Author: Trendyaestheticstreetwear.online

  • Street Style

    Street style is fashion that is considered to have emerged not from studios, but from the population at large. Street fashion is generally associated with youth culture, and is most often seen in major urban centers. Magazines and newspapers commonly feature candid photographs of individuals wearing urban, stylish clothing.[1] Mainstream fashion often appropriates street fashion trends as influences. Most major youth subcultures have had an associated street fashion. Street style is different all around the globe.

    Description

    [edit]

    The “street” approach to style and fashion is often based on individualism, rather than focusing solely on current fashion trends. Using street style methods, individuals demonstrate their multiple, negotiated identities, in addition to utilizing subcultural and intersecting styles or trends. This, in itself, is a performance, as it creates a space where identities can be explored through the act(ion) of dress.[2]

    Bill Cunningham for The New York Times pointed street style out as a keen catalogue of ordinary people’s clothing. Also, he mentioned that streets tell a great deal about fashion and people, if one listens. According to him the best fashion show is coming to life every day on the streets.

    Street style is a viral and instant facet of fashion that has changed many of the ways in which fashion is made and consumed. Its fast characteristic links it also to the term consumerism.[3] Given how styles change over time, it also challenges the use of fast fashion in relation to the purchasing and wearing of clothing, as this conceals the complexities of practice.[4]

    Development

    [edit]

    Street style has always existed but it has become a phenomenon of 20th century. The increase in the standardization of life after World War II (suburbanizationmass marketing, the spread of television) may be linked to the appeal of “alternative” lifestyles for individuals in search of “identity”. Industrial production, particularly in the sphere of fashion, was not only the popularization of stylists’ tastes that move from high fashion, through prêt-à-porter, to the peripheries of the system. These were also tastes that originated among economically disfavored, marginal groups, the whole range of metropolitan tribes, that are able to trigger new fashion production and diffusion processes.

    Hipster girls

    Phenomena of this kind have been studied for a long time in England and have revealed the importance of young people’s street styles during the post-war period, which may be linked to the generation of baby boomers, who came to represent a new sociocultural category—the “teenager”—who has money to spend and be an important motivation on economic and cultural world.

    The history of identity and the history of clothing run on two parallel rails. In this connection, street style works as a facilitator of group identity and subcultural cohesion. Since the close of World War II, Western culture has seen a dramatic decline in the significance of the traditional sociocultural divisions such as race, religion, ethnicity, regionalism, nationalism, in defining and limiting personal identity. The tribe groupings, such as bikers, beats, and teddy boys in the 1950s; mods, hippies, and skinheads in the 1960s; headbangerspunks, and b-boys in the 1970s; and goths, new age travelers and ravers in the 1980s got dressed and unusual body decoration as an expression to create a sense of identity.[5]

    In the first half of the twentieth century, although the unaccompanied figure of the woman in the street was seen increasingly in fashion photographs, she often remained bound by the pursuits of a bourgeois existence, with the reality of the street beautified as a fantasy prop for high-end fashion. As an object of gaze, her position contrasted with that of the flâneur and the male privileged code of visual spectatorship. It was not until the post-war period, with the emergence of style-conscious magazines aimed at men, that the image of the flaneur, somewhat melded with the more modern notion of the “man about town”, began to be visualized in fashion photography. Masculinity was shown to be influenced by the industrial atmosphere of the metropolis. This is illustrated by Terence Donovan‘s grainy black-and-white photographs of sharply suited men in “Spy Drama” for the October 1962 issue of Town which became famous as the visual influence for the filmic interpretation of James Bond. In this period, the representation of the woman in the street was radicalized by the emergence of youth as a social category and its claiming of street culture as its primary context.[6]

    Influence of sportswear

    [edit]

    Influence of sport practices

    Street style includes ordinary people who regularly wear sportswear. However, it is influenced by supermodels who work for various sportswear brands. Therefore, it gets easier to influence ordinary people with the sense of sportive clothing.[7]

    Skateboarding particularly influenced the forming of certain street styles. The image of the street style follower often corresponds with skateboarding. Skate shoes that keep the feet from slipping on the board have been adopted by people who do not skateboard.[8]

