Monday, October 14, 2013

Frugalista

Reading an article about Mr. Money Mustache and frugality made me want to catalogue my own spending habits.

Things I do differently from many of my friends that save me money:

  • Don't get manicures or pedicures
  • Don't get massages or facials
  • Don't buy designer handbags, clothes, shoes, nail polish, jewelry
  • Don't get blackout drunk on weekends
  • Don't have meals that cost more than HK$400 per head except on select birthdays
  • Don't stay at five-star hotels on holidays
  • Only get haircuts once every 6+ months and never get other treatments
  • Get haircuts at Mina Dev'wil
  • Take a lot of mass transportation instead of taxis if alone
  • Don't impulse buy makeup
  • Try to keep lunch below HK$60
  • Eat lots of Subway sandwiches, pizza and kebabs for dinner
  • Drink lots of wine from 7-Eleven
  • Drink beer
  • Don't take classes
  • Read a lot
  • Hike a lot
  • Don't ever lose cellphone
  • Banned clubbing from life
  • Banned from life any drink that comes in a plastic bottle, unless in hiking emergency

Things I do differently from many of my friends that cost me money:

  • Leave air-conditioning on all day during summer months
  • Have a cat
  • Am only willing to fly on Cathay Pacific or Dragonair (if out of HKG)
  • Live in Soho
  • Don't live with parents
  • Buy coffee from Starbucks almost every weekday
  • Don't let guys pay for everything
  • Buy high-end cosmetics
  • Don't have insurance for doctors' visits
  • Don't get corporate discounts

Things I should do:
  • INVEST

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Shop window origami 2013

Seems that the last time I posted shop window origami was way back in 2011. Here are photos of ones I've spotted, all in Hong Kong, since April this year.

Cool! Hummingbirds in earth tones at Coach (Queen's Road). It's not really obvious what's going on in this window until you take a step back, and it turns out the hummingbirds are holding up shoes. I guess the mannequin is meant to be enjoying a fine fall day in the park, surrounded by shoes and hummingbirds. So random, but interesting:



Not real origami, because it's not really folded out of a piece of paper but more like assembled. A giant faux origami elephant at Gap Kids (Hysan Place):


This one was hard to photograph but turned out kinda cool looking. Birds and starburst geometric origami in the Sogo window facing the street. I like the different positions of the wings:


These cranes are folded out of lai see envelopes, at Mint & Lemongrass (Soho). A really good idea, since those envelopes can be really pretty, are often free and a waste to throw out. This is a kind of display that a small store can easily put up to add a festive air around Chinese New Year time. But it also seems weird to combine Chinese and Japanese traditions, imho, and cranes are so strongly associated with Japan:


Sunday, August 25, 2013

Goodbye, lover


H&M finally closes its Central store. It had been previously reported that it was closing due to high rents. I know this is the dumbest post ever, but it's totally sad. H&M in Central has provided hours of shopping therapy to me for small sums of money. It is one of the very few places in Central to buy inexpensive clothing. It was stuffed with articles of clothing so varied that I had found there no-fail outfits for job interviews as well as components to many a Halloween costume that one could actually wear on normal days too. You did good, big ol' store.

Monday, July 01, 2013

Book quote

Irritated by the insect buzz of a harpsichord on KDFC (which she obliged herself to tune in to for the supposed relaxing properties of baroque music, despite its always having struck her as the auditory equivalent of trying to fold origami in your mind).

--Page 143, Telegraph Avenue by Michael Chabon

(The latest in an ongoing series of sightings of the word origami in a novel I'm reading.)

Sunday, June 23, 2013

It just needs to be said

The most delicious food in the vicinity of Hollywood Road is kebabs from Beyrouth. Not cheap, with a smallish lamb kebab costing HK$65. Keeps me wanting more ...

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Frivolous rave/question

I bought a shower gel about half a year ago by the brand o'Naomi, which I don't expect anyone to have heard of. I hadn't. This is the website.

Reasons for purchase:

  • It said made in Hong Kong, so I figure I save on transportation costs, and it's more environmentally friendly.
  • It said "organic," which I am skeptical about naturally (har-har), but still it swayed me. I later found out from their website that they also supposedly do not use dioxane, a carcinogen found in many products.
  • It was called "sugarcane and orange blossom" shower gel. The short-ish ingredient list included essence of those things, and olive oil. Somehow, sugarcane seemed like a believable ingredient, because it's cheap. I normally assume when a product says it has an exotic, expensive ingredient (like I dunno, caviar? Avocado?) that it just has half a drop per bottle, and it's actually a turnoff because I think they are exaggerating and are therefore immoral.
  • The label design was not very attractive (similar to those pictured). So I thought I wasn't paying for some expensive design service.
  • It was cheaper than the more well-known brands, likely for the above reasons.


Review:
It's totally normal and feels good and smells good. No problems. I'm gonna only buy this brand from now on for hair and bath stuff for the above reasons. So unless I get a dud, I'll just use this. (I also had an extreme allergic skin reaction to a Tresemme shampoo recently, so I am very fed up with imported big names that just use fancy plastic bottles and are just full of chemicals anyway.)

Question:
I wonder what other people think of this brand. They make these unattractive-looking shampoos and conditioners that use Chinese herbs. They are kind of hidden on one side of the drugstore shelf with the other unattractive shampoos, while the Vidal Sassoon and Japanese brands, in their sleek, shiny, expensive-looking packaging, are prominently displayed under bright lighting.

Monday, March 11, 2013

Quote of the Day

"it's a little weird to me that the first thing you think after getting engaged is 'i NEED to change my status....on facebook.' "

--Justin H., via gchat (and no, he doesn't mean "you" like me, but "you" like "someone." Specifically people who annoy the shit out of us on Fb.)

Thursday, March 07, 2013

Mmm, solid wood

Me: You have the nicest furniture out of all my friends.
Dave: That's because I'm the oldest of all your friends.

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Never give up on your orchid*


I bought this small orchid plant at the Flower Market in Mong Kok two Decembers ago. I kept it alive for about a year after all the flowers on the stem had bloomed and died, but all that grew were roots, lots and lots of roots, in the style of Medusa's hair, and new leaves that weren't looking too healthy. This photo doesn't do the roots or leaves justice. Some of the leaves have burnt tips. I seriously considered throwing this plant away. But last week I noticed -- finally!! -- a new stem coming out (pictured). I was shocked that this was happening. I thought this plant would never bloom again. Moral: never give up on your orchid. *Unless it's in really, really bad shape.

Monday, February 11, 2013

quote of the day

"Well it is good that you didn't die. I would be devastated among many mourners."

--Tim, via chat. Haha, a nice thing to say.

Monday, February 04, 2013

Favorite article of clothing

 

I love this top. Nice tie-dye, with a braided neckline and more braids down one side, has that soft vintage feel. It's supposed to be a dress, according to the Forever 21 website. It looks totally horrible on the website and as a dress.

Anyway, this is the perfect unintentional shirt. Something like US$20. Purchased at the zoo that is the Forever 21 store in Hong Kong.