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Project Runway, The Devil Wears Prada, and even Queer Eye have brought fashion to your screens. Explore your favorite fashion media.
Ace The Look At Your Wedding With These Exquisite Sherwani Styles For Groom
Do you want to wear something different and exciting on your wedding day? With so many options and choices, it can be difficult to choose the best outfit. Finding your favorite color, fabric, and work all in one outfit is difficult. Furthermore, there is always the possibility of incorrect styling. But don't worry, we completely understand your concern, which is why we have brought some fantastic wedding sherwani paired with white lungi with golden border ideas that any groom can wear on their special day. Look at what's new!
Amit KumarPublished about a year ago in StyledWhat people wore in medieval England
Whenever medieval clothing appears on the T.V, it seems to have been given a glamorous (at least by today's standards) glow-up. Ladies wear beautiful tight fitting gowns and dirt and grime is non-existent. Chivalry is well and truly alive in knights who prance around in armour. But this is far from the truth. Fashion in the medieval period went through a lot of changes, especially regarding men.
Mhairi CampbellPublished about a year ago in StyledDoes Being Creative Makes Me Weird?
The actions of humans make creative people feel as if their gift, talent, and credible ability are life sentences. Many are treated horribly and rejected while alive and accepted after death. Maybe that’s why many of them commit suicide.
Annelise LordsPublished 2 years ago in StyledBefore Ivy Park, There was House of Dereon
Before Beyonce's athleisure fashion line Ivy Park dominates the fashion world, there was House of Dereon. If you were around the 2000s , you would remember Beyonce’s first fashion line House of Dereon. House of Dereon was founded by singer Beyonce and her mother Tina Knowles to Until Dereon was accused of their fashion line oversexualizing young girls and has lost a lot of interest from fans until it was discontinued in 2012.
Gladys W. MuturiPublished 2 years ago in StyledFashion Inspired
“Unable are the loved to die, for love is immortality.” -Emily Dickinson Oh to be the lover of a writer! For it is not just the writer that loves you, it is also the reader.
Jennidoll of (jennidoll.inc)Published 2 years ago in StyledThe Most Iconic Fashion Styles From Our Favourite Music Stars
Welcome to the world of music celebrities – eccentric, talented, glamorous and appraised. They are not only making a statement with their voice but also with their clothes. Some of them have such unique and extravagant fashion sense they just can’t be mistaken for another.
Adam JohnsonPublished 2 years ago in StyledYouTube Shorts has Just Arisen Jumping Into the Limelight
Are you looking to utilize YouTube’s new Shorts video option? You should be! The short-form video format helped numerous small creators break out and reach a massive audience similar to those already popular short-form content platforms such as Snapchat Stories, TikTok and Instagram Reels .
EstalontechPublished 2 years ago in StyledThe story of the ‘queen of flowers’
“It might well be said of this beautiful flower, that nature has exhausted herself in trying to lavish on it the freshness of beauty, of form, perfume, brilliancy, and grace.” This is how Charlotte de la Tour describes the rose in her famous book Le Langage des Fleurs (The Language of Flowers). In it, the rose occupies a central and almost hallowed position. Her sentiments were nothing new; before the publication of her book in 1819, the rose had – for millennia – been prized for its beauty, both aesthetic and olfactory. Like de La Tour, the Greek writer Achilles Tatius called the rose the “queen of flowers” in the second century AD, and to Persian poets like Hafez, its loveliness was unrivalled. And the rose continues to be strongly associated with beauty today, as it does with love; but within its folds lie many other connotations, some of which aren’t as rosy. Ravishing: The Rose in Fashion, an upcoming spring 2021 exhibition at the Museum at FIT (New York’s Fashion Institute of Technology), explores the myriad meanings of what is perhaps the most symbolically rich – and controversial – flower, not only in fashion but in everything from mythology and literature to religion and politics.
Many A-SunPublished 2 years ago in StyledThoroughly modern mullets: Style's unlikeliest comeback
Style can be – among other things – a way for individuals to express the influence of the external world. It makes perfect sense, then, that the definitive beauty trend of the previous year – one of the most chaotic and traumatic years in global memory – is the resurgence of one of the most reviled and lampooned haircuts in modern history: the mullet. The long in the back, short on the top-and-sides look has made a powerful and poetic comeback during the coronavirus pandemic, that (like the virus itself) shows no signs of leaving us soon.
Sue TorresPublished 2 years ago in StyledThe birth of the Black is Beautiful movement
On 28 January 1962, a large crowd formed outside Purple Manor, a nightclub in the Harlem neighbourhood of New York City. A fashion show was taking place – an event that proved so popular it had to be held for a second time that same night – which sparked a movement that would change the way black people were represented forever.
Cindy DoryPublished 2 years ago in StyledGen X, Gen Z, Millennials: Which has the best style?
Online, Generation Z (ages 9-24) has been criticising numerous aspects of mainstream Millennial (ages 25-40) style, namely their affections for side-parted hair and skinny jeans. In the process they have unleashed a tidal wave of sassy, self-conscious and downright spiteful reactions from Millennials. The trending dispute is so impassioned, not due to a lifelong allegiance to the particular jeans or hairstyle in question, but because the accusation of being outdated has forced Millennials to face an uncomfortable truth: there's been a transfer of generational power.
Sue TorresPublished 2 years ago in StyledBritain's first black aristocrats
For centuries, the Royal Family, Britain's wealthiest, most exclusive institution, has been synonymous with whiteness. And yet, for a brief moment, there she was: Her Royal Highness the Duchess of Sussex, a biracial black woman, on the balcony at Buckingham Palace. Her picture-perfect wedding to Prince Harry in 2018 was an extraordinary amalgamation of black culture and centuries-old royal traditions, as an African-American preacher and a gospel choir graced St George's Chapel in Windsor. Watching on that sunny May afternoon, who would've known things would unravel the way they have three years on?
CopperchaleuPublished 2 years ago in Styled