Liz Morrow Liz Morrow

remix archives // fall blazer

 

The past couple days it's been raining non-stop, and as I took Dusty for a late afternoon walk, I felt the definitive nip in the air signaling fall's arrival.  In the last week I've grown more fond of the idea of fall coming.  We had a super long, very warm summer, and cooler temperatures are starting to sound nice.  Plus, I'm getting excited for soup.  Last fall I went soup crazy.  I think I only cooked soup for a solid two months.  Anyway, all of that to say, it's the time of year for blazers!  I wore this one quite a few times last fall, so we'll see if it gets more wear this year.  It's a really comfortable blazer, made out of more of a sweatshirt fabric than the usual formal blazer fabric.  I think that probably makes it a bit warmer than your typical blazer, too, which is nice for layering and keeping warm as temperatures dip lower.  I like pairing blazers with more ethereal dresses, it makes for a fun contrast.  Although, going full on professor with a structured top and skirt is also fun sometimes.  My style has evolved since last fall, so I'm looking forward to styling this blazer in even more ways!

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Liz Morrow Liz Morrow

strawberry basil lemonade sparkler


The summer menu at Metronome has a strawberry basil lemonade sparkler, and so far I've tried ordering it twice.  The first time they'd run out of champagne.  The second time, lemonade.  So I decided to try my hand at making one for myself at home.  Summer is winding down, but it can still get hot outside and this is a refreshing late summer drink.  I think this drink is so delicious and man does it go down easy.  They're not too stiff, since there's no liquor in them, so you can have a few before getting too silly.

I love a drink that has a cool gradient. I think this might originate from when I used to see my parents drinking Mai Tai's in Hawai'i when I was a kid.  I always thought the gradient of the brown on top and the orange on bottom was so cool.  So much so that one time I wanted to be cool like the grown ups, so I made a drink that looked like a Mai Tai by using orange juice and coke.  Needless to say, it tasted kind of gross, but I'm pretty sure I drank the whole thing just because.  



For the strawberry-basil syrup:
1 1/2 cups granulated sugar
1 cup water
1 pound strawberries, washed, hulled, and sliced 1/2 inch thick
3/4 cup tightly packed basil leaves

1. Place the sugar and water in a medium saucepan over high heat and stir until the sugar dissolves and the mixture comes to a boil.

2. Add the strawberries, reduce the heat to medium low, and simmer until the strawberries have softened, about 10 minutes.

3. Remove from the heat, add the basil leaves, and stir to incorporate. Cool to room temperature, about 45 minutes. Strain through a fine-mesh strainer set over a medium bowl; discard the solids. Cover the syrup and refrigerate until ready to use.


For the sparkler: 
2 oz syrup
1.5 oz lemon juice
4-5 oz champagne/sparkling wine

Fill a collins glass with ice cubes, add the syrup, then the lemon juice, and then slowly add the sparkling wine so it doesn't bubble over.  You can also make this drink in a wine glass sans ice, if you prefer!  I like to serve the drink with the gradient intact, just because it looks cool, but it tastes best mixed up.  Garnish with a strawberry, or a lemon wedge, or a basil leaf... or go crazy and garnish with all of them.  It's your party, you can garnish if you want to.


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Liz Morrow Liz Morrow

civil disobedience


It's started raining more and more these days.  Slowly easing us into the months of drizzle and dampness that are fast approaching.  I love these late summer evenings where it's raining because it's still warm enough to have my back door open to listen to the rain.  Soon enough it will be too chilly at night for such things. It's so pleasant to let the cool rain air waft in.
Confession time: this jacket doesn't really fit my clothing purchase standards that I set for myself.  I've been eyeing it on ModCloth for something like a year, maybe more, and when I saw it was 70% off at ModCloth's last hurrah sale, I gave in and finally got it.  I have to say, though I feel guilty, I'm totally and completely in love with it.  Like, it hasn't been cool enough to wear a jacket like this yet, but I wear it anyway even though I get super sweaty.  Same with these jeans.  Actually the entire outfit has been worn multiple times this past week.  It's becoming a bit ridiculous.  



