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Women's Fashion

Why is cottagecore so blindingly white? – A Curious Fancy

by Lina Clémence July 7, 2025
written by Lina Clémence


Plus size fashion blogger Ragini of a curious fancy styling a cottagecore look against a background of snowdrops. A fat indian woman in her late 30s is sitting in a woodland clearing dotted with snowdrops. she’s reading a book. She’s wearing a white apron dress over a blue dress with puff sleeves. She has shoulder length hair and there’s a birkin style basket next to her. the time is around sunset in early spring.

Wearing  ✶  Blue puff sleeved midi dress by New Look last year (similar style here)  ✶  Cream linen apron dress by Field Day Apparel  ✶  Old Peacocks cable tights  ✶  Old Clarks T-Bar flats

We took these photos more than a month ago, and it’s taken me this long to coherently put into words why these images are important. The short answer is: because we pretty much never get to see fat, brown people in this kind of imagery. The long answer made me far too angry for far too long and angry writing doesn’t make for nuanced reasoning. 

When I started this blog more than a decade ago, cottagecore didn’t have a name. But it was this aesthetic – pale, svelte nymphs traipsing through woodlands and meadows in floaty dresses   and flower crowns – that kindled my love for fashion and led me to try and create a bit more representation for people who look like me. That was 2010. Now in 2022, cottagecore is fairly mainstream and has been so for a while now – yet the bodies that it centres remain as thin and white as ever. Go to any social media platform and search for cottagecore, fairycore, princesscore, dark academia or any related keyword. Then see how long you have to scroll before you come across a) a brown person, b) a fat person, and c) a person who’s both. I can assure you that you’ll be scrolling for a long time. I’ve been asking myself why this is and I don’t have any good answers. 

Plus size fashion blogger Ragini of a curious fancy styling a cottagecore look against a background of snowdrops. A fat indian woman in her late 30s is sitting in a woodland clearing dotted with snowdrops. she’s reading a book. She’s wearing a white apron dress over a blue dress with puff sleeves. She has shoulder length hair and there’s a birkin style basket next to her. the time is around sunset in early spring.

The obvious (and simplistic) answer lies within the nature of the aesthetic itself. From a purely visual standpoint, cottagecore overlaps heavily with the tradwife movement – a deeply misogynist ideology rooted in ethno-nationalism that seeks a return to traditional gender roles and a vision of an all white Europe/America. But attributing the lack of diversity within cottagecore to neo-nazis adopting the same aesthetic is far too simplistic an explanation and ultimately not very useful. As a neurodivergent creator I struggle with engaging in conversations online, but even in the limited range of interactions I’ve had with creators in this visual space, I’ve found nothing but warmth, inclusion, and support. In fact the least inclusive thing about cottagecore is social media algorithms (yes, you, Instagram) that consistently elevate and centre thin, white bodies. 

We live in a world where being thin and light skinned is aspirational by default, and where people of colour, especially fat poc with darker skin are stereotyped as loud, brash, and unruly. The people who program social media algorithms are far from immune to these prejudices. If developers on Instagram think cottagecore to mean pale, thin figures against European landscapes, then that’s what people browsing the platform see when they search for cottagecore. And when people see only one body type and skin colour in this aesthetic, it inevitably becomes associated with those specific features. Eventually we end up with a feedback loop where cottagecore is thin and white because we only ever see thin and white people in this style of imagery. Fat people of colour who adopt this style as their own remain unseen because that’s not what people are used to seeing. 

As a fat, brown creator I constantly resist the pressure of being pigeonholed into the plus size influencer stereotype. People follow plus size influencers to see fat bodies in lingerie and bodycon fits. That in itself has a worthy purpose, which is to normalise fat bodies. But when a fat, brown person decides that, actually, they’re perfectly comfortable with their body and would much rather do something else now please, suddenly no one’s interested. Can we only imagine fat bodies or brown bodies in the restrictive niches we force them into? Does our only worth lie in making statements of ‘bravery’ or ‘confidence’ with our socially unacceptable bodies? Can we not be fully realised people beyond that? 

