Tag Archives: Garance Doré

Humble pie

Last week I started class at the Alliance Française to prepare for my summer adventures.

Man, was I rusty. Hopefully that will be as painful as it will ever be during the next nine weeks of this conversation course. I’ve joined a class that’s been together for a while now — people who take French to practice, for work, or to prepare for travel.

Although it’s an advanced level class, everyone is operating with their own strengths and weaknesses. It’s great to converse with people who are trying just as hard as you are, and have an interest in you getting to the next niveau in your skill.

Here’s the thing. I started taking French in the 7th grade and I’ve had French every year through college, and even ended up majoring in it (totally useful degree). When I moved to Atlanta, to meet people, I did an internship at the AF and got more real-life practice (and free classes!). But for the past 5 years I have barely spoken a lick, save a few random occurrences at L’Atmosphère, with Anne, or my aunt, who I used to practice with all the time in LA. Not enough.

I won’t say I made an ass of myself, because I didn’t. I understood just about everything and held my own pretty well — except for this one article we discussed, where I confused melatonin for melanin and thought a conversation on sleep was about tanning. Yeah. I like to think my mistakes endear me to others. Not a lot of room for ego in language-learning.

So I am committing to reading in French, 5 hours per week. That may not sound like a lot, but it’s something. I am reading over 2000 pages this quarter in school. After I got to 2000, I stopped counting, so 5 hours is the best I can do. I’ll be looking at Garance Doré’s blog and news sites like this and this. That’s how we develop as speakers, even in our native tongue — my mom put book after book in my hand. And all good writers are voracious readers. So, voilà.

And it’s interesting to me, the way language affects your outlook on life and the creation of art. When things are said differently, they mean something else — to understand a culture is to really understand how they say things. Like, the French use the passive voice much more than we do. And they will always give up a grammatical rule to make a sentence sound prettier. What does that tell you? That the language evokes a people concerned with the way things sound and feel, more than the black and white basics? Maybe.

When they say “I miss you” or tu me manques, it really translates to “You miss me.” But it means the same thing. Kind of. When speaking in French you have to think in French, and that’s the part that’s hard; that’s the part you forget over time if you don’t use it. But that’s what I love about the French (if I can make such a generalization), and from the process of learning another language. You just have to come at everything a different way.

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Welcome, Sartorialist

Do you know the Sartorialist? If not, allow me to make an introduction. In 2005, Scott Schuman started taking pictures of people with an inspiring style on the streets of New York.

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Having worked in fashion sales for years, he’d developed quite the eye for a great “look.” His photos make me want to move to to New York, which is saying a lot. They also make me want to go shopping, which is more than I can say for a lot of catalogs these days. Real people (are New Yorkers real people?) have such amazing style. Last year he released a book with select images. Que bella.

Some of the images are just stunning (he doesn’t favor re-posting them, so check the site). I wonder, is it stressful, knowing you may be captured on camera by the Sartorialist when you leave your house each day? Is it worse if you see him on the street, and he doesn’t bother to ask you for a photo? All questions you can ask him yourself, I suppose – he’s in town for a visit – one night only!

Hagedorn Foundation Gallery
The Galleries of Peachtree Hills
425 Peachtree Hills Ave #25
Atlanta, GA 30305
Date: Friday, September 17
Time: 7:00PM – 10:00PM
FREE and open to the public


He’s speaking to the students at SCAD Atlanta this morning, and we are all so excited. I don’t know that I’m in my Sunday best, but you know, I look kinda cute.

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