Fashion Time   +  watches

DIY: The Rorschach Inkblot Jacket
Home for the holidays and then some, I was leafing through clothes I had left in Manila in search of something salvageable. When I found this plain white denim jacket that I had not once worn, I set out to make something beautiful out of it.white denim jacket by Topman
When the photos from the Dries Van Noten Spring 2011 show came out, I knew those Rorschach-esque ink-blotchy shirts dear old Dries sent down the runway were fairly feasibly DIY-able.Dries Van Noten Spring 2011 (via GQ.com)
But for this project, I wanted a more literal interpretation of this inkblot test psychologists use to detect underlying thought disorders, so I pulled up photos of Rorschach's original tests for inspiration.card no. 2 from "Rorschach Test – Psychodiagnostic Plates" (via Wikipedia)
I wanted to do something symmetrical like Rorschach's cards, but not quite. As for the color palette, I was subliminally inspired by the Rajo Laurel dress my mother wore on New Year's Eve, which featured mixed black-and-white prints contrasted with color blocks of bright green:color inspiration: mixed-print jersey dress by top Filipino designer Rajo Laurel
Here's how I did it:I drew up a rough sketch of where I wanted to plant the blotches.I then lined the entire jacket, torso and sleeves, thick with newspaper to prevent the ink from blotting through to the back.I took a couple of shades of marker refill ink, the strongest ink available in the office supplies store,and went to town with the ink in a medicine dropper: dropping ink-bombs from about two feet above, and painting graceful ink-blobs on contact. I then heat-set the stains with a hair dryer (not pictured).
But the blots were not as sharp as I had hoped for them to be, and the green ink was a little on the lifeless side, so I decided to accentuate the print with dabs of zesty grass green acrylic.I squeezed a bit on a paper plate, and added a few highlights with the best paint applicator: my fingers.
The paint dried a deeper, richer color and here's what came out of the jacket:DIY Rorschach inkblot jacket. (Look closely and tell me what you see.)
And here it is worn:DIY inkblot jacket, Gap shirt, gray pearl necklace, Louis Vuitton belt, tailor-made trousers, Number (N)ine shoes
Details:The necklace is a long strand of gray Philippine pearls, the belt is my brother's, now bestowed upon me, and the watch is a Cartier Roadster on navy alligator.Though they took many a painful and frigid weekend in New York to break in, these Number (N)ine monk-strap flat creepers have become my current favorites. The pair in ever-versatile beige suede seem to bring that much-needed dark Japanese-ness to every outfit.my wearable psych-test-cum-painting up close
When our family chauffeur saw the jacket and remarked that the pattern seemed to have a meaning he couldn't figure out, I knew my job was done.