belle magazine december 2012
DESCRIPTION
This Issue: The season's sparkling fashions, the truth behind bad boys, insider winter fun + more.TRANSCRIPT
DECEmbEr 2012/january 2013 FrEE
belleSeaSon'S SparklerSArtful Fashion to Be Seen In
Women You Should knoW:Holy Yang, Joan Davis, Treesa Gold and more
Breaking Bad BoYS What's the Attraction?
acupuncture for healthA Closer Look at Therapy
WaY to go in rVaInsider Tips for Winter Fun
Towne Center West, Just west of Short Pump Town Center in front of Hilton Hotel, 804.360.0205
short pumpChesterfield Towne Center, Southside of Richmond, 804.794.2004
chesterfield
www.BRMS.com
FIND US
1 Mountain Hardwear Men’s Ghost Whisperer Jacket $285.99; 2 The North Face Spectre Plaid Shirt $69.99; 3 Smartwool PhD Outdoor Medium Crew $23.95; 4 Mountain Hardwear Men’s Mesa Convertible Hiking Pant $79.99; 5 Oboz Sawtooth Low B-Dry $124.99; 6 Keen Sterling Mary Jane $89.99; 7 GSI Outdoors Java Press 30 oz. $32.99; 8 Pistil Designs Women’s Piazza Beanie Hat $29.99; 9 Horny Toad Women’s Heartfelt Long Sweater $167.99; 10 Power Monkey Explorer Solar Charger $99.99; 11 Patagonia Women’s Better Sweater $139
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Spend $50 and get a free gift. Choose between a Blue Ridge 40th Anniversary pint glass or bandana or a CD of live tunes from the Festy Experience!
FROM US TO YOU
Good Help to Those in Need®
Santa’s not the only one who delivers gifts.
BON SECOURS FOR WOMENBon Secours Richmond Health System
BON SECOURS FOR WOMEN
BON SECOURS FOR WOMEN
BON SECOURS FOR WOMEN
BON SECOURS FOR WOMENBon Secours Richmond Health System
BON SECOURS FOR WOMENBon Secours Richmond Health System
St. Mary’s Hospital | Memorial Regional Medical Center | St. Francis Medical Center
To learn about our state-of-the-art birthing centers, helpful parenting classes
and more, call 340-BABY or visit bonsecoursforwomen.com( 2 2 2 9 )
As colder weather moves in, CinéBistro at Stony Point Fashion Park is providing more ways to stay
entertained indoors this winter. In addition to the great holiday block-buster films coming out this season, the popular Metropolitan Opera series contin-ues its successful run with five additional live performances running through the win-ter. Encores of each performance are also offered for those who are unable to make the live broadcast. Richmond football fans have discovered the thrill of viewing games on the big screen as attendance to the Monday Night broadcasts has continued to grow through-out the season. Upcoming match ups include Giants vs Redskins which is sure to be popular with the Richmond audience. In addition to the free broadcast, guests are able to enjoy continuous service throughout
the game as well as food and drink spe-cials. Complimentary seat reservations are available at the theatre Concierge Desk 1.5 hours before kickoff. The popular weekly wine event “Tuesday Tastings” reached the one-year anniversary mark in mid November and has contin-ued to be a popular weekday draw. For $15, guests can enjoy chef-prepared hors d’oveurs, learn about wines from an expert vintner, and participate in wine trivia for a chance at free movie passes. CinéBistro will be celebrating the New Year by hosting Countdown to 2013: A 1920’s Gala! The party is open to the public and guests are encouraged to dress in their 1920’s best. Party perks include a complimentary midnight champagne toast, a balloon pop for great prizes, a costume contest and live feed of the NYC Times Square ball drop.
S P E C I A L A D V E R T I S E M E N T
CinéBistro at Stony Point Gives You More Reasons to Stay In & Stay Warm this Winter
STONY POINT FASHION PARK 9200 Stony Point Pkwy, Richmond, VA 23235 | 804.864.0460 www.CobbCineBistro.com | 21 and over. Proper ID required.
For Information Regarding Private Events: [email protected] FOR A VIDEO TOUR
@CinebistroSP
/CinebistroStonyPoint
GIFT CARD
THE PERFECT GIFT!Gift Cards Available for Purchase at
Concierge or CobbCinebistro.com
December
1 The Met Opera Presents: La Clemenza di Tito 12:55p3 Tchaikovsky’s The Nutcracker 7:30p Giants vs Redskins 8:30p8 The Met Opera Presents: Un Ballo in Maschera 12:55p10 Texans vs Patriots 8:30p13 Midnight Premiere of The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey15 The Met Opera Presents: Aida 12:55p17 Jets vs Titans 8:30p19 La Clemenza di Tito (Encore) 6:30p21 Premiere of This is 40 Premiere of Jack Reacher23 Chargers vs Jets 8:30p25 Premiere of Django Unchained Premiere of Les Miserables 31 New Years Eve 1920’s Gala
For Ticket Purchases, Please Visit CobbCinebistro.com. Follow us on Facebook
& Twitter for Regular Updates.
