FASHION QUOTES V

quotations about fashion

Fashion quote

Fashion is something barbarous, for it produces innovation without reason and imitation without benefit.

GEORGE SANTAYANA

The Life of Reason

Tags: George Santayana


Fashion is political, especially when you're in a marginalized community. We have been left out of fashion since forever. But now we're getting a foothold. I think it is political for a fat woman to wear a bikini or a crop top or to basically exist in a world that's telling them that they should not exist.

GABI GREGG

interview, Cosmopolitan, December 11, 2017


Fashion is an international language.

SUE JENKYN JONES

Fashion Design


Fashion is a product of a society with more than one class in it and where upward movement between classes is both possible and desirable. Thus it would seem that, as soon as this kind of society exists, as soon as modern, capitalist society exists, fashion exists.

MALCOLM BARNARD

Fashion as Communication


Fashion ... is most capricious in her favours, often running from those that pursue her, and coming round to those that stand still. It were mad to follow her, and rash to oppose her, but neither rash nor mad to despise her.

CHARLES CALEB COLTON

Lacon

Tags: Charles Caleb Colton


One had as good be out of the world, as out of fashion.

COLLEY CIBBER

Love's Last Shift

Tags: Colley Cibber


Most fashionable ladies are as diamonds because they are more costly than useful.

WILLIAM SCOTT DOWNEY

Proverbs

Tags: William Scott Downey


It should never be forgotten that any one who makes himself a slave to fashion is just as pusillanimous as one who makes himself a slave to any other master.

JACOB WILSON

Self-Control


I participated in the transformation of my era. I did it with clothes, which is surely less important than music, architecture, painting ... but whatever it's worth I did it.

YVES SAINT LAURENT

"Some fashion wisdom from Yves Saint Laurent", USA Today, June 1, 2008

Tags: Yves Saint Laurent


Every style seems completely appropriate to its epoch. We cannot imagine Madame de Pompadour, or the Empress Josephine, or the early Victorian lady in anything but the clothes she actually wore. Each represents completely the ideals of her time: elegant artificiality or post-Revolutionary morals, or the prudery of the rising middle class.

JAMES LAVER

"Fashion: A Detective Story", Vogue Magazine, January 1, Vogue Magazine, January 1, 1959


We are living in such a troubled world that fashion seems completely irrelevant. Yet ... it's a very, very mysterious thing. Why all of a sudden do people like yellow? Why all of a sudden do people wear combat boots?

DIANE VON FURSTENBERG

Newsweek, Aug. 7, 2006

Tags: Diane von Furstenberg


It would be mortifying to the feelings of many ladies, could they be made to understand how little the heart of a man is affected by what is costly or new in their attire.

JANE AUSTEN

Northanger Abbey


[Fashion is] a kind of vitamin for style.

YVES SAINT LAURENT

Ritz


There is not so variable a thing in Nature as a lady's head-dress.

JOSEPH ADDISON

The Spectator, Jun. 22, The Spectator, Jun. 22, 1711


In hindsight, my initial love for fashion was about hope and evolving to become the type of woman I wanted to be: strong, confident and feminine. I always loved the idea of dressing up--my wardrobe and how I present myself reflecting how I feel on the inside. That is what I do for other people now. I give women the means to express themselves and be who they are and who they aspire to be, and I think there is a real beauty in this.

RACHEL ROY

Newsweek, Oct. 15, 2007

Tags: Rachel Ray


While the fashion industry may, at least at the top end, be thriving, the notion of fashion itself is becoming more and more meaningless. Any discipline in fashion has long since evaporated; the idea of a single fashionable skirt length, or heel height, is incomprehensible. The definition of the fashionable has become so skimpy that it refers not to the mode of dress of everyday people--the clothes that have sufficiently caught the popular imagination to be worn in a widespread manner--but only to the styles that momentarily excite members of the fashion caravan.

REBECCA MEAD

"The Last Designer," New York Magazine, Sep. 16, 1996


One of the most perplexing aspects of fashion is its preoccupation with change, and hence with time. Its mutability is the point. Even those who take (or claim to take) no particular interest in clothes will, by accident or passivity, nonetheless go with the fashion flow. A man who wore a doublet and hose in the sixteenth century will not be wearing such an outfit in any of the following centuries unless he's on his way to a costume party. You would either have to take great care of what you already own so you rarely needed to buy new things or go looking for passé ones to be completely out of fashion, which takes more work than being in fashion.

LINDA GRANT

The Thoughtful Dresser


No fashion is ever a success unless it is used as a form of seduction.

CHRISTIAN DIOR

attributed, Dress Code


Feminist readings of fashion have often portrayed it as a kind of conspiracy to distract women from the real affairs of society, namely economics and politics. Fashion has been seen as a device for confining women to an inferior social order, largely because it demands an unequal expenditure of time and money by women on activities which do not attract the professional attention and efforts of men. Fashion works to intensify self-absorption and thereby reduces the social, cultural and intellectual horizons of women.

JOANNE FINKELSTEIN

After a Fashion

Tags: Joanne Finkelstein


The fashion wears out more apparel than the man.

WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE

Much Ado About Nothing

Tags: William Shakespeare