Plus size fashion blogger Ragini of a curious fancy styling a cottagecore look against a background of snowdrops. A fat indian woman in her late 30s is sitting in a woodland clearing dotted with snowdrops. she’s reading a book. She’s wearing a white apron dress over a blue dress with puff sleeves. She has shoulder length hair and there’s a birkin style basket next to her. the time is around sunset in early spring.
snowdrops in the woodlands at national trust wallington photographed by Plus size cottagecore creator Ragini of a curious fancy.

Naturally I can only speak from my experience as a fat woman, an Indian woman, an immigrant from the third world to the first. When I speak of fat, brown people I’m using my experience of living in this body and navigating the world in this skin to reach certain conclusions. I would never presume to speak for anyone else  or any social group other than the one I belong to. This is relevant to my next point about the lack of diversity in cottagecore, which is lack of access. One of the main reasons we don’t see brown people in rugged, romantic, European landscapes is the lack of access to those places. Like I said, I can only speak from my experience as an Indian immigrant to the north of England and what I’ve observed in the time I’ve been here, but as an international student at York Uni 10 years ago, I soon realised that I was completely cut off from accessing the vast swathes of British countryside I dreamed of visiting. I didn’t drive (and still don’t!) which meant that I was wholly reliant on public transport. Just as an example, to get to Owen’s parents who live out on the moors in County Durham we have to drive for an hour and 15 minutes from Alnwick. If we wanted to make the same journey on public transport, we’d have to take 3 buses, 1 train, and walk for half an hour bringing the total journey to 3 hours and 15 minutes. And that’s the most time efficient route according to Google. Ofcourse there are wonderful stretches of meadows and forests much closer to Alnwick seeing how it’s a picturesque market town in the heart of Northumberland with an almost entirely white population. Which brings me to my second point about access – the undifferentiated whiteness of Britain outside of large cities. 

When we lived in Newcastle, it was hard not to notice that certain areas were almost socially cordoned off for brown people to live in. This isn’t peculiar to Newcastle, every largish city in Britain will have an ‘ethnic zone’ like this. And you can bet that these areas have some of the worst connectivity via public transport. There are both internal and external pressures that contribute to the phenomenon of these ‘ethnic zones’. Being an immigrant, especially a brown immigrant from the third world to the first, is an intensely alienating experience. You crave and latch on to anything that reminds you of home. It’s natural, then, to want to live amidst people from your own culture who understand your alienation and struggle better than anyone else. This is the internal pressure. But then you find that private landlords simply don’t want to rent to you outside of these areas. Houses that are available to the white students in your course mysteriously go off the market when you contact the letting agents. The only places that become available to you are the ones in ‘ethnic neighbourhoods’ or cardboard coops run by slumlords. 

snowdrops in the woodlands at national trust wallington photographed by Plus size cottagecore creator Ragini of a curious fancy.
Plus size fashion blogger Ragini of a curious fancy styling a cottagecore look against a background of snowdrops. A fat indian woman in her late 30s is sitting in a woodland clearing dotted with snowdrops. she’s reading a book. She’s wearing a white apron dress over a blue dress with puff sleeves. She has shoulder length hair and there’s a birkin style basket next to her. the time is around sunset in early spring.

This isn’t an imaginative flight of fancy that I’ve constructed – this was my experience as an international student from India 11 years ago. Later on when I moved to Newcastle to live with Owen, I left the househunting to him and we got the place we wanted without any issues. Being married to Owen conferred a very different kind of legitimacy onto my person. Suddenly I was deemed a whole lot safer, more normal and acceptable even in spaces that weren’t meant for me. People I encountered while shooting with Owen out in the countryside visibly relaxed and took on a friendly demeanour once they saw that I was with him. Driving out to these places where we seldom encounter another brown face can be unsettling but Owen is like a protective charm for my brown, immigrant self. In his presence, I’m a fascinating curiosity instead of a threatening one. While there are many brown people in the U.K. who have this protective shield extended to them by virtue of having a white partner, many others don’t, and navigating these white spaces outside the city as a single brown person or with your brown family in tow can be nerve wracking. The level of stress involved makes leaving the safety of your community in the city very much not worth the pain. 