    Key sites

    [edit]

    Designers, street style activists, trendsetters, bloggers, fashion retailers and models influence a city’s representation. These trends can mark shopping areas and entertainment locations. From the interdisciplinary perspective of consumption and consumer practices, city tourism is connected to city branding, through which a city’s representation is aimed at attracting visitors and consumers.[9]

    Street style in Milan

    Milan

    [edit]

    Milan has several important fashion institutions, agencies and events, including Milan Fashion Week. The expression ‘capitale della moda’ (the capital of fashion) refers to Milan when describing styles, urban life, fashion collections, and designers, motivating other cities to compete for this fashion, branded city status.

    Paris

    [edit]

    Paris‘s look can be considered through frameworks of fashion fads, designers, a chic and luxury capital, artists and a bohemian lifestyle. Paris is an example of creating the ‘city look’, a collective image – certain fashion garments, specifics and lifestyles embody definite urbanity in a city’s context. For instance, an image of ‘La Parisienne’, – the typical Parisian woman – consists not only of clothing but of certain manners, values and behavioural patterns associated with the country and its citizens. One of the most typical associations with Paris is that it is the city of love and fashion, a romantic city full of chic and luxury. The fashion phenomenon can provide strong associations and a clear understanding of Paris as a centre of fashion, love and dreams.[9]

    Japan

    [edit]

    Japanese fashion has inspired many fashion professionals in the West, starting with Kenzō Takada‘s appearance in Paris in 1970 followed by Issey Miyake in 1973, Hanae Mori in 1977, Yohji Yamamoto and Rei Kawakubo of Comme des Garçons in 1981. Japan is gradually becoming a country that is a genuine force in the field of fashion. Today’s Japanese fashion contributes both to the aesthetics of fashion as well as to how business is made in this industry.

    Japanese street fashion sustains multiple simultaneous highly diverse fashion movements at any given time. It does not come from the famous professional Japanese designers, but is led by high school girls who have become extremely influential in controlling fashion trends. These fashion-conscious, or fashion-obsessed, youngsters indirectly and directly dictate this type of Japanese fashion. It is not an exaggeration to say that they are the agents of fashion, who take part in the production and dissemination of fashion. Japanese street fashion emerges from the social networks among different institutions of fashion as well as various street subcultures, each of which is identified with a unique and original look. These teens rely on a distinctive appearance to proclaim their symbolic, subcultural identity. This identity is not political or ideological; it is simply innovative fashion that determines their group affiliation.[10]

    London

    [edit]

    Street style in London

    London is considered a significant fashion capital, but in contrast to Milan and Paris, London’s look is closer to the fashion sense of royalty, traditions and strong street style culture.[citation needed] The city was a pioneer in the development and promotion of second-hand markets and underground tendencies in street style.[citation needed] Being a multinational city with a diverse cultural background, London is identified as a space where street style embodies not only the general popular fashion concepts, but also works as a tool to express social and cultural identity.

    Other important aspects of London’s peculiar image is a recent collaboration between the Duchess of Cambridge and Alexander McQueen fashion brand. Clothes produced for the Duchess can be called revolutionary in a certain sense, as they are woman-friendly, less pretentious and dramatic. This speaks about a certain democratization of the brand, that becomes more affordable for common consumers and perceived as a street style item rather than high fashion royal attribute.[citation needed]

    One of the major reasons London has proved itself as a street style centre in Europe is that British fashion players are seen as more open and flexible in terms of innovative approaches to fashion and cooperation with young promising talents. This attitude creates more open-mindedness and affability with regard to street style and promotion of sustainable fashion practices.[citation needed]

    New York

    [edit]

    The practice of photo shooting models, still in runway makeup, in front of open warehouse spaces and garages or just on the street came from the fashion capital of the United States.[11] Starting with the Gibson Girl of the 1890s, the free-spirited Flapper fashions of the 1920s, and the rugged, masculine work-wear of the 1930s and 40s, American culture has been especially influential in the creation of street style, with music movements like jazzrockdisco, and hip hop, American sports and recreational pursuits like basketballbaseballmotorcycle ridingsurfing and skateboarding, countercultural movements like the hippy movement, punkgrunge and associated “anti-fashion“, and image-based cultural industries like Hollywood all having exerted a significant amount of influence on New York’s fashion and design.[12][13]

