Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m the quietly wealthy mom of 3DC who rolls up in my new to me Honda Pilot. Jewelry is my 1ct solitaire and plain wedding band, costume gold hoop earrings. Monthly blonde highlights, light drugstore brand makeup but tasteful, pro manicured nails. I’m in head-to-toe REI casual clothes (Kuhl jacket over a Fjall Raven button down and Marmot leggings and Anita bra) with Salomon trail runners. If I have to get dressed up, I’ll ask my Nordstrom personal shopper (I’ve had the same one for years) select something. I can’t be bothered.
I'm obsessed with hair but nobody gets monthly highlights. Even if you have gray, you do monthly color on roots and highlights every few months.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Today while roadtripping I saw a family at a cafe where every kid was decked out in Vineyard Vines, and bottle-blonde Mom had a white neverfull on one shoulder and lululemon backpack on the other. All of that mattered a lot less than the fact that one of the toddlers wouldn’t wear his sneakers, so they SET HIS SHOES DOWN ON THE TABLE, decided to move to a different table, took a table decoration with them, and then put the shoes in the decoration to entertain the kid…and then put them back on the surface of the new table. Brand names can’t cancel out this kind of upbringing!
Lululemon and Vineyard Vines are hardly designer brands. They have outlets! I’m not impressed with your outrage over putting toddler shoes on the table either. It wasn’t Ruth’s Chris on NYE.
They are definitely not "designer." But they are relatively expensive, especially for kids. Especially Vineyard Vines. Very preppy. Show me a family in Vineyard Vines and show me a family in Gucci and I'm going to guess the one in Vineyard Vines has more money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wealth whispers
Yes, but that doesn't mean beat-up cars and old clothes - more like Loro Piana, Bottega Veneta, and custom or estate jewelry.
Anonymous wrote:Wealth whispers
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Today while roadtripping I saw a family at a cafe where every kid was decked out in Vineyard Vines, and bottle-blonde Mom had a white neverfull on one shoulder and lululemon backpack on the other. All of that mattered a lot less than the fact that one of the toddlers wouldn’t wear his sneakers, so they SET HIS SHOES DOWN ON THE TABLE, decided to move to a different table, took a table decoration with them, and then put the shoes in the decoration to entertain the kid…and then put them back on the surface of the new table. Brand names can’t cancel out this kind of upbringing!
Lululemon and Vineyard Vines are hardly designer brands. They have outlets! I’m not impressed with your outrage over putting toddler shoes on the table either. It wasn’t Ruth’s Chris on NYE.
They are definitely not "designer." But they are relatively expensive, especially for kids. Especially Vineyard Vines. Very preppy. Show me a family in Vineyard Vines and show me a family in Gucci and I'm going to guess the one in Vineyard Vines has more money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Today while roadtripping I saw a family at a cafe where every kid was decked out in Vineyard Vines, and bottle-blonde Mom had a white neverfull on one shoulder and lululemon backpack on the other. All of that mattered a lot less than the fact that one of the toddlers wouldn’t wear his sneakers, so they SET HIS SHOES DOWN ON THE TABLE, decided to move to a different table, took a table decoration with them, and then put the shoes in the decoration to entertain the kid…and then put them back on the surface of the new table. Brand names can’t cancel out this kind of upbringing!
Lululemon and Vineyard Vines are hardly designer brands. They have outlets! I’m not impressed with your outrage over putting toddler shoes on the table either. It wasn’t Ruth’s Chris on NYE.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m the quietly wealthy mom of 3DC who rolls up in my new to me Honda Pilot. Jewelry is my 1ct solitaire and plain wedding band, costume gold hoop earrings. Monthly blonde highlights, light drugstore brand makeup but tasteful, pro manicured nails. I’m in head-to-toe REI casual clothes (Kuhl jacket over a Fjall Raven button down and Marmot leggings and Anita bra) with Salomon trail runners. If I have to get dressed up, I’ll ask my Nordstrom personal shopper (I’ve had the same one for years) select something. I can’t be bothered.
I'm obsessed with hair but nobody gets monthly highlights. Even if you have gray, you do monthly color on roots and highlights every few months.
Anonymous wrote:I’m the quietly wealthy mom of 3DC who rolls up in my new to me Honda Pilot. Jewelry is my 1ct solitaire and plain wedding band, costume gold hoop earrings. Monthly blonde highlights, light drugstore brand makeup but tasteful, pro manicured nails. I’m in head-to-toe REI casual clothes (Kuhl jacket over a Fjall Raven button down and Marmot leggings and Anita bra) with Salomon trail runners. If I have to get dressed up, I’ll ask my Nordstrom personal shopper (I’ve had the same one for years) select something. I can’t be bothered.
Anonymous wrote:That their lives are driven by a need for external validation stemming from a deep insecurity, usually an upbringing that was the opposite of the life they are trying to project.
Anonymous wrote:Today while roadtripping I saw a family at a cafe where every kid was decked out in Vineyard Vines, and bottle-blonde Mom had a white neverfull on one shoulder and lululemon backpack on the other. All of that mattered a lot less than the fact that one of the toddlers wouldn’t wear his sneakers, so they SET HIS SHOES DOWN ON THE TABLE, decided to move to a different table, took a table decoration with them, and then put the shoes in the decoration to entertain the kid…and then put them back on the surface of the new table. Brand names can’t cancel out this kind of upbringing!