Golden Magazine: The Rise of a Blogger

Golden Magazine: The Rise of a Blogger

The Rise of a Blogger

Danielle Bernstein, successful fashion and lifestyle blogger, CEO of WeWoreWhat brand, and NY Times best-selling author of This is Not A Fashion Story, has become one of the largest names in the fashion industry in her early twenties. Bernstein developed her blog after transferring from University of Wisconsin-Madison to the Fashion Institute of Technology during her sophomore year of college (Forbes). She was inspired by the street style of her classmates and decided to photograph them and document the clothing pieces on her blog. About a year later, Bernstein began to profit off of her website and brands reached out to her to promote their products. As she began to monetize from the blog, she signed with a modeling agency and her agent, Jennifer Powell, helped her in creating her business WeWoreWhat.

Link to Blog: WeWoreWhat.com

Launching WeWoreWhat

Through the success of Bernstein’s blog, she was able to create and design her WeWoreWhat clothing line. Her clothing line currently consists of fall fashion items such as knit sweaters, flannel shirts, a collection of denim print, matching sets, and more. Her unique clothing line also contains cowhide print swimsuits, bras, and pants.

This is Not A Fashion Story

Published in 2020, Bernstein released her autobiography exposing stories about her childhood and teenage years, experiences in her dating life, and even the development of her blog and the success of her companies. Bernstein shares that she was under pressure to succeed with her blog after dropping out of FIT to pursue her dreams. She includes her story of how she made her way in the fashion industry, and gives readers a few tips to get started. Bernstein started as a young Long Island girl with a dream, and turned her passions into a full-blown career.

Photo: AmazonLink to Shop:

Photo: Amazon

Link to Shop: This is Not a Fashion Story

Written By Alyssa Wagner

About

Golden is a digital media strategy founded at the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities – run by students, for everyone. Golden embraces the power of getting dressed, celebrates the individual, and strives to break the boundaries of typical fashion, beauty, and lifestyle content. We feature an online magazine, blog, and social media presence on several platforms.

 

In Minneapolis, a Thriving Center for Indigenous Art

In Minneapolis, a Thriving Center for Indigenous Art

Credit…Jaida Grey Eagle for The New York Times

New York TImes: On a yellow brick building in Minneapolis, a mural of a woman with two braids that cascade into waterfalls and lips muzzled by a red handprint watches over Franklin Avenue.

Above the handprint — a symbol of solidarity for missing and murdered Indigenous women — the figure’s sunglasses reflect a cityscape and tepee.

The reflection represents the American Indian Community Blueprint, the 2010 document that provides a framework for Native urban community development, and the American Indian Cultural Corridor along Franklin Avenue in the Phillips neighborhood just south of downtown.

“It was a revolutionary document,” said Robert Lilligren, the president of the Native American Community Development Institute. Its goal? “To create an economic engine for the Native community.”

 

The mural, “Hearts of Our People” on the facade of All My Relations gallery in Minneapolis created by Natchez Beaulieu with a team of young female artists.
Credit…Jaida Grey Eagle for The New York Times

At the corridor’s heart is the yellow brick building, which houses the institute, as well as its community assets: the Four Sisters Farmers Market, Pow Wow Grounds coffeehouse and All My Relations Arts, an organization and exhibition gallery dedicated to increasing the visibility of contemporary Native artists, cultivating Native curators and connecting them to the influence of preceding generations.

This year, All My Relations Arts celebrates 10 years in this location, and about two decades of operation. It has become a point of pride, said Angela Two Stars, the organization’s director.

“A lot of the artwork that we display is from a native perspective, and that’s a different narrative than what we’ve been taught, you know, as American history,” Ms. Two Stars said.

Mr. Lilligren said the gallery “immediately became a center of attention, both in the community and the broader arts world.”

“It’s almost like sacred space,” he said.

All My Relations is a direct outcome of the blueprint, which outlined the corridor as a destination for Native American art, culture and food, citing examples such as New York’s Little Italy and San Francisco’s Chinatown.

 

“Bring Her Home” at All My Relations Arts
Credit…via All My Relations Arts

Marked by orange lamppost banners, turtle imprints on sidewalks, and a number of murals, the eight-block corridor is bookended by the Ancient Traders Market and the Little Earth affordable housing complex, which became famous as a home base for the American Indian Movement. Formed in the aftermath of the 1956 Indian Relocation Act, the movement went on to organize the 1972 Trail of Broken Treaties, a protest walk from the West Coast to Washington, D.C., to demand that the Nixon Administration honor its treaty commitments.

The Relocation Act forced many Native Americans to assimilate into urban areas, like Los Angeles, Chicago and Minneapolis, which has one of the largest concentrations of urban Native Americans in the nation.

“The American Indian Movement was founded here in 1968. I mean, literally here, you know, in the footprint of the American Indian Cultural Corridor,” said Mr. Lilligren, who served as the first Native American member of the Minneapolis City Council from 2001 to 2014.