    New York Fashion Week was the world’s first fashion week. Historic fashion magazines like VogueHarper’s Bazaar, and Cosmopolitan have been the world’s pre-eminent fashion publications for over a century. Neighborhoods like the East VillageGreenwich Village, and Williamsburg, Brooklyn have been hot spots for street style, the latter having helped give rise to the hipster revival of the 2000s and 2010s.

    India

    [edit]

    Young people posing with fancy headgear, at Science City Kolkata, 2018

    Street style in India is getting on its way by copying this style generally from Hindi cinema. As Indians are always fascinated by fashion, in India, different religions help in achieving this street style.

    Effects of social media

    [edit]

    Fashion bloggers

    [edit]

    Social media channels have become an efficient way in fashion practices to keep in touch with the consumer base as well as increase it through brand exposure. It allows for immediate feedback from users, which makes it possible to stay up-to-date with the latest changes and trends in street fashion. Blogs that focus on fashion brands and products, street style and personal style in particular are the largest categories of the blogs. Fashion blogs, or style blogs, are blogs that focus on fashion and beauty and are produced by bloggers who self-identify as stylists, creating their own authentic looks and exposing them in urban spaces.

    Blogger Alan Cariño attending París Fashion Week

    As the result of the immense outspread of fashion blogs, the level of engagement between the individual and fashion industry has risen dramatically, the gap between fashion houses, publications, and individuals is narrowing. Within the everyday people can communicate via the blogosphere, sharing their personal, individualized expressions of self.

    By utilizing texts, including images and narratives, from fashion blogs, individuals can view, and thus, approach dress from an innovative, individualized perspective. Fashion choices are more visible, accessible, and relatable through the fashion blog space due to these sites’ availability, user-friendliness, and constant change (i.e., uploading of new images and narratives). Blogs, in contrast to traditional fashion practices, represent varied images and bodies. However, it has been found that fashion blog imagery is not that different from those bodies featured in fashion editorials: there is often an emphasis on thinness, height, and whiteness. Yet these sites also include images of women that are raced or gendered, which does present an alternative view, as well as male bodies (not common in mainstream fashion editorials for the female subscriber).[2]

    Instagram

    [edit]

    Instagram, a leading mobile application for stylizing and sharing photos on the web, has proved popular among street style amateurs and professional street style photographers with large followings.[14]

    Instagram is viewed as a relatively cheap, quick, flexible, and widely available platform. It gave life to a specific Instagram-based community of street style photographers and models, who also work as an additional channel of communication from fashion providers and consumers. Consequently, many well-followed photographers started including more street style photography in their portfolios.[citation needed]

    Examples

    [edit]

    Examples from the 1950s1970s1980s1990s2000s, and 2010s include:

  • Aesthetics (Textile)

    Aesthetics (Textile)

    Aesthetics in textiles is one of the basic concepts of serviceability of textiles. It is determined by the perception of touch and sight.[1][2] Aesthetics imply the appearance and attraction of textile products; it includes the color and texture of the material. It is a statement about the end user (consumer) and the target market. When combined with fabric construction, the finish of the clothing material, garment fit, style, and fashion compatibility, colours create an aesthetic comfort. All of these elements work together to satisfy our visual perception.[2][3] Aesthetics incorporates the role of evaluation (analysing and judging) also.[4]

    There are various arts and applications that imparts aesthetic properties in textiles. Additionally, the use of LEDs and optical fibres enables the creation of aesthetic properties such as illuminated textiles.[5]

    History

    [edit]

    Infant’s hat

    From antiquity until the eighteenth century, the majority of textiles were crafted and decorated by hand. Human ingenuity and the urge to improve one’s appearance led, over time, to the development of complex fabrics and, in the last hundred years, to remarkable technological advancement.[6]