 

top/courtesy of lulu's :: jeans/courtesy of modcloth :: boots/lulu e. bebe
bag/courtesy of hearts
jacket/modcloth :: necklace/courtesy of adorn by sarah lewis


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Liz Morrow Liz Morrow

real talk: menses, yo // sponsored by U by Kotex



So, who wants to talk about tampons?  Right, no one.  I didn't think I did either, but we all have funny stories.  About periods, tampons, and mishaps.  I think it's kind of weird that it's such a non-discussed subject, especially since we all deal with it.  Well, those of us with XX chromosomes, at least.  When I was contacted by U by Kotex to do a post about feminine products, at first I was like, "LOL, yeah no thanks, I'll pass."  But the more I thought about it, the more I wanted to write about that lady stuff.  I mean, we get periods, we use feminine products, and sometimes funny things happen.  But it's life, and it's real, and we deal with it on a regular basis.  So, I thought I'd start this post off by getting the vagina vibes flowing (hahah get it?) with some funny and embarrassing stories about me and Aunt Flo.

 My mom was out of town when I got my period.  I was 13.  It was weird.  I was playing Pokemon on my brother's gameboy, took a break to go to the bathroom, and BAM.  OH HAI WOMANHOOD.

 Can we talk for a sec about how annoying cardboard tampon applicators are?  So uncomfortable.  When I discovered those smooth plastic ones I almost died of happiness.  Shoving a tiny cardboard toilet paper roll up in my business?  No thank you.  No cardboard shall ever enter my nether regions ever again, I vowed.


 I rode horses from age 10-20, and having my period was the bane of my existence when I rode.  Avoiding leaking and such while straddling a horse, posting, cantering, sitting the trot... wearing, thin, beige riding pants?  So above my pay grade as a teen.  Tampons kind of freaked me out when I was younger, so I tried my best to get away with wearing pads, but after every riding lesson I'd run to the bathroom to check if I was still wearing non-blood-stained pants.  I cursed the fact that rust colored riding pants were no longer in style.  How perfect would they be for hiding an unsightly "feminine" leak?  Ugh, damn you equestrian clothing trends!

 When I was younger, before I got my period, I stole a tampon from my mom's stash to try it out.  I was super anxious about my mom finding out, so I tried to be really sneaky.  I was horrified when she walked in my room later and somehow I'd just thrown the wrapper on the ground and she picked up.  I was so sneaky about everything else, how did I possibly overlook throwing away the wrapper discreetly? DOH.


  My current favorite use for tampons is wearing them during yoga/pilates classes to keep from queefing.  Yes.  That's right.  Real talk, ladies.  I'm not the only one right?  Please tell me my vagina isn't just the most rude vagina on the planet.  After going though an hour long yoga class, loudly disrupting it multiple times with my vagina's unkind noises, I vowed NEVER AGAIN.  I never go to a yoga class without a tampon now, regardless of the time of month.  You guys now know more about me than I ever anticipated.  Kthxbye. *

  I almost never get bad cramps or sick before my period but 3 or 4 times I've gotten violently ill (okay I think once was aided by being ridiculously hungover on top of it).  The first time it happened I was in school and started getting suuuper bad cramping/nausea, so I went to the bathroom between classes.  I ended up missing my next class while I sat on the toilet, doubled over, and ended up vomiting up my breakfast... which happened to be fluorescent sour gummy worms (health nut, yo!) while the Junior High girls were getting ready for P.E. class in the same locker room/bathroom.  AWESOME.  Also awesome?  I was given a detention for skipping class (they had a "no truancy rule), because I hadn't informed my teacher I was in the bathroom... because I was already there when class started... vomiting.  Hey school!  I would've, if I could've walked down the hall to my class to tell my teacher... without vomiting on her!  Despite sharing all of this with the school administration, I still had to serve my detention.  Because if you let one girl skip class for being stuck in the bathroom throwing up because of her period, everyone is going to start skipping class and blaming their PMS vomit.  Obviously.

