2016 Fitness Goals

2016 Fitness Goals, Old Navy Active

When it comes to fitness, you’re going to hear a lot of people say they want to be healthy because that’s good for them. I fall into that camp too, but the higher priority for me right now is to be smoking hot! I might as well call it like it is!! Here’s why:

During the last two years my body had a big job. For the first nine months I was pregnant and for 16 months after that I had to eat enough to nourish myself and nurse my son. Before I have another baby, I’d like to have a few months to really focus on getting stronger, improve my endurance and set myself up to be in the best shape of my life. But like i said above - mainly, I wanna look good!

I usually gauge my general fitness on whether or not I can fit into most of my clothes instead of pounds (but if you’re wondering I’d like to lose 10 to get back to my pre-pregnancy self!) Right now, my jeans are feeling a little tight and I’ve gotten into a bad habit of just wearing work out clothes all day (even on days when I don’t work out. Whoops).

For these photos I was on en route to the gym after work and wore pieces from Old Navy’s TRAIN Active line (today’s post sponsors) that I bought with a gift card and picked out myself. I ended up wearing the cute navy jacket with my regular clothes all weekend too because while it’s fleece and perfect to up the ante on a workout outfit, it could really work both ways. I really like compression top leggings too because my belly is still jiggly and I like to hide it as much as I can. Of all the leggings I’ve ever had, these are by far the best at sucking in that area! (Personal Request - build this technology into your swim wear too!) I’m also wearing a tank top I had in my closet and an everyday activity sports bra from Old Navy. I’m not running much and my ta tas are getting back to their regular size so this style is supportive for whatever I end up doing at the gym.

My diet is on track so now I’m trying to figure out the right kind of activities to do as exercise. My family and I joined the YMCA so I’ve been experimenting with different classes (Bootcamp and Zumba so far) and I’m still looking for the right fit. I know I’d like to get back into a yoga or pilates class and I really like lifting weights. 

The most fun thing I’ve done so far is to strap on my Ergo 360 and pop Felix in the back. He’s a sturdy 26 pounds so walking on the indoor track for two miles plus a couple sets of lunges, squats and rows make for a great workout! When it feels like fun, it’s a lot less loathsome (treadmill, I’m looking at you!). 

Ideally I’d like to find a class or two that I take regularly and can look forward to mixed in with the baby backpack workout. Maybe something with weights or a dance class? I’d like to try out Barre or maybe even a water based class. I will keep you posted! I’d love to hear what kind of workouts you’re into these days! 

2016 Fitness Goals, Old Navy Active

Today’s post was brought to you by my long time partners at Old Navy. Whether you’re running, training or taking a studio class, they have a full line of cute active wear at affordable prices. Thanks for supporting the brands that sponsor What I Wore!

52 Thoughts | An Occasional Style Blogger

Why I'm Over Fashion Blogging

I’m very tempted to change the subtitle of this site from a personal style blog to the life of an occasional style blogger. But before I get into all of that, I’m going to rewind to the very beginning - to pay a little homage to the original pioneers of the fashion blogging world - and then tell you my story from the inside out.

Here’s how it started…

In 2007 I was working as a fashion designer for a small company out of New York City. You could say that I liked fashion (hello, career choice), but I would not win any best-dressed awards. When I showed up in NYC I was wearing Target jeans with H&M tops, basically broke and just trying to show up in clean things that went with each other. I didn’t wear a lot of dresses and I had very little vintage clothing in my closet.

We would regularly travel to Hong Kong to work with our development team there to source fabrics and trims and create samples. Essentially we’d take anything/everything that was popular in Europe and extract it, boil it down, mix and match it and come up with new styles (this is pretty much how all fast fashion works, if not even more direct copying). So while we were there we’d be on a 12 hour time difference with New York, and in the post-lunch slump the small team (three of us) would break a bit. No one was in our home office at that time (it was the middle of the night there!) so we’d all get on our laptops and goof around. That’s when I found an online rabbit hole into the world of personal style bloggers (very new at the time!) and people who photographed their daily outfits. 

