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Designer Clothing News Archive03-Jan-2007
Having Trouble Finding Clothing that Fits? (Hope Star) (ARA) - Ever gone into a department store and found a suit you just loved, then been disappointed after trying it on and realizing it just wasn't designed for you? Larger men face that problem everyday, but fortunately it's easy to solve.
Wal-Mart's December same-store sales rise the most since August (International Herald Tribune) Sales growth had slowed in recent months, hurt by store renovations and a push to add fashionable clothing at the expense of lower-cost items.
Women's business wear plays to its strongest suit (Los Angeles Times) A recent breakfast at the New York Athletic Club celebrating the charitable work of Dress for Success provided the perfect opportunity to glimpse a variety of women in their ideal professional attire. The guests that weekday morning represented a range of industries: media, entertainment, insurance and banking. Almost everyone was wearing a blazer. Some wore traditional pantsuits and others wore ...
Americans venture into alpaca fleece (El Paso Times) The fashion world may seem a long way from the barn. But an increasing number of people are leaving behind their high-stress jobs and turning to alpaca farming as a low-key yet lucrative venture resulting in designer goods that boast the softness of cashmere and the warmth of wool.
SoHo Bounces Back as a Fashion Center (New York Times) Many retailers left their stores after the attack on the World Trade Center, but now fashion is venturing back though perhaps in somewhat less high-end forms.
Expecting the best in fashion (Haaretz Daily) If in the not-so-distant past, it was difficult to find maternity clothing in Israel, now there is an abundance of styles to choose from. From Israeli chains to local and foreign designers, maternity wear is now readily available in a vast array of designs and trends.
Pixnit was here (Boston Globe) At 2 a.m. on a Monday in November, this stretch of Massachusetts Avenue, from Plympton Street to Harvard Square, is lit up like a vintage pinball machine. So it's testament to Pixnit's experience that even in the neon glow cast by nearby storefronts she can vanish, almost completely, into the smallest of shadows.
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