March 8, 2016

What about ripped jeans?

What about ripped jeans?

the proper dress code of ripped, frayed or used jeans.

 Hard to say if the ripped jeans trend is a must. Hard to say if ripped jeans must be part of our glamorous feminine wardrobe, or not... Sweet little girls, rebellious young women or beautiful terrific icones, what image of ourselves do we give by wearing ripped jeans? Perception we give doesn't necessarily correspond to the interpretation we want to suggest to the others. In that perspective, is a nefarious image of a playmate directly linked to jeans that let appear flesh?

Like any act of creation, fashion loves to play on contrasts. We call so "to break the code". For example, we can casually wear sophisticated outfits, adopt a classic atypical dresscode, choose a version of evening undressed dress or overdressed undressed dress, have long or short clothes for hot or cold weather when it's hot and cold at the same time... Ok, it's seems a little bit complicated, but that's the way it is. And it's excatly the same mecanism for fashion materials, frames, cuts, and postures of course. As far as jeans are concerned, (cotton textile and linen fabric originally used for work clothes), associating them to overflowing sensual gestures, the contrats become really interesting!


We all remember that famous advertising of that famous American soft drink, showing beautiful bare chested workers, muscled as gods, molded into a form-fitting stained or ripped jeans. They were very hot, weren't they? Before them, Marilyn Monroe, James Dean, Elizabeth Taylor, Brigitte Bardot, Jean Seberg, Elvis Presley, Olivia Newton John, Madonna and ... Samantha Fox had already considered the jeans major pieces of their wardrobe.
The challenge is in how to use jeans to create intelligently a chic and effortless silouette. Playing with small breaks of style or/and color or/and gender, jeans really can consciously multiply the power of seduction. Should you want to be more sensual choose stress and fur, glamourous: silk, undomesticated: leather, unspoilt: flannel plaid, sulphurous: laces etc.
Can you remember the light faded jeans worn by so so so sexy Samantha Fox, during the summer of 1986 for her song Touch me? Just torn under the buttock, exposing the gluteal folds with sensuality each time she moved her legs. In her case, jeans reached the most ultimate expression of provocation.
Today, torn knee jeans trend is far from insignificant. Young girls, and hope they are, suspiciously look like schoolgirls after having fallen in the schoolyard. If you have daughters, you probably have noticed that they go back home all sheepish, and saddened by having ripped their pants. Childhood nostalgia or refusal to grow up, these women seem to wear jeans like children do at low space, while swiftly overwhelmed by high speed. More than a figure of style, ripped jeans translate a mindset which is quite anchored on age for ages... Above all, wearing jeans with lacerations or holes, letting appear legs, thighs or buttocks can unfortunately tie or squeeze the body with a "salami method". For the fattest of us, being swaddled like a sausage or a good roast is the worst expression of bad taste. So let's be careful!

 

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