Style Evolution: How to Create Ageless Personal Style in Your 40s and Beyond
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Average customer review:Product Description
The author of the successful The Pocket Stylist follows up with a book that addresses the specific fashion needs of the over-forty crowd
Even though women in their forties, fifties, sixties, and beyond have never looked better, healthier, or younger, their fashion needs have changed. Unless you have the body and lifestyle of an eighteen-year-old, shopping probably isn’t much fun anymore. The fashion industry seems to have turned its back on women who are forty and older, churning out collections that have nothing to do with careers or sophisticated living. Kendall Farr to the rescue! With Style Evolution, she shows readers how to create a hip, ageless, individual sense of personal style without feeding into the culture’s deep obsession with looking “young.”
Naming names, Farr shares the results of her extensive analysis of designers and brands—from high-end to budget-conscious—best-suited for women over forty. She also delivers ideas that suit every budget, from high-end lines to good buys. Packed with more than one hundred full-color illustrations, Style Evolution guides readers through discovering their own style profiles, with six basic shapes designed to match realistic body types. Farr also puts the spotlight on trends, illustrating the ageless approach to wearing what’s “new.” An ageless shopping checklist and thorough details on accessories (from bags to shoes to eyewear) complete the book.
With hundreds of tips that bestow grace and class, Farr leads the way for the woman who is ready for her wardrobe to catch up with the rest of her life.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #4959 in Books
- Published on: 2009-04-07
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 208 pages
Features
- ISBN13: 9781592404216
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
- Click here to view our Condition Guide and Shipping Prices
Editorial Reviews
Review
“Smart, behind-the-scenes advice from one of the best in the business. Take The Pocket Stylist with you on your next shopping spree!”
—Emme, host, Fashion Emergency
“Bossy, brilliant, and never condescending, Kendall Farr is the shopaholic’s best friend...and enabler.”
—Simon Doonan, author of Wacky Chicks
“Can’t afford a stylist? Then grab this book before you go shopping....It’s like talking to a best friend with great taste.”
—Cindy Weber Cleary, fashion director, InStyle magazine
About the Author
A top New York stylist, Kendall Farr has dressed many celebrities, including Halle Berry, Uma Thurman, Angelina Jolie, Joan Allen, Andie MacDowell, Julianne Moore, Sigourney Weaver, and Diane Sawyer. She has also served as a design consultant for a number of fashion labels. Farr is the author of The Pocket Stylist (Gotham Books, 2004) and has written columns for Glamour and O, The Oprah Magazine.
Customer Reviews
Yay! What TO wear -- for grown-ups.
I've been waiting for months for this update to Farr's The Pocket Stylist - got it yesterday, and it's just what I was hoping it would be. Farr explains why it's so hard to figure out what to wear based on my old habits and what I see in magazines/stores, and she suggests specific solutions, down to the store and product line. Her advice resonates with me (even my husband could recognize me among the "types": I'm the one with stacks of merino v-necks and matching suits but no spark in my wardrobe). I especially appreciate how specific Farr is about what works/doesn't for various body shapes and the examples of how to wear various looks. This book should help any would-be fashionista... I just wish I could take Farr shopping with me!
Real Help From a Real Person
I think Kendall Farr is the style writer we all should listen to. I know she has helped me improve my look and style which has increased my confidence leaving me close to nauseatingly perfect (as if!). Her advice is real, she writes like a real person who gains weight, sometimes gets it wrong and lives in the same world I do (as opposed to some elongated body fantasy realm where we all move a seamstress into our homes to have access to alterations all the time....are you listening Nina Garcia?).
That said I do have a comment to make about this book. I am the target audience for this book's advice but I think it is geared to the kind of dressing needed by working women. Many of us live a more casual life and many of these outfits would not do for everyday running around. I know I would be way overdressed at the market or bookstore in most of these outfits. Her only clear casual advice is collared polo shirts and bermuda shorts (what year is it?).
My other caveat (made with deep respect for Ms Farr) I live in South Florida. It is quite casual here, even for working women plus it is HOT. 8 months of the year it is hot, 6 months of the year it is really hot. Of the 10 outfits pictured in the book 6 featured jackets. It would be genuine torture to wear these tailored jackets in the Florida (or south or southwest) summer heat.
I think, even at my age, I can dress with a little more casual style and look good. Being this age does not mean the occasional well fitted long tank top with a cropped cardigan over it & cropped or capri pants are the exclusive territory of younger women, done with restraint, of course.
But still, Kendall Farr knows her stuff and I am listening.
This is a later addition to this review. How can you not like a book that uses the word *gobsmacked* to express her surprise. Indeed!
I wanted to like it more
Ms. Farr started off well by acknowledging that we over-40 women have a tough time finding decent clothes nowadays. But frankly I think she's writing for fashion professionals who live in New York City and have tons of money to spend -- not your average slob like me. I read fashion mags and books all the time, have two cousins who are in the fashion industry, and I STILL hadn't heard of half the designers and brands that Farr recommends. They would probably be very hard, if not impossible, to find in NE Massachusetts, where I live -- and I probably couldn't afford them anyway! Farr's standards are SO high that you'd have to spend your entire life shopping, shell out a fortune on top-of-the-line designer stuff, and then take everything for professional tailoring, in order to pass muster with her. It kind of depressed me. ("Geez, do I really look that bad?") And finally, the book has NO photos and not nearly enough drawings. SHOW me what you mean! Instead it's very wordy and loaded with fashion-pro jargon (such as talking about a fashion label's "bridge" line, "masstige", or that Talbots is good for "anonymous wardrobing" -- huh?). And she loves the word "skews" -- as in, "This clothing manufacturer skews young." It also needed more careful proofreading. Although in general Farr writes well, I came across quite a few awkwardly written or completely incomprehensible sentences, where clearly there were words or punctuation missing. The lack of index, glossary or table of contents was also a big drawback. On the plus side, though, she does give you tons of info on useful websites -- though I'm nervous about buying online from an unfamiliar label.