I’m by no means arguing that there aren’t any brown people outside of cities in the U.K. But the sort of racism and prejudice we’re faced with makes it much harder to carve out a life outside these geographically and socially close knit communities, especially if you don’t have a white partner or family. Which brings me to my last point of discussion – cultural containment. Here I can only speak for myself and my own culture – the vast, self contradictory yet self contained melting pot that is Indian culture. I grew up feeling alienated from Indian culture for reasons too numerous to list here (I talk about it a bit more in this Instagram post) and sought refuge in the culture of a far off land dramatically different to mine, yet which had colonized mine for over 200 years. I grew up dreaming of benign woodlands and windswept moors – tropical jungles with “nature, red in tooth and claw” held as little charm for me as the Bollywood films my peers watched and the salwar kurtas they wore. It’s no surprise that I gravitated to this aesthetic that’s so rooted in European/British landscapes and costuming that neo-Nazis aspire to emulate it for wildly different reasons. 

Plus size fashion blogger Ragini of a curious fancy styling a cottagecore look against a background of snowdrops. A fat indian woman in her late 30s is sitting in a woodland clearing dotted with snowdrops. she’s reading a book. She’s wearing a white apron dress over a blue dress with puff sleeves. She has shoulder length hair and there’s a birkin style basket next to her. the time is around sunset in early spring.
snowdrops in the woodlands at national trust wallington photographed by Plus size cottagecore creator Ragini of a curious fancy.

If the majority of brown people/south Asians/Indians aren’t drawn to this aesthetic, it could be because most of us have our own, culturally coherent and self contained aesthetic language. Maybe that’s what needs to be explored within the sphere of cottagecore imagery. Sarees and ghagras on brown bodies but out in coastal meadows and bluebell woods (watch this space because that’s something I’m planning!) That still won’t solve the problems surrounding access to the countryside for brown people, especially immigrants, but the visual medium is a powerful one. Maybe seeing a fat, brown person in a jewelled lehenga and bindi musing in quiet contemplation amidst a sea of snowdrops will allow others like them to visualise themselves in a similar setting. Inaccessible as these places are, maybe they’ll feel a little less alien, and a little more like someplace a brown person could visit and feel safe to be themselves. And why just stop at a sea of snowdrops? Why not the green expense of paddy fields, of cloud wreathed rainforests, meadows golden with mustard flowers, rivers so vast under a brooding sky you can’t tell where the river ends and the sea begins? Can’t cottagecore be translated to these landscapes as well? 

If you’re interested in reading more about people of colour in the English countryside, I thoroughly recommend The Museum of English Rural Life’s refreshing blog series ‘Changing Perspectives in the Countryside’. For further reading on the intersection of tradwife ideology and cottagecore aesthetics, I recommend this erudite and insightful article on Lithium Magazine. The best way to foster representation in the cottagecore community is to diversify your feed. Follow fat/BIPOC/queer/trans/disabled creators and amplify their work! And finally, if you’ve enjoyed reading this blog post or found something of value in it, please consider supporting my work on Ko-fi. 




