
In 1992 I bought a tie dye romper from a  patchouli-smelling street vendor in Mission Beach, which I proceeded to wear to  Lollapalooza with Doc Marten boots and a pair of round John Lennon-esque  sunglasses from Charlotte Russe.  (To complete the cliche, if you  must know, I traveled there—Lollapalooza, not Charlotte Russe—in the back of a  VW bus with 8 people, including my angsty long-haired wannabe rocker boyfriend  who wouldn’t stop eating Funyuns.) It was a banner year for the ‘palooza--Pearl  Jam and Soundgarden and Cube and Stone Temple Pilots.  Sure wish I  remembered the music.  But, alas, classy college girl that I was, I  had consumed my body weight in Zimas on the way and spent most of the festival  either face down in the grass or face down in a portable john.   Like I said . . . classy.  
 I do, however, remember that  romper, with its bright, irresistibly cheerful concentric circles, like a  textile lollipop—a vestige, if you will, of a simpler, more frivolous  time.  These tie dye plates are reminiscent of that garment.   They almost pulse with their bold, swirling hues and, yet, there is a  playfulness about them, a sweetness.  They are appropriate as both  the backdrop for a trio of jello shots at a college bash and the setting for a  Spongebob cupcake at a kid’s birthday party.  I attended  Lollapalooza in 1992, so guess which one I recently used them for?   (Though my son would be quick to point out that we served apple pie at  his birthday party, because cupcakes are too “mainstream.”  No  joke.  My kid is 9.  What do I do with that?)   Better yet, throw in some peace sign decor, psychedelic music, and a  fondue pot and you have the makings of a groovy 60s soiree.   You  could even have guests tie dye shirts as favors.  Hmmm . . . wonder  what happened to my friend with that VW bus
Guest Post by Laura Davis of www.FictionLimbo.com 
 
 






