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Influences on Clothing

Influences on Clothing. Chapter 1. Who decides what clothes you wear? Why do you wear the clothes you do???. Choosing What to Wear. Did you oversleep?? Did you pick out your outfit the night before?? Are your shoes comfortable for a long day?. Your Basic Needs.

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Influences on Clothing

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  1. Influences on Clothing Chapter 1

  2. Who decides what clothes you wear? • Why do you wear the clothes you do???

  3. Choosing What to Wear • Did you oversleep?? • Did you pick out your outfit the night before?? • Are your shoes comfortable for a long day?

  4. Your Basic Needs • Physical needs – comfort, protection and safety • Clothing covers the body and protects from weather, harm and injury • Intellectual, emotional, social needs = communicate info about people and their lives • Make you feel attractive/confident • Help identify you with other people

  5. Your Activities • Linked to how and where you spend your time • Hiker chooses comfortable shoes • Sports enthusiasts need protective gear • Weekend activities call for either casual or dress outfits

  6. A check of the weather guides our choices • Warm weather close feature light colors to reflect sunlight, loose styles • Cold weather clothing have multiple layers, heavy fabrics to trap air • School may have dress code • Part time job may have uniforms

  7. Your Personal Preferences • Your likes and dislikes • Your values and beliefs guide your clothing choices • Examine your values to discover your overall attitude • What do you look for in clothing? • Comfort, durability, low cost, easy care, status, latest style

  8. People who want comfort Choose clothes that feel good Wear well over time Looking for low cost Special sales/bargains Preserve free time Clothing with little care Status Look or are expensive Have designer name Latest style/color May dress to blend in

  9. Other Influences • Family, friends, media influence our choices • Family • Constant presence • Impact may go unnoticed • Favorite activities • Where they live

  10. Friends • Peer group- consists of people wth a similar background, social status, and age • Friends/classmates • Big influence on how we act and dress • Group may decide what is “in • Not good or bad • Negative if peer group conflicts with individuals values

  11. Media • Message are communicated to a large audience • Television, radio, movies, video, magazine, newspapers, catalogs

  12. Advertising • Tells you where the clothes are to buy • Useful to consumers • Purpose is to sell product, image idea • Powerful tool • May not mention negatives in ad • Look for facts • Create vague but positive feelings for product • Gorgeous models = no product information

  13. Celebrities • “imitation” is the sincerest for of flattery • Admire someone, they can influence your choices • Entertainers = clothing, hairstyles, fashion • Sport celebrities endorse brand products

  14. Who Wants to Be a Millionaire • Regis Philbin started a craze • Matching shirt and ties • After 9-11 • T-shirts, hats with FDNY and NYPD

  15. Status Symbols • Give wearer a special feeling of importance or wealth • Names, initials of designer • YSL – Yves St. Laurent • Tommy Hilfiger • Nike “swoosh” • Choose the one which fits your budget

  16. Changing Society • Social influences on what people wear • Society– group of individuals who live together in a particular area (nation/community) • In the U.S. change is inevitable and ongoing • What happens in one part of country can quickly influence other parts • Five major trends

  17. 1. More Casual Living • American society was once more formal • Hats/gloves a part of woman’s attire • Men wore business suits • Dressed up when traveling on plain, went shopping or ate in restaurants • Restaurants prohibited women from wearing slacks, men had to wear jackets

  18. Women never wore white shoes before Memorial Day or after Labor Day • Black was only color acceptable at funerals • Black never worn for weddings • Today most restaurants welcome casual clothes • Wedding guests/bridesmaids wear black • Workplace permits casual attire • Most women no longer accept uncomfortable/constricting clothes

  19. 2. Rapid Communication • Technological changes brought societies around the world in close contact • We share goods, services, information quickly and easily • Fashion news travels rapidly; computer, television, fax and videos • Internet and Commercial online services offer new ways to communicate, advertise, and sell supplies to customers

  20. 3. Multiple Shopping Options • Opportunities to shop everywhere • Stores still favorite option • Malls, strip centers– lined up in a row • Indoor malls feature at least 2 large stores and a food court • Mega malls = 400 stores, restaurants and entertainment areas • Shop by phone, online, fax • Shop 24/7

  21. 4. Consumer Power • Designers drove the fashion world of yesterday • Today the consumer influence is felt • Consumers have more knowledge/skills • Know what they want, rock bottom prices • Shop where these demands are met • Loyalty to a store brand name is less likely

  22. 5. Global Marketplace • Well traveled shirt could have begun in another counter • Someone created the design • Fabrics created somewhere else • Shirt manufactured somewhere else • Thread, buttons, trim from another place

  23. Garments made entirely in one country is the exception rather than the rule • Developing nations become key players in fashion industry • Fashion capitals expanded across the globe1940-1950’ high fashion designers were in Paris • Today Tokyo, Germany, etc

  24. Looking Ahead • Clothes mean little to one and more to others • Fashions reflect history • Technology brought change • Clothing expresses culture as well as your personality • Learn what color and design you like for your best appearance

  25. How To Make Decisions • See page 33 • 1. State the situation • 2. List various options • 3. Evaluate options • 4. Consider your values • 5. Select the best option • 6. Evaluate the results

  26. Summary • Clothing is often chosen to meet certain basic functions and needs • People make clothing choices based on activities as well as personal preferences • Values, family, and friends influence a person’s clothing choices

  27. Influences on clothing choices reach consumers in several ways through the media • Rules about clothing have relaxed in the United States, creating more choices for consumers

  28. Advances in technology have greatly increased the variety of clothing available. • Studying clothes and fashion can help you make satisfying choices about your wardrobe, and even your career

  29. List 5 values you use when buying clothes. • List 5 garments in your wardrobe. For each one, explain what influenced you to buy or wear that item

  30. Identify how celebrities, movies, and television programs inspire current fashion. Collect magazine photos and write descriptions for a bulletin board or display

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