1. Balloons
2. Spaghetti
3. Rainbows
If you were to ask Mickey Williams, these would not be her top points of inspiration for designing a party dress. But in fashion, the client is always right…and Mickey’s client happens to be fashion legend Victoria Vanderweil’s five-year-old granddaughter. Even though it’s the toughest assignment Mickey’s gotten during her time at the Fashion Academy of Brooklyn, she can’t pass up the opportunity to impress a top designer like Victoria.
But when Cordy turns out to be a tiny terror with non-stop demands, the assignment goes from hard to impossible. Not only that, but Victoria wants Mickey to babysit Cordy during NYC Fashion Week! Can Mickey pull off her project and pass, or will it fall apart at the seams?
Purchase Runway Ready (Fashion Academy) on Amazon for $6.99 FREE Shipping on orders over $35.
Purchase Runway Ready (Fashion Academy) on Amazon for $6.99 FREE Shipping on orders over $35.
Excerpt from Runway Ready: Fashion Academy:
Mr. Kaye continued. “Clients can be extremely difficult,” he said. “And part of becoming a successful designer is learning how to interpret what they want and give it to them.”
Mickey gulped. What if the client was the same Wall Street exec that had earned JC his two last year?
Instead, a little girl strolled into the room and stood facing the students. She was dressed in a pink-and-white smocked dress, white ruffled socks, and shiny black Mary Janes.
“Aww, she’s so cute!” Mars cooed. “Hiya, sweetie!”
The child stuck her tongue out and stomped her foot. “I am not cute. Cute is for babies! And don’t call me ‘sweetie’! You’re a dum-dum!”
The class erupted in laughter. “You tell her, kid!” Gabriel said, applauding.
“You’re a dum-dum too!” the tot fired back.
“I’d like you all to meet your client,” Mr. Kaye said, trying to calm everyone down. “This is Miss Cordelia Vanderweil. If we could keep the name-calling to a minimum, Cordy, dear?”
“As in Victoria Vanderweil? The famous fashion designer who practically launched the designer-jean craze in the seventies?” South asked.
“The one and only,” Mr. Kaye replied. “This precious young lady is her granddaughter.”
Cordelia looked over the crowd of faces staring at her. “My grandma isn’t gonna like any of you,” she said. “You’re all mean and icky!”
South flinched. “I’ve been called a lot of things before, but never ‘icky’!”
“You don’t mean that,” Mr. Kaye insisted, taking the child’s hand. “These lovely students are going to design you a pretty dress for your fifth birthday party.” He then turned to face the class. “And your granny is going to be the judge of who wins this challenge, after Cordy has selected her top two.”
“No way!” Mars exclaimed. “Victoria Vanderweil is going to grade our designs? That is amazing!”
“Well, that depends,” Mr. Kaye pointed out, “on how amazing your designs are.”
“My birthday is Valentine’s Day,” Cordy revealed proudly. “My granny says it’s because I’m so lovable.”
Mickey raised her hand. “What are the guidelines for the dress?”
“You will have to ask Miss Cordelia that,” Mr. Kaye replied. “Cordy, they’re all yours.”
“I want a fancy dress,” the child rattled off. “With bows and pearl buttons! Oh, and balloons!”
Gabriel raised an eyebrow. “You want balloons on the dress—or attached to it?”
Cordelia waved her hand dismissively. “I like pink and purple and red and yellow and orange and blue. I like twirly ballerinas. Oh! And the Easter Bunny!”
Mickey scratched her head. This was a tall order to fill! “You mean these are your favorite things you want at your party? Or things you want us to think about when designing your dress?”
“Rainbows! I love rainbows and spaghetti!”
“Do you all think you have enough information?” Mr. Kaye asked the class. “I do believe Cordelia has lunch at the Plaza Hotel with her granny shortly.”
“You better do a good job!” she said, leaving them with a stern warning. “Or else!”
“I second that,” Mr. Kaye said. “You have one week to complete your challenge. Good luck—you’ll need it.”
Mr. Kaye continued. “Clients can be extremely difficult,” he said. “And part of becoming a successful designer is learning how to interpret what they want and give it to them.”
Mickey gulped. What if the client was the same Wall Street exec that had earned JC his two last year?
Instead, a little girl strolled into the room and stood facing the students. She was dressed in a pink-and-white smocked dress, white ruffled socks, and shiny black Mary Janes.
“Aww, she’s so cute!” Mars cooed. “Hiya, sweetie!”
The child stuck her tongue out and stomped her foot. “I am not cute. Cute is for babies! And don’t call me ‘sweetie’! You’re a dum-dum!”
The class erupted in laughter. “You tell her, kid!” Gabriel said, applauding.
“You’re a dum-dum too!” the tot fired back.
“I’d like you all to meet your client,” Mr. Kaye said, trying to calm everyone down. “This is Miss Cordelia Vanderweil. If we could keep the name-calling to a minimum, Cordy, dear?”
“As in Victoria Vanderweil? The famous fashion designer who practically launched the designer-jean craze in the seventies?” South asked.
“The one and only,” Mr. Kaye replied. “This precious young lady is her granddaughter.”
Cordelia looked over the crowd of faces staring at her. “My grandma isn’t gonna like any of you,” she said. “You’re all mean and icky!”
South flinched. “I’ve been called a lot of things before, but never ‘icky’!”
