Birthday Suit

Sarah KempsonThis past weekend I celebrated my 30th birthday, and this is what I wore. You can find all these pieces in stores now!

Jayson Brunsdon Black Label Winter Bloom Dress $189, from Myer (Psst! $20 off offer on now!)
Wittner Topper Mulberry Heels, $50, from HeelSteal.com
Diamond Earrings and Yellow Sapphire & Diamond Ring, with thanks to Keshett Jewellery
Manicure by Wicked Bliss

Venue: Honey Bar and Restaurant, South Melbourne
Image thanks to Meagan Harding Photography

 

 

The eve of 30 – Part Four

The final countdown. The last hurrah. There are less than 12 hours left of my 20s. And there are only six things left of my 30 moments before 30 list.

25. Turning 26
My mother was 26 years old when I was born. She’d been married for six years, owned a house and was getting on with life. I had a period of wondering where my life was going – I didn’t have a boyfriend so I wasn’t close to having babies – I wasn’t even working in a job I liked! Many nights of reassuring myself that I had plenty of time left and remembering all the stuff I had going for me made me remember that everyone does things differently. I was having an awesome time living in the city, running my blog and the social side of things. It paid to remember the good things I had, rather than what I didn’t it.

26. My first fashion show
There’s a certain feeling when the lights go down and the big screen comes to life. A fashion show gives me that buzz, a feeling of adrenaline while the music pumps and the lights dim to reveal works of art through a smoky haze. From my first runway show, Target Rocks the Runway, at the L’Oreal Melbourne Fashion Festival close to ten years ago at Waterfront City Docklands, to a personal showing in Paris and a Chanel party in my hometown, my fashion journey is really one I could only ever have dreamt of.

27. The first time I smoked
Many of my high school friends smoked. They’d buy them for 50c a cigarette, or steal them from their parents, and smoke at recess, lunch and after school in the cricket nets on the main oval. I was always terrified of getting caught, plus I knew it was illegal and bad for you. I was straight as an arrow in the behaviour department. As I grew up and rebelled, I asked one of my girlfriends to teach me. We were 16, and she came over after school and we went to the local park where I was apparently ‘a natural’. I came home and immediately confessed to Mum. I couldn’t even rebel without dobbing myself in.

28. Starting my blog
I can’t remember the moment I decided to start a blog. Whether it was my idea, or someone said I should, it came about while I was working in a job that wasn’t very stimulating and I needed something to fill my days. I hadn’t been on Twitter for long and it seemed having a blog was the thing to do. I started Sarah’s Style Emporium using the Blogger platform, and proposed to write a recipe and the outfit you should cook it in. An acquaintance said he gave it two weeks. My blog has moved home twice, gone through several makeovers and in June 2014, will celebrate its 5th birthday. I’ve been invited to events, gifted shoes and drunk so many glasses of complimentary champagne I can no longer keep count. I have been spoilt rotten and I’ve loved every single minute of it.

29. A Little Ray of Sunshine
It’s silly how every time I hear this song, I get a bit choked up. When Mum was pregnant with me, she says that she heard ‘A Little Ray of Sunshine’ by Axiom, ALL the time, and so she knew she was having a girl. For as long as I can remember, it’s been my song. I understand there are a whole stack of girls out there claiming it as their song, but I feel like it’s legitimately mine. Mum and Dad even played it during the speeches at my 21st – and if I was having speeches at my 30th, I’d play it then too.

30. TODAY
Do you ever have those days where you take a moment, sigh, and realise just how friggen awesome your life is? Some people don’t get 30 significant moments in a lifetime, let alone in 30 years – and if I’m being honest, this is just the tip of the iceberg. I have plenty more where those came from – I’m lucky enough to have them coming out my ears. Today my boyfriend wished me a Happy Birthday eve. Last week he wished me a Happy Birthday month. These are the crazy little things that make me smile – when friends send me a fashion picture or an article they think I’ll like; when Mum serves my favourite dinner when we visit; when my brothers help me move house (again); when Dad fills my car with petrol when changing the oil.

Today is significant because it’s my last in my 20s. When I left my teenage years, I couldn’t have imagined this is what life would be like at 30. I was sure I’d have kids by now, living in the suburbs – I doubt I ever would have been to Paris! I have plans for the future now, but I no longer feel like they are instructions or a roadmap. They are a guide, designed to help, but not direct. There is no right or wrong.