He explained that the Minneapolis corridor is unlike others nationwide because of these organic roots, and because Native Americans own a majority of the property along Franklin Avenue, including the All My Relations Arts space.

The gallery itself has become a pipeline for cultivating talent. For example, Dyani White Hawk, a former All My Relations director and curator, has many works in the collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian.

Jonathan Thunder, a painter, illustrator, and filmmaker, is the project mentor for the All My Relations initiative, “We Are Still Here,” which supports artists in making large-scale public artworks.

 

Angela Two Stars, “Okciyapi,” at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis.
Credit…Cameron Wittig for Walker Art Center

Ms. Two Stars is herself a high-profile artist whose installation “Okciyapi” was unveiled Oct. 9 at the Walker Art Center’s Minneapolis Sculpture Garden, placed next to “Spoonbridge and Cherry” by Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen.

“I call myself a fan girl of Native artists,” said Ms. Two Stars, who years ago participated in her first juried show at the gallery, where she met Ms. White Hawk, now her mentor. In 2018, she was invited back to curate a show about missing and murdered Indigenous women, “Bring Her Home,” now a recurring event.

“My grandmother was kidnapped and murdered when I was 9, so I used that to shape the exhibition,” Ms. Two Stars said. She shares this with participating artists to say: “I get it. You’re safe here.”

Juleana Enright first came to the gallery as a 2020-21 fellow of the Emerging Curators Institute, a Minneapolis program for arts professionals from diverse backgrounds. Mx. Enright, who is nonbinary, wanted a space for the show they were developing on Indigenous futurisms — inspired by Grace Dillon’s Native sci-fi anthology — and found All My Relations to be the right fit. Mx. Enright was hired as the gallery assistant in April and their showBiskaabiiyang (an Anishinaabe term meaning, “a return to ourselves”) is on view through Dec. 11.

A still from Santo Aveiro-Ojeda’s "1870: Cyberpunk Forever"

Credit…Santo Aveiro-Ojeda

“I just like that this gallery specifically was reinterpreting what it means to be a contemporary native artist and really highlighting people that you should know” Mx. Enright said.

All My Relations Arts initiatives extend outside the exhibition space, with community murals along the corridor like the woman with braids, created by Natchez Beaulieu and local youth in partnership with the Minneapolis Institute of Arts and its 2019 exhibition “Hearts of Our People: Native Women Artists.”

The presence extends beyond the corridor as well. The ongoing “We Are Still Here” initiative, in partnership with the Hennepin Theatre Trust and Clear Channel Outdoor, tasked artists with designing art for digital billboards throughout the metro area.

Ms. Two Stars says a favorite display is by Sheldon Starr, who paired an image of the Lincoln Memorial with text that says “Mass Execution U.S. Champ. Undefeated 1862-Current.” The piece refers to President Lincoln’s order to hang 38 Dakota men in Mankato, Minn., in 1862. It remains the largest mass execution in U.S. history.

“It’s a truth-telling initiative,” Ms. Two Stars said. “It’s really typical to a Native American kind of personality where they use humor to address some of these hard parts of our history.”

 

Sheldon Starr, “Mass Execution U.S. Champ,” on view on top of the Hennepin Theatre Trust in Minneapolis this April.
Credit…Hennepin Theatre Trust

In late October, an All My Relations Arts project in partnership with the Minnesota Department of Transportation led by Courtney Cochran will be installed at the site of a former Native American homeless encampment. Twenty-three painted plastic panels — stitched with resin beads and ribbon prayer “zip ties” to a chain-link fence — will read “Never Homeless before 1492.”

Ms.Two Stars and Mr. Lilligren said the community was embarking on refreshing the blueprint.

“Native people know what they want. Native people have the ability to realize their visions,” Mr. Lilligren said. “That was important for the native community to learn and for the broader community to learn.”

Sherwin-Williams 2022 Color of the Year

Sherwin-Williams 2022 Color of the Year

(Image credit: Sherwin-Williams)

When two of the most sought-after hues come together, it’s a match made in interior design heaven.

Homes&Gardens: Sherwin-Williams has just revealed their 2022 Color of the Year – and it celebrates the two most popular tones of the season. The aptly named Evergreen Fog merges green and gray hues to create a color that is almost guaranteed to be successful throughout the year ahead. But what else do we know about the shade that is about to reset paint trends globally? Here is everything we know – so you can get ahead of the inevitable color trend.

Following a chain of breezy neutrals and vibrant jeweled paints, Sherwin-Williams curated Evergreen Fog to mark the start of a new dawn of ‘nostalgic mid-tones’ – the basis of which we observe in the ever-increasing desire for gray and green paint ideas.

The appeal around these shades made the color the ‘clear choice’ for the Ohio-based manufacturers, as their director of color marketing, Sue Wadden says.

