Home - About - Style Me Vintage - Work - Press - Blog - Contact

Stumblin’ Slims

On Saturday 1st October 2011 the newest and hottest 1950s Rock N Roll night will be taking place at Village Underground in Shoreditch.

Stumblin’ Slims will recreate the girly glamour and leather clad sexiness of 1950s and 1960s Hollywood in East London with gals in vintage prom dresses and guys in quiffs and tight denim will be revving up the T-birds.

Stumblin’ Slims describe themselves as a cross between Prom Night and a late night drag race meet with a soundtrack of original rock n roll tracks and live bands.
Featuring a DJ set by the beautiful Gizzi Erskine as well as live music from The Langley Sisters, an all-girl three part harmony group whose vintage hits herald back to a golden Hollywood age. Also performing will be The Caezars, one-man boogie band Dollar Bill and DJ duo Hits Don’t Hurt.

Throughout the evening, guests will be able to sip from a (spiked) punch bowl and help themselves fairground-style to popcorn and candyfloss. Marlboro smoking rebels and their bobby socked girlfriends can play spin the bottle in the back of a pickup truck while those without a prom date practice the hand jive and get giggly on milkshake cocktails.

Throughout the night, there will be professional dancers on hand to teach wannabe twisters and jive bunnies in readiness for the Stumblin’ Slims Twist Contest. The winning couple will not only be presented with the coveted twist trophy, but will also win free meals at The Blues Kitchen in Camden.

The Blues Kitchen has become the new home of Rhythm & Blues in London. A genre that has become increasingly popular through rockabilly clubs and Northern Soul nights, Blues and Rock n Roll is now firmly back on to the London radar thanks to the likes of The Blues Kitchen, a venue that offers live music every night until late and DJs plucking tunes from the best record collections in town.

The Blues Kitchen Presents STUMBLIN’ SLIMS Saturday 1st October 2011 8pm – 2am

Village Underground, 54 Holywell Lane, City of London, EC2A 3PQ

Tickets: £15 adv. £20 door

 

 

Judy’s Affordable Vintage Fair

Ladies, Gentlemen, lovers of vintage, I would like to introduce you to Judy’s Affordable Vintage Fair.

More and more people are discovering that it doesn’t take the latest throw-away wardrobe to sport a look that you love and others can’t stop complimenting. Whether it’s early 20th century glamour, a shapely fifties frock, a free and easy seventies look or the bold attitude of the eighties, love of vintage is growing.

At Vintage Secret we couldn’t be happier about this, but sometimes the growing popularity of vintage style and lifestyle has made it harder to cultivate the perfect look at a good price, but luckily for us the lovely people at Judy’s Affordable Vintage Fair are back in town.

On Sunday the 22nd of May, Bethnal Green’s York Hall will see the arrival of the fair. The venue built in 1891 will host up to 45 of vintage trading expert Judy’s favourite stalls chosen for their value, including sponsor Rag and Bow’s Roaming Vintage Store. It’s hard not to get into the swing of things in York Hall where the history of the venue makes this event feel like it could be happening fifty years ago. The fair includes a pop-up cake shop, hair salon and music, there’s a good community feel to it and most importantly it’s a great place to pick up a bargain!

You’ll find affordable vintage from the 1940’s to the 1990’s including gems like Biba and Mary Quant. You can find 1950s prom dresses, 1970’s maxi’s, military surplus, Americana and plenty of lush jewellery to sift through all under one roof.  Judy has also conceptualised and curated vintage markets for some of the country’s largest outdoor events, including Lovebox, V Festival and the Reading & Leeds Festivals. If you’re in town then pop along, bring some cash as not all the stall holders can  take cards. Be there early to beat the queues, bag a bargain and still have time for a delicious cake and tea!

Bethnal Green’s Affordable Vintage Fashion Fair runs from 11am to 4.30pm on Sunday the 22nd of May

York Hall, Old Ford Road, Bethnal Green, London, E2 9PJ

Entry: £2 Early Bird (10:30 -11:00): £3

 

John Bishop’s Britain needs Mods! (TV Show)

Are you a friendly mod with stories to tell and a great sense of humour? Then the people behind John Bishop’s Britain need you!

The Saturday night entertainment show for BBC1 is looking once again for lots of different people, from all walks of life, from all over Britain to take part in the show. They want you to tell them funny, interesting stories from your life on various topics, and currently they are seeking people into the Mod scene (them being a representative of a British sub-culture of course) who wouldn’t mind going on the tellybox and telling them about it. Age doesn’t matter, you can be a young whippersnapper who has got into the scene recently or someone who was there the first or second time round – they always have the best stories!

Here is a little snippet from the program if you have not seen it!

Sounds like something you would be interested in or know someone who would be perfect? Drop me a line at laura@naomithompson.co.uk and i will pass your details onto their production team.