Official Drop Site! Donate Unwrapped Toys 11/19 - 12/17 Gifts Valued at $15*+ Earn You a FREE
Appetizer Card & Entry to Win
*Must Present Receipt. See Website for Details
Free Movies for a Year & a $250 Food Voucher!
belle DECEMBER 2012/JANUARY 2013 | 5 |
Style & SubStance 7Tree of retro delight. ... Joan Davis crusades for artists. ... Where to give or get a letter. ... Season the holiday well with spices. ... Go on an eco-safari. ... Meet a local e-tailer. ... Treesa Gold takes the Belle pop quiz. by Karen Newtonway to go: Looking for something fun to do in RVA this season? Try these options on for size. by Karen Newton 13
FaShion cueS 14Feature: Enter the party like a work of art in these seasonal sparklers. by the Belle fashion team
perSonalitieS 20proFile: Holy Yang grows businesses with determination. by Christine Stoddard
body & Soul 24FitneSS: Acupuncture may solve unexpected issues. by Julie Geen 24private partS: Why are some attracted to bad boys? by Julie Geen 27
DEcEMbER2012/JAnuARY2013
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belle
Belle is published monthly and is free. One copy per person. Belle may be distributed by authorized distributors only. Style Weekly subscriptions are avail-able for $49 (third class mail) and $99 (first class mail). Style Weekly, 1313 E. Main St., Suite 103, Richmond, Va. 23219, 804-358-0825; General fax 804-358-1079; News fax 804-358-9089; Classified phone 804-358-2100; Classified fax 804-358-2163.
www.styleweekly.com E-mail: [email protected]
Copyright © by Style Weekly Inc. TM 2012 All rights reserved.
publiSher: Lori collier Waran [email protected]
editor in chieF: Jason Roop [email protected]
editor: Deveron Timberlake
art director: Joel Smith
photography editor: Scott Elmquist
FaShion editor: Lauren Healy
contributing writerS: Julie Geen
Valley Haggard
Elizabeth Jewett
Hilary Langford
Karen newton
christine Stoddard
copy editor: G.W. Poindexter
deputy Managing editor: Ed Harrington
SaleS Manager: Hannah Huber [email protected]
publiShing and new Media developMent Manager:
Dana Elmquist [email protected]
Marketing, SponSorShipS & eventS: Tonie Stevens
Senior account eXecutive:
Toni Mccracken
account eXecutive:
Jamie Haboush
SaleS aSSiStant:
Kimberly Hall
advertiSing graphic artiStS:
Kira Jenkins, chris Mason
adMiniStration/buSineSS Manager:
chris Kwiatkowski
buSineSS aSSiStant:
Jennifer Waldbauer
On the cOver:Vintage sequin snakeskin dress ($75) fur hat ($40) and black silk blouse as collar ($30), all at Mc-Cue Vintage; gunmetal ring ($68), at Pink.Photo by Scott Elmquist at Page Bond Gallery.
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31artS and entertainMent 30agenda: books to curl up with, music to dance to, and some top picks for a winter’s evening. by Julie Geen, Elizabeth Jewett and Hilary Langford.
FirSt perSon 34Forget minimalism and load me up with more, or less. by Valley Haggard
It ’s ChicAgain!
Get what you really want this season..
Sycamore Sq Shopping Ctr | 1225 Sycamore Square | Midlothian VA, 23113 | 804-897-CHIC (2442) | Mon–Fri 10–7 • Sat 10-6 • Sun 1–5
ItsChicAgain.com | Find Us On Facebook
Upscale Consignment | New fun fashions arriving daily…Where Thrifty is the New Envy.©
holiday sparkle for less new arrivals daily
belle DECEMBER 2012/JANUARY 2013 | 7 |
StylE&SubStancEO
, Tan
nenb
aum
photo by scott Elmquist
Hot products, new ventures and local discoveries. by karen newton
let’s face it, not everyone
wants the trouble or expense
of a live tree. it’s still nice to
have a little holiday motif,
and you can do it ’60s style
with this miniature takeoff
on the classic aluminum
christmas tree ($44.95)
from old world accents,
3419 w. cary st. its selection
of ornaments is varied, but
these chinese-made ones
come with a sense of humor
and maybe even a little
irreverence. and after the
season, you can just bend
the branches up
and store till next
year, when you’ll
find it ready to
dazzle again.
| 8 | DECEMBER 2012/JANUARY 2013 belle
st yle & substance
West Indian nutmeg
photos by scott Elmquist
Seasoning’s Greetingseven if you don’t bake all year long, you may get a hankering to apron up and make some
christmas cookies this time of year. For inspiration and supplies, walk the aisles of penzeys spic-es at 3400 w. cary st. in carytown to open jars and sniff your way into a festive mood. everything comes in multiple sizes so you can buy just enough to try it in a recipe or stockpile a favorite. pure vanilla extract comes in single- and double-strength for classics such as butter or sugar cookies. natural high-fat cocoa powder is just the thing for making fudgy brownies, or the best hot cocoa. and if it all seems like too much work, how about a whole west indian nutmeg, ideal for grating over eggnog? no apron required.
product oF cHange
It was an idea born of divorce. Cheryl Shana-
han had worked all aspects of retail, exhibited
her photographs locally and was looking for a
new creative outlet after her marriage ended.
She decided to use her photographs as the
basis for cards, calendars and journals, and
sell them online at her e-store, Lucky Ginger.
“It was a creative foil to the demands of my
full-time job in commercial construction,” she
says. “With this I can let my creativity ooze out.”
Using her photographs as a starting point, her
e-store offers note cards, gift tags, paperweights
and just about anything she can put her photos
on. But her point of pride is that everything is
made in the United States. “If I source every-
thing here,” she says, “everything I do is helping
another company here.” shopluckyginger.com.
belle DECEMBER 2012/JANUARY 2013 | 9 |
st yle & substance
Violinist Treesa Gold has played with the Richmond
Symphony, is a member of local bands Goldrush and Long Arms, and has been overscheduled since she was 2 years old. She says she wouldn’t have it any other way.
