While many may run a blog just for fun, for those trying to communicate a purpose, it can be serious business. “The Digital Approach” was about me trying to show how fashion can be embodied not only in print, but in the digital media, especially in the genre of the blog. Every blog has strengths and weaknesses, and mine is no exception.
Tumblr was my chosen platform for this particular blog: it allowed for the easy postings of images, text, and videos, and for a professional, yet personal look. One of the strengths of the blog include the easy navigation. The layout includes an actual space for the posts and a separate “sidebar”. This sidebar includes a disclaimer and a quote dealing with fashion (by Yves Saint Laurent). It also includes a hyperlink to the “about” section, as well as hyperlinks for posts and responses. Along with the tags (which can be seen by “hovering” over a post), these allow for an easier navigation of the blog that could save a reader time in scrolling thought all the posts. Other links can be seen in the upper section of the blog. These include a “home” link that takes the reader to the main page (in case they are on a particular post); an “ask” link that leads a reader to an ask box where they can leave any questions or short comments; an “archive” link that takes the person to the archive page, which displays small visuals of each post; a “submit” link where readers can submit photos, longer responses, videos, quotes, or links that I can choose to publish or not to publish to the blog, creating interaction; and a “theme” link that serves as credit to the maker of the layout (it is frowned upon to remove them). Another strength is the use of a color scheme for the theme. Red, white, and black/grays serve as the primary colors in the blog and I tried to show them not only in the layout and the sidebar image, but also in the posts themselves. I feel that this adds cohesion and is very visually appealing. I also find the different uses of media to be a strength of the blog. I incorporated “spotlights”, images, text, and video in order to add variety and keep the blog more interesting. The “spotlights” are my reviews on particular fashion blogs that show how one can be successful in blogging (for example, thesartorialist.com). I also used outside sources by quoting articles written by other people interested in fashion and presenting my views on these opinions. A weakness could be seen in the fact that, by using tumblr (and with tumblr’s new response length restrictions), I had to “reblog” responses to my peers, which appear on my blog and can be distracting from the purpose of my writing. I tried solving this problem by the creation of links to “responses” and “posts.”
I love my blog. While it only has 8 followers, my posts have gotten “likes” and few “reblogs” (where people make my post appear on their page). I feel that my blog presents a different view on fashion blogging, actually considering what it is that sets it apart from printed journalism. I talk about how blogging allows for a faster transmission of news to a fashion-savvy audience. I learned how to communicate with this particular audience better by creating this blog. I had to think about what I wrote and how my readers would perceive this information. My thoughts had to be articulated so that they could be easily understood by people outside of the English major. I had to include visuals, which is different from what I learned in high school through writing essays. Creating this blog in a digital media permitted me to use videos and links to communicate the idea that fashion blogging is a great innovation and opens doors for many writers.
I think this blog warrants a B+ or A-. I didn’t include as many sources as I could for writing about fashion in the online world, but I feel that my blog presents a clear point in showing how beneficial the blogosphere has been for a quick and clear communication of the importance and beauty of fashion. It takes a positive view on technology and how easily-accessible resources are due to this progression. After all, if fashion wasn’t online as well as in magazines, this blog wouldn’t truly have any purpose.
P.S.: To anyone who has taken anything new and intriguing from this blog, I thank you for your time and hope I could help open your eyes to the wonderful world of fashion blogging.
This particular video, titled “The Business of Fashion Blogging”, presents some key points on not only how to blog in fashion, but how to blog in general:
It’s important to stay true to yourself when blogging. After all, that’s what people want to see. The unique voice is what sets writers, in general, apart from others. There has been a debate between writing online and actual physical writing since word processors became popular. This debate has made even the most intelligent reconsider what writing truly is.
Literacy today is in the midst of a tectonic change. Even inside of school, never before have writing and composing generated such diversity of definition.
Yancey makes a great point in her writings on composition. We are, as a society, expanding past pen and paper, and we must learn that there is more to writing than the mechanical process of putting ink on said paper. Maybe it’s time we get over the fact that the internet’s many communication platforms are garnering so much attention and focus on how to excel in this new genre of blogging.
