Friday 30 November 2012

Dressing the Detective - Lunch with Marion Boyce

Marion Boyce sharing her experiences
- see more photos on our Facebook.
This luncheon was held at Burrinja on November 21 as part of the Fashion Meets Fiction Exhibition Program. It was an excellent turn out - just shy of 100 people came to listen to Marion, who was a fantastic speaker. Councillor Samantha Dunn was there to open the luncheon with her wonderful humor (we love having Samantha at these gatherings!). We were also lucky to have various press and bloggers such as Yahav Ron from Paris '99 there to enjoy the event.

This was a very popular talk for all lovers of the Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries television series and questions could have gone on for ages - everyone just loved hearing about the stories and challenges Marion has come across in her career as a costume designer. Marion's work was simply stunning and we can all agree the audience was completely captivated.

Big shout outs to the ladies and gentlemen who came dressed in vintage attire! What a lovely surprise - they were a bit shy for photos - but they looked incredible in 1940s couture. Also, to the girls with their vintage hair, pincurls and victory rolls - stunning.

Thank you to everyone who came and a big thank you to Marion Boyce for being available to talk about her costume designing career. If you missed out on seeing Marion talk, here is an interview snippet from the Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries Youtube channel.

Thursday 15 November 2012

Dreaming of Dior - Lunch with Charlotte Smith

Charlotte Smith, curator for the pieces on display at the Fashion Meets Fiction Exhibition, was at Burrinja Cultural Centre yesterday to share with us the stories behind the Darnell Collection. With a full crowd seated at the luncheon, Charlotte delighted us with tales of how the collection began with her godmother, Doris Darnell, and how Charlotte came to be the custodian .

It is incredible how one dress can remind you of the most important moments of your life.

For Doris, it was the inspiration of dancing in a peach slipper silk-satin dress, cut on the bias with a low cut back and hundreds of buttons displayed in a Bryn Mawr boutique. Doris first spotted this vision of loveliness in the shop window in 1937, whilst she was still a student at Bryn Mawr College. However it was the Depression and the dress cost $40, which back then would have been almost half her tuition money - too much for a young lady on a scholarship. Also, Doris was a Quaker and to "covet" items was traditionally frowned upon.

These issues did not faze Doris, who visited the dress frequently - until one day, it went on sale for $20. She obtained $10 from her parents (in lieu of birthday and Christmas presents for the next few years) and saved for the rest. Doris wore her dress to a ball at Rutger's University - and on that night, she met her husband.

For Charlotte, who had always been familiar with her godmother's collection whilst growing up, her life changed when Doris arranged for Charlotte to take over as custodian. "I received a fax from my godmother saying she was going to be sending 70 boxes. Boxes of what, I wasn't sure; so I cleared out a small corner of my store thinking I was going to be receiving shoes boxes."

What actually arrived was a fully packed truck with boxes approximately waist to shoulder height. The entire delivery weighed around 1200kg and each box contained roughly 50 packaged items, creating a grand total of over 3,500 vintage pieces.

"It was like Christmas for 3 months. I remember the first dress I pulled out; it was a cream, silk chiffon dance dress from the 1920s. It was so light, it just floated in the air and the glass beads... they shone prisms all over my shop front."

It was when Charlotte unearthed her godmother's notebook, detailing all the stories behind the dresses that the value of the collection hit home. "It wasn't until then that I truly realised the importance of what I had been given. Some of the dresses had their own tags or notes attached saying "worn to at Queen Victoria's ball" or the date and event in which the garment was worn. It really is a privilege to be a guardian of not only an amazing collection but also of the stories of people's lives."

She looks familiar! One of the many mannequin
displays at the
Fashion Meets Fiction Exhibition
The Fashion Meets Fiction Exhibition is currently open. Don't miss out on your chance to see this incredible collection of vintage clothing - it really is something to see!


Fashion Meets Fiction Exhibition - The Darnell Collection
When: November 9, 2012 - February 17, 2013
Where: Burrinja Cultural Centre, Cnr of Glenfern & Matson Drive, Upwey VIC 3158
Session Times:
Tuesday-Friday: 10.30am-4pm
Saturday and Sunday: 10.30am-1pm and 1pm-4pm



Tickets Now Available
Purchase tickets online or call Burrinja Cultural Centre on (03) 9754 8723
For more information on the Fashion Meets Fiction Exhibition at Burrinja Cultural Centre, follow us on Facebook and Twitter.

Tuesday 13 November 2012

Sing it Loud - Wear it Proud!! Eastern Regional Libraries Supports Loud Shirt Day

Rose, Raelene and Federica at Rowville
Library celebrating Loud Shirt Day!
Everyone has a shirt hidden in their closet that seems to have a visual radio-active energy that makes people eyes burn. It's the shirts we love to hate and hate to throw away, but one day a year we can let that shirt shine with Loud Shirt Day on October 19th. In the spirit of the Fashion Meets Fiction exhibition and bringing together fashion with their love of books - that's exactly what the staff at Eastern Regional Libraries did.

Loud Shirt Day is an initiative created by the First Voice Organisation that focuses on providing listening and spoken language therapy to deaf children in Australia and New Zealand. First Voice is a world class leader for the early childhood intervention and research for children who are deaf or hearing impaired.

