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Showing posts with label 5 tips for how to choose the best pair to buy ladies shoes online. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 5 tips for how to choose the best pair to buy ladies shoes online. Show all posts

Saturday, 31 August 2013

Fall fashion 2013: The top 10 trends on the runways this season

Fall fashion 2013: The top 10 trends on the runways this season
Fall 2013 fashion is a lesson in extremes. There’s some serious push and pull when it comes to the stylistic female role in today’s society, and no place proves a better show than on the runway.

Skirt suits, the once-staple pairing for women’s fashion, were back for fall at Prada, Dolce & Gabbana and Christian Dior, where models returned to New Look ideals. Nipped waists, strong shoulders and an ample cut of wool seemed to pose that the woman of the 1940s was ideal, at least this time around on the trend carousel. The return of the skirt, whether in-suit or otherwise, seems never more impactful than for this season, where it appeared in virtually every collection from Hérmes to Chanel. At Ports 1961, a mid-length circle skirt paired effortlessly with a grey bomber jacket and cable knit sweater to make the ultimate modern-casual statement.

Fashioning an identity: Struggling with the confounding concept of lesbian chic

Fashioning an identity: Struggling with the confounding concept of lesbian chic

In the early ’90s, I would take an hour-long bus trip from the suburbs of Montreal to hang out with friends in the city’s downtown core. I remember seeing billboards featuring lithe girls (who mainly looked like boys) posing in black and white alongside Highway 20, selling the apotheosis of gender erasure via CK One fragrance ads. It was a time when Quebec-born supermodel Ève Salvail was the biggest question mark on the scene. She sent shockwaves through the industry when she first walked down Jean Paul Gaultier’s runway with a shaved and tattooed head. She represented an overtly androgynous presence in the fashion industry and seemed, to me, as rare and queer as a glitter-encrusted rainbow unicorn.

But I’ll say it straight: Lesbians are rarely part of the fashion party. The Fashion Institute of Technology in New York and its museum’s latest exhibit,  A Queer History of Fashion—which opens Sept. 13—touches on the subject


Truth be told, Salvail didn’t come out publicly until 2007, and often it is gay men who design clothes to be worn by straight women in hopes of attracting the male gaze. Lesbian élan was, and sometimes still is, seen as an oxymoron. Legendary lesbian designer/Sex and the City costumer Patricia Field recently told The Advocate magazine, “Any place you can go from [the stereotypical image of] ‘lesbian’ would be chic, I imagine.” And there you have it—no matter how many self-pronounced L.A. dykes press their A-cups into L Word-like power suits, the idea of gay-girl fashion will always be suspect. Add to that lesbian feminism’s critique of sexist power structures and the objectification of women’s bodies, and it’s easy to see how the fashion apparatus became “the enemy” and the idea of a fashionable lesbian became a joke.

As with all major life transitions—think about the post-divorce haircut or graduation tattoo—coming out of the closet meant I needed to change my look. Until then, music had always dictated my sartorial choices. I was 18, with long, blonde hair, and very much concerned—though in true ’90s style I would never admit it—with style. I dressed like every other indie-rock fan: miniskirts, One Star sneakers, off-season toques, Sonic Youth baby T-shirts, bracelets made from bike chains. When I wore dresses, they were plaid or lace, fabrics whose very pattern made an ironic comment on femininity. I shopped only at thrift stores along Mont Royal. My most prized possessions were a gauzy purple mini-dress and silver combat boots that musician Melissa Auf der Maur left behind in a bag that I found in my first apartment. My style icons were Kathleen Hanna and Kim Gordon. I found myself at lesbian bars where my baby-doll dress and Chainsaw Records sweatshirt read as heterosexual, where even my ironic take on femininity got in the way of getting laid.

That changed when my first girlfriend took me to see Go Fish, an early representation of modern lesbian life on film. The characters wore suspenders, knee-length jean shorts and leather vests, and I wondered silently, “Does being queer mean I can’t have any style?”