It was colorful! And vintage! And creative! Mostly composed of women who dug through their local thrift stores and boutiques, it wasn’t stuff you could just go out and buy at the mall. And I wanted in! Some of the early members of the flickr group wardrobe_remix were Jeanine (formerly of Independent Fashion Bloggers and the Coveted, now of Mrs. Peasy), Beth (B. Jones Style), and Jenny (formerly Frecklewonder, now Mikasa Su Casa on etsy). These were my original favorites and I still follow all of them on social media. And all of this happened wayyyy before anyone was getting sponsorships or trips or even had banner ads on their sites. I’d like to call this phase the good old days

I didn’t even have a “fashion” blog yet! I posted my daily outfit photos to flickr and to the remix group but blogged on my old blogspot page and then my personal tumblr blog. I called my flickr set ‘What I Wore’ so when I eventually thought of doing a blog of just outfits in 2008, that’s what I decided to call it too. 

Back then a lot of us little bloggers were big on helping each other out, meeting up in NYC and some of my best long distance friendships were forged during this time. I remember meeting with one street style photographer who asked about my site traffic and told me when I got to 2,000 page views a day, I could start selling ads.  I still remember where I was when I hit that tally (2400!), thanks to a round up link from Gala Darling (who I didn’t know personally at the time and eventually became friends and travel mates with down the road) So Gala, thanks girl! 

Fast forward about nine months. I had met Adam and he helped me put together a media kit and business plan to make What I Wore a legit business. My first big client was ModCloth and I self-hosted a little sidebar ad for them and reinvested a portion of what they paid me to buy outfits from their site. Eventually they gave me store credit and that’s when I started listing my clothes from them as “courtesy of” and then “c/o” or “gift”. This was long before the FTC outlined guidelines on any sort of disclosures either.

Those early days were a financial struggle but I felt really good about my clients and how I incorporated products into my blog. I still feel good about that, but I certainly got a lot of flack from readers. At least the loud and vocal ones ;) 

So here’s where the story starts to turn for me. These days blogging as a career isn’t as rare as it was and people are able to make great livings. If you read the trade news some people are pulling in six figures a year (unfortunately, not me). A lot of women can stay home with their children, buy houses, support their families - and that’s great. I can say the same for myself and I’m grateful that this platform has allowed me to do so. I think the fact that this is a business is a wonderful thing for me and for everyone else. 

That said, there are quite a few things that don’t sit well with me anymore, and why I don’t feel proud to be called a fashion blogger. I cringe when someone introduces me as one. Here’s why:

EVERYONE LOOKS THE SAME. That’s an exaggeration of course, but I do see the same outfits every where I look. Hell, I copy outfits too but the general face of the fashion blogging world looks like a coordinated catalogue to me. I’m not inspired by looking at it and it doesn’t inspire me to participate in that way anymore. Sometimes I want to wear a mom uniform but some day I wanna be the true weirdo that I am! 

In the olden days the blogosphere was much more diverse and creative. Girls in thrift store clothes, girls in Target mixed with vintage DvF, guys in girls clothes, big girls, tall girls, tiny girls, average girls. Girls with lots of makeup and girls with no makeup.  It doesn’t feel good to me that now the “top” bloggers are mostly skinny, white, and from wealthy backgrounds. Feels like an episode of The Bachelor. And yes, I know I’m skinny and white so I’m part of that problem. I’m also fully aware that I can seek out the diversity I crave. But on a personal note,  I’m looking to break away from being just another girl in head to toe J.Crew.

(Side note, I do like J.Crew and I have a lot of items from them I’ve purchased in the past, although I will say the quality is really starting to slip and the styling used to be so much more funky and quirky, so I think I’m falling off the bandwagon. Time will tell).

So we have these slender women who are beautiful and I don’t hold that against them at all, but what I do have beef with is that the fashion blogging world has pretty much replaced magazines and look books with the exact same thing. We used to be like “F Vogue! Not realistic!!” and now I wanna scream “F FASHION BLOGGERS! NOT REALISTIC!!!!!” 

I think some of this has devolved from the moment money got involved. On any collaboration with a client the creativity is a compromise to some degree - whether you’re a graphic designer or video editor or any kind of artist working for someone else. This isn’t a bad thing, but from an artistic point of view, I can see that my relationships with clients and use of affiliate links has changed my perspective and goals on my blog.  I do believe if you’re helping sales through virtual word of mouth and making big companies a lot of money, you deserve a piece of that too.  Designing a website, putting together an outfit, doing hair and makeup, selecting a location, posing, photographing, editing and writing blog posts well is a lot of work. Some bloggers are single-handedly doing as good of a job (or better) than entire editorial magazine teams.  That takes years worth of skill and I’m happy bloggers are being recognized and paid for their work. Yet, only wearing what’s popular and what’s selling best inevitably creates a cookie cutter approach. 

