Top 1200 Fashion And Beauty Quotes & Sayings

Explore popular Fashion And Beauty quotes.
Last updated on November 15, 2024.
Fashion hasn't changed enough yet. There's too much a stereotype of beauty.
Beauty saves. Beauty heals. Beauty motivates. Beauty unites. Beauty returns us to our origins, and here lies the ultimate act of saving, of healing, of overcoming dualism.
The great attraction of fashion is that it diverted attention from the insoluble problems of beauty and provided an easy way -- which money could buy... to a simply stated, easily reproduced ideal of beauty, however temporary that ideal.
You are born with this love; fashion and beauty are a part of who I am. — © Francois Nars
You are born with this love; fashion and beauty are a part of who I am.
Beauty is like a new class system. The world is so obsessed with beauty; it has been for the last 2,000 years. It's the one stock that's never gone down, the one stock that's never gone out of fashion.
Fashion has two purposes: comfort and love. Beauty comes when fashion succeeds.
If fashion is for everyone, is it fashion? The answer goes far beyond the collections and relates to the speed of fast fashion. There is no longer a time gap between when a small segment of fashion-conscious people pick up a trend and when it is all over the sidewalks.
Although people often equate them, glamour is not the same as beauty, stylishness, luxury, celebrity, or sex appeal. It is not limited to fashion or film; nor is it intrinsically feminine. It is not a collection of aesthetic markers - a style, as fashion and design use the word.
My favorite thing about beauty and fashion in all seasons is that it's a way to reinvent ourselves.
Most women are dissatisfied with their appearance - it's the stuff that fuels the beauty and fashion industries.
I feel like fashion is becoming more inclusive, partly because the industry is finally getting that beauty exists in so many ways, and partly because thanks to Instagram, girls can create their own images, or remix images they're seeing in magazines and fashion shows, in ways that weren't possible before.
I have a lot to say about fashion - not just about fashion, but beauty, art.
In the South America of the forties and fifties, everyone was into beauty and glamour and fashion.
With fashion, my mother was an icon, but she never lived it in the sense that she was never obsessed with fashion. When I was a young girl, my sister wasn't doing fashion, so I started fashion thinking, 'I'm going to do something that they haven't done yet.' That was my silly scheme at the time.
I really like to be able to have variety and to try different things - that's the beauty of fashion. — © Leighton Meester
I really like to be able to have variety and to try different things - that's the beauty of fashion.
Beauty and fashion is not pain!
Part of what I have to represent is an alternative to this perverted fashion industry concept of what beauty is.
Stepping outside of my personal bubble, or that of fashion or beauty, is pretty important to me.
Fashion is a reflection of our times. Fashion can tell you everything that's going on in the world with a strong fashion image.
If I have done anything, it is to make ugly appealing. In fact, most of my work is concerned with destroying—or at least deconstructing—conventional ideas of beauty, of the generic appeal of the beautiful, glamorous, bourgeois woman. Fashion fosters clichés of beauty, but I want to tear them apart.
I always loved aesthetics. Not particularly fashion, but an idea of beauty.
I want to achieve anti-fashion through fashion. That's why I'm always heading in my own direction, in parallel to fashion.
Beauty too often sacrifices to fashion. The spirit of fashion is not the beautiful, but the wilful; not the graceful, but the fantastic; not the superior in the abstract, but the superior in the worst of all concretes,-the vulgar.
Goldie Hawn has always been a beauty and fashion icon to me. She radiates joy and infuses beauty into everything through her smile and spirit. She is a great example of what real beauty means to me.
Insofar as one can talk of a Vionnet school, it comes mostly from my having been an enemy of fashion. There is something superficial and volatile about the seasonal and elusive whims of fashion which offends my sense of beauty.
I tend to like to make my statements more in fashion than in beauty, because what I normally respond to is when someone looks really effortless and deconstructed, beauty-wise, and they're fashion is really grand. Someone like Kate Moss is a great example.
As ridiculous as I think the fashion and beauty industry is, I'm wildly obsessed with it.
Beauty comes when fashion succeeds
I think the problem is that fashion has become too fashionable. For years, fashion wasn't fashionable. Today fashion is so fashionable that it's almost embarrassing to say you're part of fashion. All the parodies of it. All the dreadful magazines. That has destroyed it as well, because everybody thinks fashion is attainable.
I've always enjoyed fashion and dressing up for things, whether it's high fashion or play fashion.
