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Kim Philley, frivolousuniverse

The first person I met in Bangkok was Mr. Deep. I got in at 2:00am the night before and was still rubbing the sleep out of my eyes as I stepped onto the platform of the Sky Train station at Thong Lor. The platform was deserted save for a well-heeled businessman. I looked at the man in the suit, he looked back at me. I smiled, he smiled. And then he said, ‘You just move to Bangkok–lucky, lucky lady!’

Kim Philley, Bangkok, tuk-tuk, ESP, Elizabeth & James, frivolous universe

How could I resist? I walked ten meters down the platform to ask him how in the heck . . . .

‘Because I am Sri Lankan astrologist. My name Mr. Deep,’

‘So what’s your day job?’

He took offense: ‘I told you, I am astrologist!’ And then, with cosmic timing, he fielded a very important astrological call on his BlackBerry Pearl.

We ended up having tea together. The next day I started sleeping with 33 limes under my pillow.

Kim Philley, Elizabeth & James, Bangkok, Frivolous Universe

I know I look like I’m taking a piss, but I wanted to show the detailing on this classic white blouse by Elizabeth and James (yes, that’s Mary Kate and Ashley Olsen’s line): three delicate buttons that loop in back when you want a fitted, ultra-feminine look. 

When we sat down for tea, Mr. Deep tore the edge off a sheet of paper and scribbled something down. He had me clutch the wadded-up paper in the palm of my hand as we talked–about life and love and the infamous Bangkok heat. I didn’t mention any names or hint at a particular situation, and yet Mr. Deep told me there was a man in my life who I just couldn’t shake. ‘Now open your palm,’ he said. I unfolded the tiny fragment. My ex’s name was written on the piece of paper I had been holding all along, in a sloping, Sri Lankan hand.

Kim Philley, frivolous universe

Riot-of-color cotton skirt: ESP (Saim Paragon)

Mr. Deep crumpled another piece of paper and stuffed it into my hand. I sipped my iced green tea. ‘What’s your favorite flower?’ he asked.

I had to think about it for a second. Orchid.

‘How old are you?’

33.

‘What’s your biggest worry?’

My health.

‘Now open it.’

I unfurled my palm. This time the piece of paper Mr. Deep had placed in my hand minutes before read Orchid, 33, Health.

Kim Philley, http://http://www.frivolousuniverse.com/

Red wallet: Italia Design (Delhi Airport)

Mr. Deep placed one last bit of paper into my hand. ‘Now write down a four-digit number,’ he said. I thought of four numbers. ‘Now write down four more.’ I jotted them down. ‘Another.’ Okay. ‘Now think of four more.’ The list was growing. ‘Now add the numbers together.’ I carefully did the arithmetic; my numbers added up to 2,779.

‘Now,’–he sounded serious as the grave–‘if you open your palm and the number I have written is the same as the number you have written, your problem can be solved. If you open your palm and it is a different number, your problem is between you and God.’

I opened my palm. I smoothed out the piece of paper: 2,779.

Kim Philley, http://http://www.frivolousuniverse.com/

Stone bracelets: Central Market, Phnom Penh, & David Akins’ Reflexions Center giftshop, Nampa, Idaho

Pepto-Bismol pink ballet flats with hidden wedge: J. Crew

This was incredible news, but Mr. Deep told me there were a few things left to do: I needed to buy 33 limes. I had to sleep with them under my pillow. And each day I must walk through a busy crossroads and chuck one lime into the intersection.

Kim Philley, http://http://www.frivolousuniverse.com/, limes

Did I do it? Am I doing it? This is Bangkok. I’d be crazy not to toss those limes.

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Kim Phlley, Vertigo, Vertigo bar, Banyon Tree hotel, Bangkok, Thailand, ZARA

Cocktails al fresco & the best view in Bangkok: The rooftop Moon Bar at the Banyan Tree hotel

Vertigo, Banyan Tree hotel, Bangkok

There’s nothing quite like a few days spent riding Bangkok’s Sky Train to make one feel fatally frumpy. Along Sukhumvit Road, women wear scarlett-soled Christian Louboutins to commute to work, only to stuff them into their Bottega Veneta bags when they arrive at the office, swapping heels out for bunny slippers. Even Bangkok men are so well turned out—bespoke jackets, saddle oxfords, sometimes a Rockabilly pompadour shellacked to the top of their foreheads—that I’ve begun stroking my chin for signs of insidious stubble. Adding insult to injury are Thailand’s glamazon ladyboys, many of whom do a far better job of impersonating a woman than I do:

Miss Tiffanys Universe 2011, Pattaya, Thailand, ladyboys

Verklempt ladyboys at the world’s premiere transgender beauty pageant,
Miss Tiffany’s Universe in Pattaya, Thailand

