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What You Should Know About Fashion? | Jane Dottie Vintage

The term "fashion" generally refers to a popular practice or style in the areas of clothing, makeup, accessories, footwear and so on. However, when considered in a strict sense, fashion mainly refers to the trend in dresses or the kind of attires and apparels people put on. Jane Dottie Vintage store was founded by Amber Glaspie in 2019. The curated shop includes a lot of neutral colors and more classy, upscale fashion with name-brand clothing from places like Chanel and Cavalli. The issues of style and design have a lot to play when looking at fashion across the globe. Fashion production has c

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What You Should Know About Fashion? | Jane Dottie Vintage

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  1. What You Should Know About Fashion? By Jane Dottie Vintage

  2. STYLE Polo Shirt A particular design, shape, or types of apparel item Styles come and go Mini skirt Bell bottoms Poodle Skirt Bermuda Shorts Country or “Annie Hall Look”

  3. FASHION The display of currently popular style of clothing Most accepted and up-to-date Continual process of change

  4. Fad Temporary passing fashion Usually out of the ordinary

  5. APPAREL All men’s, women’s, and children’s clothing A garment is a specific piece.

  6. SILHOUETTE The shape of clothing styles The general direction a silhouette takes shows a fashion trend

  7. Avant-garde Most daring and wild designs Too far out to be considered fashion Draws attention to the wearer https://www.janedottie.com/

  8. Classic Continues to be popular even though fashion changes Always acceptable

  9. Garment Fit Fitted to the shape of the body Draped to hang over the body Tailored garments are sewn to fit the body Composites are a combination lf draped and tailored

  10. Haute Couture “Finest dressmaking” in French High fashion industry, where the designer creates the original, individually designed fashion Expensive with limited numbers Exclusive label of the designer May be exclusively designed for a certain person

  11. Made to Order or Custom Order Not designed for the person, but made to fit a certain person May order from a runway or after seeing a sample or sketch

  12. Copies Look like the haute courtier garments Are produced in quantities May be sold in high end department stores Lower quality of construction and fabrics

  13. Knock-offs Lower priced copies of the garments Results from fashion piracy

  14. Ready to Wear Mass produced the factories Standard sizes Manufacturing companies label

  15. The Stores Retail sells to customers Wholesale sells to the trade Overruns are the garments left at the end of the season that have not sold Irregulars and seconds may have flaws

  16. Prices High-priced designers get much attention, but account for only a tiny % of the clothing sold 1/3 of all sales go to the moderate priced market 2/3 of all sales go to the lowest priced market

  17. Fashion Cycle Periodic return of specific styles or general shapes 1. New style created 2. It is introduced to the public 3. Adopted by fashion leaders 4. It is worn by many people 5. Discarded for a newer style Can last several months or several years

  18. Fashion silhouettes of the past 3 specific silhouettes would become popular every 100 years The bell 1740’s and again in the 1840’s Back fullness in the 1780’s and again in the 1880’s Tubular in the 1820’s and again in the 1920’s

  19. Social, Economic, and Political Influences Fashion has always reflected the social conditions, current events, technology, popular entertainment, peoples values and attitudes. Historically people dressed according to their social class

  20. Economic and Political Hard Times Clothing usually gives a more serious, conservative image During “good times,” clothing is brighter, more adventuresome, more fun

  21. Hemline Index As hemlines rose, the stock market rose (1920’s and 1960’s) People’s moods are affected by the way they dress During WW II, the government restricted the amount of fabric to be used for civilian clothing, so styles became tighter, with no cuffs, and skimpy seam allowances

  22. Thank You

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