Girl Crush

Girl crushes; aren’t they wonderful!! I’ve had many a girl crush in my 23 years…

Thessaly la Force, founder of Girl Crush Zine (does what it says on the tin), has written this great piece for W Magazine, all about the the joys of having a little love for a female. Read it below then take yourself to the GCZ site to enjoy more!

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Everyone can use a role model—especially one who’s smart, stylish, elegant, and fun. Thessaly la Force explains the same-sex love that dare speak its name.

I developed my first girl crush—on the illustrator and ­writer ­Leanne Shapton—three years ago, when I was working as a Web producer at The New Yorker. A colleague of mine had Leanne’s second book on her desk, and one day I picked it up and slowly started turning the pages, transfixed. The book—­Important Artifacts and Personal Property From the Collection of ­Lenore Doolan and Harold Morris, Including Books, Street Fashion, and Jewelry—is a mock auction catalog that tells the story of a deteriorating relationship through the deacquisitioning of the ­couple’s possessions. It’s capricious, intelligent, and delicately done. ­

According to Google and my close interrogation of those who knew her, Leanne ­appeared to have a most enviable life: She lived in a stunning West Village apartment, all antique rugs and Farrow & Ball paint; wore a Dries Van Noten skirt as effortlessly as she did a painter’s smock; and was happily engaged to the handsome and successful publishing executive James Truman. I adored her from afar, and I suppose a part of me wanted to be her.

A generous friend who knew Leanne found my obsession amusing and arranged for the three of us to have a drink. On the appointed day, I stood in front of my bathroom mirror a cliché of a nervous wreck: rehearsing what to say, fretting over what to wear. Should I go understated and elegant in a black Maria Cornejo dress and Margiela booties? Or maybe something a bit more romantic, like my floral-print Mayle dress with Chanel flats? Should I lead with a handshake? A cheek kiss? A hug? And if she ordered a martini, should I get one, too—or would it be wiser to stick with a glass of Sancerre? More important, why was I treating this like a date?

The “girl crush” may sound ­silly, but sometimes it takes something ­unserious to get us talking about a serious subject: the ambitions of young creative women and the need for ­worthy role models. Among my own nominees for inaugural members of the Girl Crush Hall of Fame are Zadie Smith, with her daring, brilliance, and wild success; Joan ­Didion, with her cool, spare prose; Patti Smith, with her soul and wisdom; Sofia Coppola, with her chic grace and unmistakable taste; and Tina Fey, with her goofy smile and razor wit. Each of them has accomplished something the rest of us dream of doing. And because they’ve done it, we feel we can too.

There’s a distinctly nineties flavor to the term (think Riot Grrrls), but the idea of the girl crush is much older than that. F. Scott Fitzgerald had something to say on the matter in an essay he penned in 1930: “  ‘Crushes’ were once a boarding-school ­phenomenon—now any sort of courageous individualism makes a woman the center of a cult…What effect has this woman worship on the young girl herself?”

When my good friend ­Jenna Wortham—a New York Times ­reporter—and I decided to start a zine called Girl Crush last spring, we thought of it as a chance to be frivolous, irreverent, and earnest all at once. We created a website, ­Girlcrushzine.tumblr.com, and began soliciting personal essays. We e-mailed novelist Jennifer Egan, This American Life contributor ­Starlee Kine, New Yorker writer ­Amanda ­Fortini, former Missbehave editor Mary H.K. Choi, and other women we admire.

As varied as the submissions we received were, the answer to ­Fitzgerald’s question was clear: Woman ­worship, girl crushing—whatever you want to call it—is a positive trend. ­Fortini’s took the form of a singular ­devotion to the journalist Janet ­Malcolm, whose work she faithfully read and followed when Fortini was an assistant at The New York Review of Books. To Choi, a girl crush is a creatively inspiring friendship born of mutual respect and admiration—like the one she established with the sassy Times columnist Cintra Wilson. For Egan, it represents that moment in girlhood before boys have entered the picture.

After two months, we had dozens and dozens of submissions—more than either of us had anticipated. Had we struck a chord? I can’t help but believe our current generation’s embrace of girl crushing signifies something larger: evidence that a professional world once dominated by men has evened out—maybe not totally, but to a reassuring degree. When ­Didion first set out to become a writer, she copied the sentences of Ernest Hemingway; today, my friends and I copy hers.

That night, when I arrived at the bar to meet Leanne, I instantly forgot everything I had prepared to say. She asked me about my life. I asked about hers. We slipped into comfortable conversation almost immediately. We talked about books, travel, our hopes and dreams for the year. At the end of the night I walked her home. “Dear Leanne,” I wrote to her the next day, “So fun to meet you last night. I must bashfully admit that my girl crush is undiminished. Hope I played it cool. :)” Over the next year, we gradually moved from being acquaintances to friends. And that’s the thing—a girl crush doesn’t have to be purely aspirational. Still, I’ll never forget what Leanne wrote in response: “Your crush is reciprocated!”

– By Thessaly la Force

❤ 25% off MOB ❤

Ok, I know all I do is post about Married to the Mob, but I don’t care. I love them and all I want to do is tell the world! You’ve seen the holiday collection that has just been released, and you loved it, didn’t you?! So, it’s no surprise that the lookbook for said collection is loveable too. Oh, and incase you didn’t read the title of this post, there is 25% off the whole collection… GO GET! 

WINNER ANNOUNCED!!!

Well, it’s almost Christmas, which means that the winner of our 5,000th post competion has been randomly selected and contacted! @KatieJoice is the lucky lady who wins all the stuff below:

COPY OF ISSUE 1 OF PUSSY

HOW TO SURVIVE BOYS BOOKLET

“BARBIE CARES” TOTE

CHANEL EYE-SHADOW PALETTE

ST. TROPEZ BRONZING POT

Are you mad you didn’t win?! Well, don’t panic… We have another competition going until the New Year, and for this one all you need to do is like our Facebook page and we will randomly pick a winner.

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Nicki + Ricky + David x M.A.C

What do you think of when you think of M.A.C Viva Glam? I usually think of Nicki Minaj, on a bike and Ricky Martin holding a large lipstick. What? You Don’t?! How odd..

Well, Nicki Minaj and Ricky Martin have just been announced as the new faces of M.A.C Cosmetics’ Viva Glam campaign. The 2012 campaign is a collage by David LaChapelle with tones of bright colours. 100 percent of the proceeds of Viva Glam sales go to the M.A.C Aids Fund and it hits M.A.C. counters February 2012.

Sample This

This weekend was the first Sampled sale that took place on Saturday and Sunday. I was down to paint some nails and check out all the cute hip – hop boys that were there to pick up a bargain (or 10). Damn was it a fun weekend, amazing tunes, incredible brands at a fraction of the price and I got to paint some gorgeous girls’ nails. As I was busy, I didn’t manage to take photos, so I stole a load from the AnyForty & Sampled blogs (sorry guys!). Peep the Sampled website and start getting excited about the next one, and check out some of the nails I did here. 

Pierre et Gilles.

I fricking LOVE Pierre et Gille. I hadn’t thought about them for a while but stumbled across a brochure from an exhibit they held in GOMA a (cough) little while ago (years!). They have worked with pretty much everyone, Warhol, Iggy Pop, Kylie (my favourite woman), Madonna (my second favourite), Grace Jones, Marc Almond – the list goes on. Their highly stylised and kitsch sensibility can only make you smile, even when the subject matter is often quite dark. If you want some glitter and gaudiness in your life have a look.