Categories
Fashion

“Fashion Aiding Mental Health: Exploring the Use of Weighted Garments in the Fashion Industry”

Students will be required to present:
5500 Word Dissertation
A 5500-word dissertation which proves or disproves the students’ hypothesis.
Through the essay the students must evaluate the evidence of primary and
secondary research, critical analysis of texts, coherent argumentation and correct
citation using Harvard conventions of referencing.
You will develop a 5500 word dissertation research project, based on the research
proposal that you submitted in term 2. The dissertation should demonstrate your
development of the proposal and should enable you to clearly prove or disprove the area of
inquiry you had identified and/or explore the topic in much more depth.
Some guidelines:
important: the link to uploead on Turnitin will be open on 28 February, 2 weeks before the
submission deadline.
5
o The dissertation project should provide evidence of your primary and secondary
research methods, critical analysis of the literature and of the results of your
research.
o It must be logically structured, clearly written and provide a coherent argument.
o It should include relevant images to support your discussion and illustrate key points
you are making.
o You must reference accurately all sources of information (including images) that you
use with Harvard Referencing style throughout.
o The format should be A4 word or pdf.
o Care should be taken to present the information in a professional manner,
considering layout etc.
Contents:
● Cover page – A cover that reflects appropriately the research to be conducted – you
can use an image/images/a digital image of your own artwork. It must provide your
name; student number; unit title: FINAL DISSERTATION; Element 2: Dissertation; title
of your research.
● Table of Contents – this must make the proposal easy for the reader to navigate.
Make sure that all pages are numbered and accurately referenced in the table of
contents.
● Introduction – This should provide a background and a rationale for the research.
Approximately: 1100 words
● Aim and Objectives – One aim (what you hope to prove/demonstrate/interrogate/etc);
3-5 objectives (the points you need to reach to achieve the aim).
● Literature Review – Show that you have begun to read around the subject area. The
literature should contextualise your topic, be critically analysed and must support the
achievement of aim and objectives. Approximately: 1300 words
● Methodology – Show how you are going to achieve the objectives you have set out.
This should focus on primary research. Approximately: 1000 words.
● Results and Discussion – This should present and discuss the results of your primary
research in relation to your research aim and objectives. What does it mean? What are
the implications for what you are trying to prove/demonstrate/etc.? Approximately:
1000
● Conclusion/Summary – This should summarise the key finding of the research, restating
some important points and present what it means to your topic, research aim
and objectives.Approximately: 1100 words
6
**In total you should have around 5500 words when you have completed all these
sections above.
___________________________________________________________
My topic is research on mental health and how also people in the fashion industry are affected by the same.
I want to give an introduction about mental health in general and how important it is. Then adding to that research on the fashion industry aspect. My research is about creating weights and installing them in garments to provide comfort for people who are facing anxiety issues. “Fashion aiding mental health” The investigation of weights is just a small part of how fashion can contribute to helping and showing their concern for people facing mental health issues. 

Categories
Fashion

Private Label vs. Wholesale Brands: A Comparison of Retailers’ Product Offerings In today’s competitive retail landscape, private label and wholesale brands play a significant role in the product offerings of department stores and mass merchandisers. These brands not

PLEASE READ PROMPT THOROUGHLY ALL IN TEXT CITATIONS MUST INCLUDE AUTHOR AND PAGE NUMBER!!!
Assigned Textbook:
https://www-bloomsburyfashioncentral-com.limcollege.idm.oclc.org/encyclopedia?docid=b-9781501366581
Beyond Design: The Synergy of Apparel Product Development
by Sandra Keiser , Deborah Vandermar and Myrna B. Garner
Bloomsbury Publishing Inc, 2022
Edition:
Fifth Edition
———————————————————————————
Please read Chapter 1 and 2 from your course textbook, Beyond Design.  The book can be accessed through the LIM library. All course and textbook guidelines can be found on the syllabus in Canvas. After you read the chapters, write a response to the following questions. Your response should be approximately 100 words for each question. Paste your response into the discussion box. Engage in a dialog with a minimum of two of your peers by making substantive comments on their post.  
Select a department store or mass merchandiser (one retailer) and identify two private label brands and two wholesale brands that they carry. Compare and contrast the private label and wholesale brand products in terms of price, positioning, and fashion level.  
What are the core competencies and competitive advantages of the chosen retailer? What do they excel at? How does this affect the products they develop as private labels or purchase from a wholesale brand? Write specific points and facts about each retailer.  
All written work for this class should be in essay format and APA7 cited as needed. 
Instructions
Please respond to the prompt. Your response should run 300 words in length, reflecting on the prompt above. You must post your initial reply to access the full discussion.

