Men and Women Dress in The Pandemic The Fashion Experts’ Opinions

 

 

When Melbourne Fashion Week begins November 15-21, fashionistas expect Melvernian to change into a more relaxed fashion style in the post-blockade era.

 

Pandemics may change our outfits: Melbourne fashion professionals.

Dr. Kate Sarah, a design and technology teacher of the Fashion and Textile School at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT University), has said that Melbourne’s dark taste could be replaced with more colors and glitz in the street of Melbourne. I told you I wouldn’t.

 

“History has shown time and again that following a global catastrophe, like and around the World War and the recession in the 1980s’ early years, it is typically an extravagant and lavish period in the world of fashion. “She Dr. Kate Sarah says.

 

“Now that things are reopened, we think the same thing will happen here.”

 

Sarah stated that people would take the chance to dress up and wear clothes to express their independence. This could lead to a variety of patterns and colors.

 

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“We find that people really pay attention to the wind when it comes to dressing, they’re pretty experimental, and they really enjoy what they wear,” she added.

 

“Also with looser silhouettes, people desire to feel comfortable and relaxed, as well as an atmosphere of relaxation, even when wearing eveningwear.

 

“For instance, the trend to wear sneakers during evening wear will be a thing of the past, and there will be more mismatches, and it’s going to happen. It’s going to be extremely adventurous, bold, and fun.”

 

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“Australia is having so much growth because we have decided to be authentic to who we are [as a country],” says Richard Jarman, one-half of the husband-and-wife team behind the resort-wear brand COMMAS. “All of us live not only a lifestyle but also in a no-space place that a lot of the people is envious of, and it’s about being unashamed about that.”

 

On Thursday, Jarman and his wife Emma received their National Designer Award for emerging designers at the Melbourne Fashion Festival.

 

The two created COMMAS in the year 2004, adopting the unusual approach of protecting the markets of Europe and America before establishing a local base. Their “backward” strategy effectively forced them to create their own local online store amid the outbreak, a risk they claim paid off. Today, 80 percent of their revenue is in Australia.

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Dr. Stephen Wigley, Deputy Dean of the School’s Fashion Company, agrees to wear more casual clothes after returning to work.

 

“recently conducted research on the 20,000 people who are part of 11 countries including Australia by the global athleisure brand Lululemon 81% of the respondents said they are more productive in their work if they feel physically at ease. I was.

 

“So you can see, for instance in many workplaces, there are no ties and women can remove more restrictive clothes like high-heeled shoes and skirt suits.

 

Wigley thinks that the emergence of a new pandemic could mark the beginning of the ending of the office dress policy or, at the very least, the introduction of a brand modern dress code.

 

“Just like companies that do not hire employees with flexible working styles and hybrid workplaces face difficulties keeping employees, companies that enforce a strict dress code for office attire are likely to face similar problems. There’s sex, “he said.

 

Melbourne has seen some of the most prolonged blockades globally and has seen a series of protests against vaccine mandates, blocking, and the state government’s controversial bill to manage pandemics.

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There is always a place for traditional brands like the affluent supremo Dom Bagnato or Country Road. Still, it’s in this space that is “relaxed elegance,” as Kimber says, that Australian brands can develop their own style, extending beyond singlets and boards or a mix of fashion shows in New York or Paris.

 

Kimber believes he is the truth of how Australian men dress. It is also helpful that caring about one’s appearance, which was once referred to as the derogatory “metrosexual,” is second to the norm.

 

 

Although there will always be a need for brands with heritage, such as the affluent supremo Dom Bagnato or Country Road, It’s in this space in the realm of “relaxed elegance,” as Kimber states, where Australian brands can develop their own style, extending beyond singlets and boardies or a reinterpretation of fashion shows in New York or Paris.

 

Kimber believes that he represents the natural middle ground in the way Australian men dress. It is also helpful that caring about appearance, even if it was referred to as the derogatory “metrosexual,” is second to the norm.

 

 

It’s all in the backing of emerging talent by department stores, who still have a say in the choices “real” men buy. Chris Wilson, David Jones, the head of menswear at David Jones, states that of the 50 brands that have been launched in the last 4 years, the Eleventy is the “ultimate aesthetic” of this new age of menswear.

 

“Guys care about their appearance much more than ever before,” the designer states. “The times of the basic color palette of black, blue, and white aren’t around anymore. The buyers are buying more investment pieces that go beyond the ‘good” suit.”

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