Thank you for sharing my moments. I’d love to hear if you have any you feel were turning points in your life – or, if I missed any! And if your birthday is in February, Happy Birthday Month.

Love, Sarah x 

The eve of 30 – Part Three

Well, we are past the halfway mark, and I’m thrilled to be able to recount all the wonderful things that have happened in my life. And while some things are not so nice, the fact that I have so many lovely things to write about counts me as one of the lucky ones. Heres part three…. just one day to go!

sarah at 2I think I am about 2 years old here, at Mt Hotham.

17. My first job
At 14 years and 9 months old, I was keen as mustard to get my first job. I’d helped mum out at monthly craft markets for years and was more than ready to have my independence. A job ad in the daily bulletin at school for a local cafe saw me heading down to Croydon Main Street for my first job interview. My best friend was due to have her interview immediately after mine – would we like to be interviewed together? Of course we jumped at the chance, we were both nervous and needed the moral support. And then I opened my mouth and my friend couldn’t get a word in edgeways. I was given the job, working two nights a week after school, and Saturdays, making coffee and sandwiches for $7 an hour. I worked at the Stockmans Rest Café for the next five years and made great friends with the women I worked with. It was the perfect first job.

18. First time I got so drunk I was sick
Everyone has a story about the first time they got so drunk, they swore they’d never drink again, and I am no different. I was 18, and trying to impress a boy. Of course at 30, I am smart enough to know drunk girls don’t impress any boys, but at the time, but at the time I was young and stupid. A large quantity of vodka, a ‘trip’ down some stairs and very little food was all it took and I was vomiting in the carpark while the sober boy in question held my hair back. The following day was the most horrific hangover I’ve had in my life – I never made that mistake again.

19. Moving in with Breece
From the age of 23 to 28, I lived alone, and I loved it. I like things done a certain way, everything has its place and those who have lived with me before have felt my wrath when things are not up to my standards. When Breece suggested we move in together after a few months of dating, everything felt more than right, but I was concerned about living with someone again – let alone a boy. Two years on and while I find myself picking up glasses he hasn’t actually finished drinking from next to the couch (much to his bemusement), I think we do okay to live in domestic harmony. Even if we have moved house twice.

20. The first clothing I ever bought with my own money
I’ve bought a lot of clothes in my time. Like, think of a lot, then add 10%. And it’s probably more than that. But I remember the first thing I ever bought, with money I earned. It was from a shop in Croydon Main Street that sold cheap and cheerful pieces, presumably imported from China for next to nothing. The navy blue three quarter sleeve shell top saw me through sixteenth birthday parties, cooler days at work and free dress days at school. The black platform strappy sandals from the Shoobiz outlet at Forest Hill Chase Shopping Centre lasted just as long. If I could write a whole post about my 30 most influential outfits, these would be on it.

21. Getting my drivers license
My dad taught me to drive at the Industrial Estate on Dorset Road in Croydon on a Sunday afternoon, in a Toyota Corona we bought from the side of the road for $1600. It had no air conditioning and no power steering, but it was mine. After telling everyone who’d listen they should teach their kids how to drive a manual car, my Dad taught me auto transmission – still to this day I can’t drive a manual. My licence test was super easy (the instructor joked that the tester must have needed to go to the bathroom it was so quick) and just like that, I was given a licence. The first time I drove by myself, I was so scared I drove in silence.

22. My first job in the city
For a girl from Mooroolbark, the city was a scary place. We never had the ‘city experience’ kids have at school now, and the only times we’d ever been to the city was the occasional Sunday family day out. Getting a job in the CBD was terrifying – I’d have to get trains and potentially go to meetings on other streets! For the first six months of working the New York end of Collins street, I didn’t dare walk further than a block for fear of getting lost. Five years later, I could find my way around the CBD with my eyes closed. It makes me laugh to think back to that time and remember how silly I was!

23. Laser Eye Surgery
My first pair of glasses was prescribed at 16. I was struggling to read the blackboard and so I painstakingly picked out my first pair of frames – Mambo ones that I thought were really cool. The first time I wore them at school, a friend joked that they made me look like a nerd and given that I already had braces and fairly plain looks, I was shattered. As soon as I possibly could, I was fitted for contact lenses and spent the next ten years sticking my fingers in my eyes twice a day. The day I took out my lenses for the last time and headed in for laser eye surgery, I thought I would feel like a part of me was missing, but a week later, when I could wake up and see the clock and not worry about forgetting to take out my lenses before bed, I found it was the best decision I could have made.