July 7, 2025 0 comments
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Plus Size Fashion

The perfect plus size cottagecore dress – A Curious Fancy

by Lina Clémence July 5, 2025
written by Lina Clémence


Wearing ✶ Old puff sleeve cotton maxi dress from Primark (similar here) ✶ My starry wedding crown (broke it out after 4 years!) ✶ Olli Ella Toadstool basket ✶ Seasalt fisherman sandals (not pictured)

When I saw on Instagram a few weeks ago that the woods at Wallington (where we shot the snowdrops early in March) had burst into wood anemones, we had to drive down for some photos! The day dawned hot and sunny and we made cucumber, tomato and cheese sandwiches for a picnic lunch amidst these magical, starry flowers. But of course the weather turned just as we were leaving the house, and by the time we got there the clouds were brooding and rain was imminent. We quickly snapped a few photos while Lila grumbled in her pram, and then we all sat in the car, eating squished lunchbox sandwiches in the pouring rain. All things considered, it was a very British holiday sort of day out for us!

If you follow me on Instagram, you’ll probably have seen me wearing this dress a few times before – especially on the moors that time when the heather was in full bloom. For a £20 dress from Primark two years ago, this has actually been worn a lot more than most things in my wardrobe. I consider a puff sleeved white cotton dress to be a staple of a cottagecore wardrobe, and the frequency with which I wear this dress is proof enough! While I tend not to be too formulaic with wardrobe staples – you’ll never find me saying that a specific piece of clothing is an absolute necessity for achieving a certain look – I find that a floaty white cotton dress with puff sleeves forms a solid backbone on which multiple cottagecore outfits can be constructed. With this in mind, I’ve linked to a selection of plus size white cotton dresses in the widget below to accommodate a range of sizes and budgets. You really can’t go wrong with a timeless little white dress!




July 5, 2025 0 comments
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3 Things You Should Never Do In Bluebell Woods – A Curious Fancy
Plus Size Fashion

3 Things You Should Never Do In Bluebell Woods – A Curious Fancy

by Lina Clémence July 5, 2025
written by Lina Clémence


Wearing ✶Anaya With Love maxi dress (gifted) ✶ Old ASOS straw hat (similar here) ✶ ASOS straw belt (similar here) ✶ Olli Ella Basket bag (similar here)

We were going to go to some bluebell woods this year, and then we weren’t, and then we finally were, but then again we weren’t…in the end we did make it and they were the most ethereal bluebell woods I’ve ever seen. The carpet of purpley blue (so rare in nature!) was the perfect backdrop for my Anaya With Love dress and I alternately felt like a woodland fairy or a figure from a Monet canvas.

We had to be extra careful while shooting amidst the bluebells because these ethereal woodland blooms are even more delicate than they look! If your social media feeds are heavy on the cottagecore aesthetic (like mine!) you won’t get through the month of May without seeing at least a dozen photos and videos featuring these otherwordly patches of blue scattered across the forest floor. However, shooting or filming in bluebell woods requires a lot of care and attention, and here’s why.

English bluebells are a protected species

Ancient woodlands that burst into bluebells early in the summer tend to predominantly have English bluebells, which are a protected species and increasingly threatened by their more robust Spanish counterpart. Hybrid varieties of bluebells with characteristics of both strains are becoming ever more common thanks to cross pollination. However the Spanish bluebell is an invasive species and a lot hardier than the English variety. You can always identify English bluebells by 1.) the characteristic droop of the flowers, 2.) flowers growing on only 1 side of the stalk, 3.) a more purple tone rather than blue, and 4.) the sweet, flowery smell. In contrast Spanish bluebells are a lighter shade of blue, grow upright on both sides of the stalk, and generally have a less delicate appearance thanks to the fuller inflorescence on the stalk. As hybrid varieties of bluebells proliferate further in the wild, it’s increasingly common to find bluebells that have characteristics of both. So if you’re in any doubt at all about the variety of bluebell you’ve come across, don’t take it home with you especially if its flowering in the wild.

Bluebells damage easily

A single bluebell plant takes 5-7 years to grow from its bulb, and a damaged bluebell can take upto 5 years to come back. This is why you have to be extra careful in bluebell woods, because if you step on a single bluebell it’ll take 5 whole years to come back. Even if you’re not picking the flowers, any damage to the leaves severely compromises the plant’s ability to photosynthesise and it dies as a result. While it might look like I was nestled right amidst the bluebells in these photos, that effect is created entirely by perspective. In reality, I was standing or sitting on the paths between the flowers and Owen was shooting from the road that ran past the woods. I even took off my shoes and went barefoot as that gave me greater control over where I was stepping! So If you want to take photos like these in bluebell woods, please take the greatest care not to step on any part of the plant!