Me and my Vintage

Vintage has always been an interesting concept to me. I don’t think its ever dominated my life but it is certainly interwoven. Having parents like mine always meant that I would end up being of  the Rock n Roll persuasion. Growing up on a diet of The Who, The Rolling Stones and David Bowie meant inevitably I would choose a similar path. With my teenage years being firmly in the 90s I was exposed to, what we would call now I guess, a Mod Revival. With Ocean Colour Scene, Pulp and Suede dominating the charts it was difficult to escape the Parkas, ill fitting suits and desert boots. Coupled with a few local indie discos I was a smitten kitten. Quadrophenia became my favourite film, I got excited whenever that Lucozade ad came on the telly (coincidentally my now future husband is in it!), I wore my boyfriends parka during the hot summer days, I started a scooter fund and sold anything I could at car boot sales, my favourite T-Shirt had a picture of a Lambretta SX 200 on it, I cut out and collected ANYthing Mod related from newspapers and magazines and put them in my “Mod Folder”. I still have that and I’m convinced it will be my retirement fund. I would gaze longingly at all the scooters coming through on their way to the IOW Scooter Rally.  Aged 14 I would hang out of my best boy friend’s window watching the house opposite because the guy who lived there always had loads of scooters coming and going, we nicknamed him, ironically, Scooter Man. I met Scooter Man later in my 20s where he worked as a delivery guy, I was very excited but also let down that he wasn’t exactly Jimmy, he was more Jimmy’s nerdier uncle, I would have been mortified if anyone knew what a hero he was to me…but I digress…

In the 90s it was very difficult to find clothes that suited how I wanted to look. My parents rarely indulged in any shopping trips so I had to make do with what I already had – which wasn’t easy since I rebelled at 13 and decided to be a raver, but that’s another story -  and of course the obligatory charity shops. My Grandma is the charity shop queen, and would quite happily spend money on me in these smelly, stuffy rooms with old people. I didn’t hate it but I certainly didn’t love it either. But it taught me a valuable lesson when buying clothes, especially Vintage. The only shop in my home town that sold Vintage was very expensive. I remember getting my GCSE results and running down there with £50 in my hot little hand, only to emerge with a pair of beige corduroy flares and a brown Vintage shirt with square buttons (I’m pretty sure it was a boys one too), and that was all I could afford, baring in mind this was 1996 and £50 could buy you a whole new wardrobe in Pilot. And that always stayed with me throughout my formative years. Vintage was always ridiculously expensive so charity shops were the only choice. However I never really put the two together. Vintage doesn’t come from charity shops, that was just second hand, if you wanted Vintage you had to pay through the nose for it. So I guess I started to stray away from it. I still loved everything about the 60s but it was difficult and expensive to source.  But then as I got into my mid 20s I got back into it again. I found an amazing League of Friends in the hospital where I was working, which was totally untouched by outsiders. The old dears who worked on it loved me as I always left with piles of great stuff, all for around a fiver, which they thought was overpriced. I still have a Vintage Jaeger Camel Hair coat from there that I paid three pounds for. I would take select people and swore them to secrecy, I never wanted the local Vintage shop scavengers to find my treasure trove of precious things. Its not there anymore, but I used to return frequently after I moved on and quite often think if I knew then what I know now, I would have bought everything, not just the obvious stuff.

I then moved to London and everything changed again. I got back into it and nowadays its much easier to buy repros to get the look. My fave Peter Pan dress is from Primark. And with the advent of eBay and Etsy, Vintage has never been so accessible. I went through a phase of buying anything, whether it fitted me or not and then making the pilgrimage to the dressmakers to have it all altered to my own Vintage bespoke. I had also discovered an unseen before love for dresses, I had never been girly, but now I loved it. My cousin Naomi, of the infamous Vintage Secret can be thanked for that, she scoffed at my jeans and shelltops wearing and forced me into frocks. I have never looked back. I have achieved everything that the 14 year old me would have died for, I own a Vespa 150 Super called Stanley, I have a future husband who is a Mod, owns more shoes than I do and has a faster scooter. I’m an extra in Brighton Rock(defining moment was when wardrobe asked if my clothes belonged to them, I said no!) I have fallen in love with the Vintage scene once again. Now I’m older and wiser I can appreciate the cut of a dress and the feel of the fabric, but its taken me a while to get there. I have also calmed down the spending, I have a few beautiful pieces that have been far more carefully selected, mostly all the great East Londoner Frank Russell for Mansfield. And I also wear more and more Vintage things during the day too, something unheard of a few years ago, I would always save them for best, and of course they would never get worn, which is an absolute travesty for something that has survived for so long.  And its always a case of being your turn to wear something for a few years before someone else snaps it up as their fave piece. You never really own Vintage clothes do you, you just borrow them for a time.

Ham Yardies Springtime Special Club Night

Ham Yard, W1 was the location of the original Scene club, considered to be THE Mod club from the early 1960s.