“You don’t mean that,” Mr. Kaye insisted, taking the child’s hand. “These lovely students are going to design you a pretty dress for your fifth birthday party.” He then turned to face the class. “And your granny is going to be the judge of who wins this challenge, after Cordy has selected her top two.”
“No way!” Mars exclaimed. “Victoria Vanderweil is going to grade our designs? That is amazing!”
“Well, that depends,” Mr. Kaye pointed out, “on how amazing your designs are.”
“My birthday is Valentine’s Day,” Cordy revealed proudly. “My granny says it’s because I’m so lovable.”
Mickey raised her hand. “What are the guidelines for the dress?”
“You will have to ask Miss Cordelia that,” Mr. Kaye replied. “Cordy, they’re all yours.”
“I want a fancy dress,” the child rattled off. “With bows and pearl buttons! Oh, and balloons!”
Gabriel raised an eyebrow. “You want balloons on the dress—or attached to it?”
Cordelia waved her hand dismissively. “I like pink and purple and red and yellow and orange and blue. I like twirly ballerinas. Oh! And the Easter Bunny!”
Mickey scratched her head. This was a tall order to fill! “You mean these are your favorite things you want at your party? Or things you want us to think about when designing your dress?”
“Rainbows! I love rainbows and spaghetti!”
“Do you all think you have enough information?” Mr. Kaye asked the class. “I do believe Cordelia has lunch at the Plaza Hotel with her granny shortly.”
“You better do a good job!” she said, leaving them with a stern warning. “Or else!”
“I second that,” Mr. Kaye said. “You have one week to complete your challenge. Good luck—you’ll need it.”
My daughter's review (with some spoilers):
In the beginning of the story, Mickey was moving to her Aunt Olive's home because it was near the Fashion Academy. Once school started, Mr Kaye one of the instructors at the school gave all the students various challenges. The first was to design an outfit without using needle and thread. Mickey had a hard time coming up with ideas, but once her mom walked in wearing a rain poncho that left her soaking wet, Mickey decided to design a rain poncho. Mickey was ridiculed by a classmate and received a less than desirable score.The next challenge was to design a dress for a 5 year old's birthday party (Cordy), the catch was it had to include the colors: pink, purple, yellow, red, orange and blue. It also had to include balloons, ballerinas, rainbows, the Easter Bunny and spaghetti. Before she was able to present her designs, she and a friend were tasked to watch Cordy at a very important event. Cordy being a five year old got bored and caused quiet a scene. When Mickey went to school, she learned that due to the mishap at the event, she lost her chance to present her designs. She was devastated and wanted to make things right. She crashed Cordy's party to find her in a stuffy white dress, nothing at all like the little girl wanted. She helped Cordy to redesign the dress and express her personality. To thank Mickey for teaching Cordy to walk to the beat of her own drum she was invited to Fashion week, by Cordy's grandmother who was a famous designer. To Mickey astonishment her design for the birthday dress was the featured last dress in the show and Cordy was modeling!Mickey had never felt so proud and alive.
See how it all began in Fashion Academy!
Fashion Academy
Sheryl Berk & Carrie Berk
Project Runway meets the tween scene in a trendy new series from the authors of The Cupcake Club
At the Fashion Academy of Brooklyn, FAB is a way of life.
Fashion-forward MacKenzie "Mickey" Williams is thrilled to be accepted to FAB Middle School (Fashion Academy of Brooklyn), a school that serves as a training ground for the fashion designers of tomorrow. (Their motto, “We are SEW FAB”). But when her daring fashion and stellar grades turn the Fab A-listers green with envy, Mickey discovers that standing out doesn’t always make it easy to fit in. So when friendly classmate JC comes up with a plan to help Mickey fit in, she decides to take the ultimate fashion risk—ditch her personal style for good.
One mega makeover later, pink-haired Mickey Williams mysteriously disappears, and the trendy, blonde “Kenzie Wills” shows up on the FAB scene, blending with the other students in a way Mickey never could. But when Mickey starts to lose herself to “Kenzie,” she’s not sure that fitting in is worth cutting herself down to size…
Purchase Fashion Academy on Amazon for $6.99 FREE Shipping on orders over $35.
Rafflecopter Giveaway Link for Fashion Academy Book Pack:
Runs December 18th- January 31st (US and Canada only)
a Rafflecopter giveaway
About the Authors
Sheryl Berk has written about fashion for more than 20 years, first as a contributor to InStyle magazine, and later as the founding editor in chief of Life & Style Weekly. She has written dozens of books with celebrities including Britney Spears, Jenna Ushkowitz, Whitney Port, and Zendaya—and the #1 New York Times bestseller (turned movie) Soul Surfer with Bethany Hamilton.
Her daughter, Carrie Berk, is a renowned cupcake connoisseur and blogger with over 105,000 followers at the tender age of 12! Carrie is a fountain of fabulous ideas for book series—she came up with Fashion Academy in fifth grade. Carrie learned to sew from her grandma “Gaga” and has outfitted many an American Girl doll in original fashions. The Berks also write the deliciously popular series The Cupcake Club that was recently made into an Off-Broadway musical, Peace, Love and Cupcakes at Vital Theater in New York City.
I received Runway Ready fro the Kindle exchange for this post. Regardless, I only recommend products or services I use personally and believe will be good for my readers. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commissions 16 CFR, Part 255 Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising. Full Disclosure Policy
No comments:
Post a Comment