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Originally posted by SombreResplendence View PostI apologise for perpetuating the celebrity talk to those who find it objectionable, but I'll try to do so in a more general sense. I'll assume the stylist is not a total idiot and knows what kind of image and aesthetic these clothes convey. I'll also assume the stylist knows what kind of image the Black Eyed Peas convey, and, more importantly, is being honest with himself/herself. Assuming those two assumptions are correct, why would this person knowingly dress these people in clothing that is incongruous with their public image and the music they produce? I suppose the more general question is why anyone would knowingly wear (or have others wear) clothes that clearly don't suit them?
It's not so much a matter of honesty as much as awareness, insight and being able to connect the external world of clothes and information with something personal that's more specific, intuitive and harder to pinpoint. I always find it a real downer looking at 'style evolution' documents with somebody starting out wearing things that are quite pedestrian but spontaneous and natural to themselves, then along the line you can see them growing into a look that's very proportionate and expensive and all that, but utterly hollow.
i can see the attraction to both sides of the discussion...it's easy and fun to bitch and bash at people in the public eye, but i would hope that being able to dress alone isn't what pays their bills, so it's not that important...all these clothes and shit instill an illusion of human worth (or lack of) that doesn't really hold.
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Originally posted by dji View Posthow else can you explain this sort of thing:
Fashion is a form of ugliness so intolerable that we have to alter it every six months - Oscar Wilde
StyleZeitgeist Magazine
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Originally posted by SombreResplendence View PostI apologise for perpetuating the celebrity talk to those who find it objectionable, but I'll try to do so in a more general sense. I'll assume the stylist is not a total idiot and knows what kind of image and aesthetic these clothes convey. I'll also assume the stylist knows what kind of image the Black Eyed Peas convey, and, more importantly, is being honest with himself/herself. Assuming those two assumptions are correct, why would this person knowingly dress these people in clothing that is incongruous with their public image and the music they produce? I suppose the more general question is why anyone would knowingly wear (or have others wear) clothes that clearly don't suit them?Fashion is a form of ugliness so intolerable that we have to alter it every six months - Oscar Wilde
StyleZeitgeist Magazine
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Originally posted by Fade to Black View PostI don't think it's a particularly complex question, just comes down to some people having an eye for things and most people not. A lot of people can fall in the latter category and still get by quite well despite the fact, the majority can't tell the damn difference anyway.
It's not so much a matter of honesty as much as awareness, insight and being able to connect the external world of clothes and information with something personal that's more specific, intuitive and harder to pinpoint. I always find it a real downer looking at 'style evolution' documents with somebody starting out wearing things that are quite pedestrian but spontaneous and natural to themselves, then along the line you can see them growing into a look that's very proportionate and expensive and all that, but utterly hollow.
i can see the attraction to both sides of the discussion...it's easy and fun to bitch and bash at people in the public eye, but i would hope that being able to dress alone isn't what pays their bills, so it's not that important...all these clothes and shit instill an illusion of human worth (or lack of) that doesn't really hold.Originally posted by Faust View PostYour [SR's] assumptions precipitate a notion that both celebrities and their stylists possess cerebral abilities congruent with their actual cultural status. This is a popular myth waiting to be debunked. Too bad Barthes is dead.
The argument that clothing should not be too important to people has irked me since I became interested in fashion. Admittedly, it's not the most important thing in my life, but it is still very valuable to me. I think it definitely gets a bad reputation because of the superficial majority, but the same things could be said about any hobby. Hunters can get a bad reputation because some think they don't protect the environment, but they may be hunting overpopulated species. Additionally, someone noted some time ago that some hunters are actually big environmentalists.An artist is not paid for his labor, but for his vision. - James Whistler
Originally posted by BBSCCPI order 1 in every size, please, for every occasion
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Originally posted by SombreResplendence View Post
The argument that clothing should not be too important to people has irked me since I became interested in fashion. Admittedly, it's not the most important thing in my life, but it is still very valuable to me. I think it definitely gets a bad reputation because of the superficial majority, but the same things could be said about any hobby. Hunters can get a bad reputation because some think they don't protect the environment, but they may be hunting overpopulated species. Additionally, someone noted some time ago that some hunters are actually big environmentalists.
Stack - thanks, don't drink though.
edit - probably why i'm always feeling dark as fuck these days. oh well.Last edited by Fade to Black; 12-04-2009, 05:04 AM.
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$700 RO MINK BUNNY!
"Crafted out of mink, the “Fur Monster” houses your keys and cash but will inevitably hinder your ability to pay rent."
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Originally posted by EternalI thought they were like MAD expensive, and that 700 would be a good find. Using it as a wallet, can´t see how it´s worse than paying 600 usd for a piece of folded leather.
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