Style
Style is more character than clothes. It's your inner self made visible.
Appearance does count, you can no longer afford to be without style.
Distinguish fashion and style. Fashion is in the clothes. Style is in the wearer.
Style has been out of style for decades. America has gone on a collective shopping spree. In place of style we honor merchandise. Clothes. Style doesn't demand a credit card. It prospers on courage and creativity.
Style makes a statement about ourselves in clothes. Through clothes, we reinvent ourselves every time we get dressed. It’s our second skin.
You can't have style until you have articulated a self. Style requires security—feeling at home in your own body, physically and mentally. Self-knowledge must be updated as you grow and evolve.
People want to be themselves and to be seen as themselves. Style has to reflect the real self, your character and personality, anything less looks like a costume.
It's possible to have lots of clothes and not an ounce of style. As is possible to have very few clothes and bustin’ out in style.
Style is optimism made visible. Style presumes that you are a person of interest, the world is a place of interest, life is worth making the effort for.
Style is psychologically subversive. It always demonstrates that appearances do count. Deep down we suspect this, in as much we notice others in how they look.
Style announces to the world that the wearer has assumed command of herself.
Style is a memorable mark of identity in a world that would have us stripped of our identity.
There was a time when style was a luxury. Today it is a necessity.
Psychology Today

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