Wednesday, July 17, 2013

How to Choose the Right Occasion Dresses Color for Your Skin?

Skin tone is a great essential in determining the color of occasion dresses to be opted for. To look elegant is what this formal attire is all about and the complexion plays a major role here.

Usually the light complexion people can buy just about anything but the choices are quite narrowed down for the darker people. There are different shades of dark and based on the exact complexion, you can choose the color that best suits you. Running after the fashion divas is not something that you would benefit you. So, choose the best combo for your skin.

Tanned Skin: The tropical colors of red and green tend to leave a gorgeous effect on your overall look.

Brown: Avoid black but you can try the shades of brownish golden or even some shades of red with brown.

Dark: For that shade of brown, the colors are black, brown, dark purple, tropical greens and deep red. These along with subtle makeup to match your skin tone will make this shade of your skin look all the more fashionable.

There are different views on shades that suit a dark skinned woman. While some suggest wearing lighter colors, others suggest wearing darker colors. However, the beauty of a woman lies in her confidence and the way she carries herself and her formal attire. Pick colors that warm your skin and lend it a glow of beauty. You can try on the occasion dresses in front of a mirror and then decide which color suits you the best. When you can be your own judge, why depend on the opinion of others? The best way to decide is to try on the outfit and click an image on your mobile. Try another shade which you like and click another picture. Compare both images and pick the one you like the best!


In any case try following the suggestion given here or ask a friend to compare and judge for you.

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

The Change of Clothing

Assessing a decade of fashion so close in time is complex. In terms of costume history it's only after a trend has been around for several years can we acknowledge that it's more than a passing fad and deserves recognition in the archives of history. We each see what we ourselves wore as what was worn and typical of the era. The mood of society in the final decade of the last millennium was more defining than what was actually worn.

As we all know, when we go out, we must wear something. And there are many clothes, such as: Jeans, dress, plants and so on, if you wear some beautiful clothes, you friends will think you are very pretty, but if you wear some ugly clothes, you friends will think you don't wear beautiful, you think I was very ugly and you don't like go shopping with me. So remember, the clothes is more important when you meet your friends. A beautiful clothes make us fell happy, but an ugly clothes will make us fell unhappy.

So much more was on offer globally, and many people lost interest in fashion as necessary and important to their lives when business rules for dressing relaxed. Working from home became common. By the edge of the 21st century dressing down in every aspect of life became an acceptable norm. Ordinary retail clothing sales, textile manufacturing industries and stores all declined from a less active more casual marketplace.

The range of fashion goods available was huge in the 1990s, but no one knows the real answer why retail sales were often sluggish. The main thrust of fashion was the striving to achieve individuality. Fashion proliferated as fast as it could be relayed by the media and Internet and only by styling oneself rather than slavishly following a particular designer's fashion look, could individuality be achieved. Rapid dissemination of information and a more relaxed attitude to clothes has led to a certain inevitable uniformity in cities thousands of miles apart.