Bluebells thrive when undisturbed

While posting some of these photos on Instagram, I happened to look though the bluebell and bluebellwoods hashtags and was quite disheartened to see countless photos of people posing their dogs and babies right on top of clusters of woodland bluebells. Please don’t do this! If your children are old enough to understand the importance of not damaging flowers in the wild (like Lila is!) then that’s a different matter altogether, but as cute as it might be to get a shot of your baby crawling amidst the bluebells it also means that your baby will be in primary school by the time those flowers have a chance to come back. The same goes for dogs. If you’re walking with your dog in bluebell woods, please keep them on a leash and stick to the broader walking paths. That way everyone else can also enjoy these magical blooms for years to come.


July 5, 2025 0 comments
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Plus Size Fashion

Is a Craft Gin Club subscription worth it? – A Curious Fancy

by Lina Clémence May 29, 2025
written by Lina Clémence


A summer meadow picnic with Craft Gin Club’s subscription box styled by Ragini R/ A Curious Fancy. Ragini is sitting in a meadow wearing a green floral apron dress. Next to her is a mirrored tray with a bottle of gin, 2 glasses with gin cocktails, and some meadow flowers on it. Close to the tray is a wicker basket wth packets of snacks in it.

We’ve been getting a monthly subscription box from Craft Gin Club since February this year and I wanted to talk a bit about it! Full disclosure: Owen is the gin aficionado in our family and I’ve been partnering with Craft Gin Club on a gifting basis as a little monthly treat for him. We receive the boxes, I create some content each month (sometimes with Owen’s help, sometimes by myself) and then we enjoy the gin, snacks and mixers.

Would we pay for a Craft Gin Club subscription if I wasn’t in a position to create photo and video content in exchange for the monthly boxes? The answer is yes. We’d probably get a bi-monthly subscription instead of a monthly one – Craft Gin Club offers monthly, bi-monthly and quarterly subscriptions along with the option of purchasing one-off boxes of the month. There are some monthly boxes that I’ve loved more than Owen did and vice versa, so I appreciate that there’s the option to choose the ones you like the most.

A summer meadow picnic with Craft Gin Club’s subscription box styled by Ragini R/ A Curious Fancy. Ragini is sitting in a meadow wearing a green floral apron dress. Next to her is a mirrored tray with a bottle of gin, 2 glasses with gin cocktails, and some meadow flowers on it. Close to the tray is a wicker basket wth packets of snacks in it.

Whether it’s a subscription or a one off box, Craft Gin Club makes for a wonderful gift as there are so many different things to try out in every box. Everything comes packaged beautifully and securely, and there’s something for everyone. I love the fruity gin cocktails that I can make with the mixers while Owen prefers a traditional G&T. There are even things for Lila to enjoy (she loves the toddler friendly crisps and chocolate!) And thanks to Craft Gin Club, I’ve also discovered some new favourite beverages, both alcoholic and otherwise. That’s my favourite thing about these boxes – there’s a bundle of new things to try out every month that we wouldn’t discover otherwise, and some of the snacks and beverages from previous months’ boxes (blood orange cider and chocolate covered marshmallows immediately spring to mind) have become firm favourites in our household.

When we were shooting these photos in the meadows, we soon realised that we’d once again forgotten to bring a bottle opener, so we couldn’t make the cocktail of the month for the photos! (With every subscription box, you also get an issue of the Craft Gin Club magazine which has a variety of cocktail recipes and ideas including the cocktail of the month, the ingredients for which are included in the box.) So I quickly made a cocktail of my own creation with the Tassie gin, limeade, cocktail syrup, and dried pineapple garnish. And it was so good! I know next to nothing about making cocktails and with the ingredients in a Craft Gin Club box, I can just throw things together to my liking and get a delicious end result. Now that’s what I call magic!