Happily there exists more than one kind of beauty. There is the beauty of infancy, the beauty of youth, the beauty of maturity, and, believe me, ladies and gentlemen, the beauty of age.
Once physical beauty is gone there must be something more to take its place . . . 'To thine ownself be true' is a rule to live by in Hollywood, especially. There's a strong undercurrent of conformity in the movie colony that one must fight all the time. I think this especially true when it comes to fashion, beauty and grooming.
In the mid-nineties, diversity in the fashion/beauty business was hard to come by.
I'm very interested in makeup and fashion and beauty.
I hate fashion. Or the word fashion, which sounds colorful, extravagant, expensive and gorgeous. “I never wanted to walk the main street of fashion. I have been walking the sidewalks of fashion from the beginning, so I’m a bit dark.
I have always loved fashion and feel it's another way to express my creativity. It's art and beauty combined.
I'm not here to be on display. And my body is not for public consumption. I will not be reduced to an object, or a pair of legs to sell shoes. I'm a soul, a mind, a servant of God. My worth is defined by the beauty of my soul, my heart, my moral character. So I won't worship your beauty standards, and I don't submit to your fashion sense. My submission is to something higher.
Fashion is not easy. You have to change your eye to look for beauty all the time.
Fashion and beauty is a reflection of what's on the inside. And if you're genuine, they match up. The core of who you are will be the same. — © Michelle Carter
Fashion and beauty is a reflection of what's on the inside. And if you're genuine, they match up. The core of who you are will be the same.
Fashion fosters cliches of beauty, but I want to tear them apart.
Beauty and fashion are a form of expression and it doesn't have to come with a price tag. It depends on what suits each person.
Fashion is not something that exists in dresses only. Fashion is in the sky, in the street, fashion has to do with ideas, the way we live, what is happening.
Summer is always a great time to have fun with beauty and fashion and celebrate our changing looks.
Beauty comes from within, but it's up to us to use fashion and beauty to express who we are on the inside.
Fashion is not a real element of beauty in external objects; and to persons who possess a good endowment of Form, Constructiveness and Ideality, intrinsic elegance is much more pleasing and permanently agreeable, than forms of less merit, recommended merely by being new. Hence there is a beauty which never palls, and there are objects over which fashion exercises no control.
The way our big cities change sucks. The beauty of cities was that they were edgy, sometimes even a little dangerous. Artists, poets, and activists could come and unify and create different kinds of scenes. Not just fashion scenes, scenes that were politically active. Big cities are getting so high-end oriented, business corporate fashion, fashion not in an artistic sense but in a corporate sense. For me that edgy beauty of cities is lost, wherever you go.
The things I'm passionate about are beauty and fashion.
Beauty is the lowest common denominator: I don't care what they say - every girl, every woman, wants to feel pretty and empowered and beautiful, within their own definition of beautiful. I love fashion, I love shopping, but I love beauty more because I love the science of it.
I made most of my living doing beauty, because I was never really the fashion person.
We desire to possess a beauty that is worth pursuing, worth fighting for, a beauty that is core to who we truly are. We want beauty that can be seen; beauty that can be felt; beauty that affects others; a beauty all our own to unveil.
Fashion should be genderless; how people perceive the idea of beauty can vary from one to another. — © Alessandro Michele
Fashion should be genderless; how people perceive the idea of beauty can vary from one to another.
I like people's attitudes more than fashion or beauty or whatever it is.
I love fashion, beauty, glamour. It's the mark of civilisation.
Beauty too often sacrifices to fashion.
You can't get away from fashion. The whole beauty thing is everywhere. It's just really weird.
Fashion is made up of paradoxes. There was a key moment in fashion. When the Japanese first arrived - Comme des Garçons, Yohji Yamamoto, and all - I have to humbly admit that I didn't understand the importance of it at all. It was Jean-Jacques Picart who explained it to me. They had a huge influence in that they showed that aestheticism could be different from prettiness, that there was beauty and that beauty was beyond pretty.
Fashion is everywhere. Everywhere! Flowers are fashion to me, the sky is fashion, my garden is fashion. My darling, the Sistine Chapel is fashion.
You can't be a major company today without paying attention to celebrities. They are the leaders in beauty and fashion.
For fashion and beauty, I don't think you have to overthink it.
Moving fashion used to be one of my chief goals. It's not necessarily any more. Fashion needs to change when life changes. You only need to move fashion forward when there's a reason to move fashion forward.
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