Anyway, I'm sure you guys have equally, if not more, hilarious stories of period craziness.  I remember looking through the embarrassing story section of magazines like Seventeen, and there was always at least one horrifying period story.  The more I think about it, the more it upsets me that periods and period mishaps can be so embarrassing and horrifying.  At the beginning of this post I was going to say something like, "sorry if there are any male readers out there, we're going to talk about periods now," but apologizing seemed stupid.  I'm tired of periods and feminine products being taboo or gross.  It's normal, and really, it's beautiful.  I get that it's weird for guys, and even girls, because bleeding out of your who-hah for a week is honestly a rather strange experience, especially at first.  But it's normal.  Almost every woman who has ever existed has experienced menstruation.  So no, I'm not sorry, any of you male readers out there.  Women menstruate.  Get over it.  It's a reminder that women's bodies are capable of creating new life.  How awesome is that?  Super awesome.  I know that not all guys feel weird about periods, but I do know some who are so grossed out by it that it makes them gag, and from my experience, it at least makes most men uncomfortable.  It's upsetting that something so normal for women has become a source of shame and embarrassment.  If there's one thing we need less of it's shame focused on the vicinity of the vagina.


I've used the same tampon brand since high school, mostly out of habit, and creature of habit I am.  I'd never used any Kotex products before, to my knowledge, so I was interested in seeing how they stood up.  Honestly most feminine products I've tried seem relatively the same to me, and I was relatively pleased with U by Kotex tampons.  It's not like I have a wide-set vagina and a heavy flow, or anything, so I don't need a high performance tampon personally.  This has nothing to do with the function of the product itself, but I'm a fan of the fact that the wrapper is black.  Way more nondescript and discreet than the bright white and neon wrappers of other brands.  What really stood out to me about U by Kotex was their website.  I love how the website is geared towards teens and is focused on helping them figure out the whole menstruation/becoming a woman thing.  When I was 13 the internet was still relatively new (what up, Netscape Navigator), and I don't remember thinking to myself, "oh I bet I can find that out online!"  Knowledge about my changing body and what it all meant seemed limited to science books which were always more about the biology of menstruation than how to deal with it as a newly minted woman.  I remember being so confused by the menstrual cycle diagram with the cross section of a uterus building up the lining, dropping an egg, and then menstruating.  There's a lot of shame associated with menstruation, a lot of messages being sent young (and old!) girls that it's gross and disgusting and something to feel ashamed about.  I deeply appreciate the lengths U by Kotex goes to to empower girls and give them knowledge, useful knowledge, about their periods, biology, how to use feminine products (something that's become second nature to me as a 26 year old woman, but a terrifying, foreign idea at 13), and female health.  I would've loved to have that kind of resource as a 13 year old!  A lot of girls don't have a mom they can ask, and even if you do have a mom you can ask, it can be weird.  Having access to great information on a safe website is awesome.

If you want to give U by Kotex a try they're giving out free samples, which you can get by clicking here.  Want to find out more about U by Kotex?  Check out their website, facebook, and twitter!


I wrote this review while participating in a content series through Clever Girls Collective on behalf of U by Kotex, and received products to facilitate my post and compensation for my time to participate. All opinions and thoughts are my own. Thanks for supporting those companies which keep Delightfully Tacky alive and kicking.

*U by Kotex wants you to know that they don't advise you use tampons for uses other than for, you know, periods and stuff.  
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Liz Morrow Liz Morrow

pretty ladies

While in Austin I took a lot of outfit photos for other gals, and they helped me with a few of my own as well.  It's so much easier to do one another's outfit photos, especially since we all know each other and how we like our photos to look.  Plus, no one feels bad for asking for a detail shot, or a few of the shoes, or maybe a couple more just a little further away, or let's try a different background.  I always love being solely behind the camera, so it was fun to shoot other girls' outfit photos instead of just my own.  I grabbed shots of Julie, Moorea, Chelsea, and Tieka over the course of the weekend and here are a few of my favorites from the outfits photos I shot for them!



 


 

 

bottom photo taken by Tieka
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Hi, I’m Liz

I'm an artist, writer, designer, DIY renovator, and … well basically I like to do all the things. If it’s creative I’m probably doing it. I’ve spent over 30 years voraciously pursuing a life steeped in creativity and I wholeheartedly believe creativity and joy are inextricably linked.
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