Currently, First Voice have supported more than 1,000 hearing impaired children in Australian and New Zealand and perform almost 70 cochlear implant procedures a year.

And didn't the librarians look absolutely smashing? Eastern Regional Libraries raised $136.00 for Loud Shirt Day to go to the First Voice Organisation. Congratulations!

Friday 9 November 2012

Fashion Meets Fiction Opens Today!!

Time to celebrate!! We are so excited!

After so much hard work getting it all set up, the gallery looks devine.

The Fashion Meets Fiction Exhibition opens today at 10:30am at Burrinja Cultural Centre.

It's not too late to get tickets to the sessions, so book in now. Don't miss the opportunity to check out this display of literature and fashion from decades past - it is simply phenomenal to see how fashion and literature were so influential in characterising popular culture today.

Fashion Meets Fiction Exhibition - The Darnell Collection
When: November 9, 2012 - February 17, 2013
Where: Burrinja Cultural Centre, Cnr of Glenfern & Matson Drive, Upwey VIC 3158
Sessione Times:
Tuesday-Friday: 10.30am-4pm
Saturday and Sunday: 10.30am-1pm and 1pm-4pm

Tickets Now Available
Purchase tickets online or call Burrinja Cultural Centre on (03) 9754 8723
For more information on the Fashion Meets Fiction Exhibition at Burrinja Cultural Centre, follow us on Facebook and Twitter.

Thursday 8 November 2012

Guide Dogs Cocktail Party Cancelled

Fashionable Puppies
We are sad to annouce that the Official Fashion Meets Fiction Cocktail Party for Guide Dogs Victoria has been cancelled on Thursday November 15th at 7:30pm.

The exhibition extends their apologies for any inconvenience! Ticket holders will be notified and refunded.

However, we are still excited to be supporting Guide Dogs Victoria as our official charity - so stay tuned for the photos from a puppy fashion-shoot with guide dogs.

-- Cancelled --
The Official Fashion Meets Fiction Cocktail Party
When: Thursday 15th November 7:30pm - 9:30pm
Where: Burrinja Cultural Centre, Cnr of Glenfern & Matson Drive, Upwey VIC 3158

Vintage Cocktails for a Spicy Night at Fashion Meets Fiction!

Have you booked your ticket to the Official Fashion Meets Fiction Cocktail Party to help support Guide Dogs Vicotria?

Here are some vintage cocktail recipes that were popular in the 1930s and 1940s for inspiration! During this period, cocktails mainly consisted of gin, rum, brandy or whiskey. Many of the recipes had been around for a very long time, but it wasn't until the 1930s during Prohibition and the 1940s  that they gained widespread popularity.


Sidecar
1 measure Cointreau
1 measure brandy/cognac
1 measure lemon juice
Shake with ice and strain into sugar-rimmed cocktail (martini) glass and garnish with a strip of lemon rind.
** Is said to be credited to a Parisian bar tender who was asked to prepare a beverage by an American captain that would take away the chill from being outside.



Mint Julep

2 measures bourbon (American whiskey)
8-10 fresh mint leaves
1 tbsp caster sugar
Put mint, sugar and a dash of hot water in a short glass, grind together, then spoon into a tall glass over crushed ice. Add bourbon, top off with crushed ice, stir well and stand to chill until the ice is partially melted. Garnish with mint leaves.
**One of the oldest cocktails of them all. Originiated in the southern United States, probably during the eighteenth century.

 
Gibson
half measure dry white vermouth
2.5 measures gin
2 cocktail onions
Pour vermouth and gin into a glass with ice, stir and let chill for 30 seconds. Skewer onions on a cocktail stick and place in a cocktail (Martini) glass so onions rest at the bottom. Strain vermouth/gin into the glass.
**As an alternative to the Martini, with an onion garnish instead of an olive, the Gibson is thought to have originated in San Francisco's Bohemian Club in 1898.



Manhattan
2 and a quarter measures American rye whiskey
1 measures sweet red vermouth
Dash of bitters
Maraschino cherry to garnish
Shake ingredients with ice and strain into a chilled cocktail (Martini) glass, garnish with the cherry.
 **Often referred to as "The King of Cocktails", the Manhattan is thought to have made its debut in the 1870s at a banquet hosted by the notorious Lady Randolph Churchill (yes, that's Winston's mum).



Zombie
1 measure white rum
1 measure light rum
1 measure dark rum
1 measure apricot brandy
1 measure pineapple juice
1 measure papaya juice
½ measure rum
Dash of grenadine
Shake all ingredients other than the 151-proof rum with ice. Pour drink and ice into a tall glass and top with the high-proof rum.
**Legendary 1930s recipe created at Don the Beachcomber restaurant in Hollywood as a hangover cure and became popular at the 1939 World's Fair in New York.


The Official Fashion Meets Fiction Cocktail Party
When: Thursday 15th November 7:30pm - 9:30pm
Where: Burrinja Cultural Centre, Cnr of Glenfern & Matson Drive, Upwey VIC 3158
Cost: $55.00
Bookings essential phone 9754 8723 or book online.