This is July’s box that you can see in the photos – we’ve already received the box for August and I can’t wait to unbox it and try out the gin and other goodies inside! The boxes are £40 each and all of them have a full sized bottle of gin along with a range of tonics, mixers, garnishes and snacks to nibble on while flipping through the monthly magazine. Craft Gin Club also has frequent discounts on their website which make the boxes even better value! So here’s to a subscription box that never fails to delight, month after month *clink* And to more makeup free photoshoots (did you notice?)

A summer meadow picnic with Craft Gin Club’s subscription box styled by Ragini R/ A Curious Fancy. Ragini is sitting in a meadow wearing a green floral apron dress. Next to her is a mirrored tray with a bottle of gin, 2 glasses with gin cocktails, and some meadow flowers on it. Close to the tray is a wicker basket wth packets of snacks in it.
A summer meadow picnic with Craft Gin Club’s subscription box styled by Ragini R/ A Curious Fancy. Ragini is sitting in a meadow wearing a green floral apron dress. Next to her is a mirrored tray with a bottle of gin, 2 glasses with gin cocktails, and some meadow flowers on it. Close to the tray is a wicker basket wth packets of snacks in it.
A summer meadow picnic with Craft Gin Club’s subscription box styled by Ragini R/ A Curious Fancy. Ragini is sitting in a meadow wearing a green floral apron dress. Next to her is a mirrored tray with a bottle of gin, 2 glasses with gin cocktails, and some meadow flowers on it. Close to the tray is a wicker basket wth packets of snacks in it.
A summer meadow picnic with Craft Gin Club’s subscription box styled by Ragini R/ A Curious Fancy. Ragini is sitting in a meadow wearing a green floral apron dress. Next to her is a mirrored tray with a bottle of gin, 2 glasses with gin cocktails, and some meadow flowers on it. Close to the tray is a wicker basket wth packets of snacks in it.
A summer meadow picnic with Craft Gin Club’s subscription box styled by Ragini R/ A Curious Fancy. Ragini is sitting in a meadow wearing a green floral apron dress. Next to her is a mirrored tray with a bottle of gin, 2 glasses with gin cocktails, and some meadow flowers on it. Close to the tray is a wicker basket wth packets of snacks in it.
A summer meadow picnic with Craft Gin Club’s subscription box styled by Ragini R/ A Curious Fancy. Ragini is sitting in a meadow wearing a green floral apron dress. Next to her is a mirrored tray with a bottle of gin, 2 glasses with gin cocktails, and some meadow flowers on it. Close to the tray is a wicker basket wth packets of snacks in it.



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May 29, 2025 0 comments
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Plus Size Fashion

The perfect summer holiday dress – A Curious Fancy

by Lina Clémence May 29, 2025
written by Lina Clémence


Plus size fashion blogger Ragini of A Curious Fancy photographed in the Northumbrian market town of Rothbury.An fat Indian woman in her late 30’s, she has long black hair with white streaks. She’s wearing a retro maxi dress in a white floral print, cream espadrilles, and a red bag on one shoulder. Picturesque shop windows and stone buildings are visible in the background.

Wearing ✶ Retro cotton print dress c/o Very Shop summer dresses at Very UK ✶ Self made hair bow ✶ Espadrilles and Bee shoulder bag, both c/o Very

It’s late August but I’m not ready to let go of summer yet! And with the August bank holiday weekend predicted to be sunny and warm, I’m hoping for one last river swim before the end of the season and holding on to my sundresses and sun hats. Last weekend, I wore this sweetest of summer dresses for a little trip to the Northumbrian market town of Rothbury. We’ve driven through Rothbury several times on our way to Cragside and Wallington, and I’ve always wanted to shoot some photos against the charming shopfronts and houses.

