By ROSIE WATERLAND
Do you look back on your formal photos and cringe with embarrassment?
Our styles often change so dramatically in the years after we leave high school, sometimes all it takes is 12 months to look back and wonder what the WHAT that girl was wearing (and who the hell let her out of the house with all that eyeliner)?
It’s been ten years since I finished school, and in a Romy and Michele-esque walk down memory lane, I dug out the old formal photos to see what ridiculous choices I made during what I considered the most important moment of my education.
They were kind of disappointing. And not becasue I made bad choices, but because I didn’t. No hilarious hairstyles or ridiculously misguided foundation lines. No puffy shoulders or sequin-spew. I looked quite nice, to be honest. BOR-ING.
In year 10, I went for more of a princess vibe. I think a lot of girls go down that road because it’s the first time many of them have worn a ball gown and they want it to look like it’s straight out of a Disney film. My dress was made to look like one of the gowns Kate Winslet wore in Titanic. Not Disney, but close.
It was a fun night with lots of dancing, none of which was with my date. (Panicking that nobody would ask me and I would end up having to go alone, I had awkwardly asked a boy I barely knew to be my plus one. He graciously accepted, to which I replied “Awesome, thanks. Now I can get serious about my dress.” Not exactly a love connection.)
In year 12, I was rocking more of a sexy vibe. I was 17, and quite obviously a mature adult who now knew everything about beauty and fashion (that eyeliner I wore in year 10 was SO ridiculous).
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I wish I had a photo to post of my Year 12 formal dress from 1986 - I went in search of them a couple of years ago to bring out at the 25 year (!) reunion but to no avail. You'd have a good giggle.
Anyway, it was pretty classic 80s, although most of my friends were wearing "hot pink" or "electric blue" as was the thing at the time (with matching eye makeup and lipstick!). Well, being a bit "arty" I went with emerald green and black so I didn't look like everyone else.
My mum made it, because I couldn't afford the Studibaker Hawk gown I was desperate for in the shops. It was a sleeveless black velvet column that pouffed out at the knee with an emerald green silk organza skirt (gorgeous colour), with black tulle underneath to hold it OUT! Sheer black spotted stockings, patent black pointed toe pumps, long black gloves, matching emerald green eyeliner, short haircut with a long fringe and a boy in a pink suit jacket completed the look.
Now if only I could find those photos...
I've had a really topsy turvy day and night so feel free to be honest everyone and tell me if I'm just being too sentimental... but I'd like to suggest to Mamamia for articles like this where we encourage people to share photos of their dresses, nails, pets, whatever and also Best and Worst we shut the like thumb off. I completely realise that I'm probably just projecting here but it hurts my heart a bit when I see someone has 2 likes for their personal photo for example and someone else has 7. Both people have had the guts to share and break anonymity on a massive site like this and I don't like the concept of them being rated. Same goes for when people share personal things on B&W. Even more so when it's someone who has never posted before. I find myself clicking the thumb for so many things just to let people know that I and I assume others appreciate them sharing with us. For generic articles I get it, but for stuff where the sole purpose is to share something private about one's self I figure people don't need to be rated. If something is touching or funny or beautiful then surely we can take three seconds to say so?
My school didn't do formals when I was there, it was outsourced elsewhere. Agree, Beans, no one on these pictures is unphotogenic, despite the 'oh, I look terrible...' statements. It turns me off reading when I see anytging like this.