A Quote by Athiya Shetty

I don't want to make a statement when it comes to fashion. — © Athiya Shetty
I don't want to make a statement when it comes to fashion.
Although a life-long fashion dropout, I have absorbed enough by reading Harper's Bazaar while waiting at the dentist's to have grasped that the purpose of fashion is to make A Statement. My own modest Statement, discerned by true cognoscenti, is, "Woman Who Wears Clothes So She Won't Be Naked.
I never try to make a major fashion statement but I want to be the friend in a woman's closet. I make dresses that women get laid in.
You want me to sneak up on an angel and rip out its pinfeathers, so you can make a fashion statement?
I am a fashion graduate, and I try to make a fashion statement which defines my individuality, as clothes are not just what you wear, but they also communicate.
One doesn't want fashion to look ridiculous, silly, or out of step with the times - but you do want designers that make you think, that make you look at fashion differently. That's how fashion changes. If it doesn't change, it's not looking forward. And that's important to me.
Fashion is a way to separate yourself - to make a statement about who you are and that you're different.
Killing animals to make a fashion statement = a sickening + cold-blooded vanity.
Fashion is about owning whatever you're wearing, regardless of if it's a high fashion statement or not.
To me, what is important in the theater is that we don't want to make a conclusion. We don't want to make a statement, don't want to say what something is. We want to ask, 'What is it?'
Even when you don't want, your clothes always speak for you. So fashion is definitely an important statement.
It's my job to look presentable but that doesn't mean I have to make a fashion statement everytime I walk out the house.
Fashion is an industry to make money. It plays into human psychology. We want to belong, we want to be loved. I'm not trying to demonize the fashion industry - I love the fashion industry - but style is about taking the control out of the industry's hand and having you decide what works for you.
I was the bohemian in my family, the "this is my favorite shoe and I don't care if it has tape around it" kind of person. The tape could become a fashion statement. Or a political statement.
How we dress is, as far as I can tell, the only inescapably public choice that we have. People don't need to know what you eat, people don't need to know who you have sex with. But there's no escaping what you wear and the fact that you've chosen it. Even if you insist that you don't care about fashion, that's your statement. It's really one realm of life where you are forced to make your own statement.
People think I'm trying to make a fashion statement because I never wear a bra. It's really that I'm a tomboy at heart.
One fashion faux pas that men make is wearing ill-fitted clothing with too many prints and statement pieces.
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