Teeextra - Official Chauncey Billups Vote Or Die 2024 Shirt
If you love this shirt, please click on the link to buy it now: Buy Official Chauncey Billups Vote Or Die 2024 Shirt now
Optimists have suggested that the pandemic has started reorienting our priorities around family and health rather than material goods. The Primark shoppers who camped out overnight in advance of reopening tell a different story—but those value shifts take time, and there's still hope for our industry to lead the way and change course. "It would be so beautiful to think people are calming down and the industry is uniting to set some new boundaries," Roche says. "To be more sustainable, to think about our environment and humankind and decency towards others… All of those things seem so basic and fundamental."
Browsing through the spring 2022 collections, I lingered on the new, very cool Marine Serre look book. The clothes were elevated, funky, and as French as ever, and the models stood in colorful tops in front of posh, old-timey wallpaper. But there's something odd about these shirts. They're popcorn tops, a stretchy, polyester-leaning style in which the fabric is puckered like tiny, squished pyramids. Ah, the fabric of my youth! These expandable shirts were at every mall and dollar store in the early 2000s. Shrunken pieces of cloth that could be squashed into an itty-bitty ball, they could fit a multitude of body types thanks to their considerable stretch. Vintage dealer Olivia Haroutounian remembers seeing them as a child at antique malls in Texas in the mid '00s. "When I was a kid, they used to sell them in these big bins for $2 in a plastic baggie," she tells me. fashion news editor Sarah Spellings had one as a kid, specifically a lilac version with a pink flower. features and commerce editor Lilah Ramzi, who is perpetually dressed in a ball gown and attending some society tea, dropped a bomb that she had a popcorn top in ombré pink from—wait for it—Limited Too. "The Lizzie McGuire x Limited Too collab was my everything," she says.
On the luxury side, designers and retailers are actively discussing how to become open and honest about price and quality. By explaining the origin of their fabrics, how their clothes are made, and who makes them, the hope is that customers will shop more confidently and will be motivated to invest in the story, not just the product or trend. In theory, that concept of mindful consumption could eventually trickle down to the high street. It isn't going to fix climate change or fashion's murky supply chain, but it's the best way we can begin to make a difference—and by "we," I mean those of us in the privileged position of having money to spend and the headspace to refine our shopping habits. The common rebuttal to the "fewer, better" approach is that some people can't afford to pay more for clothes, and that's absolutely true. But lower-income shoppers aren't the ones creating the mess; they aren't buying a new dress every week and then throwing it out. The people abusing the system are the ones who could afford to buy fewer, higher-quality items, and it's our responsibility to use our power and influence to raise the bar for everyone else.
Vist our store at: Visit Teeextra now
This product belong to nang
More: https://www.threads.net/@teeextrafashion/post/DB_nXF5yQ9U
Nhận xét
Đăng nhận xét