Now that Spring is starting to show its face there is no excuse for hibernation anymore. Dust off your dancing shoes and get yourself down to the Ham Yardies Spring Special.

Your DJ hosts for the evening are:

Paul Newman, Alan H, Val Palmer, Jules, Mary Boogaloo, Thierry Steuve and Steve Piper

Where: The Britannia, Monument Street, EC3R 8AJ

How much: £6 with membership card and £8 without (please see their FB page for membership info)

Smart mod dress preferred please!

Click on the flyer to take you to their FB page.

Jukebox Jam Club Night feat. Big Boy Bloater and the Limits!

This month Jukebox Jam has a fantastic line up for your delectable delights. First off is the special preview show of  Big Boy Bloater and the Limits with an all new line up.

A firm Jukebox Jam favourite – the one and only Big Boy Bloater is one of the best R&B artists these fair isles are yet to produce! Bloater returns after a year off, having regrouped and come back with a whole new line-up and promising a significant switch in direction. New band the Limits is so top-secret that JJ have only just received the merest sneak preview – a one song demo. Lucky sods that they are.

Joining the resident DJ’s is this months guest, Tomas McGrath, who as well as being a Vintage Secret fave is the young wunderkind behind cool 60s soul and R&B hangout Pork and Beans. As ever, expect the very best Blues and Rhythm sounds of the 50s and early 60s that you’re ever likely to hear – along with a sprinkling of Ska, Rock and Roll and more…

How much? £4 before 10pm or with flyer. Otherwise £6

Where: The Alley Cat(formerly Peter Parkers / Zen), 4 Denmark St, London WC2H 8LP

The Sidewinder Club Night

One of the newest venues in North London plays host to The Sidewinder club. On the 1st Thursday of every month, resident DJs Dave E and Giles promise to play the best 60s, Jazz, Blues, Soul and RnB.

In March they have special guest Smiler hitting the wheels of steel. I suggest you get yourselves down there.

How much? Free!

Where: Satan’s Circus Bar inside the Wenlock And Essex Bar And Restaurant 18 – 26 Essex Road, Islington,  N1 8LN

The Roll and Tumble RnB Club feat. The Caezers

Roll and Tumble is Camden Town’s brand new RnB hideaway club night brought to you by the fabulous Jukebox Jam. Every week they promise to bring you the best in RnB and vintage sounds around as well as special guests.

This week they have for you the amazing Caezers playing their Rockabilly rock n roll guaranteed to get your feet moving.

Accompanied by top DJ GRINSTER alongside Jukebox Jam and the Roll and Tumble residents you cannot go wrong.

How much? It’s FREE to get in before 10pm, and only £3  thereafter.

Where? The Blues Kitchen, 111-113, Camden High Street, NW1 7JN

Click on flyer for Facebook event page.

The Jelly Roll Club Night (Peterborough)

For all you lovely ladies and gents in the Midlands (that’s where the best Scooter Clubs are ;-) ), we have the Jelly Roll Club Night. Following on from their undoubted success from last year they continue bopping into 2011 with these top notch DJs on the 5th of March:

PHIL BUSH (Sounds and Pressure)
RAY MAHONEY(Club Caliente)
OXFORD PAUL(Bluecat Reggae Club)
JAMIE PARR
PAUL D
TERRY

How Much? Admission is a mere £3 and the doors open at 8pm and close at 2 am

Where?  The Brewery Tap,  80 Westgate, Peterborough, PE1 2AA

Clickety click on the flyer for Facebook event page.

Ready Steady Go! Presented by Hipshaker and Right Track Scooter Club (Portsmouth)

It brings me great pleasure to introduce to Vintage Secret my favourite club night on the South Coast.  Not just because its where i cut my dancing teeth as a young modette, but it is a fabulous club night.

Join us on the 22nd (yes i will be there as i celebrate the anniversary of my 18th birthday) where Dave, Jo & Nelly (RTSC) will be playing the Grooviest 60s Soul, Rock, Ska, Pop & Scooter Rally Classics, with Time Bomb live on stage.

Born in 1998 at the legendary Portsmouth Wedgewood Rooms they have expanded over the years and have hosted events all over Hampshire, including Basingstoke, Southampton, Bognor Regis, the Isle of Wight and London. They are also the staple diet of the IOW Scooter Rally, spinning their great tunes over the whole 3 nights in the Ryde Castle as well as hosting the Hipshaker Lounge at the IOW Festival earlier in the year.

Where: Portsmouth Wedgewood Rooms, 147b Albert Road, Portsmouth, Hampshire PO4 0JW

How much: £5 adv / £6 B4 11 / £7 after.  You can call the box office on 023 9286 3911 or book online here.

Click on the poster to take you to their Facebook Page.

Recent Tweets


Event Calendar

May 2013
M T W T F S S
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031EC