Categories
Fashion

“The Impact of Hip Hop on the Fashion Industry: A Cultural Revolution”

(why does fashion matter?)
LO1 – Demonstrate an awareness of debates related to Fashion Cultures and Histories (Knowledge) 
LO2 – Engage with and apply relevant theoretical tools (Enquiry)
LO3 – Identify, contextualise and discuss relevant examples (Process)
LO4 – Communicate your ideas effectively in an academic context (Communication)
•Reference to key themes, debates and concepts covered in the unit. 

•Referenced quotations (using Harvard referencing) from at least four academic texts. 

•An analysis of examples relevant to Fashion Cultures and Histories.  
•The conventions of academic writing, including in-text referencing of sources and a bibliography.
* My topic of essay: how hiphop changed fashion industry.
research: 
https://www.huckmag.com/article/how-hip-hop-took-over-and-transformed-fashion
https://lifestyle.livemint.com/fashion/trends/hip-hop-luxury-music-fashion-brand-collaborations-kanye-west-111691580122279.html

50 YEARS OF HIP HOP: A FASHION REVOLUTION

Categories
Fashion

“Breaking the Mold: The Importance of Inclusivity in Fashion and Modeling”

This is a journalism article that is about  the inclusivity of body shape and race in fashion/modeling. For many years, the “ideal model look” is slim, tall, and white. But now the standards have changed. I want this article to talk about how it’s better for society to have this inclusivity. 

Categories
Fashion

“Exploring the Characteristics and Uses of Segmentation in Marketing”

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Categories
Fashion

“Breaking the Mold: The Importance of Diversity in Modeling and its Impact on Body Image”

In this article I want to talk about why it’s important to have diverse models( height, body type, race). Years ago, the standards for being a model were tall, skinny, and white. Now, we are seeing more diversity. Bring up body dysmorphia and how it has changed.

Categories
Fashion

“Enhancing Brand Awareness in the DACH Market: A Benchmark Analysis of Valextra and its Competitors”

Benchmark analysis : research what tools other brands/ competitors use (strategies) to enhance their brand awareness in the DACH market ( Austria, Switzerland, Germany for the brand Valextra. Analyze what valextra is currently doing and how they can improve. Competitors are – Hermes, Celine, bottega, ferragamo, Gianfranco Lotti, Bally, etc. I have some of the project done but not fully. Information can help with the part needed to be done. 

Categories
Fashion

Title: “My Identity: A Digital Portrait”

digital film create a portrait of muself and my identity ? How do you identify yourself? How has your identity changed as you’ve moved from one country to another? How? Why? How much of your identity is something you have created yourself, and how much of it was created by others?Who are you, and what defines you?
Here are a few other questions you might like to address:
-How do your public and private self differ? Be specific. (This might be a good time to discuss your online persona vs private self)
-Has your identity changed over time? What things have not changed?
-Which aspects of your identity are connected to how other people have defined you, or things other people assurme about you?

Categories
Fashion

Title: “Fashion’s Love-Hate Relationship with Women: Examining Misogyny in Design through Dior and Alexander McQueen”

how you can tell if designers “loved” or “hated” women throughout their designs (misogynistic views of women through fashion) 
for example: Dior “designs are intricate and elegant “ : loved women 
Chanel – freed women of the corset. loved women 
start essay “if you love her dior her”
For annotated bibliography 
2 sources on 
misogyny in fashion 
1 source on diors fashion like a 
fall release of his designs 
1 source on alexander mcqueen and his fashion sense against women.
alexander mcqueen : dark, nightmare looks based around womenhood 
scandal of pointy shoes representing the mysogonistic view of chinese culture, with the foot binding women practiced. 
wedding dress design: had a straight jacket look with smudged lipstick. 
Dior 
wedding dress design for custom italian bride: modest and elegant. 
said “tradition and modernity come together harmoniously, creating a unique and unforgettable experience for the wearer- and those who admire it.”

