Showing posts with label Museum Tavern. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Museum Tavern. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 3, 2017

NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM

The best bargoon in the Mink Mile has to be happy hour at Museum Tavern on Bloor St. opposite the ROM, where between 4 and 6 p.m. daily you can scarf down oysters for a buck a shuck washed down by $6 wine. Hey for $20 for a dozen and a drink, you can’t go wrong.



The slurp-able oysters and red wine at Museum Tavern, offspring of the late lamented Bistro 990 and owned and operated by the sons of Bistro owner Tom Kristenbrun.


Designer Nicole Manek, (left) formerly of the vintage store Life of Manek and currently selling online, me and her pal at Museum Tavern. I am showing off a stunning mink backpack she made from dead stock at her boutique.

Me and world-travelling pal Claire Blondeau (a.k.a. Salty Sea Wench) mugging at the Museum. I am sporting my trademark lipstick-print-on-napkin which could be useful in masking a bad facelift. Maybe I should copyright it.


Wednesday, December 16, 2015

BAH HUMBAG


Two of my favourite words are “70-percent off,” a phenom occurring more readily in the U.S. than in Canada, especially before Christmas. So when I got a text from a pal with the image of the black Proenza Schouler iconic PSI bag with fringe that I have been lusting after and the info that it was on sale for 60 percent off at The Room in Hudson’s Bay on Queen St., I started salivating.

I am an unrepentant bag hag and shoe slut. Shoes are my crack: I swear I will be found in a ditch with a stiletto in my arm. I just had to nip over to The Bay and interview the bag.

It wasn’t exactly cheap, but as another pal pointed out, I have been a good girl and I can amortize it per wearing because I wear my bags to death. In fact, I had to retire a Donna Karan bag woven à la Bottega Veneta because my friends were sick of seeing it.

Besides, this bag can help make up for not having our highly-anticipated annual faux black sluts-and-shoes Christmas tree this year. It is traditionally topped by a drunken cupie doll in flapper attire and laden with permutations thereof accessorized by tons of shoe ornaments.

Alas, not this year. We have a very naughty and clumsy black kitten named Sammy Davis Jr. Jr. who is a one-cat wrecking crew, responsible for breaking at least five lamps and clearing the mantle of everything on it. We call it tchotchke control.

As we were hauling out the tree for assemblage last Saturday, Sammy climbed up the only surviving plant in the house. He has been known to climb up walls. Visions of broken decorations and assaulted cupie dolls supplanted sugar plums in our minds. So we packed it in and Sammy will be henceforth known as the "Cat That Ruined Christmas” (or for short, the oddly familiar-sounding "CTRC").

My new bag is consolation.
 
Words to shop by at the entrance to The Room in Hudson’s Bay on Queen Street. They are attributed to the legendary photographer Bill Cunningham, who started the street-style paparazzi phenom and inspired poseurs everywhere.

The purse sales table at The Room, where a staffer complained that the shoppers aren’t respecting the merch and treating the expensive bags, which had an entry-level price just under $1,000 even on sale, like rough trade.


This is the furry beast that got away. It is a Proenza PSI bag, but it is not the one I bagged for myself. It reminded me too much of my deceased cat, Onslow.

Dale, my affable sales associate at The Room whom I’d met at a party last summer where we bonded over our ensembles. We both wore identical Church’s studded brogues and Chanel brooches like we were evil twins from other mothers.

A random shoe shopper at Hudson’s Bay who is terminally cool. I want her boots.

My go-to happy hour is 4-6 p.m. at the bar at Museum Tavern, the Bloor St. W. reincarnation of Bistro 990, where the oysters are buck a shuck and the wine is $6 and actually drinkable. Bartender Ryan is building me the perfect martini, which comes with a mighty flourish of dry ice. “It’s not a rush unless the keg blows,” Ryan cracked.

Martini madness: The finished product, accessorized by my cell phone-cover, a frankly faux Chanel anchored by a Louis Vuitton lock, which is the real deal. One out of two ain’t bad.

The Hermès window on Bloor Street, not remarkable because the scarf is so boho but because the mannequin is swarmed by squirrels, one of which is decked out in a festive red sweater. What was the window dresser smoking?


Sunday, October 25, 2015

ONE MO TIME


Our prodigal pal Mo Gannon, who just got a big fat promotion to assistant editor at The National, the English language daily newspaper in Abu Dhabi, returned for a visit to her old stomping grounds, T.O.
On Saturday, we took her for happy hour (buck-a-shuck oysters, $6 wine) at the Museum Tavern, which is in effect Bistro 990 Jr. since it was launched by Kyle and Glen Kristenbrun, offspring of Tom Kristenbrun, founder of Bistro, our regular haunt of yore. During one raucous TIFF night, Rufus Sewell quipped, “This should be called Bistro 666.” And we have the scar tissue to prove it.


It was the old happy gang: me, Rob Salem, Mo, ad man Tim Hughes and behind him, p.r. whiz Grant Ramsay, who arguably has the best head of hair in the city.
 
While we weren’t the lives of the party, we were inadvertently part of a wedding party – two wedding parties had pre- dinner drinks and photo ops at Museum making it two weddings and a bar.              

Dropped by Clementine’s luxury resale shop at 1260 Yonge St. near the Summerhill boozeria just to check out the inventory and live vicariously through the castoffs of the rich ladies of Rosedale. This is a photographic rendition of some of the brands carried by the boutique.

Clementine’s owner Christina McDowell plucked these pants by Simone Rocha out of the back. Note the cool marabou trim on the leg.
 
These Simone Rocha shoes are part of my personal collection and would go perfectly with the aforementioned pants but they are way too matchy-matchy. I’d feel like I could take flight.

This yummy white cocktail dress by Marchesa with marabou trim on the hem was hanging in the dressing room. All I needed to buy it was the body to rock it, the bankroll to afford it and the occasion to wear it.