2012年11月15日星期四

It's what contemporary life looks like


Buttery, work-appropriate leather pants, equestrian jackets, quilting and gilded baroque embellishments are also on the sophisticated shopping list, says Brandon Holley, editor-in-chief of http://www.toppromdressescheap.com.It's not just fashion experiencing this adult-quake, says Tom Morton, North American chief strategy officer for forecasting and advertising company Havas Worldwide. He prepared a report that dealt with the "pushback against youth obsession.""People are going where the money is," Morton says. A side effect of the economic downturn is that teenagers and 20-somethings aren't entering the economy as early as their counterparts did a generation ago, he explains.

Meanwhile, famous faces aren't leaving the stage as they age: Morton points to the popularity of Paul McCartney at the Olympics and Bruce Springsteen on the presidential campaign trail. Even James Bond is 50 — and actor Daniel Craig, who portrays him, is 44.Just passing a newsstand in http://www.toppromdressescheap.com/la-femme-c-5.html, Morton noted the celebrities on the covers of the glossy magazines — Jessica Alba, Eva Longoria and David Beckham, all in their 30s, and "everyone else was even older."And saying something is "modern" or "contemporary" is no longer shorthand for "young."

"You look at the Apple store. It's what contemporary life looks like, but there's not an upper age limit on http://www.toppromdressescheap.com/jovani-c-4.html. ... There was an assumption of people growing out of things, but that's not happening," Morton says.Adam Glassman, creative director of O, The Oprah Magazine, says more people are comfortable in their own skin. Women aren't necessarily using fashion and beauty as a tool to look younger, he observes. Instead, they're using those tools to be the best 40-, 50- or 60-year-old they can be.

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