Categories
Fashion

Political Pop and its Impact on Society “The Impact of Political Pop Music: From “Say It Loud” to “Fight the Power” to “Dancing in the Street” “The Significance of “Dancing in the Street” in 1960s America”

Question:
Once you’ve read the article about Political Pop music above, write about what type of song(s) you feel identifies with your generation? What did you like about the article? Was there something you learned?
This is your opinion. Do you agree or disagree with the author’s main point about “impactfulness?” What do you think? Give an example and discuss a song that you feel has had an impact on culture. (This could be a negative or a positive impact).
This should be 3-4 paragraphs and clearly show the connection between your ideas and the article.
HOW TO MAKE POLITICAL POP WITHOUT TRYING
“Dancing in the Street” joined Motown’s burgeoning canon of amazing records immediately upon its release. But real-life events seemed to elevate the record from music history into American history.
By
Mark Reynolds
/ 26 August 2013
Because it’s been ten whole minutes since someone last published a screed decrying the state of rap music.
Not long ago, a woman let her teenage son take over the dial on the car radio. Big mistake. Instead of the reliably comfortable R&B of her favorite station, she was immediately subjected to song after song seemingly about nothing but strippers, alcohol, and other accouterments of nightclub life, or at least how it’s been portrayed in rap songs of late. Her son didn’t seem to have a problem with any of this, but it offended her sensibilities on numerous levels.
She wondered if this is what rap music has finally become. Not that she’s a prude in any respect: there’s plenty of rap on her iPod; and in fact, her middle son and a relation on her father’s side are both rappers. But the stream of songs about boodies and sex and whatnot pouring out of her radio reminded her what most people outside rap’s core demographic – and many folks inside it as well – can’t stand about the music.
In those eyes, rap’s all about boodies and sex and whatnot, or drugs and guns and whatnot, or money and brazen consumption and whatnot, or some other ghetto pathology or whatnot. What happened to us? Where oh where, the lament goes on, is the mindset of the Golden Age, that period in the late ’80s and early ’90s when rap was said to be black America’s CNN, not its crime blotter?
Where is the music, they beseech, that rises above all that whatnot, to talk to and about our better angels, or at least imagine solutions and alternatives to the grim realities of life in the ‘hood?
It’s certainly not on the radio, and it hasn’t been on the radio in ages, but that doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist. There are artists like the Coup and Killer Mike, who make speaking truth to power their personal business. There are Lupe Fiasco and Rhymefest, who speak out against the violence gripping the ‘hoods of their native Chicago. There’s the Roots, who devoted their 2011 album undun to exploring the contradictory swirls of defiance and nihilism driving many a young black male life nowadays. And any number of rappers have weighed in on the issues of their hour, in their own way, without pounding their chests for having made a political statement.
Yet as admirable as their work is, finding the one song that speaks to and of this moment, that can galvanize those who aren’t plugged into the alpha and omega of current rap, is a little tricky. Maybe that’s because it’s so much harder to have a mass hit these days, with the former pop monoculture broken off into a ‘skillion’ Facebook pages and Pandora channels. And, as our befuddled mom discovered, commercial black radio playlists aren’t going out of their way to foment social change.
It may also be that making a socially riveting song in any particular moment is harder than it seems. The standard-bearer for political rap is, of course, Public Enemy, and Chuck D still represents that standard after nearly 30 years in the public eye. But for all the band’s politically charged work, no one song sits at the sweet spot of righteous indignation and mass appeal quite like “Fight the Power” (1989):
“Fight the Power” had, and still has, everything. Its hook grabs you from the jump, and an irresistible beat refuses to let you go. Chuck D breaks off some of his most memorable lines ever, and Flavor Flav is at his second-banana best. It captures the energy of its time, the summer of 1989. It is perfectly suited for jump-starting both a political rally and a block party (or a movie that’s a little of both – it accompanied the opening credits of Spike Lee’s Do the Right Thing). And in case anyone missed any of those qualities, its title — a simple declaration anyone can easily remember — is invoked 31 times.
“Fight the Power” represents a curious dynamic of political pop music. We admire the artists who devote themselves to making socially-minded statements. Activists draw sustenance from their catalogues, their music is part of the movement’s spiritual glue. Yet what we remember most are the songs that get to us in an emotional and visceral way, that propel us into action. We thank these artists for fighting the good musical fight, but what we love best are the hits.
