I have clothing issues. Or obsessions. Take your pick.
Through self-analysis (actually over a glass of wine or two with a girlfriend), I’ve managed to pinpoint those clothing issues or obsessions back to my first fashion crush – the woman whose fashion sense inspired me.
Mum and dad split when I was six years old. Not long after, dad moved us to the country town where my grandparents lived.
I arrived at school on a stinking hot Queensland February day in the 1970s.
Wearing a uniform to school wasn’t compulsory. Most days we didn’t even wear shoes on our feet (did I mention this was Queensland?).
The thing was, all I wanted was a uniform. I wanted to look like everyone else. I wanted to fit in.
I was the new girl. The girl who lived with her dad. Not her mum. No-one else in that class, probably the whole school, had parents who had separated (did mention it was the ‘70s?). So, I really didn’t want to stand out. Any more than I already was.
My Year Three teacher was an elegant lady. (I rarely use the word lady but it’s totally appropriate for Mrs H.) The first day I met her, it was fashion love at first sight. Her hair was always perfectly “done”; her berry matte lipstick never smudged. She was always in a 1950s-style floral, printed, cotton frock, fitted around the bodice and ballooning out in a wide skirt over her ample hips. Pointed-toe kitten heels completed this impressionable fashion picture.