A Quote by Melanie Fiona

The true essence of fashion is being able to reinvent yourself with what you have. — © Melanie Fiona
The true essence of fashion is being able to reinvent yourself with what you have.
This is the essence of the American Dream - in the land of opportunity, if you have a good idea, create a solid plan, and work hard, you should be able to reinvent yourself and get ahead.
I'm a multidimensional person and that's the freedom of fashion: that you're able to reinvent yourself through how you dress and how you cut your hair or whatever.
Longevity in this business is about being able to reinvent yourself or invent the future.
If you don't think of yourself as being someone who needs to go back to school, needs to reinvent yourself, then you're not able to do the thing you're passionate about. That's to create and invent and innovate.
Fashion changes. Everyone in fashion changes. I think it's important to change it up and reinvent yourself every now and again.
I think the key to the longevity is being able to reinvent yourself and to adopt and incorporate different things into your character.
It takes courage to reinvent joys, to reinvent opportunities, to reinvent dreams, to reinvent connections, to reinvent hopes that you have set aside.
I wanted to write a book about what it's like to be 50 and trying to reinvent yourself - that struggle. There are all these books and inspirational speakers talking about being a lifelong learner, and it's so great to reinvent yourself, the brand of you. And I wanted to say, you know, it's not like that. It's actually really painful.
The fashion world is so interesting because it's always changing, but if you know yourself really well, despite of all the changes in the fashion trends, you know how to stay true to yourself.
Considering yourself a feminist doesn't make you one. Being an empathic human who can see both sides of a coin is feminism's true essence.
Knowing that the gospel is true is the essence of a testimony. Consistently being true to the gospel is the essence of conversion.
What's so great about this industry is that you have to be able to reinvent yourself every day.
What kind of guilt comes from being true to yourself but not to others?. As we have seen, being true to yourself may at times intrinsically and necessarily be in conflict with being true to others.
My dad taught me to never be pigeonholed; to really allow yourself to reinvent characters as they reinvent you; to be bold and to be willing to play seemingly unlikeable people.
Personal style is about taking a risk, trying something unexpected, and having fun with fashion, but always being true to yourself.
When you're 16 and when you're 17, you're kind of walking that fine line of being an adult and legally being able to look out for yourself, while being able to look out for yourself and being treated as a child.
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