time to make a move. A super cheap bill, an unpretentious, chilled and relaxing atmosphere for catch ups, and a slightly hazy feeling in the head, it was a all in all a lovely evening. The same lady showed us out and wished us a good night and we headed back out onto the bustling Wilton Way road.