1. What’s your job? Violin teacher and wanna-be rock star.
2. What do you do in your free time? I assume that’s a joke.
3. Biggest accomplishment in life? I was the keynote speaker at a cancer conven-
tion and preparing for it, I re-alized what a big deal it was that I hadn’t died. I had a 20 percent chance of living, so my accomplishment is living every day to the fullest.
4. Best part of being a musician? Playing the best music with the best people you’ve ever met.
5. Fill in the blank: I am happiest when: I’m playing music.
6. Play or movie? Play. but I usually don’t get to do either.
7. Cat or dog? Dogs! I have two and they’re awesome.
8. Beer or wine? Oh, wine, any day.
9. Dress or pants? a dress for me lately.
10. Favorite band? the beatles. they’re too good not to say.
11. Best thing about Rich-mond? I love that you see people you know every-where. I love that in the same city, you have trees and a legitimate city. I love that I can walk everywhere.
12. Guilty pleasure? none. Every pleasure I have is out in the open.
pop Quiz with treesa gold
LetteR Perfect
a gift for yourself or maybe a hint for the appropriate person: choose your initial or pick the first letter of the word that best describes you. perhaps a w for winsome or an M for magical. $40 at Quirk gallery, 311 w. broad st.
The Cure for New Year’s Eve
sure, sure, everyone knows the best way to prevent a hangover is to avoid overindulging in the first place. but come december when the holiday parties are endless and capped by new year’s eve blowouts, it’s difficult to be good all the time. if you have one too many, it’s best to start hydrating as quickly as possible. and if you need even more of a cure, consider some advice from the experts:
star-lite bartender ashley Hawkins may have had a hangover or two, but when she does, she knows what to do: “Four ibuprofen with a huge glass of water, eat way too much at lunch with my girlfriends, an unhealthy dose of caffeine, and possibly a mimosa.” Possibly?
secco owner Julia battaglini rec-ommends letting your body make the call. “gatorade till i don’t want to die, then chicken pho until i want to drink again. usually five and three hours re-spectively.” No need to rush things.
kali strain, bartender at amuse, knows what to do when morning comes. “a hot meal and a cold beer, bitters and soda and jumping in the ocean or a cold shower.” Bartenders are brave.
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st yle & substance
YoU GoTTA HAVe FAITH
if one of your new year’s resolutions is to get back in touch with your faith, a wide-ranging website will set you on the right path. FaithinRichmond.com bills itself as, “all faith, all news, all the time” and offers much more than a way to find a place to worship in your neighborhood (although its listing of those is extensive). you’ll find places to shop for the holidays to benefit local groups, faith-based book clubs, information on fam-ily events, announcements of music and food festivals and volunteer opportunities.
LEgaLizE aRTJoan davis has found a way to combine her legal
talents with a love of art. she has an entertainment law practice in which she advises clients on aspects of intellectual property protection, such as copy-right and trademark law. she works with “starving artists,” as she calls them, meaning visual artists, au-thors, musicians, photographers, dancers, models, tattooists and fashion designers.
davis developed a “coffee with an art lawyer” program four years ago, which grew out of a desire to give back to the artistic community. “these are people who may not have money to give to a lawyer but still need their rights protected,” she says. the works varies: she’s assisted with forming business-es, filing trademarks, filing copyrights, reviewing and drafting contracts.
artists can make an appointment for coffee on the third Monday of every month by emailing [email protected].
Hunting for glass HornsThink of it as a marriage between art, culture and design. eco-Safari, an exhibition on display through
mid-January at Micheal Sparks Design at 205 Hull St., shows off the creative handiwork of Virginia Com-monwealth University graduate Grant Garmezy, photographer Jennifer Sisk and artist Mike Garaffa.
Garmezy, an expert Richmond glass blower, has crafted an artistic alternative to natural animal horns and tusks, which are complemented by the paint graphics of Mike Garaffa. To this, Sisk adds large-format photographs capturing the tribesmen of Africa taken during her trips there. The dramatic display high-lights the relationship among photography, glass, graphics and nature. “It gives the illusion and beauty of having something real without really having it,” Sparks says. “Plus it’s animal-friendly.”
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Michael Sparks
belle DECEMBER 2012/JANUARY 2013 | 11 |
BLACK, WHITE&
BlingCelebrating our 5th Year Anniversary
Please join Dr. Zinsser and Zinsser Plastic Surgery for our annual holiday event. Enjoy hors d’oeuvres, refreshments, door prizes and
great specials all evening long!
Grand Prize provided by Capri Jewelers and Zinsser Plastic Surgery
TUESDAYDecember 4, 2012 • 5pm - 8pm
RSVP at 804.474.9805
December SpecialPurchase a skin care gift card for a friend of $100 or more and receive $50 to spend on yourself - good
through the month of December.
January Special50% off an IPL treatment, great for treating sun spots.
1501 Maple Ave 101B, Richmond, Va 23226zinsserplasticsurgery.com
John W. Zinsser,M.D., F.A.C.S
Blanche Luck,Master Aesthetician
Clothing & Accessories for men, women & childrenAccepting consignments Mon thru Fri 10-4.
Please call ahead to see if we are accepting clothes. Shopping Mon thru Sat 10-5.
“Voted as one of the best bargains on Runway Fashion”by Richmond Magazine
804-358-9985 • thehalltreerichmond.com Located in Richmond’s Carytown at Thompson & Cary
The Element of Surprise...Every Day
Richmond, VA’s Consignment Institution for Men, Women, and Children.
The Hall Tree
Accepting consignments Monday thru
Friday 10-4 PM. Shopping
Monday thru Saturday, 10-5 PM.