The same dynamic plays out when dialing it back a generation. The late ’60s and early ’70s were ripe with politically charged black pop music. Artists like Stevie Wonder, Donny Hathaway, Curtis Mayfield, and Gil Scott-Heron were seen as sages as much as pop stars for their incisive commentaries. Numerous others had their say, but which songs do we remember most about those days? Two, really: James Brown’s “Say It Loud (I’m Black and I’m Proud)” and Marvin Gaye’s “What’s Going On”.
They couldn’t be more different in tone: the former is jaunty self-assertion, the latter is inward reflection turned outward to the whole of society. But they have a lot in common. Both songs grab your attention in the first ten seconds. Both have simple lyrics that don’t require advanced political theory to grasp. Both have rhythms that carry you along effortlessly. And both deploy their titles as call-and-response hooks, irresistibly fun to sing out loud at either a rally or a party.
And yes, they both, perhaps the most impactful songs of two artists with long and well-honored careers, were massive hits.
The one thing those songs and “Fight the Power” have in common is that they were designed to be impactful. Their creators knew how to make great records, and they deployed those skills in the service of speaking in and to the tenors of their respective times. But there’s another type of pop song that becomes a social anthem – the kind that seems to capture its moment without really trying.
Dialing it back a little further, the mid-’60s saw so many issues coming to such a head with so much passion and momentum, music reflecting the ‘a-changin’ times couldn’t help but happen. Even songs that didn’t have a hint of protest in their core got claimed by the zeitgeist.
Enter “Dancing in the Street”.
Martha Reeves and the Vandellas recorded it for Motown in July 1964. They were not the first choice of the song’s writers/producers, Mickey Stevenson, Ivy Jo Hunter and Gaye. The trio thought to pitch the song for recording by Kim Weston (Stevenson’s wife), but needed someone to record a demo for Weston to work from. While they were playing around with the backing track, Reeves was in the building; they asked her to give it a shot.
She did so, twice. Take two became history.
All thoughts of Weston or anyone else recording the song ceased immediately. The Vandellas, Rosalind Ashford, and Betty Kelly were quickly rounded up to add backup oohs and aahs. The backing track was dynamic, even by Motown standards – a trumpet fanfare kicked things off, and a hard backbeat groove (a departure from the Motown norm of the era), punctuated by tambourine slams on the two and four, made sitting futile. The title was mentioned 26 times in the song’s two-plus minutes, ensuring maximum stickiness. The bridge, in which the music shifts to a minor key while Reeves declares “it doesn’t matter what you wear”, is a composition lesson onto itself. And of course, there was Reeves’ soaring, urgent lead vocal.
Berry Gordy, who had the final say on what singles would be released, thought it was the quintessential hook-happy pop record. “Dancing in the Street” hit the streets on 31 July.
It would climb to number two on the pop charts, denied the top rung only by Manfred Mann’s “Do Wah Diddy Diddy”. It spawned cover versions by everyone from the Kinks to the Everly Brothers to Petula Clark. The Mamas and the Papas’ version, more hippie-pop and less groove-heavy, was a hit in 1966. In time, it became something of a rock standard; even an early incarnation of the Carpenters had at it:
(Relax: the sight and sound of Karen Carpenter getting busy on a drum kit emblazoned with her name – not the band’s name, her name – was a revelation on multiple levels for me, too.)
“Dancing in the Street” joined Motown’s burgeoning canon of amazing records immediately upon its release, and in most cases, the news would have ended right there. But real-life events seemed to elevate the record from music history into American history.
Its release followed by just two weeks a major riot in Harlem, which would be the precursor to a string of long, hot summers in urban, black America. Five days after its release, the bubbling conflagration in Vietnam was ratcheted up a notch after a series of incidents in the Gulf of Tonkin.
Elsewhere, young activists were being trained that summer to go down into Mississippi to register blacks to vote; three of them – James Chaney, Michael Schwerner and Andrew Goodman – would be found dead weeks after they turned up missing. The Republican Party nominated arch-conservative Barry Goldwater for president, and the Democrats refused to seat the Mississippi Freedom Party at its convention.
And if all that was not out-of-this-world enough, on the very day “Dancing in the Street” was released, Ranger 7 beamed back pictures from the moon.
In other words, many of the storylines that made the ’60s ‘The Sixties’ were escalating just as “Dancing in the Street” hit the street. And throughout the next few years, especially when it came to racial confrontations, it came to seem that the record was a ubiquitous, integral element of it all. The record (and it was always the original, never any of the covers) was part rallying cry, part anthem – the one song that captured the tension and exhilaration of the times. But further, an urban legend emerged that it did so on purpose.