8.6.14

How To Find And Wear Affordable Designer Clothing

By Lila Bryant


If you're serious about fashion, you probably love paging through fashion magazines and poring over the designer outfits. You probably also know that feeling of disappointment when you look at the price of each item the model is wearing and realizing that her outfit costs the equivalent of a year's salary. However, you don't have to be a billionaire to look fashionable. You simply have to know where to find affordable designer clothing and then know how to wear it.

To be a true fashionista, you need to learn how to choose what to purchase. You need to learn the difference between fad and real fashion. People who only buy what the magazines tell them is trendy right now often buy items that no style guru would be seen dead in next year and they're really only sending the message that they have no fashion sense whatsoever.

An important principle to remember is to choose classic, timeless designs. You can wear these for several seasons without them looking outdated. This means that you can easily pick up expensive labels at huge discounts during the January or end-of-season sales and wear these items next season or the one after that.

Choosing second-hand clothes is a good option too. Look in stores that sell pre-owned clothing, at flea markets and in charity shops. Alternatively, check online suppliers to see what they have in stock. It's possible to find an item that has been worn only once or twice and pay only a few dollars, where it would have cost hundreds or thousands of dollars if you bought it new.

Wearing vintage designs is something that even the rich and famous do. Actresses who have famously worn vintage gowns when they received the Academy Award for their work include Julia Roberts, Reese Witherspoon and Penelope Cruz. Roberts had to ask a tailor to adjust her gown, a Valentino design from nine years earlier, so that it would fit perfectly. Her dress is still one of the most memorable in red-carpet history. Witherspoon's beaded Dior gown and Cruz's embroidered Balmain dress were both half a century old and first worn in the 1950s.

It's best to avoid fake designer items. Counterfeiting is a crime and supporting this industry is not very ethical. Besides, real fashionistas can spot a fake from a mile away.

Supporting only the famous couture houses is the sign of an unimaginative dresser. Instead, keep an eye out for the work of young designers. Their designs are often more striking and much less expensive.

The way that the fashion world works is that a top fashion house will come up with a gorgeous design and then the cheaper retail stores copy and adjust this for their own lines. The result is that if you choose carefully, it's only the label at the back, where nobody can see it, that will indicate that you paid a couple of dollars rather than a couple of thousand dollars. If you really want to flash that logo, wear cheaper, classic clothes and spend your money on a good brand-name watch or sunglasses instead.




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