
On Monday night, I watched
Anchorman on DVD, with
Christina Applegate. I was struck by her 1970s corporate style. It was a combination of crisp, relaxed and glossy elements - her wavy blonde hair; her pink, shiny lips; her tailored jackets and vests; her satin shirts and
Diane von Furstenberg wrap dresses. It reminds me of the clothes on
The Mary Tyler Moore Show.

I wanted to make it after all.
Right now all the shops are still stuck in their tiresome "boho" theme, but people on the street are getting into cleaner and more structured elements of that style: tailored velvet jackets; tucking their jeans into their boots. As I've repeatedly written, I'm interested in the combination of soft and structured elements in fashion; and back in
March, I noticed the layering of soft blouses with t-shirts, singlet tops and jumpers.
For a while, I have anticipated that the 1960s mod era will start influencing the way people dress - not least because the dread
Sienna Miller, who is something of a fashion touchstone, was supposed to be starring in the film
Factory Girl. She has just been replaced with
Katie Holmes, who is currently surfing the dubious wave of being
Tom Cruise's 'girlfriend'; but I still predict that the contrasting block colours (particularly black and white) and geometric shapes of mod style are going to find their way into fashion.

Biba boutique, London, 1965. Image from
Sixties City.
More generally, I think there will be more fashion references from the "Swinging Sixties", and the decorative, dandy elements of mod style - the Carnaby Street look epitomised by
Austin Powers. Melbourne's indie-pop scenesters already wear this kind of thing - just go to
Cherry Bar,
Ding Dong Lounge,
Weekender or
Shake Some Action. And, being Melbourne, many people already wear black.
But I predict the emergence of a specific hybrid of 70s career-chick and swinging 60s style. It's a tailored yet slinky look. Think satin blouses with tight jeans and flat boots; berets and velvet jackets with striped t-shirts and boyish pants; messy hair, shitloads of mascara and glossy pink lipstick. The key colours are bright, space-age, Technicolours - pink, yellow, neon red, black and white, with judicious touches of denim.
Penny came up with the perfect title for this look:
Jaunty Pussy. This was a work of unspeakable brilliance. I liked it so much that I've taken to saying it repeatedly in a plummy English accent.
"You're a woman of many parts, Pussy! "I tried out
Jaunty Pussy last Tuesday. I wore a hot-pink racer-back singlet with a hot-pink sash tied in a floppy pussy-bow around my neck. Over it I wore a black and white striped jumper; and I teamed it with black knee-length, man-style shorts, hot-pink opaque tights and white cowboy boots, with a bracelet made from three rows of very large pearls.
On Thursday, I wore a pale pink puffed-sleeve blouse with a black racer-back singlet over the top like a vest, with the pink pussy-bow, grey pinstriped jeans, and pink
Chuck Taylor sneakers. Yesterday, I wore the pink singlet again with the pink pussy-bow, a fluffy white off-the-shoulder angora jumper, a black a-line skirt, hot-pink-and-silver-striped knee socks, and white cowboy boots. And today I'm wearing a lilac silk scarf with black polka-dots, tied in a pussy bow, with a black off-the-shoulder t-shirt, a black skirt, black tights and white cowboy boots.
It would seem that I find the pussy-bow the key accessory.
Look out for
Jaunty Pussy on a footpath near you. It's also making its way back onto the catwalk - here are some looks from the Fall 2005 collection from
Diane Von Furstenberg.