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Style: sharp, contemporary thinker focused on visual culture and identity.
Style: fresh and dynamic, focused on emerging trends and digital culture.
Style: investigative and narrative-driven, blending cultural critique with personal insight.
Style: modern and critical, focusing on the social aspects of fashion and art.
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When Fashion Becomes a Tool for Resistance
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echoes of time
5 Designers Who Think Like Artists
What Your Palette Says About You
How Style Becomes Your Voice
How We Wear History
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Fashion as Art
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Color as a Tool
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More Than Clothes
We often talk about fashion as a trend, a fleeting phenomenon. But what if we looked at it as a form of language—a way to express ourselves without speaking?
Color is an intrinsic part of human experience, shaping how we interpret the world and ourselves within it. In fashion, color becomes a subtle yet powerful tool of communication, influencing both self-perception and the way we are perceived by others.
Fashion used to be vertical. Designers designed. Magazines approved. Consumers consumed. But that model cracked the moment the internet gave everyone a voice—and a camera.
How Digital Culture Is Rewriting Fashion
Beyond the Runway
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Fashion can be functional, playful, trendy. But sometimes, it becomes a statement. Not about beauty, not about how “it fits,” but about how it feels.
Each generation strives for uniqueness, yet when we look into our wardrobes, we often find ourselves wearing silhouettes once owned by our parents, grandparents, or movie icons from past decades. This isn’t a coincidence.
How Algerian Youth Are Redefining Streetwear
Streetwear—once considered a Western import born from New York’s skate parks and Tokyo’s neon corners—has found a new language in North Africa. But in Algeria, it doesn’t simply arrive; it mutates. It absorbs, adapts, and resists.
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The body has become a fashion product—something to style, sell, and sculpt. But who decides what’s desirable? And who profits from this desire?
During the French Revolution, the “sans-culottes” rejected aristocratic breeches and adopted trousers as a political statement. Similarly, in 20th-century America, the Black Panthers’ leather jackets and berets weren’t just style choices; they were uniforms of Black pride, resistance, and radical presence.
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