Friday, 5 June 2015

Thursday, 4 June 2015

sources for my blog

http://www.rehabs.com/explore/dying-to-be-barbie/#.VXBpbs9VhBc http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-2918318/I-want-100-plastic-Human-Ken-doll-risks-blindness-veins-forehead-removed.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valeria_Lukyanova https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7JxfgId3XTs http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_fashion_design

Evaluation

The research that i conducted was helpful because i had gained more knowledge of what i was writing and it help me with my facts and statistics.researching other published products had given me inspiration of my layout and they style of writing for my target audience. The feedback that i had received from my peers and my teacher  helped me on what I needed to change for it. The changes i made were adding more information on both of my posts and making it clearer for the audience to understand. drafting and redrafting my work helped me make improvements and make my work clearer.

my blog

http://keeleybarnaby.wix.com/fashionandpassion

video of my pitch

draft of post 2 adaptation

fashion has been around for centuries. it has evolved from long skirts and corsets in the Victorian era to short skirts and crop tops of the modern day, has the fashion industry been doing in circles and re-using fashion from the past?

The fashion from the 50's in the UK for woman was patterned skirts or dresses used for casual wear as well as for special events. these dresses and skirts were worn below the knee and they flowed. the long skirt was original introduced in the 19th century and re-introduced in the 21st century. in 2014 the long skirt was re-introduced and re-adjusted, by changing the patter,style and taking a few inches from the bottom.

The 60s fashion was all about short dresses and bold colours. these dresses have been adapted still using bright colours but plain, also the style of the dress has been adapted to cutting the sleeves short or having the dress without sleeves.

The 70s fashion was similar to the 60s but they were wider and loose, the colours had been  dulled down and the patterns became more noticeable. nowadays companies such as ASOS use this style of fashion to create an inspired look such as a 70s inspired swing dress or jump suit with wide legs.

The 80s fashion was acid wash jeans and shell suit tracksuits, many people nowadays still wear acid wash jeans that can be worn all year around and the tracksuits have been changed the material is still used but the pattern has changed. bomber jackets are the modern version of these tracksuits.

The 90s to us in the 21st century would seem less weird but the colour was still as bright as the 80s and still not up to modern day fashion standard, could you imagine dressing like cher from clueless or one of the spice girls would be quite weird wouldn't it. but it has been used as inspiration plaid shirts and skirts have been brought back into style.

 modern day fashion is like a cake and all the fashion from the past are ingredient used to make up the fashion of today. we may not notice is but the world of fashion is being used over and over again but changed for a modern twist .

Sunday, 31 May 2015

draft of post 1

Since the dawn of time men and woman were meant to look a certain way but now a days that image is the enemy to many bodily insecure people all over the world and why? Because of how the media portray models in catalogues or on runways.
But where does this idea that being slim is perfect come from? The answer to that question is that it is hypodermic, meaning that from a young age we are all injected with this idea that being thin is better than being fat. These ideas have come from things such Barbie dolls, films/ TV programs, music, and books.

Barbie is the “perfect” blonde doll that every girl grew up having always wanting to be just like her. Barbie was created March 9th 1959 and was originally a brunette as well as a blonde but further down the factory line the brunette Barbie didn’t fit the doll’s house and was changed to blonde like the other dolls. Mattel Inc. the company that created Barbie has been the subject of numerous controversies and lawsuits, often involving parody of the doll and her lifestyle. It has also created a syndrome called "Barbie Syndrome”. This term has been used to depict the desire to have a physical appearance and lifestyle representative of the Barbie doll. It is most often associated with pre-teenage and adolescent females but is applicable to any age group. A person with Barbie syndrome attempts to emulate the doll's physical appearance, even though the doll has unattainable body proportions.

Valeria lukyanova aged 29 is a Moldovan-Ukrainian model and is the real life Barbie. Her figure and Barbie’s are identical, Valeria claims to only ever have had a breast enlargement and no other surgery. She say the way she keeps her Barbie like figure is “an all liquid diet and mountain climbing” but what is Barbie without her Ken, Justin Jedlica aged 34 is a Slovak American businessperson and model. He is known for undergoing over 100 surgical procedures to look like the Ken doll. Valeria and Justin are only two people of the many people that are affected by Barbie syndrome.  

Dying to be Barbie (http://www.rehabs.com/explore/dying-to-be-barbie/#.VT9J9CH4-Uk) is a website that talks about how many girls from the ages of five up try to be thin by making diet lists to follow. It also shows the number of preteens affected by this and how the number of teens with eating disorders is rising. Also 42% of children aged 6-10 wish they were thinner, the future generations risks of health problems is rising.

Have you ever noticed that in many books and films such as Snow White, Sleeping Beauty, Cinderella and the little mermaid are all thin and pretty? And they all get a happy ending, films like this brainwash young girls into thinking and being thin, pretty and depending will give you a happily ever. Because children’s minds are vulnerable at a young age this message stays in the mind causing them to want to be like a Disney princess. Even though frozen’s message to young girls shows then that you don’t fall in love with the first man you see but both main female characters are still thin and pretty. The same with TV programmes for children 12 and up, Shake it Up was a Disney channel program about two teenagers on a dance show. All twelve cast members not including extras were all slim and none of them seemed to be overweight, this is the same with Wizards of Waverly place the main character played by Selena Gomez was slim, beautiful and got any boy she wanted but her best friend played by Jennifer Stone was the opposite, she wasn’t slim and she played a socially awkward girl that people made fun of, this can show young girls that if you don’t look a certain way it can affect how you are treated in a public place. This can affects the self-esteem of the audience. This also shows the audience that producers look for a certain type of person so the cast will be smaller.

Books: everybody reads them or has had a story book read to them as a child. This is the starting point in life where the mind is vulnerable to everything from words children hear to actions that they see. This is where the idea that looking like characters in story books sinks into their minds and as they grow older the same stories told in different ways makes it worse or they give children false hope such as Disney books about princesses finding a prince and living happily ever after. That doesn’t happen in the real world even though we like to pretend it does, it also teaches young girls that they need a man to be happy. There is a book called Eleanor and Park which is about a full-figured fifteen year old girl with big red hair, and a half-Korean fifteen year old boy who meet on a school bus on Eleanor's first day at her new school, and through a connection of comic books and mix tapes of 80's rock music, they create a spark that ignites a love story. Though this story is a fictional alternative it still makes an impossible love story. The book makes the main character different from your average petite lost for love character it still isn’t a real life story line. If I was to sit next to the same person on the train everyday (even though in London you never see the same person on a train twice) and read over their shoulder I’d get a few rude words thrown my way, as great as it is having a sense of hope that one day we can have a happy ending it almost all the time never ends well. It may be a refreshing to have an alternative love story but it still give us a false hope at love, I mean yeah it’s great that Eleanor it different but we won’t always meet out prince charming and live happily ever after. Just like Romeo and Juliet love will end or something will tear it apart.

In conclusion the media and publishing sectors of society have brainwashed us from a young age to believe that being thin and pretty get you everything you want and a happy ending in life when in reality it’s a big fat lie and causes us to make ourselves insecure about the we look and try to change us through hypodermic techniques.