When I was single, slim, and had some discretionary income to buy some new wardrobe pieces, I went shopping in downtown Minneapolis, where I worked. After shopping at Dayton's, Donaldson's, and a string of chain specialty stores, I went on a whim to Nieman Marcus.
I found three suits to try on, two of them in pink. None of which I bought, because my Midwestern frugalness prevented me from justifying paying more for one suit than I spent in a whole year on clothing...
I remember that all three suits fit well, felt great, and screamed quality. The one that really stands out in my memory was a $2,500 suit I thought was ugly on the hangar, but was recommended by the sales person. When I put that suit on me, I looked spectacular, even though I hadn't liked it on the hangar. The sales person told me that the particular designer was known for knowing how to make a woman look good.
It was a lesson to me -- the cut of a garment makes all the difference. But the bigger lesson: Expensive clothing looks better.
It is no wonder that Sarah Palin is looking good these days. Expensive clothing makes all the difference, and can be addictive. I don't blame her a bit for wanting to wear them once she tries them on.
However, I do wag my finger at the RNC. They could have easily done their shopping at Macys' and saved a lot of money. And, perhaps then, when the election is over, Sarah Palin would have clothing she could purchase for her own wardrobe as she continues as governor. I doubt her clothing allowance, or salary, will allow her to purchase the expensive clothing and accessories she is costumed in right now.
Because, let's face it -- they aren't really going to give those clothes to charity. One does not give $2,500 designer suits to charity.
They are much better off selling them on eBay. Well, maybe there's a consignment store in Dallas willing to take them off their hands.
I'm actually surprised that some enterprising young designer didn't step forward and donate suits to get her name in the press.
ReplyDeleteOn the other hand, I think fashion designers have more sense than that.