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Washington: A Style Capital?
Sara Higgs adds to the polish that is Maggie and Lola Boutique on Capitol Hill.
(By Nate Lankford For The Washington Post)
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New York fashion has a lot to recommend it. But it's not always very much fun. When everyone around you is buffed and lacquered to a high sheen, when you spend more on clothes than you do on rent, your expectations are monumental. And life being what it is, something always ends up not quite right. The dry cleaner returns your slacks with one crease a quarter-inch left of center. Everyone at work gets their Miu Miu wedges a week before you do. You break the bank on a Devi Kroell bag, only to see its cachet plummet when Jessica Simpson makes it her signature.
That's why there is something wonderful about spotting a woman on M Street wearing a sale-rack dress and chunky, scuffed boots, a smidge of kohl around her eyes, bangs skimmed back with bobby pins. She's not worried about appearing overdressed, underaccessorized or so last season . She not worried, period -- she's dressing to please herself. And to the jaded among us for whom fashion is work, life or a bit of both, that can seem surprising. Which it shouldn't, because that devil-may-care attitude is what fashion is all about.
Have a style question? E-mail Suzanne D'Amato, Sunday Source's deputy editor and a former fashion writer at Vogue, at styleq@washpost.com. Please include your name, city and phone number.
A Place I Love
I've never been much of a girly girl. I hate lipstick. I don't own a single pair of heels. I rarely, if ever, think pink. But I absolutely, positively -- dare I say it? -- heart Maggie and Lola Boutique. The bright, cozy shop is housed in a former bed and breakfast; I can easily imagine taking up residence on a chair inside while Lola the black Lab snoozes away at my feet. Or maybe I'd spend a crisp fall morning in the garden, where vines curl up the archway and owner Katharine Ordway throws parties for swish Washingtonians.
Oh, right, the clothes: floral tunic tops by Calypso Christiane Celle, pleated silk dresses from Julie Haus, lacy underpinnings courtesy of Hanky Panky, cable-knit handbags by Margaret Nicole. Kids' stuff, too. It's pretty but not precious, sweet without being saccharine. Of course, none of it comes cheap. But for a minute, I considered tossing my decade-long accumulation of droopy black garb in favor of a kinder, gentler wardrobe composed of crinkled-silk frocks and ribbon-trimmed button-ups. The moment passed, but still: Maybe all those girly girls are on to something.
-- S.D.
Maggie and Lola Boutique, 1013 E St. SE, 202-234-2850; http:/
The Look: Spotted on D.C. Streets
I see plenty of fashionable folk in Washington, residents and visitors alike, but these three struck me as standouts -- proof that quietly quirky style can still make a statement.
-- S.D.
Cagla Alkan, 27, resides in Durham, N.C. "I live on the periphery of fashion," she says, laughing, "so I like to shop online." Her dress is by Marni; she purchased it on the discount luxury goods Web site Yoox.com.
Takeo Yagi, 25, of Tokyo is less than particular about how he culls his wardrobe. "I just buy everywhere," he says. His striped satchel was a gift from a friend.
Imani Farley, 22, of Alexandria describes her style as "a little bit bohemian." Her top is by Charlotte Russe; her necklace was purchased at a street fair in Cleveland, "kind of like Eastern Market, actually," she says.
NEXT WEEK in the Sunday Source
Find out what's in store for fashion this fall.


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