    Self-decoration is prevalent in societies and is a fundamental human characteristic. Clothing’s decorative values are regarded as primary. The most important clothing value is “protection” from the elements.[7] Following that, it is a well-known fact that one of the primary reasons for wearing clothes was for self-decoration.[8] Self-decoration is a fundamental aspect of human life.[8] Every culture recorded some form of decoration, even if they were not clothed.[9][8]

    Factors

    [edit]

    Aesthetics is defined as the way a textile appears and feels.[10] In terms of aesthetics, the material is a combination of texture, color, and pattern. Material for clothing include fabric (cloth, fur, leather) and accessories (buttons, zips, gemstones, and embellishments, etc.). These aesthetic elements work together to determine how the material looks, fits, and feels.[11]

    There are various factors that affect the aesthetics of a textile product;[1] many are listed below. These factors are produced using methods of textiles manufacturing and the application of finishes such as dyeingprinting, glazing, and napping.[11]

    Color

    [edit]

    Color is a visual characteristic that is described by terms like redorangeyellowgreenbluepurple, etc. Typically, it is the color of an object that attracts the most attention.[12] Color is one of the primary properties that is noticed when a consumer makes a decision to buy a dress.[13] The colors are distinctive and distinguishable; we frequently refer to clothing by its color, for instance, a “blue shirt.”[13]

    Luster

    [edit]

    This wedding dress and veil were designed by Sybil Connolly while she was working at Richard Alan on Grafton St, Dublin. The dress is satin with a full-length Limerick lace veil.
    Isabelle De Strange, Brocade Costume, c. 1938, NGA 13643.
    Devoré velvet (also known as burnout technique)

    Luster is a physical property that makes them appear bright, glossy, and shiny. The amount of light reflected from the surface of a fiber is referred to as its luster. The level of luster is determined by how light reflects off the surface.[14][5] Certain natural fibers, such as linen and silk, have an inherent luster.[15][16]

    Texture

    [edit]

    Texture in textiles characterizes the surface as rough or smooth, which is determined by tactile and visual perception. The texture of textiles is affected by yarn manipulations, finishing techniques, and fabric structures.[2]

    Drape

    [edit]

    Drape (draping or fabric drape) is the property of different textile materials how they fold, fall, or hang along with a three-dimensional body. Draping depends upon the fiber characteristics and the flexibility, looseness, and softness of the material. Drape finishes can also alter the draping properties of clothes.[2][5]

    Hand

    [edit]

    Hand or hand feel in textiles is the property of fabrics related to the touch that expresses sensory comfort.[17] It refers to the way fabrics feel against the skin or in the hand and conveys information about the cloth’s softness and smoothness.[18]

    Techniques of improving aesthetics in textiles

    [edit]

    Texturising

    [edit]

    The fibres, which serve as the building blocks, contribute to the aesthetic appeal of a fabric.[19][20] Natural fibres have inherent aesthetics, whereas synthetic fibres are altered during the manufacturing process to meet desired specifications. Texture in textiles refers to the surface’s roughness or smoothness, as determined by tactile and visual perception. Yarn manipulations, finishing techniques, and fabric structures all have an impact on textile texture.[21] Textile fibers come in a variety of shapes and forms. The fiber shape of synthetic fibers is controlled with a device spinneret during manufacturing (extrusion) process, whereas natural fibers conceive their shape with a variety of factors such as cellulose built up in plant fibers, and in silk, the shape of orifice from where the silk fibers are extruded. In hair fibers, it is hair follicle that is responsible for the shape.[22]

    ShapeCharacteristics of the fiber
    Oval or roundSmooth, soft and slippery feel, reflectance value high, poor covering properties.
    Dog boneFeels harsher than round shaped fibers, high luster, covering properties excellent.
    FlatReflection of light is higher than that of a round shape.
    TrilobalTrilobal fibers have three sides. They feel like silk fibers and their reflection of light is higher than those round shaped fibers.
    PentalobalPentalobal is a structure resembling a five-sided star. The Pentalobal shaped fibre imparts a subtle sheen and bulkiness.
    OctolobalOctolobal, a shape with compressed hexagons. The fibers with Octolobal shape have subdued luster. Flatter sides reflect or disperse the light.
    MultilobalMultilobal, a fibre shape characterised by a large number of pentalobal lobes. Each lobe reflects light in some way.