24. High school bullying
Bullying comes in all shapes and sizes and my experience was no different. In the earliest years of high school, I was dedicated and studious, which doesn’t always sit well with kids who just want to be cool. Their declaration that I was just that ‘bit different’ than the girls I thought were my friends was like a punch in the stomach, and my self confidence plummeted. I threw myself into my studies and made friends the old fashioned way – slowly but surely. At 30, I realise that friendships are complex but I have more than enough wonderful people in my life to make up for the stupidity of a few teenagers way back when we were 13.

 

The eve of 30 – Part Two

Following the first eight of my significant life happenings, the next eight are sure to keep you intrigued. For those who know me, I hope you know how much each and every one of you mean to me, regardless of whether you happened to be mentioned in my top 30. I am significantly lucky to be rich in friends, family, love and laughter – and to all of your who contribute to that, thank you.

Turning 30

9. Leaving an unfulfilling job with no job to go to
I’ve been blessed with some great jobs in my time, and I feel I learnt a lot from each of them, but at some point you tend to exhaust your level of learning, and what you can offer a business. This is when you just start showing up every day, and taking home a paycheck, with not much in between. This happened to me in 2009, and it took everything I had to leave an unfulfilling job, without having another job to go to. Responsibility says you should line up another to cover your rent and mortgage and food etc, but sometimes you just need to take a risk, and jump.

10. My first published piece of writing
At high school, I took Journalism as an elective. I loved writing. But the teacher clearly didn’t and my love of words was quashed. I headed off in the direction of business school, until a guy at work noticed my love of fashion and asked me to pen a piece for his website, 15 seconds. I wrote about the Life In Style Festival at Docklands, and shortly after started writing for Onya Magazine. My first printed piece for Fashion Journal, about fashion and film, is one of my proudest moments – seeing my name in print showed me I was truly supposed to be writing. When I expressed this to mum, she told me she always knew I’d be a writer. ‘Why didn’t you tell ME!’ I said.

11. My two gorgeous nieces
Just prior to Christmas 2009, my brother and his partner announced they were pregnant. It would be the first baby in our family – the first grandchild, and great grandchild on my dads’ side – and it was a very exciting time. The weekend my niece was born seven months later I was in Tasmania and got off a plane to discover I was an aunt. I cried all the way from the airport to the hospital. I couldn’t believe my little brother had a baby, and just two years later, they did it all again. Those two little girls are spoilt rotten by their aunt, and one day I hope I’ll be the one they feel they can come to when they need someone to talk to.

12. Death of a friend
It’s always hard to lose someone you love, but the day an accident killed one of my best friends when we were 19 will forever be etched in my mind in great detail. An ordinary day, I was living with a friend and we’d taken a trip to the local shopping centre to return a top. The phone call that changed everything just said we had to go to my boyfriends parents house – Adam had been in an accident. The shock of arriving and being told he hadn’t made it is a moment I will never forget. The following days are a blur of cups of tea and hugs. No one should have their life cut short at 19 years old – especially not someone who was as kind and caring as Adam was. I still can’t believe the accident was ten years ago. 

13. Starting my own business
After having worked in jobs that didn’t make me happy for a number of years, it was with the support of my partner and mentor that I decided to take the plunge and go out on my own. Armed with a few small business social media accounts, I jumped head on into freelancing – and long lunches, late nights, and never switching off. Freelancing has shown me how much you can love what you do, and finding the right balance between working to live, and living to work. Some weeks I’m flat chat, and others I can go to the movies in the middle of the day, but not a day goes by I’m not grateful for the opportunities I have been presented with and the flexibility my lifestyle has.

14. Grade 6 Valedictorian
In Grade 6, everything was a popularity contest. School captain and heads of houses were never going to be badges I wore, but the chance to be the Valedictorian at our graduation ceremony was a decision made by the teacher, and I was stepping up. Charged with writing a three minute speech on a topic of our choice and presenting it to the class, I did what I do best – talk!! The final round challenge was talking for a minute on a topic chosen by the teacher. I banged on for as long as I could about Netball, and then I was awarded the honour of speaking at the event. I wore a pink top and long skirt that Mum and I had picked out at Myer and had my hair blow dried. Six years later I was asked to do the same at my Year 12 Awards night. Both times were an honour.