If the video shows anything, it’s that businesses are ready to listen to what bloggers have to say, and that those who blog can now make a career out of doing so. It’s a whole new world we now live in and by adapting to the changes that it presents, we can succeed.
The poll may provide beneficial knowledge on how today’s society uses different mediums to get their fashion news and show which medium, print or web-enable, is preferred.
Edit: out of the 12 votes, 10 say that they find their fashion news and advice on blogs (that’s 83%!), while 8 % (one vote each) find their fashion news in magazines and websites of magazines. I guess it goes to show just how important the blog has become to the fashion-savvy youth culture of today.
If you would ask the creators of Polyvore what it is, you’d probably get a similar response to the one found in the “About” section of the site.
What is Polyvore?
With 10 million monthly unique visitors, Polyvore is the web’s largest community of tastemakers where people can discover their style and set trends around the world. Trendseekers and shoppers alike come to Polyvore to discover the hottest brands, products, trends and looks.
I’ve known about it’s existence for a while now, but I’ve only recently signed up for the site. To say that it’s incredible is an understatement. The site presents fashion-savvy “Digital Natives” a way to create sets of clothes and accessories (everything to the smallest detail) of things that they would like to wear/see/imagine. The possibilities are endless. Polyvore has before partnered with fashion giant Yves Saint Laurent and supermodel Kate Moss- it’s not lacking credibility when it comes to offering a wide variety of clothes.
In a sense, the site is a fashion magazine that each user can create. It offers templates similar to the pages of magazines and allows for a user to use “clippings” of clothing items, jewelry, perfumes, make-up, shoes, and accessories to create an ideal look, much like one may see in a fashion mag. This unprecedented interaction between the clothes and every-day person is what sets Polyvore apart from high-style boasting magazines. While most probably couldn’t afford the more high-end brands that Polyvore offers for use, the options of choosing a price range and a particular designer (or style of clothing) allows for the user to get more specific ideas than they would from a magazine.
Polyvore allows for experimentation and offers anyone the opportunity to create looks, progressing the basic ideas of fashion magazines.
(The photos presented are sets that I’ve made on my personal Polyvore account).
(Source: polyvore.com)
Spotlight: The Sartorialist.
Type in “sartorial” into google. The result it will first yield will be one that defines the term as ‘of or relating to tailoring, clothes, or style of dress: “sartorial elegance”.’
That’s exactly what this particular blog, titled “The Sartorialist”, represents- style. It was started in 2005 by photographer Scott Schuman and has been gaining popularity ever since. Armed with a camera, the founder wanted to create “a two-way dialogue about the world of fashion and its relationship to daily life.” (as stated in the “biography” section of the site). His work has been featured in literary giants GQ and Vogue (both Italian and Paris). In a sense, this particular writer bridges the two worlds of fashion in print and online.
But what’s so special about this particular blog? It’s not haute couture and photoshop that regulate the “pages”- it’s street style- what we, the people on the street, out and about, wear. Of course, he captures models of duty and gets passes to fashion events, but there’s simply something being offered here that there isn’t enough of in the glam mags- there’s true personality. Schuman isn’t selling a brand, he’s selling an idea- that you can find style anywhere. The recognition that he receives is just another perk of working hard online and in the real world.
It is the striking difference from the magazines that separates people like Scott Schuman from so many other writers in the fashion world- he doesn’t go out of his way to sell fashion, he shows style.
Schuman’s blog can be found by clicking the source link.
(Source: thesartorialist.com)
When one starts a blog, as I’ve stated previously, they usually don’t expect much. It’s strange to think, then, that some get just the opposite. As in printed work, advertisements are becoming prevalent in fashion blogs. Notice those pesky “Shop here for the latest trends!” ads on the sidebars of many popular blogs? It’s because brands and stores have come to realize the potential that this attention-drawing business of blogging receives. I have stumbled upon an article called “Fashion Blogging Grows Up: Why Advertisers Want a Piece of the Action” (which can be found here ). It’s an interesting read to say the least.
