Monday, April 25, 2011

Does Fashion Influence People?

Source: News report

Locate + List - main points
Re-write in a paragraph - as a news report

Copy and paste all into a word document on googledocs
Highlight topic sentence yellow in each paragraph

Summary

Most of the people today were influenced by newest fashion trends, but most of them are not. Most of those that get influenced by fashion are usually seen the trends trough fashion channels, fashion magazine, fashion articles, runaway show and even by some friends or anyone that has high fashion sense. But fashions in 19th century were mostly influenced by popular designers and popular magazines. Americans were usually following the trends of Charles Frederick Worth’s designs, he was the first true fashion designer in 19th century. Fashion trends from Paris are usually illustrated with drawings but with photography it became more real. Mostly they used gowns. Vogue promoted the fashion from Paris models and the couture of French fashion, it provided sketches and patterns of fashion from America too. They combined two different countries in one Vogue magazine. One of the France’s popular designers was Paul Poiret. So I can see that American and French had something in common. Both shared similar fashion trends and it influenced the people. Both also included in fashion magazine Vogue.

Questions

1. What kind of sources that fashion influenced to the women in the world?
2. How many trends are usually released per year?
3. How long did it take for fashion to spread around the world from the original designer?
4. How long was it last when gowns used to be very popular?

Article
By the 1860s, stylish American women could see original designs by Charles Frederick Worth, the first true fashion designer, in the popular publication Harper’s Bazaar. As other designers appeared on the scene, their creations could also be seen in new fashion magazines. By the turn of the twentieth century, this was the primary method of spreading news of fashion trends from Paris, the seat of fashion.
At first, the gowns were illustrated with drawings, but as photography became more sophisticated in the early twentieth century, the fashion press used more and more photographs of new designs. At the same time, fashion and art were merging in the eyes of the artists, who dabbled in many of the arts. These artists not only painted, but also created textile designs and fashion illustrations. Some journals of the day printed both fashion illustrations and photographs, along with short articles on fashion by modern writers. Until the Second World War, even mainstream fashion journals like Vogue and Vanity Fair continued to publish fashion illustration by modern artists, encouraging the connections between fashion designers and visual artists.
Vogue functioned in America not only to provide sketches and patterns of fashions derived from Paris models, but also to promote French couture. One of France’s premier designers, Paul Poiret, wrote in a special thirtieth-anniversary edition of Vogue that the magazine "is today one of the best methods of communication with a distinguished clientele," revealing the importance for him of reaching the American clientele.
In America, wearing Paris fashion ensured that others would recognize the wearer’s status as a cultivated and wealthy person, perhaps able to travel to Paris, certainly able to afford the best her own locality could provide, be it local cultural life or the best dressmaker in town. For the Tirocchi clientele, nothing less would do to proclaim their status as wives and daughters of newly wealthy industrialists, a new elite of active and intelligent women in a vibrant city with a long history and a monied elite.
The Tirocchis subscribed to both Vogue and Harper’s Bazaar. No doubt many of their clients also subscribed to these magazines at home, but they were able in the shop to consult the magazines and could order a dress made from one of the sketches they saw illustrated. Vogue illustrated as many as 33 models from Paris in each issue, and about twice as many American dresses. Advertisements provided many more images.
As a result of their familiarity with fashion magazines, by 1920 clients were asking for couturiers by name instead of favoring designs sewn and trimmed by Madame Tirocchi herself. The sisters turned this development to their advantage by embracing it and offering their customers copies of Paris couture from supply houses in New York that had paid for the right to copy them in the same materials as the original, then stitch up copies to order for retailers like A. & L. Tirocchi.
Custom dressmaking declined for many reasons in the early twentieth century, but the increasing popularity of the fashion press, which championed couture and a worldwide fashion industry, was a major factor hastening its demise. Women saw what they liked in the pages of fashion magazines and were no longer satisfied with dresses that were not identified with the style of a particular fashion designer.

http://tirocchi.stg.brown.edu/514/story/fashion_magazines.html

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Bloom's Vocabulary Knowledge

Knowledge

Useful Verbs

Word Meaning


tell
communicate, talk about news or facts.
listconnected items or names written or printed
describeGive a description of something or someone like maybe the characteristic, qualities, or events.

relate
connect something that has something in common.
locatethe position of a place

writemark (letters, words, or other symbols) on a surface, typically paper, with a pen, pencil, or similar implement

statethe particular condition that someone or something is in at a specific time or condition.
namea word that set for a person or animal