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The End of Fashion: How Marketing Changed the Clothing Business Forever

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A solid, hard-hitting, and uncompromising journalistic look at the fashion industry.

The time when "fashion" was defined by French designers whose clothes could be afforded only by elite has ended. Now designers take their cues from mainstream consumers and creativity is channeled more into mass-marketing clothes than into designing them. Indeed, one need look no further than the Gap to see proof of this. In The End of Fashion, Wall Street Journal, reporter Teri Agins astutely explores this seminal change, laying bare all aspects of the fashion industry from manufacturing, retailing, anmd licensing to image making and financing. Here as well are fascinating insider vignettes that show Donna Karan fighting with financiers,the rivalry between Ralph Lauren and Tommy Hilfiger, and the commitment to haute conture that sent Isaac Mizrahi's business spiraling.

ISBN-13: 9780060958206

Media Type: Paperback

Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers

Publication Date: 08-22-2000

Pages: 352

Product Dimensions: 5.31(w) x 8.00(h) x 0.79(d)

Teri Agins has covered the fashion business at The Wall Street Journal for ten years and lives in New York City. This is her first book.

Read an Excerpt

PARIS: The Beginning and the End of Fashion

We will know twenty years from now what fashion is in Paris. Right now, there is general confusion.
--Karl Lagerfeld, April 24, 1998<