15. Any friend I have made through any means
I’m very lucky to be able to say I make friends easily. From kindergarten to twitter, my circle of friends is varied and every person is special. An honourable mention must go to Rachel, who is my longest serving friend at 24 years!! Having met in Grade One, when her family moved here from England, Rachel and I have made it through primary school, shared employment and (several) state moves. I’m sure I still have our original best friends necklace charms somewhere too…..

16. Pretty much every birthday
There is such a thing as a person who likes their birthday. Each year on February 1st, I declare birthday month open and proceed to spend the entire 28 days celebrating me and eating cake. And there is nothing wrong with that. Most years I organise a dinner, or drinks, and am thrilled that there are people who will come and celebrate with me. Maybe after 30, I’ll change my tune, but thank you to everyone who has ever celebrated Sarah with me.

 

The eve of 30 – Part One

It’s crazy to think I am about to turn 30. When I was 12, I remember thinking how old my aunt was. She was cool – I’m pretty sure she had the boyfriend jean thing going on over a decade ago – but she was 30. She was unmarried, occasionally single and always having fun. I think her first overseas trip happened around when she was 30, and she owned real estate. I idolised her – but she was old.

images

It got me thinking, Carrie Bradshaw style, about what the most significant moments in my thirty short years have been – both good and bad. What were the defining moments? What are the things that make me who I am, that I’ll remember fondly forever, or would rather forget? No doubt having compiled this list, I’ve forgotten some (and I’m sorry if they involved you!) but off the top of my head, I wrote the moments that were my most significant to me, since 1984.

And then I started writing about how I felt, and why that event was special. And the copy got really really long. So here is the first batch. Stay tuned for the second instalment!

1. My Debutante Ball
Year 11 at my high school was all about the Central Australia camping trip, and the Debutante Ball. Not being much of a camper (much to my parents disappointment!), I was all about the glamour of the ball. The idea was that young ladies were supposed to ask the boys, but as all shy 15 and 16 year olds will know, that’s not always the way it happens. I think Adam and I mutually agreed, in the spirit of our friendship, to escort each other – and then spent the next month of training laughing our way through the two-hour long dancing sessions. Mum and I shopped for the dress, and I had my hair, make up and nails done. I was 15 years old and felt like a princess. The whole evening was so much fun, followed by an equally awesome after party, and a group of my girlfriends sleeping the night at my house. The next day I put on the dress again, and wore it all day, just because I could (and because I had to return it on Monday!). That night will always be one of my favourites.

2. 21st birthday
I’m one of those silly people who actually likes their birthday. That might change after I turn 30, but at 21, I was super excited. I bought all the paper and made my own invitations, Mum booked a hall, organised a massive cake and scores of fingerfood, while Dad sourced ice and beer. My brothers ran the bar and acted as emcee. My girlfriends told funny stories and my parents played ‘A Little Ray of Sunshine’ – ‘my song’ from before I was born. I wore a black floor length jersey dress with diamanté straps that was backless – I went braless (which is saying something if you’ve met me!) and the black fabric stained my nails grey from lifting it all evening so I didn’t step on it. There were 110 of my closest family and friends in the same place and I was in my element.

3. Getting my year 12 Enter score
My high school years had ups and downs, but overall, Year 12 was up. I studied when I was supposed to, worked two part time jobs and had a great group of friends. My results were good, and I was planning ‘the rest of my life’, post high school, based on what ENTER score I would achieve after my exams. I required a score of 68 to get into the university I had chosen, and was thinking I would achieve a score in the 70s that would easily satisfy this requirement. When the time came for Year 12 students to log on online to check results, I found I didn’t want to know – what if I hadn’t gotten enough? At the school’s presentation evening that night, other students excitedly shared their results whilst I continued to stress over something I could easily have found out. And then two teachers came over and congratulated me on my results. As soon as we got home, I was online, discovering I’d achieved in excess of 86. I didn’t know whether to smile or cry or both. I was surprisingly proud of myself.