Unless I had a butch girl on my arm, I was never read as queer. This of course had its privileges in wider culture, but the invisibility got on my nerves. Butch women had style —dapper suits and tough leather jackets—but femme gals like me could only mirror straight culture or attempt to play with it sarcastically, employing extra red lipstick, gaudier animal prints, shorter skirts. I was fine with being a femme for a while—but things changed as I grew. Born of politics and a rejection of patriarchy—which, ironically, resulted in a rejection of the feminine—it felt like there was a community-wide obsession with androgyny and a significant amount of peer pressure to dress more middle-of-the-road. In one tonsorial misstep, I shaved my head, but felt neither Sinéad sexy nor Ani DiFranco rebellious.
As my hair grew, I became more comfortable and less concerned with fitting into a particular aesthetic to cement my identity. What is fashion, after all, if not constantly in flux? Fast-forward to the new millennium: Ellen DeGeneres is a Cover Girl model and her wife, Portia de Rossi, is the star of shampoo ads. The more mainstream representations of queerness emerge, the more brash my style icons become. I am now drawn to the gorgeous, glamorous excess of Beth Ditto. The Arkansas-born singer’s confidence with clothes seems to illuminate a path for the riot grrrl in me who has grown up. She’s beautiful and brazen and never seems to reconsider her femininity.

As I approach middle age, I have toned down my style, while young queers embrace a whole new era of fashion. They open stores geared toward tomboys and custom-fitted suits; out models like Tasha Tilberg and Freja Beha Erichsen are no longer anomalies. There are important conversations happening about the complex relationship between what we wear and who we are. Queer and feminist thinkers no longer feel pressured to dismiss fashion entirely, or trash talk about selling out or conforming to impossible standards. The didacticism of the identity politics era has softened to make way for a more meaningful dialogue on the ways in which style can be a part of everyone’s lives. And when you go to a queer bar, there is an array of styles and less pressure to demonstrate your politics with shorn hair or T-shirt slogans. That said, there are days when I just want to wear my Vision Street Wear T-shirt—the one I lost in a pit at Lollapalooza ’96. But some lessons are learned the hard way.

Sunday, 28 August 2011

5 tips for how to choose the best pair to buy ladies shoes online

Shopping for shoes has become a passion for most of the fashionistas with the latest developments in fashion shoes and the easy availability through online portals. With online availability of shoes there is a significant scope for choosing among the best pairs with some clicks of the mouse. The facility of internet has virtually brought every online store to the doorsteps of customers and offers a dynamic platform to choose among the best of the materials within targeted budgeted options. Women today are just crazy about the fashionable shoes. Online system for purchasing shoes is well adopted by people lately with growing familiarity with ecommerce. Even though, finding a perfect pair of shoes online requires intensive attention and minute precautions. Described below 5 most vital tips that may help any woman to choose her pair of fashion shoes from any online store;

Tip#1: Check out for the authenticity of the online stores:

Online stores provided great deal of comfort while making any purchases. Still this is a platform with high risk of fraud. With the recent implication of stringent laws, the online frauds have reduced to a great extent. Still apposite care is necessary to check the authenticity of the online stores. There are many community portals and forums where you can ask your query reconfirming the authenticity and there are numerous online users who will be happy to share their experiences with any particular online store.


Tip#2: Check out for the return policy:

This is another most significant aspects for purchasing a product (here shoes) online. There may be chances that you get defective pairs with the shipment of the product. Hence it’s vital to check for the return policy defined by different online shoes shoes stores for such situations. This should be done before making a final purchase of shoes through online transactions.

Tip#3: Check out for the brands in stock:

Before taking a final purchase decision you should always check out whether the shoes you are ordering are in stock or out of stock. This will help you to receive the product in within your desired timeframe.

Tip#4: Check out for the size and design:

Shoes are to be perfect in shape and size to get the maximum wearing comfort. You also need to have the perfect sized shoes to suit your personality. Always try to order one size larger if you can comfortably manage them.

Tip#5: Check out for additional surcharges (if any):


Most of the online shoes stores offer free shipping of products to your doorsteps. However you may get some online stores asking for extra charges for shipping of shoes. Check out for their charges before making any purchases. Also check out for any additional surcharges for cross border shipping. This will help you determine the final cost of the products, and will also help you to decide and purchase for a best pair of shoes online to suit your needs.