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    How much for that paper in the window?

    Masterful window displays at Clotheshorse Anonymous fool even the savviest Dallas shoppers

    Rachael Abrams
    Mar 1, 2013 | 10:09 am

    Have you seen the couture dresses in the windows at Clotheshorse Anonymous? Did you know they are actually made from paper? (If you thought they were real, no worries. We were fooled too.)

    We decided to get to the bottom of this very clever ruse, to learn more about the genesis of these magnificent window displays and the design culprit responsible for the trompe l'oeil.

    "Celesta Segerstrom and I met three years ago in the waiting room of a garage, while both getting our tires change," says Julie Hogg, who works in advertising at the consignment store. "We started talking about our businesses. At the time, Clotheshorse had just moved to a new location [at Preston Road and Forest Lane] with major power windows. We came up with the idea of mixing fashion and art through paper."

    Segerstrom went to design school in California and worked as a television art director and, later, as an advertising director here in Dallas. "I also did freelance illustrations for album covers. I had a very varied career," Segerstrom says.

    It wasn't until fate (or flat tires) brought Segerstrom and Hogg together that Segerstrom began her career as a paper sculptor. "I did the first set of windows for Clotheshorse in 2009. I made silvery tops and recovered mannequins in fabric just in time for Christmas," she says. "I had to come up with something that said 'high-end-couture' and symbolized real clothing. As a result, I began doing paper sculptures for a lot of other people."

    In addition to the windows at Clotheshorse, Segerstrom co-designed the Christmas windows for Neiman Marcus Downtown in 2009 and, more recently, created the black and white penguins for Stanley Korshak for this past holiday season.

    "Valentino, Gucci, Chanel, Gaultier and YSL have all graced our windows," Hogg says. And when Diana Vreeland's The Eye Has To Travel premiered during the Dallas International Film Festival last year, Segerstrom designed the windows as an homage to the editor's days at Vogue and Harper's Bazaar.

    Where does the master designer begin? "There are certain things I look for in the design to make the dresses," she says. "Many times it's the pattern in the fabric and the texture that makes the display so interesting."

    The latest displays reflect the designs of Balenciaga and the fashion house's newest creative director, Alexander Wang. "I did them all in white and made the background look Spanish," Segerstrom says.

    Her usual routine begins with finding pictures of dresses or key pieces that she and Hogg both like. And then she starts dumpster diving and visiting Home Depot for unique materials.

    "I say I'm a paper sculptor, but this kind of work forces me to use other materials, to make it look like fabric," Segerstrom says. She used gossamer for the hooded dress; gossamer for the bridal gown with wire and yarn for the bodice; and, for the lace-top dress, lace-like floral paper to replicate the kind of lace Jason Wu uses. Each dress in the Balenciaga window display took about 30 hours to create.

    Segerstrom admits she loves fooling window shoppers, and she says seeing a dismantled window display makes her feel like she has succeeded, "because people keep touching it." For her Chanel display, Segerstrom used shelf liner to make the iconic quilted purse.

    "There was a customer that did not believe it was not real," she says. "She finally ripped the purse open because she just wouldn't let it go. I really succeeded with that one."

    ---

    The Balenciaga-inspired gowns will be on display at Clotheshorse Anonymous through mid-summer.

    The bodice of the Balenciaga bridal gown is made from yarn wrapped around wire.

    Balenciaga at Clotheshorse
    Photo by Julie Hogg
    The bodice of the Balenciaga bridal gown is made from yarn wrapped around wire.
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    New giant Quge-tip from Dallas-based Q-tip sells out in 24 hours

    Teresa Gubbins
    Dec 10, 2025 | 3:15 pm
    Q-Tip Quge-tip
    Q-Tip
    Q-tip's Quge-tip

    A giant version of an everyday product has sold out in 24 hours: Called the Quge-tip, it's a 6-foot version of the iconic Q-tip, the beauty staple that's been around for more than a century.

    Measuring nearly six feet from tip to tip, Quge-tips feature enlarged swabs and a sturdy stick modeled after the original Q-tips swabs design.

    The Quge-tip was released on December 9 and sold exclusively online in limited quantities for $35. Alas, according to a spokesperson for Dallas-based Elida Beauty, the parent company of Q-tip, the product flew off the virtual shelf.

    "Now that they’re sold out, Q-tips is surprising fans with social giveaways," the spokesperson says.

    The Quge-tip is one of two products just released by Dallas companies — both of which feel like they could be April Fools Day jokes — except that both are for real.

    Dave & Buster's Claw Purse Dave & Buster's Claw PurseD&B

    Dave & Buster's Claw Purse
    The Dallas-based eatertainment chain is leveling up holiday gifting with the debut of the Claw Purse, a limited-edition purse designed by Chain. The Claw Purse is inspired by one of the brand's most iconic games — the claw machine — and according to a release, is "the season's most unexpected fashion statement" for anyone who loves bold style, nostalgia, and a little bit of play.

    To mark a milestone for the brand, the Claw Purse launches alongside the expansion of Dave & Buster's Human Crane, a viral, full-body game experience that turns guests into the claw — where they are lowered down into a bin of huge prizes to grab whatever they choose.

    Beginning in December 2025, the Human Crane will appear in over 112 Dave & Buster's locations with additional stores rolling out nationwide throughout the season.

    But back to the purse: It made its debut at Chain's Holiday House, an event at the company's HQ in L.A., where "it quickly became a crowd favorite among creators, stylists, and culture icons," or so says the release. Which also calls this "the first creative collaboration" between Dave & Buster's and Chain, bringing together Dave & Buster's beloved gameplay with Chain's signature culture-forward point of view. So maybe there will be more collaborations in the future.

    Q-tip's Qugetip Q-tip's Quge-tipQ-tip

    Q-tips Quge-tips
    The Quge-tip is a nearly six-foot supersized version of the "iconic" Q-tip cotton swab, first invented in 1923 and the go-to for beauty, baby care, first aid, cleaning, and everyday moments that call for a gentle, precise touch.

    The six-foot Quge-tip features enlarged swabs and a sturdy stick modeled after the original Q-tips swabs design — offering a new way to experience an iconic tool at a dramatically large scale, designed as a playful, oversized tribute.

    The release nots that Quge-tips tap into a rising trend of consumers using Q-tips swabs for alternative tasks, which now make up a meaningful share of cotton swab use: From dusting high shelves and cleaning hard-to-reach corners to large-scale art projects.

    The six-foot Quge-tip features enlarged swabs and a sturdy stick modeled after the original Q-tips swabs design — offering a new way to experience an iconic tool at a dramatically large scale.

    The company insists it's a real thing — they do a very funny video mocking late-night ads for cheap products — and that after debuting at qugetips.com on December 9, they sold out of their initial run. One note: They do not reveal how many Quge-tips were sold. It could just be, like 10 that were for sale.

    There's a chance they'll be doing another issue, and they encourage interested shoppers to diligently follow their social media.

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