Cherry Picking Mondays

Inject a little bit of somethin’ somethin’ into your accessory collection this season with bold icons, invigorating colour and high-impact pendants that render your outfit a little reserved (no matter how funky it is) as they do the talking. Perfect for summer music festivals baby.

LOLA POP NAME NECKLACES

Your name, his name, any message you want to share with the world. Doesn’t matter really, because these coloured metallics are available in whatever words you please. And with so many colours available, you might have to pass through the indecisive on your sure-fire road to fabulous. Available at Lola Pop, and expect to pay around $50 Australian dollars (depending on the conversion from British pounds on the day).

Image courtesy of Lola Pop

DRAMA JEWELLERY PENDANTS

Punk princesses take note – this range is for you. Colours, shapes, rock and roll – it’s all about wearing it tough, rough and outta control. These styles are favourites to the Veronicas, Ruby Rose, Sarah McCleod and Rebecca Jobson, and this week Sassi Sam is introducing two new brilliant additions to her Drama Jewellery Stable, the anime pendants designed by electro pop punk group, Nylon Pink (Spotlighted in our music section this week). The Drama Jewellery line and the new anime pendants are stocked exclusively in Australia at Sassi Sam, from $39.95.

LIMEDROP RIBBON

I wanna be next to you, black and gold, black and gold. The hot colours of modern nightlife, black and gold, come together in this gorgeous yet edgy wooden black bow necklace. Offering a mix of tough yet girly through its dark chain but pretty ribbon shape, this baby will offset both casual and elegant gear this season. Looks especially hot layered with gold necklaces, but if you prefer to get a little matchy, try offsetting it with some earrings. Available from Pitbull Mansion, for $49.50

 

Image courtesy of Pitbull Mansion

About Sarah Ayoub

Sarah Ayoub is organised chaos in the flesh. Nerdy, culture-savvy and a tad over-excited, she flits between university study (where she’s preparing for a doctorate), shopping centres (where she impulse-buys things like designer handbags and chocolate coins) and her bedroom, (where she writes at a computer surrounded by writer’s mess). Shy but flamboyant, a brain but a bimbo, conservative but open-minded, Sarah decided to pursue a career as a journalist because she wanted to be Lois Lane and Clark Kent’s love child (inheritor of enviable journalistic skills and the ability to fly) and because her plan to be a psychiatrist was shelved after a viewing of The Sixth Sense. Desperately in need of a time machine, Sarah Ayoub is an iron fist in a velvet glove - and a walking contradiction that makes perfect sense.