I want to push myself and return more to my roots. I’m an artist. I’m a designer and tailor and a knitter and a milliner. I’m an author, illustrator and teacher!  I make things! I have bins of funky vintage prints that I want to wear. I like looking a little different and I can’t source similar items as every little treasure I’ve found along the way. I like that!  I’m also a business woman and mother and I want to make money for my family. I want to blend those two things harmoniously with a push to be even more authentic, even when what I’m wearing isn’t popular or on trend (a theme I’ve been exploring a lot in the past year). I pride myself on honesty, especially when it comes to my emotions and experiences, so I owe it to myself to be more loyal to my vintage loving, pattern playing, off-beat personal style too. 

Where do I go now? I’m going to be the most true version of myself, both in my sartorial choices and by pursing my many interests. I don’t like getting dressed in the winter as much as I do the rest of the year, which means less outfit posts this time of year. So I’ll take a chance to explore my other hobbies - cooking and baking and knitting and making things. I believe those all deserve a home on this site, regardless of the title of this blog.  The name ‘What I Wore’ is already past tense.  It will be a part of my future, but in the context of becoming an occasional style blogger.

And I like the way that looks on me. 

What I Wore | Cheetah!

Jessica Quirk styles a vintage cheetah print coat with flare denim and a chambray button down

Jessica Quirk styles a vintage cheetah print coat with flare denim and a chambray button down

Jessica Quirk styles a vintage cheetah print coat with flare denim and a chambray button down

Jessica Quirk styles a vintage cheetah print coat with flare denim and a chambray button down

  Karen Walker Super Duper in Black      Rag and Bone Newbury Bootie 

WhatIWore: Nothing makes me feel warm like a faux fur animal print coat! Ok, not completely true (would rather be snuggled under a million covers in bed, but…life). Ok! So this is a pretty basic outfit but made many times more fun via the animal print coat. This is my second vintage version which I found at an antique shop at the end of the season a couple years ago and got for a really great price. My first one had ripped a huge hole in the lining and yes, although I can sew, replacing the lining was going to be a procrastination project. You know the kind… the ones where you could do that instead of paying someone else but it just never gets done because starting a brand new project would be 100x more fun. 

When: January 19, 2016

What:
Shades: Karen Walker ‘Super Duper’
Coat: Vintage ‘Safari styled by Fairmoor’ (I believe this is the same coat for sale on etsy, and this and this are similar the same brand)
Gloves: Vintage
Chambray: J.Crew
High Waisted Flare Jeans: Frame Denim
Booties: Rag + Bone

Where: Coffee Shop Laptop Sesh

I’ve partnered my coat with a classic chambray and denim combo, a pairing I’ve loved for years. I like how these high waisted flare jeans balance out the volume of the coat and I just sort of feel like a late sixties vintage babe today. It’s also my first morning back in the groove with regular babysitters and getting out of the house and it feels great! 

Jessica Quirk wears a vintage cheetah print coat with flare jeans and a chambray button down

Ways to Wear | Denim + Leopard

Jessica Quirk of What I Wore shows multiple ways to style denim and leopard

WhatIWore: I’ve got a long diatribe about my views on fashion blogging and it’s future, but I’ll save that for another day. I bring it up because one of my new personal goals is to look more to my own closet, and the pieces I’ve collected over the years, for inspiration. And what’s a daily outfit blog good for if you can’t scroll through your archives for ideas? You guys know I love a repeat outfit and these photos from seasons past have given me a fresh dose of inspiration. 

Denim and animal prints are such a great pairing. Some would call both a neutral and in a high fashion world, I suppose that’s true. Neutral in the sense that they both will match 95% or more of the other things in your closet. But when you pair the two together, the leopard (or cheetah) gets to take center stage.

Animal prints are nothing new, but maybe you’re the kind of gal that’s been on the fence about adding something spotty to your wardrobe. Maybe a leopard vintage coat isn’t the right place to start, but a pair of flats or a bag could be a great way to play around with it to see if it’s for you.  If there’s one thing that’s important to me with this blog, it’s embracing personal style, and that’s not something that’s in or out as the calendar pages turn. Personal style is personal to you! 

The pieces featured in this post are from past seasons or vintage, but find more options that might work for you below. Or to see all of my leopard/cheetah ensembles, click here.