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Showing posts from November, 2009

Do clothes maketh a woman?

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Does your fashion sense reaffirm your attitude? The way you and I dress up, does it say anything about who we are, what we feel and think and also our positioning in society. If you are already getting sceptical about your answer then here's cue enough... To work, why do we dress up in a formal or semi-formal manner (unless if you are a creative person and so anything you'd wear would be considered fine by your boss)? At a party, why are we so fine with a little bit of cleavage and our toned legs showing and guys would walk around in unkempt looks, sporting tight jeans and a tee to emphasise their broad chest? Perhaps, clothes do make a difference. To us, clothes can be good mood elevators and to others, who see us for the first time, perceptions get defined by the way we dress up. GETTING BLOUSY: One of the most interesting observations that fashion experts have maintained to have noticed is that clothing sense greatly earmarks the attitude of a particular era. So, after world

Prepare yourself for that 'fine' line

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Admire that stray wrinkle It amazes me when I see people around looking at a picture of a model or an actress who has lived her days of glory on screen or ramp and said, ‘Gosh! she is looking so dowdy and old now.’ Ditto is the case with men. And quite naturally, we find this trend percolating into our daily lives. When we meet up with our school friends, any statement which goes like ‘You are looking so young’ is considered a compliment. I'd like to ask — Why is it that we are growing more and more intolerant of what grace our age brings to us. That wrinkle on a women’s forehead, her laughter lines, her glowing eyes, don’t they look so beautifully her age. Take a look at George Clooney, Brad Pitt and Johnny Depp , all of who have been nominated as the sexiest men by international polls. Don’t they enjoy a touch of ‘crow’s feat’ or a bunch of fine lines under their eyes. Don’t they look uber handsome with these fine lines. Now, imagine them without those lines. A poker plain face

Blaze Of Glory

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BLAZE OF GLORY Most of us would relate to the title ‘Blaze of Glory’, for it’s a popular track by singer Bon Jon Jovi (my personal favourite). But today, here, I find it an apt title for this post because it throws open a question to you and may set you thinking — Is it right to celebrate life when there’s chaos all around you? Does it seem right to party on when your neighbour’s mourning his family’s torture? Or is it all right to let go of the gory details and concentrate on what’s bright and cheery. In fact, why not invite your mourning neighbour to join the revelry by way of fashionable ways... And so, recently in the beginning of November, the terror-ridden state of Pakistan — our influential nuclear-arms-equipped neighbouring country, celebrated the Fashion Pakistan Week (yeah! Not Pakistan Fashion Week). The Week began with an opulent ceremony. The music to this was militant violence, I would say. However, some peppy music did play during the ramp walk. The event was sans

GO GLOBAL OR THINK LOCAL

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Mumbai to dictate a new fashion week format by thinking 'more local' March 2010 will be a turning point for Indian fashion. There's something largely experimental and hard-hitting the fashion capital of Mumbai plans to do in the near future. Let me spill the beans — Lakme Fashion Week is soon to start showcasing current fashion trends instead of forecasting a look which would hit the stores in the next 6 months. Let's make it simpler. Traditionally, around the globe, a fashion week always follows a forecast-oriented format. So, a fashion week in Summer will forecast looks for winter and a fashion week in winter would showcase the look for upcoming summer. The reason this is done is because, the designers who showcase their designs on ramp models, get enquiries from buyers. These buyers place orders of say 100 or 100 pieces of the ramp design they liked. Then begins the manufacturing process. After production, it gets packed, labelled and then shipped to the stores as p