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Showing posts from May, 2021

How Could I Dress for Work Now?

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This is the overall quandary we are altogether confronting , following a year telecommuting in tights and Zoom shirts, or outside the air pocket in P.P.E. The other evening I was really going out to supper with companions in a cafĂ©, and I went through around 30 minutes simply gazing into my storage room as though it were an unfamiliar region, attempting to recall what I used to wear.  All things considered , we've been changed, pretty basically, by the pandemic . Along these lines, as well, our garments need to change. We can't imagine the most recent year didn't occur, nor would we be able to dress as though the most recent year didn't occur. Which leaves us where ?  Image source from pinterest As you note, there is a developing assemblage of punditry blending around the possibility that we will before long be in for a Roaring Twenties revival with its go-go gathering dressing ethos. (You can get it: That decade likewise arose out of a pandemic.) But 21st-century flapp...

Does it fit me? Euveka answers the never-ending question

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Like most clients, we want clothes that are comfortable and nice. When people shop online, they quickly know whether they like the product or not. They can easily have additional information on materials, colors, or brand image... But for the fit, we can only know once we have tried the item on. As a result, nowadays 1/3 of garments are returned due to a bad fit. There are some solutions, such as online recommendations , but these are unable to provide a 100% match between the client’s data and the brands’ data. Many online shoppers order several sizes from different or same brands to be sure to have at least one product that fits. Image source from fashionunited How can brands guarantee their customers that their garments will fit them perfectly? There is a need to integrate all processes in fashion, from production to retail to clients, for a 100% data match. This is key to satisfying the customer, and therefore to reducing returns and unsold items. Developing logistics managemen...

How to Turn Vegetables Into a Tie-Dye Pattern

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Sustainability may be fashion’s favorite buzzword, but Hillary Taymour, the designer behind Collina Strada, doesn’t just pay lip service to the concept; she brings it down to earth, treating sustainability like something everyone can practice every day. Like by dyeing a white T-shirt using beets and turmeric. “I look at tie-dye as a form of hand-painting on clothes,” Ms. Taymour said. “There’s no way to make exact replica tie-dyes.” She has been using tie-dye in her collections since 2018, sometimes with three to six different techniques in one garment, elevating the summer camp pastime into an artisanal practice. Here, she demonstrates one technique: the subtle plaid tie-dye.Your tool kit Image source from pinterest White T-shirt 3 beets 1/3 cup turmeric Splash of white vinegar. (Apple cider vinegar will do in a pinch.) 2 pots and 2 large mixing bowls 2 rubber bands A spoonPrepare two pots of boiling water . Cut up the beets and place in one pot, allowing them to boil for one hour...