North• I-95 S to RIC• Take exit 79 to I-195 S• Merge left via exit 186 to I-195 S/Powhite Pkwy• Go 2.2 mi to Cary/Grove exit• Left at light onto W Cary St.• Left at next light onto S Thompson St.• Left into shopping center
South• I-95 N to RIC• Take exit 74A to Downtown Expwy• Go 3.3 miles thru toll• Merge onto I-195 N• Take Cary/Floyd exit• Right at light onto N Thompson St• Right at next light into shopping center
East• I-64 W to RIC• Take left exit 190/I-195 S• Go 1.4 mi to exit 74A Downtown Expwy• Go 3.3 miles thru toll• Merge onto I-195 N• Take Cary/Floyd exit• Right at light onto N Thompson St• Right at next light into shopping center
West• I-64 E to RIC• Take exit 186/I-195S Powhite Pkwy• Go 2.2 mi to Cary/Grove exit• Left at light onto W Cary St.• Left at next light onto S Thompson St.• Left into shopping center
12 S. Thompson St.Richmond, VA 23221
(p) 804-358-9985web: www.thehalltreerichmond.com
We do our very best to offer a broad range of clothing and accessories for men, women, children and infants. Contemporary in every way, The Hall Tree provides the most fashion and variety for the least price - Truly a shoppers delight.
Some say the best fashion designers have their reunions at The Hall Tree. The labels prove them right.
Joan Williams, Owner
Located in Richmond’s Carytown at Thompson and Cary Street.
Yves S
aint L
aurent
Coc
o C
hane
l Lou
is Vu
it on
Dior Oscar de la Renta Calvin K
lein Ralp
h L
aurenG
UC
CI
D&GFENDIDKNY
Welcome to The Hall Tree!
CoachK a t e
SpaDE
Celebrating our 40th Anniversa
ry
Just one visit and you’ll BE
hooked.
Hall Tree anniversary FL.indd 1 7/12/2012 9:37:37 aM
Now acceptiNg
wiNter clothiNg &
accessories
| 12 | DECEMBER 2012/JANUARY 2013 belle
Burton M. Sundin, MD & Reps B. Sundin, MD | 7611 Forest Ave, Suite 210, Richmond, VA 23229 | (804) 290.0909 • www.DrSundin.com
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RICHMOND’S BEST BET FOR HOLIDAY ENTERTAINMENTmovies | in-theatre dining | bar and lounge | corporate and private events
Gift Cards are available for purchase online or at the theatre.
GIFT CARD
STONY POINT FASHION PARK
9200 Stony Point Parkway, Suite 101, Richmond, VA 23235
804.864.0460 | www.CobbCineBistro.com | 21 and over. Proper ID required.
SCAN FOR A VIDEO TOUR
BOOK YOUR HOLIDAY PARTY TODAY/CineBistroStonyPoint
@CineBistroSP
THE PERFECT GIFT!
belle DECEMBER 2012/JANUARY 2013 | 13 |
Where to go: The Camel on Dec. 4 at 8 p.m. for a triple bill that’ll knock your socks off. Oakland, Calif., band Electrician does electro-folk songs about social war and relationships; Cardinal Compass and rising local star Dave Watkins open — and you’ll have a hard time believing so much sound can come from one man.
What to eat: 821 Cafe (825 W. Cary St.) has simple and satisfying favorites, like my beloved black bean nachos. Feeling adventurous? Try the peanut butter, bacon and banana sandwich for a one-of-a-kind taste, or go large with the Brent burger, a one-pound burger between two grilled cheeses.
Where to go: University of Richmond’s Modlin Center on Dec. 6 at 7:30 p.m. for “From the Big Easy to the Big Apple: a Celebration of the Mambo.” This multime-dia journey highlights the collision of Latin rhythms with American jazz and features the university’s jazz ensemble, musical guests and a dance contest. Remem-ber, the secret is to chill on the first beat.
What to eat: The Blue Goat (5710 Grove Ave.) is on the way to the University of Richmond and the place to enjoy rabbit pâté, braised goat and pork cheeks that should delight the mambo-going crowd.
Where to go: The Virginia Center for Architecture on Dec. 9 at 2:30 p.m. for “Talk and Tour: the House that Pope Built.” That distinctive house at Monument and Da-vis was built by the wealthy Branch family. Now it’s used by the center, but this is your chance to see rooms rarely opened to the public. See where Branch hid his hooch during Prohibition. Look for the resident ghost.
What to eat: Catch brunch beforehand at Lunch (1213 Summit Ave.) where pig is king. Its house-made sausage is stellar and the biscuits would make Aunt Bea proud. If you don’t want an omelet, try the enormous sandwich-es, such as the locomotive 231, a meatloaf lover’s dream.
Where to go: The Virginia Museum of Fine Arts on Jan. 4 from 6-8 p.m. for music at First Fridays with Capitol Opera Richmond. Richmond’s the fifth and latest city to be added to the Capitol Opera group, with the first being Sacramento, Calif., 20 years ago. Cel-ebrate with Famous Arias and Duets by six or more company singers. With drink in hand, it’s an easy way to experience opera.
What to eat: Acacia (2601 W. Cary) is only a few blocks away. When it comes to reliably creative and well-executed food, few places top this Richmond main-stay. And the bar is always a lively place to spend a Friday evening.