Sherwin-Williams Color of Month

(Image credit: Sherwin-Williams)

She explains how the merged hue acts as a perfect canvas for interior enthusiasts who can experiment with creative expression in their homes, thanks to its neutral, warming qualities.

‘Evergreen Fog is a sophisticated wash of color for spaces that crave a subtle yet stunning statement shade,’ Sue shares. ‘It inspires us to begin again and is a great choice for modern interiors and exteriors.’

If you think that Evergreen Fog looks familiar, you are not mistaken. The shade simultaneously appeared in Sherwin-Williams’ 2022 color predictions – in which it sat alongside the label’s trendiest hues, including the soothing Shoji White and the contrastable Über Umber.

Sherwin-Williams

(Image credit: Sherwin-Williams)

With its ability to work alongside a spectrum of shades in their forecast, Evergreen Fog is a versatile tool that will set the tone for your future living room ideas – whatever the size – and whatever way your room is facing. With Evergreen Fog, you’re in safe and stylish hands.

We did tell you that you’re about to see this shade everywhere. Now, let’s watch this space. Evergreen Fog is available at Sherwin-Williams stores nationwide and is available to order online via their website.

Megan is a News Writer across Future Plc’s Homes titles. She has a background in national newspapers in the UK and has experience in fashion and travel journalism, which she previously practised whilst living in Paris and New York City. Her adoration for these fashion capitals means she particularly enjoys writing about upcoming styles and trends for Homes & Gardens. Megan also loves discovering vintage pieces in her spare time, meaning her decor is largely influenced by the beauty of the jazz age.

 

 

Tundra Swan Watching: Join a Naturalist Caravan through the Whitewater Wildlife Management

Tundra Swan Watching: Join a Naturalist Caravan through the Whitewater Wildlife Management

Image Creator: Bell Museum

Minnesota DNR: Each fall, the Mississippi River valley becomes a migration corridor for many species of waterfowl, raptors and shorebirds moving from their northern summer homes to warmer southern wintering grounds. One of the more spectacular birding opportunities in the southeastern Minnesota region is witnessing the impressive concentration of thousands of tundra swans in November at the Weaver Bottoms marshes of Winona County. Such great numbers of tundra swans only appear in this area on their route south.

The best time to view the tundra swans is from mid-October through mid-November, Two viewing areas are at the Watchable Wildlife Observation Platform at Rieck’s Lake Park near Alma, Wisconsin, and along Highway 61 near Weaver Minnesota. For further information about the swans at Rieck’s Lake Park visit the Wings Over Alma (link is external) website.

 

Directions to Riecks Lake Park, Alma Wisconsin: Alma, Wisconsin is 85 miles south of St. Paul. Take highway U.S. 61 to either Red Wing or Wabasha and cross the Mississippi River. Follow Wisconsin Highway 35 south to Nelson. From Nelson, continue south on 35 for about 6 miles. Rieck’s Lake Park will be on the east side of the highway, just before crossing a bridge.

Directions to Weaver Bottoms, just south of Weaver, Minnesota: The Weaver Bottoms marshes lie approximately 120 miles south of the Twin Cities on Hwy. 61.

** For a good view of the Weaver Bottoms area, drive southeast on Hwy 61, 1-3/4 miles past the Hwy. 74 junction. Take the spur road a short distance to the top of the hill.

Event Details

Join a naturalist caravan through the Whitewater Wildlife Management Area to Weaver Bottoms on the Mississippi River to observe tundra swans. Binoculars, spotting scopes and handouts will be available. Free. Register by emailing Sara Holger or calling 507-312-2301.

event location map

Location
Whitewater State Park

Date
Nov. 6, 2021

Time
1 p.m. to 3 p.m.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Carlos Creek Winery: Hunting Widows Weekend – Alexandria, MN

Carlos Creek Winery: Hunting Widows Weekend – Alexandria, MN

 Bold North Cellars in the heart of the beautiful, Alexandria lake country and Minnesota’s first federally designated viticultural area!
Hunting opener is next weekend, which means – HUNTING WIDOWS WEEKEND!

Two days of “hunting” for deals, live music, specials, mimosas and more!

Date & Location

November 6, & 7th | 12:00 pm – 7:00 pm

Bold North Cellars
6693 County Road 34 NW
Alexandria, MN

Saturday

WINERY

Live Music 2-5 pm

“Hunt for Deals”

Hourly Door Prizes 1pm-5pm

Spend $100 and get a free gift

BREWERY

Live Music 6-9pm

“Hunt for Deals”

Hourly Door Prizes 1pm-5pm

Sour Beer Release

Sunday

WINERY

Live Music 1-4pm

“Hunt for Deals”

Spend $100 and get a free gift

Endless Mimosas & Muffins 12pm-2pm

BREWERY

Endless Beermosas & Muffins 12pm-2pm

“Hunt for Deals’

Carlos Creek Winery

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