Notre Dame T-shirts and sweatshirts are hot sellers. But Vandy Chisholm '01 learned they may
not always be the appropriate wardrobe choice.
Chisholm had a moment of national celebrity in April when she was "made over"
courtesy of the popular Discovery Channel/TLC reality program What Not To Wear.
Her fashion crime? "Vandy likes to wear head-to-toe sports paraphernalia, whether she's
going to a game or not," her friend Katie said.
Friends, family and co-workers thought Chisholm's working wardrobe -- which included
Notre Dame T-shirts, sweatshirts, fleece, socks and slippers -- was not in keeping with her
position as a corporate events planner for Utah's prestigious Sundance Film Festival.
While at lunch, Chisholm was "ambushed" on camera by program hosts Stacy London
and Clinton Kelly, presented with a $5,000 Visa card, and whisked off to New York City for a
five-day shopping marathon and makeover. In return, Chisholm had to hand over her entire
wardrobe, including the Notre Dame logo apparel, and lose the "frumpy college-girl look."
"Your co-workers don't wear alma mater stuff," Kelly complained.
"They didn't go to Notre Dame," she replied.
Hidden-camera tapes shown on air gave viewers an idea of Chisholm's working
wardrobe. "They happened to tape me on days when I was more casual than I should have been,"
she says. "I didn't take it personally."
Chisholm flew to New York on Sunday morning, and was there Monday through Friday.
"It was long and tiring," she says, "and there were a lot of re-takes. We went from 8 a.m. to 8
p.m. Great clothes; what can I say? I'd want everyone to do it once, but I don't think I'd want to
do it again."
The question she's gotten the most since the show aired is whether she really had to give
up all her clothes. "They let me keep five things," Chisholm says. That included her Notre Dame
women's boxing T-shirt (she participated in the club sport junior year) and the scarves her mom
knit.
The wardrobe makeover involved learning a new language (metallic lace wrap top, flutter
sleeves, embellishment, sequins, bugle beads). After some initial struggles -- "Who says Stacy
and Clinton know what they're talking about, anyway?" -- Chisholm emerged with a more
professional wardrobe, a fashionable haircut by stylist Nick Arrojo and a new look from makeup
artist Carmindy.
"I wasn't putting the time and effort into shopping," she conceded afterward. "Maybe
sweatshirts and T-shirts should be kept for the weekend." She plans to keep the haircut.
Now her biggest fear is that someone is following her with a hidden camera, to do a
follow-up show. "Right now I have on a Notre Dame sweatshirt, a pair of jeans and flip-flops,"
she says. "I didn't buy a bunch of suits. I got plaid pants, great jeans and tops. No fancy dresses I
would never wear again."
Reaction to the show has been positive. "Everybody loved it," she says, adding "It was
fun."
Chisholm and husband James, also class of '01, are in the middle of a move to Pittsburgh,
where he plans to work on a doctorate in education at the University of Pittsburgh.
Memo to Stacy and Clinton: She's asking for Notre Dame apparel for Christmas.
(July 2006)