Way to GoFour winter outings taste good and feed the brain. By KAREN NEWTON
Photo by SCott ELMQUISt Photo by SCott ELMQUIStPhoto by SCott ELMQUISt
sound decision
a cuban spectacular
peek behind the doors
bring me a tenor
the plan: Groove to
psychedelic folk.
the plan: Feel the
Latin rhythms.
the plan: Imagine life in the
Branch House.
the plan: Short-form
opera.
| 14 | DECEMBER 2012/JANUARY 2013 belle
Fashion cues f e a t u r e
Eclectic, festive and dramatic
statements for the season’s glitzy
gatherings.
Party Artof the
Girl
Silver silk dress by Graham & Spencer ($403) at Pink; cluster necklace by Kay Adams ($595) and pearl necklaces ($30 each) at Anthill Antiques.
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FAShion editor Lauren Healy
PhotoGrAPher Scott Elmquist
Art director Joel Smith
Model Kristina Welch, Model Mayhem
hAir Crissi York, master stylist,
Salon Del Sol and Spa
MAKeuP Jonye Cordova, JonyegirlFaces
FAShion ASSiStAnt Ashley Carruthers
locAtion Page Bond Gallery,
1625 W. Main St., pagebondgallery.com; 3North Architects, Sanford Bond, AIA,
lead architect.
Victorian black lace dress by dolce Vita ($250) and white crystal hand necklace by Serpent & the Swan ($165) at need Supply co.; pearl necklaces as bracelets ($30 each) at Anthill Antiques; gunmetal beaded headband ($12) at ur-ban outfitters; blue roses headband by leslie tuite ($25) at B-Sides thrift Boutique; black open toe platform by charles by charles davis ($138) at champagne and Shoes.
Susan Jamison painted “So caught up” in 2012.
Fashion cues f e a t u r e
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Black cutout dress by reverse ($79) at urban outfitters; gold moon-rock bracelet ($38) and gold beaded bracelet ($75), both at Pink; gold chain cross-body purse by Whiting and davis ($24) at the hall tree; gold skull earrings ($58) at champagne and Shoes; sterling costume ring ($65) at Anthill An-tiques; gold tip suede heel by dol-ce Vita ($185) at need Supply co.
Fashion cues f e a t u r e
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1950s handmade wallpaper print dress ($68) blue topaz and 10-karat gold ring ($142), both at halcyon Vintage; watch guts necklaces by Kay Adams ($155-$195) and vintage sterling men’s lion head ring ($50) at Anthill Antiques.
Fashion cues f e a t u r eFashion cues f e a t u r e
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Burnout velvet long sleeve dress by dolce Vita ($52) at the hall tree; black mohair shrug handmade by Phyllis ($42) at hal-cyon Vintage; vintage fishing-lure necklace by Janelle Pietrzak ($26) at All roads Market; cross ring ($75) and party bracelet ($42) at Anthill Antiques; black lace headband ($12) at urban outfitters.
Fashion cues f e a t u r e
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find it HErEAnthill Antiques3439 W. Cary St.254-2000anthillantiques.com
All roads Marketetsy.com/shop/AllroadsMarket
B-Sides thrift Boutique2925 W. Cary St.355-3131bsidesrva.tumblr.com
champagne and Shoes3004-B W. Cary St.261-0951champagneandshoesva.com
halcyon Vintage117 N. Robinson St.358-1311halcyonvintage.com
the hall tree12 S. Thompson St.358-9985thehalltreerichmond.com
lex’s of carytown3020 W. Cary St.355-5425lexsofcarytown.com
Mccue Vintageetsy.com/shop/McCuevintage
need Supply co.3100 W. Cary St.355-5880needsupply.com
Pink3158 W. Cary St.358-0884pinkstore.com
SaxonShort Pump Town Center11800 W. Broad St.285-3473saxonshoes.com
urban outfittersShort Pump Town Center11805 W. Broad St.364-5216urbanoutfitters.com
Fashion cues f e a t u r e
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Susan Jamison painted “Prick” in 2012.
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personalities p r o f i l e
photo by scott elmquist
The ambitious Holy Yang wasted no time in launching a Richmond business empire.by Christine stoddard
Imagine starting three booming businesses, marrying a male model and giving birth to a baby boy — all by the time you’re 23. that’s the life of the young and accomplished thai-american holy Yang (pronounced holly.)
“instead of switching majors, i switch business ventures,” Yang jokes.
two years ago, Yang opened Made in asia, an upscale thai and pan-asian restaurant in Ches-terfield that brings urban cool to suburbia. the business holds benefit nights and concerts and has sponsored a Mrs. Virginia contestant. in 2011, richmond Magazine named Made in asia the ar-ea’s best new restaurant. at that point, the place
had been open to the public for only a few months, but Yang didn’t miss a beat.
Following Made in asia’s success, Yang found-ed a marketing company, Yang Business services, which designs branding and promotional strate-gies. Many of her clients are restaurants, espe-cially ones that are recently established — such as Bobalicious, a Virginia chain specializing in fro-zen yogurt and bubble tea.
Yang has another big idea: a bright, trendy res-taurant downtown that delivers fast but healthy Japanese cuisine using environmentally friendly practices. “think just one step up from Panera and Chipotle,” Yang says of the business concept. “Fast but not too fast, casual but not too casual.”
this restaurant, a2, will offer gourmet asian fusion food — including dishes that are meaty, vegan and gluten-free — in a relaxed and futuris-tic setting. a2 is under construction in the former hunan Café at 1112 e. Main st. a wireless order-ing system, sustainable menus, motion-sensor lights and a recycling program will promote a2’s
“positive impact on the city,” Yang says. she likens the stylish, green-minded concept to something you would see in new York City or even tokyo. “it will give [richmonders] the experience they seek in other cities,” Yang says, “but it’s still tailored to the needs of richmond.” a2 is scheduled to open in early 2013.
