Wednesday, February 25, 2009

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Goth is in- prepare to be popular

Fashion turns to gothic in sign of the times
Article from: The Courier-Mail

Jasmin Lill

February 22, 2009 11:00pm

BLACK really is the new black.

It's the gothic trend sweeping shopfloors from chainstores to boutiques and is destined to infiltrate our wardrobes in months to come.

Soft or romantic goth might be mostly black but it's not complete without lashings of opulent trimmings.

And it seems we have the gothic subculture to thank for the haunting look that's skulked into the mainstream for the winter.

Goth is something Violet Vex has channelled from a very young age, and she hoped to source more of her wardrobe from conventional stores for a while at least.

"For as long as I can remember, my parents gave me white tu-tu skirts and little pink tops, and I've gone out of my way to go find some black velvet and lace," she said.

"It's a little bit frightening seeing this become mainstream when it's always been something I've been an outcast for."

Ms Vex said colour wasn't a complete no-no, provided it was restricted to tiny pops of purple, red or green with silver accents and lace.

Brisbane boutique Bessie Head already is stocking key winter pieces including a Morticia Addams-inspired floor-length creation by Manning Cartell.

Store buyer Marnie Byrnes said she believed the global economic gloom was driving fashion back to basics.

"If people want to go goth, look for chains, corset-style, frills, tulle and obviously a lot of black," she said.
http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/story/0,23739,25093264-5013173,00.html

Gothic Kittens

Woman accused of piercing 'gothic' kittens will face charges in county court 1:47 p.m.

By Bob Kalinowski
Staff Writer
Published: Tuesday, February 17, 2009 1:48 PM EST
A woman accused of animal cruelty for piercing the ears of kittens, cutting off their tails, and marketing them as gothic will face the charges in Luzerne County Court of Common Pleas.

Holly Crawford, 34, of Sweet Valley, was in Luzerne County Central Court today for a preliminary hearing.

“This was tying a rubber band around a cat’s tail so tight that it falls off,” said Deputy District Attorney David Pedri. “She caused the cats pain. She did this to sell them to make money.”

Crawford’s defense attorney, Demetrius Fannick, argued state law “goes on and on” about specific acts of animal cruelty, but nothing about piercing cats and docking their tails.

Prosecutors said a part of the cruelty included Crawford tying rubber bands around the tails of the cats so they would fall off. She’d then pierce the nub.

“There’s nothing in the statute that expressly says you can’t pierce your cat’s ears or necks, or even crop their tails,” Fannick said. “It’s a case that you will be for or against as an animal owner. Let the legislature say you can’t pierce or tattoo your animal, and it will be different.”

Magisterial District Judge Paul Hadzick said the case was a gray area in the law and predicted it might one day cause for a clarification in the law. At the very least, he said it’s a case that should be decided by a jury or a higher judge.

“I don’t think that the decision is for me to be made here,” Hadzick said.

Charges were dropped against co-defendant William Blansett, 37, after Crawford admitted she was solely responsible for piercing the cats. The charges stem from a search warrant executed Dec. 17 at Crawford’s 71 Dobson Road home, where the business was based.

Animal control officers and state police located three pierced kittens and two others. The kittens had their ears pierced with 14-gauge jewelry, a standard size for eyebrow and belly piercings in humans. It caused their ears to flop. Their necks were pierced with submission rings. One cat’s tail had fallen off and another had a rubber band tied tightly around its tail.

Arrest papers say Crawford and Blansett bragged they would put “a rubber band tightly around the base of the tail to stop circulation to the tail, which eventually falls off.” Blansett, of 188 Gordon Road, Sweet Valley, described it as a “castrating band,” police said.

Crawford told the official “the kittens cried when she pierced them, but seemed fine afterward,” arrest papers say.

Members of the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals brought the case to the attention of local investigators after seeing an advertisement for “Gothic kittens” on the online auction site eBay. One PETA official, acting as a possible buyer, visited the home on Dec. 16. The suspects displayed the mutilated kittens and told the official about how they planned to obtain and disfigure more of the cats to sell, arrest papers say.

http://www.citizensvoice.com/articles/2009/02/17/news/doc499b064a67cd3862028437.txt

Gothic Fashion sparks Brawl

Gothic fashion sparks brawl

12:00a.m. 3rd February 2009

| By Rae Wilson
Gothic fashion sparks brawl

Kelly Owen was injured after a brawl on the Sunshine Coast.

Gothic clothing has been revealed as the spark for a brawl near a Mooloolaba coffee shop on a Sunday night last July.

Gregory Paul Gallagher, 37, and Stacey Louise Hober, 34, both from Parrearra pleaded guilty in Caloundra Magistrates Court on Monday to common assault.

The couple were expected to face a summary trial but changed their plea after charges were downgraded from assault occasioning bodily harm.

Kelly Owen, who had been celebrating her 21st birthday, received a cut under her eye and facial bruising in the assault about 10pm on July 6, 2008. Her 14-year-old friend had a lump to the left side of her forehead and bruising to her face.

The young women, who were out for a quiet dinner and coffee on the tourist strip, did not know the couple who attacked them.

Police prosecutor Stephen Winstanley told Caloundra Magistrates Court the couple had made slurs about the girls’ clothing and then made threats to hit them.

He said the situation became an all-in brawl where Ms Hober hit one of the girls in the forehead and then jumped on top her.

The girl received two further punches to the temple and jaw.

Sergeant Winstanley said another girl tried to pull Ms Hober away but she was overpowered and had several punches thrown at her. It was not suggested those punches made contact.

Sgt Winstanley said the girl pulled Ms Hober’s hair in retaliation and then Mr Gallagher punched her in the face.

He said ambulance and police were called and the girls were treated at the hospital.

The couple’s defence team submitted the whole incident could have been handled better.

Ms Hober was fined $250 for two counts of common assault.

Mr Gallagher was fined $200 for one count of assault.

http://www.thedaily.com.au/news/2009/feb/03/gothic-fashion-sparks-brawl/

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