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-> Fashion and Beauty
amother
OP
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Yesterday at 3:33 pm
This is a spin off post of the husband wanting OP to dress more chassisish. A poster said her husband prefers that she dress more classy than trendy. What are examples of this? Can’t you dress classy and trendy?
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amother
Birch
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Yesterday at 3:37 pm
I think for classy she means- blouses, pleated skirts, flat loafers, soft pink manicures on shirt nails, pear earrings
For trendy think leather skirts, clunky loafers and boots, longer nails, heavy gold jewelry
I think a person can be both but most people gravitate toward one type
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soproud
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Yesterday at 3:47 pm
Personally, I consider classy to be equivalent to timeless. I like a knit sweater top, a-line black skirt, (footless) tights, boots with a low heel, simple makeup, and gold jewelry.
To some extent, yes, the top, skirt and boots will be in style, but I don’t consider myself trendy. I rewear from season to season as my size hasn’t fluctuated much and I buy good pieces to last.
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amother
Slateblue
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Yesterday at 4:34 pm
Classy is not the opposite of trendy; classIC is. Classy implies wealth and aristocracy, classIC means timeless, never on the cutting edge but never totally out, either. Trendy just means currently very much in fashion but implies a certain innovation. A style can be trendy and classy but seldom trendy and classic. If it's a classic that's been revived and is very much in style right now, it might be described as trendING but not trendY.
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amother
Kiwi
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Yesterday at 4:43 pm
It’s not classy vs trendy
It’s CLASSIC. Meaning timeless. Meaning always in style.
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amother
Opal
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Yesterday at 4:46 pm
amother Slateblue wrote: | Classy is not the opposite of trendy; classIC is. Classy implies wealth and aristocracy, classIC means timeless, never on the cutting edge but never totally out, either. Trendy just means currently very much in fashion but implies a certain innovation. A style can be trendy and classy but seldom trendy and classic. If it's a classic that's been revived and is very much in style right now, it might be described as trendING but not trendY. |
You did a great job explaining
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amother
Geranium
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Yesterday at 5:24 pm
amother Birch wrote: | I think for classy she means- blouses, pleated skirts, flat loafers, soft pink manicures on shirt nails, pear earrings
For trendy think leather skirts, clunky loafers and boots, longer nails, heavy gold jewelry
I think a person can be both but most people gravitate toward one type |
Yes that’s what I would say. More blouses and pleated black skirts as opposed to oversized sweater and colorful midi with Chucky shoes. But you can also be trendy and classy
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