Yang isn’t the wait-and-see type. she quit col-lege at age 19 to start putting her business smarts into practice. the detroit native moved to rich-mond four years ago to help her sister-in-law, the owner of asiana Bistro in Powhatan. after two months, Yang and her husband, Kevin Guo, fell in love with richmond’s small-town-in-a-big-city feel. at that point, they decided to stay in rich-mond and began planning their restaurant and business future.
“You can’t teach how to become an entrepre-neur,” Yang says. “You need the drive and passion for business and you just have to do it. i’ve been there painting my own walls and doing the elbow grease work.”
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Gift Guide special advertis inG section
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3. One of a kind from Michou Jewelry. Rainbow pyrite & tourma-line in a sterling and gold vermeil setting. Only at Alchemists www.alchemistsbooksandfgifts.com | 320.9200
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Belle’s Holiday Gift Guide
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3. Be sure to make a statement with this chunky necklace this season. The Hall Tree | www.thehalltreerichmond.com 358.9985
4. Holiday hand knit wool dog sweater, Winter hat & scarf. These are the warmest sweaters made today. Sizes XXS-XXXL. Fido Park Avenue Dog Boutique www.fidoparkave.com | 360.8011
5. Stainless steel VCU timepiece from the “Tango” Collection by Raymond Weil. Available exclusively at Schwarzschild. Sterling and 18K Naga Dragon bracelet by John Hardy. Schwarschild www.schwarzschild.com | Short Pump 967.0800 Alverser 344.0150 | Carytown 355.2136
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| 24 | DECEMBER 2012/JANUARY 2013 belle
body & soul f i t n e s s
I am a jagged stress ball when I come to licensed acu-puncturist Diane Lowry. Snarled up in a loop of not sleeping, and struggling with an unusually busy schedule including a plane trip, a wedding, a welcome influx of work and a horrible virus, I am unable to rid
myself of a lingering cough, exhaustion and sinus trou-ble. I could take a round of antibiotics and press on, but what I really want is to heal, unwind and find my balance again. I need my chi tweaked.
Lowry, 38, began studying Chinese medicine and acu-puncture in 2005. She started her own practice in 2009. A lifelong sufferer from migraines and fatigue, she began looking for the answers traditional medicine never gave her and studying natural healing on her own. After a car accident left her in pain, she tried acupuncture. “Noth-ing seemed to help,” she says. “I was miserable, laying on the couch every night after work. Acupuncture got me back on my feet again.” She left her career in advertising and delved into the world of chi, meridians and needles.
Once I sit down with Lowry, we go through a thorough intake that gives her a picture of my overall health. She examines my tongue and feels the pulse in my wrist. “There are channels or meridians in the body,” she says. “You can think of them as little highways that carry the energy through the body. A lot of what we’re doing is try-ing to unblock any areas that have gotten stuck. We try to figure out where in the body things are out of balance and select points on that channel or meridian that can correct it.”
Lying on the massage table, I relax as Lowry places needles in the back of my neck, down my spine, and on my legs and feet. I feel no pain, only a growing wave of com-plete, narcotic relaxation. My busy squirrel mind tries to go over its little lists and fuss with tasks undone, but
it falls into an abyss. A really lovely abyss. The needles trigger the body to release serotonin and endorphins.
“A lot of times people ask if I am injecting something,” Lowry says. “People ask if there is something in the nee-dle or on it. It’s hard to imagine that a tiny needle, the size of a human hair, can elicit that kind of feeling in your body naturally.”
After she takes the needles out, Lowry does tui na, or Chinese bodywork, on my back, massaging me with a blend of eucalyptus essential oils to further help my si-nus problem. I begin to feel like I might be a human be-ing instead of a malfunctioning robot.
My lungs no longer feel stuck together, and my sinuses begin draining a few hours after I leave the office. Best of all, I sleep deeply that night.
Most of Lowry’s clients come for headaches and back pain. Stress and depression rank second, followed by fertility issues, colds and flu. She encourages people to come in at the onset of a virus, making her one of the only people around who would be glad to see you at this time. “You can use acupuncture as a preventative,” she says. “You can use it to shorten the duration of a cold and less-en the symptoms. And then if we add an herbal formula, even better. You might really start to feel some changes that day.”
This month, Lowry travels to Canada to train in second chance facial rejuvenation. The technique uses the me-ridian systems of Chinese medicine with a microcurrent machine to firm the face and increase collagen produc-tion. “You might be coming in to get rid of a furrow,” she says, “ but you end up helping your stress and digestion, too.”
For information about acupuncture and Diane Lowry, visit HealthFocusAcupuncture.com or call 467-1355.
by JuLIe GeeNAcupuncture gets the juices flowing.
DianE Lowry’s Tips for CoLD anD fLu sEasonBunDLe up
In traditional Chinese medicine, the lung is considered the most exterior organ and our first line of defense against pathogens. When the weather turns cold and windy, acupuncture points on the neck and upper back become especially vulnerable. Wearing a scarf protects these points and the health of your lungs.
aCupressure on Lung sevenOne of the most influential points
for strengthening the lung organ is called lung seven. It promotes the descending function of the lung, making it a great choice for cough and nasal congestion. It also alleviates the headache and stiff neck commonly associated with colds and flus.
