Marcia

You are currently browsing articles tagged Marcia.

marcia_octnovdec_fade

Senior Contributing Editor and back-page columnist Marcia Sherril recounts her most precious Christmas memories

When my siblings and I were young, our Christmas tradition was to sell mistletoe to make money for our Christmas presents—and not just any mistletoe. We didn’t buy it in bulk at the local wholesale nursery. No, our father prudently armed his sons with rifles at a tender age and the boys were instructed to shoot the mistletoe out of the trees near our house—a forest that still runs deep along Birmingham’s Cahaba River. We would gather up the fallen branches and tie them into lovely bunches with red satin ribbons. Placing them ever-so-gently in little brother Billy’s red wagon, we set out on a three-mile journey to sell them to our neighbors. With each house situated on five-acre plots, we had quite a hike before us that lasted all day but would, without fail, result in pockets full of earnings to spend the next day on presents for our parents.

My favorite gifts were always those from my father, who would either have tons of money or be bankrupt and devising a plot to get it all back (a sport I continue to this day) but he nonetheless always gave the perfect gifts. Whether it was Earth Shoes (when those were the rage), or North Face parkas, or elephant-bell-bottom jeans when we were older—or when we had our own children: Cabbage Patch dolls, Furbies—whatever was unattainable, he got it. Every Christmas morning we would awake to the sound of him playing guitar and singing Christmas carols and Momma warming cinnamon buns in the oven while the Boston Terriers feasted on bacon. We still have the dogs, and we have our memories, and of course, we have Momma.

–Marcia Sherrill 

–Marcia Sherrill 

Tags: , , , , ,

New York Design Diva Marcia Sherrill sends dispatches from her most recent travels.  

Working at the Hong Kong office of my handbag factory and my precious stone lapidarist, I found that both factories were located just hours away in the same province in China. Yes, southern China is rivaling Bejing and Shanghai as an industrial SUPER ZONE. When traveling, DO NOT try what we did going in—namely a bus to the Hong Kong Immigrations; another bus to the Chinese Immigrations; and then traversing 8 million stairways and then another bus to our destination.

Nope, this Southern Lady insisted on a car on the way back to Hong Kong (about 3,000 Hong Kong dollars, or $400), but worth every yen as we were whisked back to Hong Kong in a van replete with Video for you and the driver who alternately watches TV, talks on his Bluetooth-enabled cell phone and plays games on another contraption. Such is their CAUTION on the roads.

You drive up to both Immigration posts and are not subjected to anything more than a throwing open of your van doors, passport scrutiny and an electronic gun that accesses your temperature—yes with SARS and Avian Bird Flus still in recent memory you are not leaving Hong Kong or Mainland China with a temperature.

But CHINA is magnificent. Every other corner is unbridled construction and development; while in between this frenetic work are the tiny Chinese stalls selling goods and cooking God Knows What! Carts full of chickens and pigs stop at the red light alongside Mercedes and Bentleys.

Our hotel, The International Hotel of Quandong, featured three types of accommodations: Western, Japanese, and Chinese. Opting for Japanese we each had a two-story Zen Palace with a top floor boasting a typical Japanese bed and a plasma screen TV and as for the hotel help…a call to the hotel concierge started with “I’d like a Pellegrino…” and an IMMEDIATE ding at your door from a waiter bearing a bottle and lemon slices. The work ethic is unbelievable.

The factory workers work from 8 am to 10 pm with meal breaks and then retire to DORMITORIES where they sleep. But I am constantly assured that my offering of extra cash would be an insult as the Chinese are PROUD of their factory jobs. And the factories? Nothing in America or Europe compares—the hive of activity, the belt floors, the bag floors, the SCREEN PRINTING floors—everything but handbag hardware together for one-stop designing. Dinner at the hotel offers surprises while lunch is routinely McDonalds and KFC (with Chinese twists such as the KFC egg pie dessert).

The Hotel Buffet netted us Fried Loach (a local worm delicacy from what we could decipher), Fried Insects with Solt and the ever-tempting Frog with Sauce. We chose pizza, which seemed innocent until we could not get our waiter to assure us that the meat was NOT French Bulldog.

The Chinese will kill themselves to accommodate you. And their TV is CCTV (Chinese controlled, but in English is more fascinating than Bravo, CNN and The History Channel rolled into one). China is the stepchild of the more Western Hong Kong but for this weary traveler, it is China that calls me back. Its youth, earnestness and its sheer hospitality.

—Marcia Sherrill 

Tags: , ,

New York Design Diva Marcia Sherrill sends dispatches from her most recent travels.

Having been to Japan I thought I was prepared for the magic and mystery of this former British Isle but nothing could have prepared me for the inscrutable Orientalism of Hong Kong and China. And the best part? It seems as if there is one Chanel, Dior and Louis Vuitton store for every 200 people—they are ubiquitous in the city that sports giant skyscrapers like Atlanta does trees.

Every squre inch of this hilly atoll sports either a mall (and I mean mega-mall, like Lenox on steroids) or a hotel or a giant office building. In between lurk the tiny shops and market streets and warrens of restaurants, Chinese and Western, that feed these affluent hordes. The Peninsula Hotel is magnificent and tea there is de rigeur for the weary traveler but try to get off the beaten path of stores, stores, stores and head to the tiny local markets for silks and other yummy fabrics—and trust me, they can make you that Balmain Dress in Vogue in the three days that you will reside in Hong Kong.

It was all I could do not to launch The Marcia Sherrill Couture Collection right then and there. The main attraction is the city’s nightly light show that has all of the massive buildings lining the harbor lit up in a 4th-of-July style extravaganza that lasts a full 15 minutes. The Gateway Mall across from the Sheraton is not as super mod as the newly opened Elements Mall but it does house Japan’s IT shop, where all the natives shop and upstairs on the third floor is their incomparable outlet store with all the big European labels. Go native and buy scads of make-up from Japanese Cosmetics, FACES.

Seems as though the younger Hong Kong shoppers want all things Japanese, and why shouldn’t you at half the price of the European Brands we can get at Phipps!

—Marcia Sherrill

Tags: , , ,

AH&L’s favorite New York Design Diva, Marcia Sherrill, sends dispatches from recent travels in London. Last week London was enjoying a spot of global warming and the usual blustery, damp autumn season was all golden light and jacket-warm weather. Browns Hotel, with its aristocratic history is all tarted-up with posh interiors and a bar scene that is strains of Josephine Baker-ish Jazz and Sloane ranger-types crowding the bar.

Read the rest of this entry »

Tags: , ,