Karen Robinovitz, co-founder of the digital management agency Digital Brand Architects (which was co-founded with Kendra Bracken-Ferguson, formally of Ralph Lauren) states that “There’s no difference to Hollywood in that someone might be worth a lot of money because they know how to open a movie. If [a blogger] can convert 14,000 people in a week for you, that’s worth something. We believe that if someone is providing a service you would normally pay someone for — a model, photographer, stylist, designer, etc. — then the blogger should be compensated appropriately.”
She’s not the only one to hold that opinion. A source quoted off the record adds to the argument, stating that
“There’s a relationship between editorial and advertising, and there are ways of building relationships with a site through advertising.”
This is one of the ways that the blog is different from the magazine. While, in a magazine, it is the publication that profits from the advertisement, in blogging, it’s the actual blogger- the writer, who profits. Writing, and especially writing in blogging, is a talent that is becoming recognized by the people with the money. Advertisers are turning more and more to the internet- the bloggosphere- to hook new clients. And why shouldn’t they take notice? Millions of people on the internet “tune in” to these bloggers and take their word for all that they can. It’s the bloggers who start the trends and their readers follow them. Why not take advantage of that?
Reading this brought me back to reading So Yesterday by Scott Westerfeld when I was younger. In the novel, there was a kind of hierarchy: an Innovator creates the trends, they’re the ones who tie their shoe laces in a certain way first; the Trendsetter passes on the trend (and get paid to do so at times- the characters in the novel did by sitting in a focus group for commercials); then come the normal people- the ones who consume the trends after they hit the store fronts. The bloggers today make me think of these characters- the Trendsetters. They may not set the trends, but they do well to copy them and popularize them on the web. So why shouldn’t they get paid?
Much like the fashion magazine, the blog reaches many and provides a perfect platform for brands to make themselves seen. If magazines get paid for it, the fashion blogs should as well. After all, in this day of communication and technological advancement, it is the fashion blogger that many turn to.
This is tumblr- the newest platform for bloggers to express and impress. When one signs up for this site, they usually don’t expect to hit it “big” (and those who do don’t seem to get far). Tumblr has become a kind of home for hipsters, writers, sports fans, and (of course) fashion bloggers. During the last NY Fashion Week, tumblr sent twenty four of their own to the events. They got passes to the shows and an opportunity to network with fashion’s elite. It was a way to connect the world of the internet with the “real” world, a way to form a kind of union between tumblr and the fashion world in a way that seemed unheard of before. I remember, I used to track a girl on this site that was one of the 24 bloggers selected. Before NYFW, she was popular on the site, but she was struggling in her life outside of the internet. Then this opportunity presented itself and she posted all about her experiences, from the events to the clothes to the people and so on. Now, she runs a successful blog (including sponsors) and seems to be doing rather well in her actual life. It’s strange, one wouldn’t think that the internet could open doors, but it does. Making connections online and through blogging can allow for connections outside of the internet. While there is the issue of safety on sites like these, there are also a plethora of open doors for those who try (or are simply lucky enough to have exquisite taste and make it on someone’s radar). This is the internet age, and it’s time that we, society, accepted it for all that it can give us.
(Source: thedigitalapproach)
About this blog and its owner:
As a freshman University student in a Writing and Editing class, I am taking my first step in becoming a fashion journalist. Now, fashion journalism is primarily believed to be one of the written genre- a type of journalism primarily situated in magazines. With the expansion of the internet and technology, fashion is crossing into the online world, especially through the use of blogs. This is mine. My goal with this little blog is to introduce my view of fashion; display what catches my eye; and potentially open the eyes of my readers to the wonderful world that becomes apparent when looking at the influence of mind-blowing designers, such as Alexander McQueen, and how they changed how we perceive not only fashion, but style, today. Fashion is everywhere- from the showroom, to the store, to the catwalk, to the street and beyond. This is my view of it.
-Kristina