4. Finishing uni
It took me four years to complete my Bachelor of Business(Marketing & Media)/Advanced Diploma of Marketing at University. Four years of tutorials, lectures, classes, assignments, exams, beer gardens and toss the boss. Tuesday nights at Cheers, Thursday nights at Daiseys – it was a wonder we learnt anything in the four years we drove the hill on a daily basis to Swinburne in Lilydale. Long breaks between lectures were filled at the local cinema (where I worked, so movies were $2), at the driving range, or the local La Porchetta, where we consumed so much pizza, we could probably have bought the restaurant. In 2005, I finished my last exam – I can’t remember what subject it was but I can recall the room it was in – and met my friends in the Atrium. We were done. Months later I donned the robes and traditional graduation cap and paid $180 for a portrait of me wearing both. My degree is still in the tube they gave it to me in, but I was the first of my generation – both my mother and fathers side – to finish.

5. Meeting Breece
Having been pretty much single for close to a decade, I was just about done looking. I had resolved that I wouldn’t go down the online dating path until I was at least 30, and everything else seemed too hard at the time. Work was frantic and my social life was active. But the Universe had other ideas, and so it was that one evening in November 2011, I was in the right place at the right time. Attending a work function alone after my colleague was unable to make it, I was quietly making small talk with industry people when an innocent social media check in saw me meeting friends in the bar for a drink. One drink turned into a particularly big night, and the beginning of the next phase of my life. I had always thought I would meet someone through a friend – and I’ve been told these things happen at the most unexpected times. Over two years later I am still grateful I decided to go to the work function alone that night!

6. House sitting in the city
I have lived 75% of my life in the same suburb, about an hours drive to the east of Melbourne. I went to primary school there, high school in the next suburb, and university one suburb the other way. My friends lived there, I bought a house there. It was comfortable. My first job out of Uni was in the CBD and I commuted an hour each way on the train morning and night. It was a long commute but was else was I to do? It was then that I was asked by my boss to housesit her amazing apartment on Queens Rd, opposite the Albert Park golf course. I spent three weeks within a tram ride of the CBD, walking distance to the Prahran Market and strolling Albert Park lake – not to mention the $10 taxi ride home. There was no going back – I had seen how good it could be. I immediately began my search for inner city rentals and shortly after moved to South Melbourne, where I would like to stay for the foreseeable future.

7. Buying my first house
While all my friends went off on gap years and bought fancy cars in our early twenties, I decided to take my wisdom from having working in Real Estate and buy a house. I did my research – I didn’t need a 10% deposit (oh, the days before the GFC!) as long as I could afford the repayments – and with that, I was on my way. While Mum tried to dissuade me with talk of rates, insurance and the other ‘unknown’ costs of being a home owner, I scoured realestate.com, drove to open for inspections and met with mortgage brokers. When I found the one, I called in my parents for a second opinion and twenty four hours later, my dad sat beside me while I put in a offer on my first house. After some negotiation, my offer was accepted and 90 days later, I was the proud owner of  a 3 bedroom brick veneer on a corner block. I was 22.

8. Going to Paris 2011
Travel was something I always wanted to do, but having bought my first house at 22, not something I could afford. It took me until I was 27 to finally get the cash, and courage, to branch out and get on a plane to a foreign land, but it was the most amazing experience and not one I would have been able to do at 20. It took my girlfriend six months to convince me to go with her, but those 2 weeks in Paris could not have been better. Spring in the city of lights was magical and showed me just how much of the world there was to see. I was lucky enough to return to Paris in 2013, during winter, and see Paris in a whole other season. I will be forever grateful for the opportunities I’ve had to travel – and those that will come in the future.

2014: Here we go!

Sarah Turns 30

 

This year brings about two milestones – the first, my 30th birthday, and the second, the 5th anniversary of my blog.

Both have gone through many phases – I vividly recall my high school ‘happy pants’ days, and corporate wardrobe, while the blog has housed recipes, bar reviews, fashion and the fabulousness that has been my late 20s. We’ve both grown up.

It’s strange to think the last five years of my life have been housed here, and shared with all of you. From a move to the city from the burbs, really learning what I want to do with my life, the stressful jobs and the fun ones, new friends and old ones, the half decade of 25 to 30 is a real turning point in one’s life.

The next five will likely be just as crazy.  But how exciting to be in a place where I can look forward to that!

Happy New Year readers. 2014 – let’s do this!!