Who?

Our very own agony aunt, Lady Unmentionable is a socialite and lingerie aficionado. She'll answer any questions you may have from how to wear the latest lingerie trends, to how to care for your delicates! If your knickers are in a twist, email Lady unmentionable at knickersinatwist@playfulpromises.com.

The social media obsessed marketing guru, who produces all our photos. She is in charge of making sure you are all up todate on the playful gossip, so talk to her on our facebooktwitter and
 tumblr or email her:  anna@playfulpromises.com

Lydia looks after our logistics, making sure our knickers are where they need to be on time. This is to balance out evenings spent being a fire-breathing badass showgirl.

Designer and the glue that binds Playful Promises together.

 

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Entries from September 1, 2012 - September 30, 2012

Thursday
Sep272012

Beauty Queens: Birth of the pageant

 

 

As much as we love giving AND receiving gifts, sometimes getting something right for someone can be a real pain. Enter our cute new gifting tins! Inside each tin is a pair of panties, in sizes small, medium and large (which makes sizing SO much easier). Each tin is Beauty Queen themed, with a gorgeous illustration by Katie Woodger.

 

But for many of us, especially us Brits, beauty pageants are a strange, unknown world. Are they really as shallow as they seem to first glance? We looked into the history of the most famous beauty pageants and how they came to be!

 

The four largest and most famous international beauty contests are Miss World (founded in 1951), Miss Universe (founded in 1952), Miss International (founded in 1960) and Miss Earth (founded in 2001 with environmental awareness as its concern), however it is Miss America that has been going (in one form or another) the longest.

 

Beauty pageants are generally multi-tiered with local competitions feeding into larger competitions. The worldwide pageants often require hundreds, sometimes thousands, of local competitions to slim down the hopeful entrants!


 

 

Although contests to determine who/what are the most beautiful have been around since Ancient Greek myths, there is no evidence of beauty contests for women having existed at this time. Instead there were “contests of physique” known as euandria, which were exclusively for men.

 

Beauty pageants may in fact be traced back to European festivals, in particular, the English May Day celebrations that involved the crowning of a Queen.

 

The first of the modern form of pageant was staged in America by P.T. Barnum (of Barnum and Bailey Circus fame), who had been holding dog, bird and even baby beauty contests in his dime museum in New York City. While his baby contest proved to be a hit, a similar event for women in 1854 was a flop. The prize of a dowry or a diamond tiara if the winner was married was not enough encouragement for Victorian women to display themselves.

 

Instead Barnum came up with the great idea of using daguerreotypes of the entrants instead. Unfortunately he sold off his museum before organising these alternative pageants, but the idea of using modern technology was a pioneering new form of entertainment and his idea was taken up by newspapers across the nation.

 

 

Gradually the discomfort of displaying women in public began to fade, and in 1880 the first “Bathing Beauty Pageant” took place as part of a summer festival to promote business in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware. However it was not until the 20th century when beauty pageants began to become a regular occurrence.

 

In 1921, the businessmen of Atlantic City faced a predicament; how to keep tourists past Labor Day? They decided to hold a fall festival, which included a “National Beauty Tournament”, soon dubbed “Miss America” by the press. The pageant was a great success, running each year until 1929 when the effects of the Great Depression and bad press put a hold on the event.

 

Miss America was revived in 1933, under a new name and management as The Variety Showman’s Jubilee. The pageant was a shambles, with one judge oversleeping, Miss New York State collapsing on stage from an abscessed tooth, Miss Oklahoma rushed to hospital for an emergency appendectomy, Miss New York City dropping out, Miss Arkansas revealed to be married and three contestants disqualified for living in other states!

 

Marian Bergeron, a dead-ringer for Jean Harlow, eventually wins, however is nearly disqualified when judges discover she is only 15. Despite being underage, she is allowed to keep her crown and earns the nickname “baby vamp”. Unfortunately the crown was stolen from her hotel suite hours later...

 

Despite the setbacks of that year, Miss America continued to hold their contest each year. During World War II, thought is given to discontinuing, however the decision is made that it helped strengthen the American spirit.

 

 

In 1945 Lenora Slaughter became the first female director of the pageant, making changes that would put the contest on the map for decades to come. She created a scholarship program to help young women attend college; however as the public focused on soldiers returning from the war, she faced a challenge to raise funds. Unsurprisingly, considering the time, the businessmen she approached were uninterested in the idea of scholarships for women. Despite this, Lenora eventually raised enough money to set up the scholarship, which is still in place today!

 

Lenora also caused controversy in 1948 when she announced that the winner would be crowned in a gown rather than the traditional swimsuit. Reporters are furious and attempt a boycott, before their editors called them off. Three years later in 1951 Miss America winner, Yolande Betbeze, refused to pose in a swimsuit, insisting she was a classical singer, not a pin-up. Her decision was supported by judges, much to the distaste of sponsor, Catalina swimwear, who promptly pulled their sponsorship and began to plan its own pageants, Miss USA and Miss Universe.

 

 

Make sure you tune in next week for part two of beauty pageant history!

 

Wednesday
Sep262012

Competition: Win a Playful Promises tea dress

 

 

We love our floral tea dresses because they are just so versatile! Whether it's lovely and warm (lucky you), or a little bit chilly, the tea dress is ready for anything.

 

We want to hear how you would style this dress! What accessories would you wear with it? Shoes? Stockings, tights or leggings?

 

And not just on the outside, but tell us what Playful Promises lingerie you would love to wear underneath! 

