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A discovery engine for meaningful knowledge, fueled by cross-disciplinary curiosity.
A Brain Pickings project edited by Maria Popova in partnership with Noodle.
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Fashionista first appeared on page 100 of my 1993 book Thing of Beauty: The Tragedy of Supermodel Gia. I created it because as I was writing about the fashion industry—and young model Gia Carangi’s immersion in it—there was no simple way to refer to all the people at a sitting for a magazine photo or print ad. I got tired of listing photographers, fashion editors, art directors, hairstylists, makeup artists, all their assistants, and models as the small army of people who descended on the scene. This was also the group that, according to one top fashion illustrator I interviewed, had collectively become “the famous non-famous people” at Studio 54.

Since I was re-reading a lot of the newspapers and magazines from the period of Gia’s supernova career in the late ’70s and early ’80s, and remembering a lot of coverage of Sandanistas (and a lot of “–ista” jokes among my mag writer friends), I just decided to try it.
The word only appeared four times in the book, and it did not immediately catch on. In fact, the first mention of it, in a May 2, 1993 review in the New York Times Sunday Book Review, was a cranky one: The author, Carol Kramer, a magazine fashion editor herself, dissed my “vivid (if slightly unfair) indictment of what Mr. Fried … who tends toward hyperbole, calls the beauty-industrial complex.”
And then she bitch-slapped me for “fashionista,” saying “he makes up corny labels, too.”
[…]
Twenty years later, the word is everywhere—most recently and annoyingly in a bombardment of T.J. Maxx commercials. It sits happily in its place it the OED, which defines it as “a person employed in the creation or promotion of high fashion, such as a designer, photographer, model, fashion writer, etc. Also: a devotee of the fashion industry; a wearer of high-fashion clothing.”

Writer Stephen Fried, my former mentor, apologizes for inventing the word ‘fashionista’ 20 years ago. Also see how other now-common words got their start. 

Fashionista first appeared on page 100 of my 1993 book Thing of Beauty: The Tragedy of Supermodel Gia. I created it because as I was writing about the fashion industry—and young model Gia Carangi’s immersion in it—there was no simple way to refer to all the people at a sitting for a magazine photo or print ad. I got tired of listing photographers, fashion editors, art directors, hairstylists, makeup artists, all their assistants, and models as the small army of people who descended on the scene. This was also the group that, according to one top fashion illustrator I interviewed, had collectively become “the famous non-famous people” at Studio 54.

Since I was re-reading a lot of the newspapers and magazines from the period of Gia’s supernova career in the late ’70s and early ’80s, and remembering a lot of coverage of Sandanistas (and a lot of “–ista” jokes among my mag writer friends), I just decided to try it.

The word only appeared four times in the book, and it did not immediately catch on. In fact, the first mention of it, in a May 2, 1993 review in the New York Times Sunday Book Review, was a cranky one: The author, Carol Kramer, a magazine fashion editor herself, dissed my “vivid (if slightly unfair) indictment of what Mr. Fried … who tends toward hyperbole, calls the beauty-industrial complex.”

And then she bitch-slapped me for “fashionista,” saying “he makes up corny labels, too.”

[…]

Twenty years later, the word is everywhere—most recently and annoyingly in a bombardment of T.J. Maxx commercials. It sits happily in its place it the OED, which defines it as “a person employed in the creation or promotion of high fashion, such as a designer, photographer, model, fashion writer, etc. Also: a devotee of the fashion industry; a wearer of high-fashion clothing.”

Writer Stephen Fried, my former mentor, apologizes for inventing the word ‘fashionista’ 20 years ago. Also see how other now-common words got their start

Shoe forms of iconic Hollywood actresses at Ferragamo. 
(Thanks, Eric)

Shoe forms of iconic Hollywood actresses at Ferragamo. 

(Thanks, Eric)

For generations they have signified femininity and glamour - but a pair of high heels was once an essential accessory for men.
A men’s 17th-century Persian shoe, covered in shagreen - horse-hide with pressed mustard seeds, from a fascinating story on why men stopped wearing high heels. 
For generations they have signified femininity and glamour - but a pair of high heels was once an essential accessory for men.

A men’s 17th-century Persian shoe, covered in shagreen - horse-hide with pressed mustard seeds, from a fascinating story on why men stopped wearing high heels

The original “Gangnam Style” – two middle-aged Korean gentlemen walk down the street in 1904 traditional dress. Their hats, known as ekate, are made out of horsehair.

The original “Gangnam Style” – two middle-aged Korean gentlemen walk down the street in 1904 traditional dress. Their hats, known as ekate, are made out of horsehair.

In 1965, Salvador Dalí designed a bizarre line of women’s swimwear – certainly fails on his resolution to be “against revolution” and “for tradition.”

Also not well-known: His 1969 Alice in Wonderland illustrations.

( Dangerous Minds)

The Discerning Gentleman’s Guide to Suit Tailoring. To really amp the style literacy, verse yourself in Harris Tweed, “the greatest cloth of all.”

The Discerning Gentleman’s Guide to Suit Tailoring. To really amp the style literacy, verse yourself in Harris Tweed, “the greatest cloth of all.”

Playful pop-culture trivia of the finest kind: A music video that costume-changes its way through music history.

( The Dish)

130 years of Vogue, visualized in color by British artist Arthur Buxton. Reminiscent of Wattenberg + Viegas’s Luscious project.

130 years of Voguevisualized in color by British artist Arthur Buxton. Reminiscent of Wattenberg + Viegas’s Luscious project.

Advanced Style – photographer Ari Seth Cohen captures the confidence, beauty, and elegance of the fashionable over-60 set.

An introduction by the inimitable Maira Kalman offers the ultimate cherry on top:

Albert Einstein sailed his boat wearing a ratty sweatshirt. Frumpy pants. His hair disheveled. He always looked incredible. Who else? Louise Bourgeois. Duke Ellington. Isak Dinesen. Picasso. Gandhi. Isadora Duncan. My neighbor Beth Levine, the shoe designer. She walked out of the elevator, at 92 years old in a pencil skirt and heels, into our lobby, the chicest person in town. So what is it about style. What makes someone beautiful, no matter what the age? No matter the wealth?

What makes you turn your head as you walk down the street and think, ‘There goes a great looking person’? It is easier to define when you are looking at someone young. But if someone is in their 70s or 80s or 90s, or 100s(!), it is more elusive. More challenging.

Ari Seth Cohen has done something very important. He has looked at our grand population and singled out the people that, in a way, are most invisible and have the most to offer.