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Faceless fashion police

(41 Posts)
Flippinheck Sat 25-Oct-25 13:06:16

ROMILO

NotSpagetti I applaud the fact that you are obviously very passionate about fashion but your reply is ever so slightly patronising. I say this having a background of four years training in fine art and textile design so not completely ignorant.
Most of the people who post on here will not be off to the shops in the latest Paris Fashion Week cat walk designs, they buy their clothes from high street stores and on line retailers and haven't you rather proven my point by posting a photo of the colours we WILL be wearing next Autumn.

Well said.

ROMILO Sat 25-Oct-25 13:03:22

NotSpagetti I applaud the fact that you are obviously very passionate about fashion but your reply is ever so slightly patronising. I say this having a background of four years training in fine art and textile design so not completely ignorant.
Most of the people who post on here will not be off to the shops in the latest Paris Fashion Week cat walk designs, they buy their clothes from high street stores and on line retailers and haven't you rather proven my point by posting a photo of the colours we WILL be wearing next Autumn.

Casdon Sat 25-Oct-25 12:28:59

I just do a very specific Google search for what I’m looking for, eg long bottle green cotton cardigan, and it usually comes up with options for what I’m after. I don’t like short knitwear, or things that go bobbly either, but by being very specific I can avoid wasted effort trawling through the rails. One that was very hard to avoid a couple of years ago was tiers on dresses, but thankfully that’s passed on into the fashion archives now by the looks of it.

Witzend Sat 25-Oct-25 12:15:27

Especially after seeing the recent ‘latest’ trouser styles, e.g. the barrel leg which personally I find hideous, I’ve come to the conclusion that designers rack their brains for something new, which (they hope) will have millions of us rushing out to buy it, regardless of hideousness or whether it suits us, just because it’s must-have ‘fashionable’.

If anyone here actually likes barrel leg trousers, no offence meant, each to her own, but personally I wouldn’t be seen dead in them.

Oreo Sat 25-Oct-25 12:14:55

Another M&S grumble here, a whole floor dedicated to very short knitwear that on first glance are made for 7 year olds.
In colours…brown, black, grey, cream and various odd shades of green.
No decent shirts or blouses at all.DP was amazed that we left the store without me buying something.🤭

LauraNorderr Sat 25-Oct-25 12:10:31

Autumnal colours for autumn provide camouflage as we go about our business. A government directive so that we don’t feel overpopulated. 😂

M0nica Sat 25-Oct-25 11:56:38

The clothing market has aways been like that, since the time people started considering fashion when buying clothes.

Why should it change now? Shops will only stock clothes that they know they can sell large quantities of. It is just not profitable to stock lines that only have low demand, ditto why would manufacturers make a dress or top that will only sell 100s when other garments can be sold in their thousands?

This applies to everything, grocery items you love that disappear from the shops. Restaurants that take you favourite dish off the menu, because too few people share your preference.

Granmarderby10 Sat 25-Oct-25 11:50:01

Well with regard to shorter tops I think it’s the “rule” of baggier/looser/wider bottoms = shorter closer fitting tops…think peak seventies?
80s was all about l-o-o-ong coats,tops and oversized shirts
Skinny bottom half, looser, longer top.
Midi skirts are “in” too now such as faux or real suede.

Though all or most trousers are too long for me personally unless they are the really fuddy duddy ones… not ready for them yet. and don’t get me started on lack of pockets (or worse fake pockets).
and all or most sweaters/tshirts,tops have a horrid boring unflattering neckline that gives me a mono boob . That’s Just designers lazy thinking imo, and it’s cheaper to knock out millions of the same old shape.

There are more sleeves which makes a nice change.

And the autumnal colours are good too but for me anything is better than grey …so so glad it is not dominant everywhere.

SueDonim Sat 25-Oct-25 11:45:53

Roses

Why are all tops and knitwear so short everywhere you look?

Why is everything made in such dreary colours for winter when jewel colours would brighten us all up?

I was bemoaning the short tops to my daughter. She said it’s because the fashion is for high-waisted trousers/skirts thus long tops not needed. A thermal vest bridges the gap! grin

There are a lot of 70’s colours and styles in the shops at the moment. I guess I wore them then but I don’t want to wear them now!

Bukkie Sat 25-Oct-25 11:41:05

My favourite colour is blue in every shade and I always chuckle when it's announced that blue is this season's colour. It has been my lifetime colour. Same with wide leg trousers I have worn them for years. If I don't like a fashion as in the dreadful cold shoulder tops of recent years I don't buy it.

NotSpaghetti Sat 25-Oct-25 11:28:37

I don't think we have Faceless fashion police ROMILO, we have artistic, driven designers who want to offer something new and eye catching to the catwalk of the world - and colours, which used to be dictated largely by the dye industry are more varied and easier to obtain. Given that, there is definitely a zeitgeist and it's amazing how many people suddenly see something new and exciting in similar palettes.

If you go to somewhere like the "Première Vision" shows in Paris and elsewhere you can see what the textile industry is offering that is new. These are what the designers are looking at and are inspired by. New fabrics, new processes, new takes on the old.

Whilst you and I might just see, say, lace, tweed or denim there are manufacturers who spend a lifetime working on one particular type of fabric. There is always innovation.

Here is some info re denim this year (just as an example):
www.premierevision.com/en/articles/4544e140-58ae-f011-8e61-000d3a2355f0/entrez-dans-le-futur-du-denim-65-exposants-15-pays-une-vision-commune-de-l-innovation

And a photo of "new" denim boots.

The colour strip photo is probably what you will see next Autum and Winter as they are busy designing and making that stuff now ... just saying!

Just because we don't suit/like things, it doesn't mean we have to be policed into them!

Labradora Sat 25-Oct-25 11:09:47

We all need new clothes from time to time and I agree that it is annoying to be tied to particular colours and styles which may not suit me.
I do however keep my clothes for a long time and look after even something that I have bought at Tescos if I really like the item. So I always have available to me a wider range of colours and styles that is not restricted to current fashion on offer.
I have always been in the size 14/16/18 range and so have tended to wear classic unfussy styles . I think that makes it easier to keep clothes for a long time.

petra Sat 25-Oct-25 10:50:09

It’s often been said/written that the economic situation is reflected in fashion.

www.thevaultuwmadison.com/blog/finance-amp-fashion-does-the-economy-influence-fashion-trends

Roses Sat 25-Oct-25 10:44:17

Why are all tops and knitwear so short everywhere you look?

Why is everything made in such dreary colours for winter when jewel colours would brighten us all up?

fancythat Sat 25-Oct-25 10:38:30

I think it has been always thus.

I used to wonder what it would be like when I got older, but personally am pleasantly surprised.

Having said that, I barely buy more than two items of new[to me] clothing per year. Currently.

ROMILO Sat 25-Oct-25 10:33:22

Who are the faceless fashion police who decide what colours we can buy, what length tops will be, how short short sleeves will be etc? I can't be the only one fed up of tops that finish at waist level, or being told sorry that colour isn't fashionable at the moment. Everything seems to be designed for adolescent beanpoles which most of us are not !