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Image Dressing: Which 'Club' Are You In?
| Article
# : |
12965 |
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Section : |
LIFE
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| Issue
Date : |
5 / 1987 |
1,066 Words |
| Author
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Carol Pearce Carol Pearce is a free-lance writer living in New York who has
done extensive writing for national magazines. |
Lighthearted sassy clothes with tulle skirts, scallops, and ruffles are being promoted by designers for spring.
But do such fashions reflect our inner images? What message does our clothing convey to others?
The way we dress affects our self-image, says Barbara Wood, director of a Westchester, New York consultation and referral service. We dress according to how we picture ourselves and how we wish others to view us.
Women are more aware of self-image than men, according to a Washington University study. A Fordham University questionnaire unearthed the fact that we tend to mentally touch up our self-picture. Clothes bolster the retouching process.
The 'Size 24 Club'
Overweight women buy according to size rather than by what looks or feels good on them, states Barbara Wood, based on her extensive consulting work with large-size women. They belong to the "24 club," she says. "They would rather be uncomfortable in a size 24 than wear the 27 or 28 that really fits so that they can brag that they can still get into a 24. Fat people know the size of everything they own. For them, their self-image is the number, not the look - and that's their club."
The 'Secretaries Club'
Secretaries join the "dress-for-success club." They are often the best-dressed people in an
... (1995 of 6332 Characters)
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