To locate lung seven, begin by making a thumbs-up sign. From the depression at the base of your thumb (referred to as the anatomical snuffbox), slide your index finger up your arm approximately two finger-widths. Lung seven is where your finger falls into the depression between the two tendons. Apply firm, steady pressure for 30 seconds to 1 minute. Repeat on both arms several times.
fooD as MeDiCine At the first sign of a cold, drink
hot ginger tea. Boil 8 to 12 ounces of water. Add a 1-inch piece of peeled and grated ginger root. Simmer for 5 minutes. Strain, cool, and drink. If you can jump in the bed and cover up with blankets to induce a sweat, even better.
If these tips came a little late and you are already suffering from a dry, nagging cough, you can still turn to your kitchen for relief. Try eating a steamed Asian pear with cinnamon and honey. The pear is cooling, benefits the lungs and throat, stops coughing and generates fluids.
Keep Things Moving Traditional Chinese medicine says
the lung’s paired organ is the large intestine. In much the same way that our lungs inhale what we need (oxygen) and exhale what we don’t (carbon dioxide), our digestive system should be on a regular schedule of receiving and letting go. That means eating nutritious foods every day and going to the bathroom every day. Seriously. Every single day. Proper digestion is vital to our immune system, and constipation is a sign that your body is holding onto toxins. Drink plenty of water. Eat foods that encourage healthy digestion – plenty of vegetables (roasted beets are great) and fermented foods such as vinegar, sauerkraut, kombucha and Greek yogurt.
And don’t forget, move your body. Walk, dance, play – whatever gets you on your feet.
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The first bad boy I love is Jeff, a fellow kin-dergartner who skids across the linoleum floor on his knees. His pants are always torn. I talk about him to my mother all the
time. She marvels at how impressed I am by the skidding.
The first time I feel a full body bolt of longing, mysterious to me at the time, is when my second-grade gym teacher lifts me up so I can grab the monkey bars. He later goes to prison for murder.
My first kiss happens shortly before I turn 14, delivered by a boy on crutches after a drunken car wreck that killed two of his friends. He wrangles my skittish self expertly despite it all, irresistible with his punk hair and hard, amused eyes.
“It’s like a plague I have lived with all my life,” my friend Vicki says of her love of bad boys. It’s not entirely uncommon; most women have at least one experience with a man she knows she should re-sist and does not. But for some of us, the attraction seems to be hard-wired.
The boy I love in high school is so bad I recycle him years later when he gets out of prison for steal-ing a Corvette from a used car lot. He also unsuc-cessfully robbed a doughnut shop. “The gun wasn’t
loaded,” he says. “And besides, I just drove the car.” His own mother wails when I tell her we’re dating again. “He’s no good,” she says. “He’s a sweet boy, but he’s no good.”
I have to drag him past my police captain father’s big white car parked in the driveway when we go over to have dinner with my family. A true bad boy is brave. He steels himself and goes inside. We make it through dinner, my father employing the same cold courtesy he uses when he loads hand-cuffed people into the police car.
I love going to work with my father. When I come home from college on weekends, he and I blaze through alleys at impossible speeds. I watch him arrest drug dealers and even a murder suspect. I stand rapt, knees shaking, against the wall of a building as my father draws his gun. Maybe the imprint of my sire, who comes home from work with finger-shaped bruises on his throat, conditions me to men who love risk. Only I choose the wrong side of the coin.
My father starts running my boyfriends through the police computer. “Did you find him?” I ask. The answer is always yes. He says very little about what he finds, sometimes just one word. “Pot,” he snarls.
“Did you know he used to wear stupid little black-framed glasses?” he asks once. But his standards are very low. He just makes sure they aren’t mur-derers.
I believe his approach of standing by without much commentary while his daughter makes a series of dreadful but somewhat supervised mis-takes pays off. The man I marry only looks like a bad boy when I meet him. For 15 years, every night after work he comes home and helps the children with homework and reaches for my hand at night. I was duped, thank God. If I need a fix, I can always watch an episode of “Lockup: Louisiana.”
For a short time after college, I work at a thor-oughbred farm. One day, a stallion comes to the fence, jet black, blowing air at me through distend-ed nostrils. He allows no one to stroke his thick neck or rub his muzzle, and he has no use for me. For a split second he looks at me with his cold, wild eyes before he whirls and tears off across the field. His gaze sears me, that brief attention from a dan-gerous creature. If he had allowed me to untangle his forelock, if he had eaten from my hand, I would be the chosen one, the special girl who rode when others walked — the one who could have it all.
His and HurtsWhy do I always fall for the bad boy? by JuLIe Geen
body & soul p r i v a t e p a r t s
*Drawing details online
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Shop Richmond’s most unique retailers, artisans, jewelry designers and craftsmen for one of a kind gifts.
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Add some ooh la la to your fa la la
| 30 | DECEMBER 2012/JANUARY 2013 belle
GIFT CARD
Party PurchaseIf you like art, shopping and historical renovations, there’s no better place than Artisan Café’s winter edition and one-year anniversary party at Dovetail Construction’s Emerald Barn, a renovated electric trolley shed at 1620 Brook Road. Enjoy the ambiance and browse local creations such as jewelry and art objects in this curated, multiart-form show Dec. 8 from 6-10 p.m. artisancafeva.com. — E.J.
sugar theraPyPerhaps the answer to your soul sickness is in the pages of “Tiny Beau-tiful Things: Advice on Love and Life from Dear Sugar” (Vintage, $14.95). Author and advice colum-nist Cheryl Strayed writes with poetic, gritty fierce-ness, showing that the way out often is more complex, loving and mysterious than the boxes in which we put ourselves. — J.G.
sPeaking of LincoLn At this point a Spielberg appearance in Richmond is almost routine. But the director, historian Doris Kearns Goodwin and “Lin-coln” screenwriter Tony Kushner will be back, dis-cussing the art of bring-ing history to life on the big screen. If you’re lucky you’ll find a ticket to the Richmond Forum, set for Jan. 5 at 8 p.m. at the Land-mark Theater, 6 N. Laurel St. Call 330-3993 or visit landmarktheater.net. — E.J.