Plus size fashion blogger Ragini of A Curious Fancy photographed in the Northumbrian market town of Rothbury.An fat Indian woman in her late 30’s, she has long black hair with white streaks. She’s wearing a retro maxi dress in a white floral print, cream espadrilles, and a red bag on one shoulder. Picturesque shop windows and stone buildings are visible in the background.

My entire outfit has been gifted by Very.co.uk (with the exception of my hair bow, which I made!) Very has so many delightful sundresses and maxi dresses in at the moment that are just perfect for summer holidays or a daytrip to a picturesque market town like this. It was hard to pick just one but in the end, this Monsoon dress in the most darling retro print had my heart. Everyone keeps saying that twee fashion is making a comeback but for me, it never left. I leaned heavily on the cutesy retro vibes with a red bee crossbody bag and cream espadrilles, both also from Very, and finished the look with a me-made hair bow and red lipstick. Matte red lipstick and winged liner is my go-to makeup look when I want I want to exude retro vibes without going into too much fuss. And my curling iron waves ended up looking like a messier version of pin up curls, which is the closest to pin up hair I’m ever going to get!

Regarding sizing, I’m wearing a size 20 in the dress and a size 8 in the shoes. In hindsight, I should have sized down to the 18 in the dress as the 20 is currently a bit too loose for me and this is meant to be a fitted style. If you look at reviews of this dress on Very and Monsoon, you’ll find a lot of people saying that it runs small, but that hasn’t been my experience at all – I feel that it’s quite true to size. The espadrilles felt a bit tight on my somewhat wide feet at first (I can wear both wide widths and regular, depending on the shoe) but after a bit of walking, they stretched out and were perfectly comfortable all day.

I hope you enjoyed this old school outfit post! I miss the days when I’d dissect my looks and discuss sizes and fit on this blog, and I think I need to bring it back. After all, twee fashion and outfit dissection is how I started blogging all those years ago!

Plus size fashion blogger Ragini of A Curious Fancy photographed in the Northumbrian market town of Rothbury.An fat Indian woman in her late 30’s, she has long black hair with white streaks. She’s wearing a retro maxi dress in a white floral print, cream espadrilles, and a red bag on one shoulder. Picturesque shop windows and stone buildings are visible in the background.
Plus size fashion blogger Ragini of A Curious Fancy photographed in the Northumbrian market town of Rothbury.An fat Indian woman in her late 30’s, she has long black hair with white streaks. She’s wearing a retro maxi dress in a white floral print, cream espadrilles, and a red bag on one shoulder. Picturesque shop windows and stone buildings are visible in the background.
Plus size fashion blogger Ragini of A Curious Fancy photographed in the Northumbrian market town of Rothbury.An fat Indian woman in her late 30’s, she has long black hair with white streaks. She’s wearing a retro maxi dress in a white floral print, cream espadrilles, and a red bag on one shoulder. Picturesque shop windows and stone buildings are visible in the background.
Plus size fashion blogger Ragini of A Curious Fancy photographed in the Northumbrian market town of Rothbury.An fat Indian woman in her late 30’s, she has long black hair with white streaks. She’s wearing a retro maxi dress in a white floral print, cream espadrilles, and a red bag on one shoulder. Picturesque shop windows and stone buildings are visible in the background.
Plus size fashion blogger Ragini of A Curious Fancy photographed in the Northumbrian market town of Rothbury.An fat Indian woman in her late 30’s, she has long black hair with white streaks. She’s wearing a retro maxi dress in a white floral print, cream espadrilles, and a red bag on one shoulder. Picturesque shop windows and stone buildings are visible in the background.
Plus size fashion blogger Ragini of A Curious Fancy photographed in the Northumbrian market town of Rothbury.An fat Indian woman in her late 30’s, she has long black hair with white streaks. She’s wearing a retro maxi dress in a white floral print, cream espadrilles, and a red bag on one shoulder. Picturesque shop windows and stone buildings are visible in the background.
Plus size fashion blogger Ragini of A Curious Fancy photographed in the Northumbrian market town of Rothbury.An fat Indian woman in her late 30’s, she has long black hair with white streaks. She’s wearing a retro maxi dress in a white floral print, cream espadrilles, and a red bag on one shoulder. She’s standing next to a river, under a stone bridge.



