
"Quiet luxury hinted at fatigue of the loud, anything-goes culture of the previous decade. Many women were simply tired of being told sex sells' or that empowerment means ever-shrinking hemlines. Quality over quantity, tradition, subtlety these were back in vogue. The passage could have appeared in an old book about the perfect woman, but it actually comes from an April article titled How Fashion Predicted A Trump Triumph in the magazine Evie, a fashion and lifestyle publication that embraces and espouses conservative values."
"The influence of Evie in the United States has led even The New York Times to dedicate an extensive profile to its founder, Brittany Martinez. The magazine is not the only one to have explored the links between fashion and reactionary shifts. A quick search on the subject pulls up dozens of articles in publications that are hardly MAGA. If anyone says I didn't know our country was going down a conservative path,"
Quiet luxury emerged as a reaction against the loud, anything-goes fashion of the previous decade, with many women rejecting the idea that 'sex sells' and shrinking hemlines as empowerment. Quality over quantity, tradition, and subtlety regained popularity. Evie, a fashion and lifestyle magazine that embraces conservative values, gained cultural influence and prompted mainstream media attention. Online culture showed complementary trends such as wellness, trad wife content, and old-money aesthetics. Sociologist Diana Crane argues that fashion reflects norms and cultural values and has the power to influence social attitudes toward body image and beauty standards.
Read at english.elpais.com
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