Wave ridersSchool of Seven Bells (Vanguard Records) has lightened up a bit. Benjamin Curtis and Alejandra Deheza admit they had fun making their latest EP, “Put Your Sad Down.” Short and sweet, these five songs ooze with sticky bass lines and ethereal vocals without being entirely trip-hop or dated. Songs merge and offer the opportunity to get lost in a web of synth-laden, new wave and the occasional psychedelic trip. Trading heavy-handed, industrial chops for mysteri-ous, sensual sounds proves a wise move. — H.L.
signs of LifeA play that features more than a dozen diverse char-acters isn’t so unusual. A play in which one actress plays them all? That’s something. Henley Street Theatre’s take on the play originally made famous by Lily Tomlin, “The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe,” runs at Richmond CenterStage, 600 E. Grace St., Dec. 6-31. henleystreettheatre.org. — E.J.
AGEndA C o m P I L E D B Y JULIE GEEN, ELIzABETH JEwETT AND
HILARY LANGFoRD
in the hiPsColombia’s Bomba Esté-reo specializes in hip-stir-ring grooves that draw on cumbia beats and sultry chill-wave sounds. Unlike the band’s previous album of club bangers, “Blow Up,” “Elegancia Tropical” (Polen Records) settles down a bit and finds vocal-ist Li Saumet showing off diverse stylings. one mo-ment she plays the dreamy chanteuse, the next an emboldened scat spitter. while it often undulates like the stuff of hip, dimly lighted bars, this collection of songs shows tremendous growth and promise for a bright, fusion band. — H.L.
Just Lookingwhen author Eliezer Sobel noticed his Alzheimer’s disease-afflicted mother still enjoyed looking at pictures in magazines and reading phrases, he wrote “Blue Sky, white Clouds: a Book for memory-Challenged Adults” (Rainbow Ridge Books, $19.95). Beautifully photographed, everyday ob-jects are accompanied by simple captions in large print, each a story in itself, no memory required. — J.G.
belle dECEMBER 2012/JAnUARY 2013 | 31 |
| 32 | DECEMBER 2012/JANUARY 2013 belle
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| 34 | DECEMBER 2012/JANUARY 2013 belle
first person
What’s in your sleigh this year? by Valley Haggard
a Case of gimmies
As we approach the time of year when my per-sonality feels most divided, I’m half-inclined to shave my head, give away all my posses-sions and head for the hills, while half of me
yearns to hand-paint candy canes and beg Mr. Claus to take me as his mistress. I don’t consider myself a material girl, but who am I kidding? “gimme gimme gimme! gimme some more,” is my heart’s true song.
but it isn’t the stuff I crave so much as the frenzy. In my mind’s eye, december is a month of bingeing and gorging, stuffing it in and packing it on. In Janu-ary comes atonement, fasting, pumping iron and making resolutions to need less of the stuff I spent the last month hoarding. How much can I do before I feel like I’m finally done? The answer — if I’m honest — is never, ever enough.
So this year I hope to approach things a bit differ-ently. I’ve abolished credit cards and booked writing retreats for two weekends leading up to the big bang instead of camping out at the mall trying to deter-mine if this mug full of bath beads will really prove to my mother, step-mother or mother-in-law how much I love her. I’d like to wrap my mind around this bizarre concept of keeping it simple.
despite an emphasis on quality time over quality stuff, most of my holiday memories from childhood blend into a montage of What I got: the longed-for rubik’s Cube, the surprising mix of a Ken doll, walkie-talkies and “born in the USa,” the real gin-gerbread house under the tree that I loved too much to eat and let the cats pee on instead. Still, the year that stands out most vividly did not center on what I got or gave but where I was and who I was with.
My traveling companion and I were, as usual, nearly broke and, as usual, had no idea where we’d spend the night. It seemed that all of the shops in europe were closed for Christmas eve, and by the time we found an open hostel we’d finished most of the crust of bread squirreled away at the bottom of our packs. The hostel concierge took pity on us, giv-ing us directions to a soup kitchen free for travelers and the homeless. at the moment we were both. I expected the basement of a grungy yMCa, not the medieval banquet hall we stumbled into an hour later.
Torches lined the walls; vats of potatoes, plat-ters of meat and carafes of wine adorned the ta-bles. Vaudeville singers danced on the stage and
other homeless travelers danced all around. Un-beknownst to us, we’d discovered Christiania, a hippie squatter commune in central Copenhagen fashioned around an abandoned military bar-racks. actual heaven couldn’t have been better. We danced and ate and sang and made merry, feel-ing the holiday spirit — and many other kinds of spirits too. The next day, with snow falling softly all around, we made a pilgrimage to see the little Mermaid, beautiful and perfectly contained on her rock in Copenhagen Harbor.
I wish our Christmas story ended there and not with getting kicked out of our hostel later that night or ending up on a subway with the Hungarian mafia on New year’s eve — but that’s another essay. I’m sure gifts were exchanged at some point, but I don’t recall a single one of them.
Now, for better or worse, unlike the little Mer-maid, I don’t live on an island. I live with people who I want to cram full of as much happiness and stuff and cheer as possible — even if it means driving us all mad in the process. This year I’m hoping that giving myself the gifts of sanity and simplicity will be the gifts that keep on giving.
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