    Blending

    [edit]

    Blending of textile fibers, and yarns during manufacturing also results in various aesthetic effects such as Devoré, and Heather, etc.[24]

    Zari

    [edit]

    Zari is used in brocade; these are the threads of gold or silver.[25][26]

    Brocade

    [edit]

    Brocade is a decorative weaving.[27]

    Embroidery

    [edit]

    Embroidery is the art or handicraft of decorating fabrics with thread patterns using a needle.[28]

    Finishing

    [edit]

    printed textile

    Finishing of textiles include improving of looks and functionality of the treated goods.

    Dyeing

    [edit]

    Dyeing is the process of applying color to textiles.[29]

    Printing

    [edit]

    Textile printing is a method of applying patterns to textile materials with various printing techniques.[30]

    Aesthetic finishes

    [edit]

    There is a range of textile finishes that alter the appearance and feel of the textiles.[31][32]

    Mechanical finishes

    [edit]

    Mechanical finish signifies machine finishes such as embossing, heat settingsanforizing, sheering, various, luster imparting, surface finishes, and glaze finishes.[33][31]

    Raised surface finishesLuster impartingGlaze and design
    GiggingCalenderingEmbossing
    NappingBeetlingMoire
    Sueding
    Flocking

    Calendering can be done in a variety of ways, including moiréing, embossing, glazing and ciréing. The fabric is passed through heated cylinders to achieve a variety of finishes with varying surface effects.[34]

    Chemical finishes

    [edit]

    Chemical finishes is a part of the textile finishing process where the emphasis is on chemical substances instead of mechanical finishing.[35] These are some chemical finishes that change the surface characteristics:

    Evaluation

    [edit]

    Most of the aesthetic properties of textile materials are subjective and determined by visual and tactile sensations. However, some of them are measurable with KES (Kawabata evaluation system).[40] The system is equipped with standardised testing machines capable of objectively determining specific physical properties. KES-F can be used to determine the fabric’s roughness and smoothness, friction, sheerness, thickness, tensile strength, elasticity, drape, and compression, among other properties.[41][42][40]

    Significance

    [edit]

    It is an interesting question how far men would retain their relative rank if they were divested of their clothes.

    Henry David Thoreau[43][44]

    Users have five basic performance criteria to consider: appearance (aesthetics of the product), comfort, durability, maintenance, and cost.[45][46][2]: 21  According to the consumer preference study, the appearance factor is considered one of the top priorities when making buying decisions about clothing.[8] Aesthetics in textiles is important in many ways, clothing is a visual signifier.[47] It has communicative powers.[47]

    Semiotics of dress

    [edit]

    The study of semiotics deciphers the ways in which ideologies get transmitted through dress.[48][49] The study of how people use clothing and adornments to signify cultural and societal status is known as the “semiotics of dress.”[50]

    Fashion symbolism

    [edit]A video on social expression through dress

    Margaret Thatcher wearing a typical power dressing outfit.[51]

    Different culturesoccasions, and social statuses command specific aesthetics that include clothing and decorations.[52][53]

    The art of applying design, aesthetics, clothing construction, and natural beauty to clothing is known as fashion design. Fashion symbolism is used in fashion designs to convey expressive content and emotions by fashion designers. In fashion symbolism, fashion designs can communicate emotions like “excitement, calmness, strength, and delicacy” through aesthetic expression.[11]

    The term “power dressing” refers to a fashion trend popular in the 1970s and 1980s in the business and political worlds.[54] During the 1960s, Jackie Kennedy was a great fashion icon for American women, and her style became a sign of wealth, power, and distinction.[55]

    Personal appearance

    [edit]

    Personal appearance is important because others judge us based on how we look. When meeting someone for the first time, the first seven to ten seconds have a significant impact on others. Most certainly, it is based on physical appearance.[56]

    Problems

    [edit]

    PillingColor fastness (staining of certain fabrics), and snagging are a few problems associated with aesthetics in synthetic textiles.[57]