| Author |
Quotes |
| Alexander Pope | Be not the first by whom the new are tried, Nor yet the last to lay the old aside. |
| Alexander Pope | Be not the first by whom the new are tried, Nor yet the last to lay the old aside. |
| Bruce Oldfield | Fashion is more usually a gentle progression of revisited ideas. |
| Charles Churchill | Fashion--a word which knaves and fools may use, Their knavery and folly to excuse. |
| Colley Cibber | As good be out of the World as out of the Fashion. |
| Edith Head | A designer is only as good as the star who wears her clothes. |
| George Bernard Shaw | The novelties of one generation are only the resuscitated fashions of the generation before last. |
| George Bernard Shaw | Fashion is a form of ugliness so intolerable that we have to alter it every six months. |
| George Bernard Shaw | Fashions, after all, are only induced epidemics. |
| Helena Rubinstein | All the American women had purple noses and gray lips and their faces were chalk white from terrible powder. I recognized that the United States could be my life's work. |
| Manolo Blahnik | About half my designs are controlled fantasy, 15 percent are total madness and the rest are bread-and-butter designs. |
| Monica Baldwin | A wisp of gossamer, about the size and substance of a spider's web. |
| Oscar Wilde | A fashion is merely a form of ugliness so unbearable that we are compelled to alter it every six months. |
| Robert Burton | He is only fanastical that is not in fashion. |
| Samuel Butler | And as the French we conquer'd once, Now give us laws for pantaloons, The length of breeches and the gathers Port-cannons, periwigs, and feathers. |
| Sophia Loren | A woman's dress should be like a barbed- wire fence: serving its purpose without obstructing the view. |
| Yves Saint Laurent | A good model can advance fashion by ten years. |
| William Shakespeare | The courtier's, soldier's, scholar's, eye, tongue, sword, Th' expectancy and rose of the fair state, The glass of fashion and the mould of form, Th' observed of all observers, quite, quite down! |
| William Shakespeare | You, sir, I entertain for one of my hundred, only I do not like the fashion of your garments. |
| William Shakespeare | Death my lord, Their clothes are after such a pagan cut to 't That sure th' have worn out Christendom. |
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