
Tomorrow, I will load the car with my luggage and get on the road mid-morning. I should arrive at my destination mid-afternoon.
This blog has suffered the last few days because my life got in the way.
A lot of stuff has hit the proverbial fan during the last few days. Nothing bad — just time-consuming stuff I have to deal with before I travel to Provincetown for Fantasia Fair on Sunday.
So please stay tuned; we will return to our regular programming shortly.
I want to be Vanna White when I grow up.
What a dream job she has!
• Wear a new gorgeous outfit every day
• Have a personal hair stylist and makeup artist
• Work 2.5 hours per week
• Travel across the USA
• Wear a new gorgeous outfit every day
I am ready to step into Vanna's high heels at a moment's notice if she decides to retire from the Wheel gig.
You may have noticed the dearth of womanless events here lately.
It certainly is not because I lack new material. You readers have continued to send me links to womanless events and I thank you for that.
The reason I have not been covering womanless events here lately is because the more womanless events I see, the more I am turned off by them.
In my opinion, a lot of the womanless events disrespect women. This is especially true in the cases when you have a gang of good old boys down at the local men's club, who decide to raise money by putting on ill-fitting dresses and fright wigs to imitate women. Their imitations are such caricatures of women that they result in ridiculing women(intentionally or not).
This offends me.
On the other hand, there are some womanless events that do a better job; where the "gals" make a real effort to look and act like women. I am often in awe of them and appreciate the time and effort that the participants invest in their femulations.
Anyway, I have decided to separate the wheat from the chaff. The high class womanless events will still find a place in my blog, but the events that ridicule women will not.
Packing for extended stays en femme is not a big deal. I always have a packing check list, annotated from the previous trip, that helps me avoid forgetting anything.
However, there is one sticking point that comes up every time I pack for an extended stay: what jewelry to pack?
When I get dressed, I often change my jewelry because I am wrong about what I thought would look good with the outfit I am wearing.
It is easy to change my mind about my jewelry when I dress at home because I have my vast collection of cosmetic jewelry on hand to pick and choose from. But I can't take my whole jewelry collection on the road, so I have to guess what will look good with the outfits I plan to wear.
If I already wore an outfit, I have a good idea how to accessorize because I know what worked (and/or what didn't work) last time out. But if I am wearing an outfit for the first time, I am not really sure what will work.
So, I always overpack jewelry-wise.
This is a big "problem" for my Fantasia Fair trip. I will be wearing five new outfits, so that means five unknown sets of accessorizing jewelry! As a result, I really overpacked my jewelry for this trip.
On the plus side, I don't wear as much jewelry as I used to wear. When I was a younger woman, I made sure I always wore earrings, a necklace, a bracelet, a ring or two, and a watch.
Now that I am a mature woman, I usually do not wear that full set of jewelry. I almost always wear earrings, but the necklace, bracelet, rings, and watch are optional depending on the outfit and whether or not I have to be aware of the time.
Daniel Lismore wrote on his blog about his involvement in the casting of a pictorial for POP magazine featuring crossdressers from Cairo, Egypt. His blog post included photos from the pictorial.
The photos are wonderful (sample right). I invite you to visit his blog and view them all.
Thank you, Lorraine Goetsch, for alerting me to this story.
The 2010 Fantasia Fair Participant's Guide is now online. The Guide is the “bible” for folks attending the event… especially first timers. Don't leave your B&B without it.
I perused an earlier edition of the Guide before I ever planned to go to Fantasia Fair. Reading it so enthused me about the Fair that I decided to try to attend the event.
I almost made it in 2007 and finally attended in 2008. Check out the Guide and you too may find yourself planning a trip to Provincetown in mid-October.
This year, I return not only as an attendee, but as a workshop presenter. As a presenter, I am in the Guide, too.
It is so cool that my biography appears on the same page (113) as one of my favorite people, Ethan St. Pierre, who Fantasia Fair is honoring this year with the Virginia Prince Transgender Pioneer Award. My photo also appears on page 67 (just below my workshop description) modeling in the Fantasia Fair fashion show.
How cool is that?
Coincidentally, I had a dream last night in which I was browsing the Guide and found a photo of myself wearing my shoulder-length blond wig, a simple white blouse, a short maroon balloon skirt, and dark brown tights (the photo did not show my feet, so I don't know what shoes I was wearing).
I don't own a maroon balloon skirt, but I liked the look! Now, where can I find a maroon balloon skirt in size 14?