Ladies fashion garment. College fashion online.
Ladies Fashion Garment
- make out of components (often in an improvising manner); “She fashioned a tent out of a sheet and a few sticks”
- manner: how something is done or how it happens; “her dignified manner”; “his rapid manner of talking”; “their nomadic mode of existence”; “in the characteristic New York style”; “a lonely way of life”; “in an abrasive fashion”
- characteristic or habitual practice
- Make into a particular or the required form
- Use materials to make into
fashion
- (garmented) appareled: dressed or clothed especially in fine attire; often used in combination; “the elegantly attired gentleman”; “neatly dressed workers”; “monks garbed in hooded robes”; “went about oddly garmented”; “professors robed in crimson”; “tuxedo-attired gentlemen”; “crimson-robed
- an article of clothing; “garments of the finest silk”
- dress: provide with clothes or put clothes on; “Parents must feed and dress their child”
- An item of clothing
garment
- (lady) a woman of the peerage in Britain
- A women’s public toilet
- (lady) a polite name for any woman; “a nice lady at the library helped me”
- (lady) dame: a woman of refinement; “a chauffeur opened the door of the limousine for the grand lady”
- A woman (used as a polite or old-fashioned form of reference)
- An informal, often brusque, form of address to a woman
ladies
ladies fashion garment – Late Victorian
NYC – Garment District: The Garment Worker by Judith Weller (1984)
On the 7th Avenue side, are two tributes to the ares history as the Fashion District, or Garment District. The first, the The Garment Worker (1984), is a life sized bronze sculpture by Judith Weller, depciting an immigrant man at a sewing machine. Weller came to the United States as an exchange student from Tel Aviv in 1957, and in 1978 submitted a 24-inch sculpture of her tailor father to the exhibition of the National Sculpture Society. Someone from the Ladies Garment Workers Union liked it so much they sponsored a larger version.
The second is the Fashion Center Business Improvement Kiosk, designed by Pentagram Architectural Services, which was awarded the 1995 Art Commission Award for Public Architecture.
Adjacent to the sculpture is a giant needle threading a button. Located on the NE corner of 39th Street and 7th Avenue, this giant needle and button were built in 1995 as part of the Fashion Center Information Kiosk. The Claes Oldenburg – inspired sculpture has a 31 foot long needle and the world largest button.
Weird New York: Your Travel Guide to New York’s Local Legends and Best Kept Secrets
By Chris Gethard
NYC – Garment District: The Garment Worker by Judith Weller (1984)
On the 7th Avenue side, are two tributes to the ares history as the Fashion District, or Garment District. The first, the The Garment Worker (1984), is a life sized bronze sculpture by Judith Weller, depciting an immigrant man at a sewing machine. Weller came to the United States as an exchange student from Tel Aviv in 1957, and in 1978 submitted a 24-inch sculpture of her tailor father to the exhibition of the National Sculpture Society. Someone from the Ladies Garment Workers Union liked it so much they sponsored a larger version.
The second is the Fashion Center Business Improvement Kiosk, designed by Pentagram Architectural Services, which was awarded the 1995 Art Commission Award for Public Architecture.
Adjacent to the sculpture is a giant needle threading a button. Located on the NE corner of 39th Street and 7th Avenue, this giant needle and button were built in 1995 as part of the Fashion Center Information Kiosk. The Claes Oldenburg – inspired sculpture has a 31 foot long needle and the world largest button.
Weird New York: Your Travel Guide to New York’s Local Legends and Best Kept Secrets
By Chris Gethard
ladies fashion garment
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