 

We've made entering the competition easy peasy! You can enter in up to 3 ways:

1. Comment on this blog post with how you would style the dress and which PP lingerie you'd wear underneath.

2. Like our Facebook Page and comment on our facebook post with how you would style the dress and which PP lingerie you'd wear underneath.

3. Follow our Tumblr and reblog the post with how you would style the dress and which PP lingerie you'd wear underneath.


 Make sure you get your entries in, as the competition closes this Sunday 30th September!

 

Monday
Sep242012

Diary of an Intern: So Long!

I am very sad to say, my time here at Playful Promises is almost finished, but instead of sobbing into the keyboard, I am going to tell you all about my time here, what I have been up to and what I have loved the most!

 

I have been at Playful Promises now for three months and have really enjoyed all my visits here. I have been involved in loads of projects and have always been kept busy! So you can see the variety of things I have been up to, I’ve compiled a list:

 

  • Researched different companies, publications, blogs and boutiques
  • Developed relationships with different members of the press through call rounds
  • Made press packs
  • Written press releases
  • Contributed to Playful Promises blog (read all my posts HERE)
  • Contributed to the Playful Promises Boutique Facebook page
  • Helped write the company’s newsletter
  • Visited the Playful Promises boutique
  • Helped organise a press and blogger event
  • Organised the Playful showroom and sorted samples

 

As you can see I have been up to loads of interesting things!

 

I am really grateful for this opportunity Playful Promises has given me because I have learnt so much! I have had a real insight into how a companies marketing department works and has strengthened me desire to work in a marketing role.

 

Originally, I wanted to work within a womenswear specific company, but having worked here at Playful Promises I want to work in the lingerie industry! After experiencing this great company and seeing how well the products are designed and constructed, how good the team is and how well Playful Promises customer service is I am actively going to pursue a marketing role in a lingerie firm – I just wish I could stay here forever!

 

My experience at Playful Promises has also made me want to work for a smaller company. At Playful Promises, everyone is valued and no one goes unnoticed, unlike a big company. Working for an independent retailer has also opened my eyes to all the amazing brands out there that guarantee their customers’ excellent products that you won’t see on every other person on the high street.

 

Playful Promises have really spoilt me while I have been here – they took me to London Fashion Week, which was so exciting! We went to the Felicities Presents…Show and saw seven emerging designers – Ada Zanditon, Arianna Cerrito, Beautiful Soul, Evmorfia, Phannatiq, Tramp in Disguise and Xsenia & Olya. I can’t believe my luck really!

 

I am really going to miss working here and I am now completely hooked on Playful Promises and I can’t even think of one thing I haven’t enjoyed about my experience here! I know one thing I won’t miss though – the commute!

 

(Note from the PP team - Caitlin was a pleasure to work with and we would love to pass on her details to anyone in the industry who has a vacancy available. Please send info to anna@playfulpromises.com)

 

Saturday
Sep222012

Lady Unmentionable: Where to find slips

  

 

Can you recommend any places to buy slips, I too suffer from the garter belt showing slightly through clothes ? X

- Lorraine (Via the Playful Promises Facebook)

 

For those not in the know, a slip is an undergarment worn between lingerie and clothing, helping clothing hang more smoothly, creating a desirable shape. The slip offers many benefits such as preventing certain fabrics irritating the skin, protecting finer fabrics from perspiration and also offering warmth to the wearer.

 

In the 1920’s slips were introduced as an alternative to corsets, fitting in with the looser fashion of the time as well as freeing up metal to be used for the production of essentials for World War l. Obviously the slip isn’t getting as much praise as it deserves; not only did it allow women a new form of freedom, but helped the war effort!

 

As Lorraine has mentioned, wearing a slip does wonders for smoothing down what I call "garter bumps" when wearing tight-fitting clothing. Not only that but it's a sexy little piece of lingerie in itself!

 

Playful Promises currently offers a few slips on sale, including gorgeous silk chemises in jade and lilac, which both come with matching panties. If you'd also like a little bit of a quirky update to the traditional slip, why not go for the Lyla Playsuit in Black or Blush?

 

 

If that doesn't tickle your fancy, slips and teddies are available from a variety of retailers on the internet, some of our favourites include Kiss Me Deadly and Ayten Gasson!

 

Also, if you happen to be popping by the Playful Promises Boxpark boutique make sure you also visit Brick Lane with its cute vintage shops and grab yourself an authentically vintage bargain!

 

Thursday
Sep202012

Introducing.... Shop Desh!

 

 

Playful Promises is ecstatic to announce that we are now a featured brand on the amazing new lingerie bible of a website that is Shop Desh

 

Shop Desh is the brainchild of Erinn Brown (previously of fab blog The Bare Intimates, which is soon to be merged with the new platform) who wants to make lingerie shopping as stress free as possible for any woman. Shop Desh is not only a massive lingerie database, including everything you could need or want in your underwear drawer, but everything on the website has been carefully selected so you only get the best products different brands have to offer! In this way, the website can be a little dangerous – as you end up wanting every beautiful item you spot!

 

Shop Desh caters for various sizes and the seach function makes it so easy for you to find what you are looking for; you can search for an item by size (from 32A to 40F or XS – XL), colour or brand. You can even refine your search further and search for an item by price or sex factor (LOVE IT)! It’s as easy as 1, 2, 3!

 

Shop Desh carries an amazing array of both British and international lingerie designers, including: Huit, Freya, Affinitas, Chantelle and Marlies Dekkers so is a great way to introduce yourself to some new brands and to continue to support your old favourites!

 

Here at Playful Promises we are so excited to see this grow and expand into the number one lingerie database! So pledge your allegiance to Shop Desh and Playful Promises!

 

Let us know if you have used Shop Desh and what you think of it!