Moms In Heels
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Moms In Heels
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Jennifer Diel, 36, mother of two, in front of a local school bus in Merrick, Long Island.
Stephen Yang
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Jennifer Diel, 37, takes back-to-school fashion very seriously.
Stephen Yang
Filed under
moms
parenting
9/25/16
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It’s the night before the first day of school, and Jennifer Diel is freaking out about what to wear.
“I used to work, and I like to dress,” says Diel, a pretty brunette who formerly worked in advertising and is now a stay-at-home mother of two in Merrick, LI.
“I love the attention. There’s nothing wrong with looking hot,” adds the 37-year-old, who drops off her daughters, ages 5 and 7, at public school wearing sleek ASOS jumpsuits, tank tops and pricey McGuire jeans, Chanel or Gucci heels and a full face of makeup. “I look better than ever, especially after having two kids.”
Forget worrying about whether teens and tweens are adhering to the dress code. These days, it’s the moms who are too hot for school, donning high heels, sexy frocks and conspicuous labels just to unload and pick up the kids.
“I’ve seen the trend more and more of moms dressing up for drop-off — hair perfect, draped in Chanel, head-to-toe perfect,” says Lyss Stern, a Midtown East mother who runs the popular mommy blog Divalysscious Moms. “SAHMs [stay-at-home moms] want to still feel sexy,” says Stern, whose two sons attend public school. “They’re dressed up in skinny jeans and stilettos three months after having a baby.”
For hot mamas, the school fashion show is the highlight of their day. Bianca Jebbia, 42, hates it when her kids have to stay home sick, because it means she doesn’t get to strut her stuff.
“I get really depressed,” says the self-described “cute, little, sexy mom,” who has “major anxiety” about what to wear each day and how best to style her Chanel purse, Tom Ford sunglasses, Isabel Marant tops and Miu Miu shoes. She doesn’t mind that her clothes make other parents assume she’s headed somewhere other than Whole Foods.
“They think I’m going to work after — that I have a meeting I’m dressing up for,” she says.
For hot mamas, the school fashion show is the highlight of their day.
“Don’t wear the big fur when everyone’s doing a little cashmere — you don’t want to look too flashy,” says Caitlin, 45, a statuesque, blond SAHM who holds a Ph.D. in philosophy and declined to give her last name for personal reasons.
A Gramercy resident whose daughter is enrolled at the Village Community School in the West Village, where actors Paul Rudd and Edie Falco also send their kids, Caitlin adds, “You’re being a little bit judged. The teachers notice. New York moms care a lot about fitting in with each other. I feel a little pressure to represent my family really well, and show respect to the school. And you want to be in the mix — you want to send the message: Fashion matters.”
But not all kids love how their moms are representing them.
Jane Notar, 37, says her daughter Harlow is “mortified” by the minidresses, off-the-shoulder Intermix tops and over-the-knee thigh-high Stuart Weitzman boots she wears to take the 10-year-old and her brother Tennyson, 4, to the Marymount School on the Upper East Side.
“She prefers Mama to wear Tod’s and khaki pants and sweaters from Ann Taylor. She wishes [I] were less ostentatious,” says Jane, a former model and current wife of nightlife impresario Richie Notar, 56. But she says her kids will have to learn to live with their mother’s risqué looks — she insists she’s just going along with the crowd.
“There’s hardly anyone I know who doesn’t look hot when they’re at school.” Besides, she says, “I feel sexier now than before I had kids. I can rock it . . . You can wear short things, but it can still have elegance.”
Victoria Beckham can relate. The Spice Girl-turned-fashion designer revealed to the UK’s Telegraph earlier this week that she spends “absolute ages” thinking of her outfits, including her school pick-up ensembles.
“I think about what I’m going to wear the next day when I’m laying in bed every night,” the 42-year-old Brit said.
But her four children don’t always appreciate the effort.
“The kids definitely tell me when they like what I’m wearing,” Beckham said. “I had something on to pick up [my 5-year-old daughter] Harper from school the other day, and she asked me if I would please not wear that . . . I think at that age they just want you to sort of blend in, don’t they?”
For some ladies, getting ready for class goes far beyond a Barneys shopping spree and twice-weekly blowouts.
In the “last couple of weeks of August, moms — particularly younger moms — want to get ready for their child’s school year. It’s not just notebooks and backpacks they shop for,” says Dr. Norman Rowe, an Upper East Side plastic surgeon. “[They’re] visiting their plastic surgeons to look good for their children’s drop-off.”
His own wife, Mia, 32 and a mother of a 10-year-old girl and 7-year-old boy, adds, “It’s intense — all private schools are . . . [and] you want people to talk to you.”
But you don’t want people to talk about you, which has been an issue for Melisa Lazarus, 35, a SAHM who lives in the Five Towns, LI, and carts her three kids around while resplendent in tight leather pants, sky-high heels, blown-out hair and full makeup.
“[The other mothers] don’t really like me,” says the mother of a 9-year-old boy and two girls, ages 7 and 3. “They say, ‘I like your makeup, but maybe it’s not for the day’ . . . [or] ‘Why are you dressed like that? Are you going anywhere?’ ”
He husband, however, doesn’t mind. He appreciates that she isn’t sporting yoga pants and T-shirts, like many of the other mommies at their private school.
“[He] loves it — he says that I take care [of] myself,” says Lazarus. “He says workout clothes are for the gym. You can’t be in workout clothes and in fashion.”
But her kids do catch some flak from their peers.
Lazarus recalls her 9-year-old son complaining about his classmate. “Someone in my class asked why you always wear heels,” he told her. Her reply? “Ask him why his mom always wears flats.”
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