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May 29, 2025 0 comments
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Women's Fashion

An eco printed dress fit for an elven queen – A Curious Fancy

by Lina Clémence May 29, 2025
written by Lina Clémence


Wearing ✶ Eco printed linen dress by Gillian Smellie {Similar in a different print here} ✶ Hair crown from Eclectic Eccentricity 8 years ago ✶ Wide Welly Co. wellies

✶ Get 15% off your purchase from Gillian’s online shop or in person at any of her pop up shops with my code CF15 ✶

Who else is watching the middle earth fanfic also known as The Rings of Power? I’m supplementing my viewing with a re-read of The Book of Lost Tales (Vol. 1) and it’s fascinating to revisit Tolkien’s earliest penned tales from over a century ago alongside the latest retelling fanfic. Elvish lore was very much on my mind when I received this breathtaking eco printed dress by Gillian Smellie, and it immediately transported me to the woodlands of Doriath, the hidden city of Gondolin and the shade of the mallorns of Lorien. For this is truly a dress fit for an elven queen!

Some collaborations unfold in the most serendipitious way. I met Gillian at her stall at the Brancepeth Castle craft fair back in the summer and instantly fell in love with her magical leaf prints. The next day when I posted some photos from the fair on my Instagram story, I tagged Gillian in one of them and to my surprise and delight I found an email from her in my inbox the next morning asking me if I’d like to style any of her pieces! Of course I jumped at the chance.

Gillian Smellie is a textile artist based in County Durham who uses locally foraged leaves to create unique and magical prints on preloved garments. You can read more about her dyeing process on her website here. Sustainable and eco friendly fashion is at the heart of her work and the reason she mostly prints on preloved and vintage garments. In my conversations with her, Gillian expressed her keen interest in expanding the size range of the garments she prints on. As pre loved garments in larger sizes that are also suitable for eco printing are rare, Gillian has been sourcing plus size linen dresses and tops from a manufacturer in Italy to expand the size range of her products. The dress I’m wearing is one of these.

At the craft fair, I was very taken by a pair of dungarees with a striking fern print that was sadly too small for me, so I requested Gillian to print my dress with all the ferns! As luck would have it though, ferns have been very low in tannin this season and produced rather faint prints, so Gillian redid the dress with sumac and rose petals and the results exceeded all my expectations. There are a few garments in my wardrobe that I’d classify as wearable art, and this dress is one of them. Despite being a huge Tolkien nerd for more than 2 decades now, I’ve never felt particularly inclined to dress up as a hobbit or elf…until I put on this dress and was enveloped in it’s ethereal beauty. The linen is also buttery soft and has a lovely weight to it. I’m wearing a size large and it’s very roomy and oversized on me (I’m currently a UK18-20) For sizing reference, I feel this dress is more of a UK 22-24.

You can shop all of Gillian’s available products at her online shop here. Gillian also does a lot of pop ups and fairs in and around the north east of England, and you can see her schedule for upcoming shows here. As she has recently started expanding her range of plus size garments, it’s worth dropping her a message if you want to buy one of her creations but can’t find your size in the webshop. Gillian can also print on any suitable garment from your own wardrobe – here’s what she told me about custom printing: “Yes I do print to order. I cannot guarantee the outcome but I can aim for a specific look/use specific leaves etc.  I’m not doing any more bespoke before Christmas but happy to take post Christmas orders.” So if you’d love to have a piece of wearable art in your wardrobe but can’t find your size in the online shop, get in touch with Gillian for a custom printed garment just like my sumac and rose elven dress!



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May 29, 2025 0 comments
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