Yes I still have it and it still fits...only because its fairly baggy and has a tie at the back!I think this style of wedding...garlands in your hair,floaty dresses etc is coming back in fashion so I'll keep it in case I get married again my daughters ever marry
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Style & beauty
Do you wear leggings?
(160 Posts)Warm, cosy and comfortable, leggings are very popular.
But are we too old?
How can we wear them without looking a fright??
My 'going away' dress (how quaint
) was from Biba. Do you still have your wedding dress Grannylin? Mine came from Rumak & Sample just down the road! What a 'hippy' lot we were/are 
Oh Grannylin I would have killed for an Ossie Clark dress! (Still would actually!)
I wanted to buy my wedding dress in Biba but couldn't find one I liked so I ended up buying a very hippy one in Bus Stop.
I find the prices for Biba at House of Fraser way out of my range, but I've got a couple of nice pieces by Barbara Hulanicki at Asda.
Glass, go and look in House of Fraser if you can. They have really captured the essence of the old Biba, I think.
I nearly bought my wedding dress in Kensington High St Biba..it was knee length with lots of see -through white netting, but £25!I bought a long Ossie Clark cream dress instead because it was £22..worth a bit more now 
Ohhh Biba.
Agree. I like to wear thick dark tights with my boots.
Though recently I did buy a par of jeggings from M&S and they're quite good tucked into boots too.
My daughter was on her way to the clothing bank but I said I'd go trough the clothes first, and have found a couple of nice tops that I'm going to keep
. I'll add them to all of the other clothes that I never wear...[she had a handbag as well, so I said we'd better look inside it and go through all the pockets of the clothes; haven't found anything thus far but I have often found notes in pockets/handbags that I'd forgotten about]
OGM I love Toast!
I never shopped in Biba, being a deprived northern lass, but some years ago did go up to the Roof Gardens on the old Derry &Toms building after I read a newspaper article about them.
By then they were owned by Sir Richard Branson, and the day we went (me, a friend and our 13 year-old DD's in tow), they were supposed to be closed for a private function.
But the doorman said no-one would be there for at least an hour and let us go up anyway! It was beautiful and unbelievably quiet, only six or seven floors up from the noisy street.
A little act of kindness that I've never forgotten
I'm with you Soop thick tights. W
When I wanted to buy a dress 2 or 3 years ago, not a dress to be found, now they are everywhere BUT I want to buy a skirt, long and flared.... not avalable ( Bags was looking for one too, I wonder whether she found one?)
Anyway I succumbed to a bargain yesterday. Very fine wool, lined, and almost floor length on me, plain dark grey, Toast, reduced from £145 to just over £40, I can see it becoming a favourite when it has been shortened a wee bit! Fits into the waist and flares out into a full skirt too, so has just the skirt I wanted!
Sadly Biba never reached Anglesey!!!!! 
I think it started in Abingdon Road, then Church Street, then Kensington High Street. I always thought it got too big then and lost a lot of the atmosphere.
In cold weather I prefer thick tights. 80 denier, black, chocolate brown or aubergine. I like the sound of your Biba dress, Tegan 
joannapiano 
On the subject of Biba, mollie65, an old school friend,who lives in Brighton got tickets for us both to visit a Biba Exhibition at the Royal Pavilion earlier this year, Barbara Hulanicki studied art and design in Brighton. It evoked special memories of the time we spent at the big store that opened in I think what was the old Derry and Toms in Kensington High Street in the '70s when we were mere teenagers. I wish I still had my dusky pink Biba boots!
ah - memories of Biba - had a lovely dress and feathery type thing from there and it was so lovely to go there at the weekend back in the day. would get about one arm and one leg in now remembering the small size they were (I was a sylphlike size 6 then)
but somehow Biba and House of Fraser can never evoke the same nostalgia (Hof F is for old folk!)
I seem to remember most of Kensington High st was a glory hole of wonderful clothes - and wasn't there a market as well.
back on topic - have tried jeggings and find the elastic goes in the waist and you can't replace it because it is sown into the waist band ! at least on the ones I bought so I switched to skinny jeans where a belt keeps them up quite well. 
I had a sort of military style coat in a sludge green and they had almost the same one in today!
Very twenties style clothes, feather boa type neck thingies, lovely dresses, nightwear, jackets, bags and purses. Oh and a cloche hat. All lovely, my DD was beside herself....
I had a Biba dress that I loved so much I'm thinking of asking someone to make an identical one for me [I wore it out before I was twenty] I know it would still suit me now. Black ankle length jersey with buttons going all the way down the front, a belt and a peplum. I loved it. I wore it with brown leather boots.
I certainly wear mine in snow and ice and they are pretty good. About the same as my walking boots I would say. As my Aqualamb are still waterproof I shall carry on wearing them in the Normandy snow and mud, but succumbed to a fab pair of furry Croc boots for best, today at Bluewater.
Has anyone seen that Biba is back, in House of Fraser? Fantastic stuff, very much in the Biba sprit. Brought back happy memories of Saturday mornings in the Kensington Church Street shop, circa 1967.
On topic, I also bought some denim jeggings from M and S. 
Now that I don't know,but I understand why you're worried. My knees are so bad I'm terrified of slipping when it's icy. The only shoes I feel safe in are my Doc Martens which are made for people that work in slippy environments. By far the worst things to wear when it's icy are wellingtons. Mind you, my new boots have lots of 'grooves' on the sole, but then so do wellies. Probably no good asking the company because they'd have to say they aren't in case someone sued them. I'll have to test them out
.
My sheepskin boots for indoors do look a bit big and maybe ugly - but I tuck my jammies in, and I am so warm I really don't care how it looks
They do have to be real sheepskin. I think I paid about £35 in TKs, which I thought was a lot for slippers. Wish I'd bought 2 pairs now.
I would like some waterproof ones for outdoors now the Celtic Aqualamb look good, but are they anti slip in the ice? After falling and breaking my wist badly, I'm always worried I'll do it again.
Thanks Sunflower for your tip, I will have to look out for some in the sales. I guess it's the real sheep skin that does the trick and keeps your feet warm. I did have some M and S fur boots a couple of years ago but they only lasted 2 winters before the soles came apart. They weren't bad though for the money.
I wear leggings, usually M&S, with a variety of long jumpers / tops. I love jeggings too. (I always think they look ok, but Mr H did make an Olive Oil comment last week!) I don't have feet, just blocks of ice, so I bought some furry slipper socks from Primark just to try - they work! I've never gone down the Ugg route - I think they look ugg-ly!
A big no from me.
(a)My legs are not very long.
(b)My legs are Not very shapely.
The only thing I can say is I do have a reasonably compact hips.
When tights first came out they were too long for me and I also did a Max Wall impression.
cazthebookworm you mention having cold feet all winter - well last year I found some Emu short boots at a reasonable price in TKMaxx - they are half a size too big and lilac in colur! But I wear them as slippers in winter and have never had such warm soft feet. I just love them I don't wear socks, just the thick sheepskin keeps my feet warm, and maybe it's th oils but the hard skin has almost gone too.
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