Archive for September 2011

The Name Of Fashion

Walking down the crowded streets, pushing your way through the queue, passing through the halls of a high school, dancing on the club floor, you simply can’t help noticing how people especially youngsters, try to decorate every part of their body. In fact, it makes you think the human body should have had an extra pair of hands and feet not to mention ears and maybe a pair of extra nostrils too, so that people wouldn’t need to pierce their lips, tongues, bellies and eye brows etc. The youngsters over the past decade have begun using rings and tops profusely. There was a time when you could identify and differentiate between a punk and a normal guy. The impact and influence of media is so strong that it is hard to stop the current generation from adopting methods of reconstructing themselves. They want to singularity, they crave for excitement.

Jewelry has lost its true essence and it is everywhere and anywhere. It just has to be there. Starting from the ear that could compensate two earrings which could palpably be decent somehow changed into the maximum amount of tops and earring the ear lobe can hold. It wouldn’t be an exaggerated statement to say ears are adorned with 9 or 10 tops at a time which makes it similar to a jewelry shop’s display of earrings with every sort of design, size and shape.

Then comes the nose, the nostrils can readily be pierced at one place. Ironically, girls these days wear so many nose pins, that their nose seems smaller than the ornaments on it.

Fashion After 40

With so many designers and trends targeting the svelte body of the twenty-something, is it possible to look fashionable as the years pass and your body begins to tell the tale?

Absolutely!

In fact, with a little ingenuity and sleigh-of-hand, it’s easy to be fashionable and stylish regardless of how many candles are on your birthday cake.

Now let’s be frank: unless you work out religiously, you probably don’t have the same body at 40, 50, or 60 that you did at 25. Time, gravity, and pregnancy all take their toll on the female body, as does menopause. And when you mix a mature body with fashions obviously made for a younger person, it can lead to self-doubt, frustration, and confusion.

But it doesn’t have to be that way. Getting older also means getting wiser, and like a fine bottle of wine, you’re improving with age. So you don’t have the same body as those twenty-somethings you see in magazines or on TV. So what? Would you REALLY trade everything you’ve learned since your twenties for the body you had back then? Probably no sooner than you’d like to re-live puberty, thank you very much.

So how can you be fashionable without wearing all those body-conscious clothes so en vogue these days? By remembering the “3 C’s” when you dress: clean, classic, and coverage.

Fashion Business School

Okay, so it may sound a little funny but fashion business school is something that many fashion students are looking into now more than ever. Fashion business school does sound a bit ludicrous, but if you consider the reasons why people attend fashion school in the first place the idea of fashion and business together only make sense. Fashion degrees are about learning the ins and outs of the business and refining your skills whereas business courses are for people who want to manage or start a business of their own. For those out there already attending fashion school, it is a safe assumption to say that many of them dream of having their own line some day. A fashion line is a business, and that is where fashion business school courses can come into play.

Who Needs Fashion Business School…Right?

Who cares if you are a pro at making A-line dresses fit even the sloppiest of figures if you can’t run your business properly? It is insane to think that so many people are failing to consider the vital role that the fashion business industry plays in their chosen field. What would the fashion industry be if it weren’t for fashion business school? If nobody knew how to run a business there would be no Versace, no Louis Vuitton or Donna Karen.

Fashion in itself is a business, and those fashion students out there who are serious about their success will put some consideration into fashion business school courses. Just look at other industries, they all have their own business schools. I know people that have failed in the medical field due to poor business skills and management. So if you are serious about getting into fashion, they I would highly recommend checking out the business schools.