Things I miss from the 90s: County Seat

things i miss from the 90s

Kate and I went shopping recently, and for some reason I got to telling her about a store that’s now long-gone – County Seat.

Who remembers it? The bright colors, crazy patterns, and matching earrings for every item of clothing in the store. It was the best.

I hope a lot of you recall that place, because evidently it only lives on in our memories. Stores that found themselves in Chapter 11 in the late 90s never existed, according to the interwebs. I thought for sure I would find images of County Seat goodness all over the place, but I was wrong. The only evidence that it was ever a real thing is in a few lonely Ebay listings, where the clothes are described as vintage.

VINTAGE, people.

But tell me they don’t bring back memories.

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Man, I loved that place.

No really. I loved it. Like, a lot. A quick trip down my grandma’s hallway displays just how much I loved it. Check out these gems.

I am pretty sure I was wearing matching teal jeans. It's too bad the Olin Mills people didn't show them off.
I am pretty sure I was wearing matching teal jeans. It’s too bad the Olin Mills people didn’t show them off.
Earrings with the same pattern as my sweater were hiding under all that hair.
Earrings with the same pattern as my sweater were hiding under all that hair.

And here’s the real winner.

The bright color-block shirt almost makes up for the fact that my sister and I look clinically depressed.
The bright color-block shirt almost makes up for the fact that my sister and I look clinically depressed.

What do YOU miss from the 90s?

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Nobody likes a vague-booker, but…

Nothing irritates me quite like a purposefully-vague Facebook status update – “I just got the best news! So excited!” or “Brokenhearted.” Or something else equally annoying. Pass or play, people – post it or don’t!

That said, I’m about to be super annoying to all of you and do an entire vague post!

The subject of my question shall remain nameless. It’s important to protect the privacy of the pre-pubescent in question.

So… here’s my predicament. What’s the best way to tell our children something they don’t want to hear? Something of a personal nature, something he or she might be embarrassed about? How can we say “here’s something you need to take care of” without ruining their self-esteem and/or making them self-conscious for ever and ever?

I had a situation like this earlier this week, and let me tell you – I did it wrong. My seemingly innocuous, kindly worded statement resulted in HYSTERICS. I am fairly sure this situation will be the subject of several therapy sessions to come. Hers and mine.

Anyone have advice for me?

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Collecting Pie on Foodie.com

I love to bake. Like, a lot. I really love it. The problem is that I also love to eat baked goods, and I cannot be trusted to have them in my house. It’s a real conundrum, because I will eat all the things. I do tend to bake a lot around the holidays, and while I’ve mastered things like my famous pumpkin rolls, until this year there was one area I had not ventured in to.

Pies.

Making pie seemed so… complicated, and I really didn’t know anything about it. But, one night shortly before Christmas, I was up to my ears in flour and baking supplies, and I got it in my mind that I should make a pecan pie for my grandma – her favorite treat. I turned to my good friend Google, and before long I was whipping up the Karo syrup pecan pie recipe along with Wesson oil crust. Believe it or not, it worked.

At least, I think it did. I didn’t actually have a piece.

In any case, I no longer feel like pie is beyond my capabilities, and I am looking forward to trying out more recipes.

I don’t know about you, but I don’t even remember the last time I looked in a cookbook. I still have some, but they are downstairs and really don’t make their way to my kitchen. When I need a recipe, I bring my iPad into the kitchen and I’m good to go. Searching all over the internet for a recipe I ran across two weeks ago isn’t always convenient, and it’s good to have recipes in one place.

Enter Foodie.com. You can browse, sort and search more than a million recipes and restaurants, and collect the ones that interest you all in one place. Their toolbar makes it easy to grab recipes from all over the internet, too. The collection posted above is my “Pie” collection, but as I scrolled through Foodie I also made collections for breakfasts, desserts, slow cooker recipes, and appetizers/snacks. I’m sure there’s more where that came from, too. One thing that struck me about Foodie is that it’s JUST food – there’s less noise and it makes it easier to find exactly what you’re looking for. I think that this is a tool I will use a lot.

Check out Foodie.com and let me know what you think!

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This post is sponsored by Glam Media.

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