With such, err, stiff competition and so little time (I started a new job yesterday and thus far am exhausted and morbidly lonely), I’ve decided nothing–and I do mean nothing–I brought to wear in Bangkok is worthy of a photo-op. Until I can a) Make an auteur friend who will take hammy fashion shots of me once a week (and that is a friend indeed) + b) Hit the weekend markets and Chiclet-sized Thai boutiques at places like Terminal 21 and Siam Discovery Center, I’ll be pilfering my Bangkok archives for today’s blog:

Kim Philley Vertigo Bar Bangkok, Thailand, ZARA

Top: ZARA

Sunglasses: Christian Dior

Gold Ganesh necklace: Bangkok’s Chinatown

Thailand has one of the most innovative, up-and-coming fashion scenes in all of Asia. I’ll be exploring young Thai designers in upcoming posts, but for now let me lead with a (fashion savvy) household name: Thakoon Panichgul (ฐากูร พานิชกุล). A Thai-American, Thakoon was raised in Thailand and Omaha, Nebraska, and is a favorite of our fashion-forward First Lady’s.

Michelle Obama, Thakoon, patterns, Kim Philley, Frivolous Universe, FU

Thakoon has a genius for acid-flashback patterns, but there are some patterns that just shouldn’t be mixed (Michelle Obama should ask herself every morning, Does this go with American Flag?)

Thakoon Pre-Spring 2012

Thakoon Pre-Spring 2012

Another rule of Southeast Asian fashion: you can never be too rich or too girly-girl. (Although you can be too thin. But thanks to the night food vendors on Soi 38 that offer spicy papaya salad, pad thai, tom yum, et al, I may soon have my ass back.) Here I am at Bangkok’s Dusit Palace Park looking gag-me-with-a-spoon girly. I hope this outfit inoculated me and I’ll never have to sport a boob-bow again.

Dusit Park Palace, Bangkok, Kim Philley, ZARA

Minnie Mouse called: she wants her look back

Leotard top (yes, crotch-snaps and all): ZARA

Umbrella: 7-Eleven

Thakoon, Thailand, Kim Philley, Frivolous Universe, FU, patterns

Thakoon Pre-Spring 2012

Bangkok street food Kim Philley

Sabai Sabai! I love the man with the sausage pancakes

T-shirt: James Perse

Skirt: ZARA

Jeweled sandals: Phnom Penh

Thakoon, Thai designers, Kim Philley, Frivolous Universe, FU

Thakoon Pre-Spring 2012

Wat Pho, Bangkok, Thailand, Kim Philley

My favorite man in Bangkok: ‘Marco Polo’ at Wat Pho

Stay tuned next Tuesday for photos of me in a ladyboy-slaying new Thai getup, which I will challenge myself to find for under 1,000 Thai Baht ($30 US)!

Photos by Marcus Aurelius 

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Because something is happening here 

But you don’t know what it is

Do you, Mister Jones?

Lara Croft Concert Raider

Jacket: AXARA Paris (Saigon)

Backpack: Osprey (R.E.I., Boise)

Turquoise jeans: Russian Market (Phnom Penh)

In April of this year, my Phnom Penh buddy and I bought sapphires, got our hair did, and boarded a night bus bound for Ho Chi Minh City. My editor at the Southeast Asia Globe had charged me with covering a historic first: finally, a Bob Dylan concert in post-war Vietnam. Because my friend knew a restaurateur who was hosting Dylan, there were even whispers that we might get to meet the Thin Man himself.

Photo by John Idaho

We spent the weekend stalking Dylan. When we weren’t attempting to order sushi backstage (and being thrown out as politely and chivalrously as I’ve ever been booted out of anywhere), we gorged on Vietnamese street food delicacies from rickety-tick plastic chairs and got our nails shellacked in three Abstract Expressionist layers. (In Southeast Asia, when it comes to fashion, more is more.)

We should have bought her durian 

It Don’t Mean a Thing (If It Ain’t Got That Bling)

Nails: District 1 (Saigon)

Blue and green sapphire rings: Central Market (Phnom Penh)

Stalk break

Anime-inspired haircut: De Gran salon (Phnom Penh)

Tiger’s eye bracelet: Central Market (Phnom Penh)

When we finally caught a glimpse of Dylan, it was as he ascended the stage in his black suit jacket with gold buttons, tuxedo trousers with satin piping, a pink shirt with a bolo tie, and a white wide-brimmed hat that acted like a visual magnet.

Bob Dylan LIVE IN SAIGON (Photo: Reuters)

But even the formidable shadow cast by the hat’s brim couldn’t disguise Dylan’s incredible, craggy visage: he looked like a Rembrandt, a face out of deep time. A face, smiling frequently with a punch of old man swagger, apparently having a very good time of it in the city formerly known as Saigon.

Onsie: mansion (The Emporium, Bangkok)

Green sapphire earrings: Central Market (Phnom Penh)

Boo: V. Boots

At the end of Dylan’s 18-song set, as the Vietnamese fashionistas scattered for nightcaps and the die-hards slowly lowered the softly glowing screens of their iPhones, there was only one thing left to do:

Photos by V. Boots & Kim Yum Grub

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