scholarly journals Research on Chinese Influence on Western Fashion Based on Fashion Magazine from 1970 to 1979

2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 11
Author(s):  
Yuru Ma ◽  
Xiangyang Bian

The decade of 1970s was a peak of Chinese influence on Western fashion. This article was intended to reveal the categories and design characteristics of Chinese-influenced clothing with classified statistical method based on collecting a total of 295 sets of designs presented during 1970-1979 from four fashion magazines. The underlying reasons for the popularity of Chinese-influenced clothing on western fashion were also analyzed and summarized. The research results showed that the Chinese-influenced clothing included three categories: outdoor daily clothes, indoor home wears and evening dresses, presenting neutral, romantic and luxury respectively. The popularity of Chinese-influenced clothing was mainly a result of some national and international factors, including anti-fashion aesthetics in the western society, the normalization of Sino-American relation and the development of Hong Kong trade.

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
V.M. Alakin ◽  
G.S. Nikitin

Приведены результаты исследований экспериментального картофелекопателя с ротационной сепарирующей поверхностью. Особое внимание уделяется обоснованию конструктивных параметров и определению рабочих характеристик нового сепарирующего устройства. На основе анализа результатов экспериментальных исследований определены наиболее оптимальные режимы работы экспериментального картофелекопателя.Research results of an experimental potato digger with rotational separating web are published in this article. Special attention is paid to definition of design characteristics and performance data of the new separating device. Admissible operating modes are defined on the basis of the analysis of results of pilot studies of the experimental potato digger.


2010 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-29
Author(s):  
Sam K. Hui ◽  
◽  
Alvin Cheung ◽  
Jimmy Pang ◽  
◽  
...  

We have developed a statistical method for the valuation of residential properties using a hierarchical Bayesian approach, which takes into consideration the unique structure of the Hong Kong property market. Our model is calibrated on a dataset that covers all residential real estate transactions in ten major Hong Kong residential complexes from February 2008 to February 2009. Although parsimonious, our model outperforms other valuation methods that are based on average price-per-square- feet or expert assessments. By providing our model-based valuations online without charge, we hope to improve transparency in the Hong Kong housing market, thus enabling consumers to make better investment decisions.


Author(s):  
Shiyou Yang ◽  
S.L. Ho ◽  
Yingying Yao ◽  
Lei Liu ◽  
Lie Wu

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to explore the potential challenges in developing numerical methodologies for inverse problems and optimizations. Design/methodology/approach – Summarizing previous research results mainly contributed by two research groups of Zhejiang University and Hong Kong Polytechnic University. Findings – Computational intelligence plays an essential role in studying inverse problems and optimizations. Originality/value – An up-to-date review on the current status of numerical methodologies, especially computational intelligences, for inverse problems and optimizations contributed by Chinese researchers.


2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (27) ◽  
pp. 64
Author(s):  
Thaisa Cristina Bueno ◽  
Yanna Duarte Arraes

Este estudo tem por objetivo identificar os textos mais comuns produzidos no jornalismo de moda nacional. Deste modo buscou-se levantar os tipos mais usuais, tendo como foco a classificação de Joffily (1991) e Flores (2018). O recorte de pesquisa elegeu duas revistas de importante circulação no país: Vogue e Harper´s Bazaar. Ao todo foram analisados 517 textos publicados em seis meses nos dois veículos. Conclusivamente o estudo mostra que o texto de jornalismo de moda, ainda que abarque marcas textuais exclusivas, tem focado na produção noticiosa, explorando pouco o viés opinativo e, investido em produções que se encaixam no jornalismo de serviço e no perfil. Journalistic Texts in Fashion Magazines: A study of usual publications in Vogue and Harper ́s BazaarAbstractThis study aims to identify the most common texts produced in national fashion journalism. We sought to identify the most usual types, focusing on the Joffily (1991) and Flores (2018) classification. The research selected two magazines of major circulation in the country: Vogue and Harper ́s Bazaar. In all, 517 texts published during six months in both media outlets were analyzed. In conclusion, the study shows that the fashion journalism text, despite exclusive discourse marks, has focused on news production, exploring little opinion and investing in productions that fit the service and profile journalism. Keywords: Journalistic genres; fashion journalism; fashion magazine.


2016 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 120-135
Author(s):  
Dana-Nicoleta Lascu ◽  
Marta Marcheva ◽  
Kendree Thieringer

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to investigate the online fashion sponsorship, shedding light on the content and appeal of online fashion magazine advertising. Heeding the call of researchers for cross-cultural advertising investigations, this research offers a comparison of online fashion magazine advertisements in France and the USA in terms of needs appeals, emotional appeals, and sex appeals. Design/methodology/approach – Elle and Vogue were identified as prominent fashion magazines with an online presence in France and the USA After pretesting to identify appeals that appeared most frequently in online fashion advertisements, a content analysis of website advertisements was conducted with the full population of online advertisements in the US and French Elle and Vogue at the time of the study. Findings – The research found that need appeals conform primarily to national character and that emotional advertising is more preponderant in French advertisements, whereas sexual advertising is more preponderant in US advertisements. For needs appeals, the need for affiliation was higher for US advertisements, whereas online French magazines advertisements were more likely to use guidance and safety appeals. The need for prominence, attention, and autonomy were higher for online US magazine advertisements, whereas French advertisements were more likely to use escape and aggression appeals. Originality/value – As fashion magazines develop an online presence that is well coordinated with their print fashion pages, it is important to understand how advertising sponsors on the magazines’ webpages target consumers. This study is a first step in providing cross-cultural comparative insights into advertising appeals in relation to national character and preferences.


2014 ◽  
Vol 945-949 ◽  
pp. 3340-3343
Author(s):  
Yan Fang Liu ◽  
Ting Yu ◽  
Yong Jiu Yuan

The article takes the CNKI full-text database as the data source and analyse the retrieved documents with statistical method. The research results showed that the research of virtual community is a hot topic in our country at present, the number of research documents still showed a trend of increasing year by year; the research of virtual community is involving multiple disciplines, but researcher with stable cooperation relationship is few, and there also lacks of research teams of virtual community, most of the research are not deep enough. According to the analysis results, the article puts forward that researchers should pay more attention to the study of virtual community application and the building of the evaluation system.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lauren Watson

Introduction: The digitization of women’s fashion magazines is an on-going development in recent years. The rise of fashion bloggers and online-only fashion publications on the internet have forced major print publications to develop and expand their companion websites. Over the last decade, sales of print fashion magazines have steadily declined, while costs of printing have steadily risen. As a result, major publications have looked towards the cheaper alternative of developing websites in order to deliver digital content to their readers and further establish a strong presence online. By utilizing such digital platforms, women’s fashion publications have found a way to reach large audiences with generally free and easily accessible content that is produced with a high frequency. With a secondary medium of digital fashion magazines complimenting their original print publications, discrepancies in content between print and digital platforms emerge. Several factors play a part in the discrepancy between print and digital content. One of the primary factors, suggested by researcher Ytre-Anne is the way in which older audiences prefer physical print editions of magazines over newer digital alternatives (Ytre-Anne 2011). This factor may cause print fashion magazines to specifically cater towards an older demographic in order to maintain or increase sales. Furthermore, as the development of the internet and the rise of fashion blogs in the late 1990s into the new millennium worked to target younger audiences who were familiar with technological advancements, it may be argued that a younger readership may be the target of online publications (Magee 2012, Turner 2009). Similarly, other studies have shown that younger audiences prefer fashion products to be featured on, or endorsed by celebrities, pointing towards the idea that a younger audience prefers content with celebrity news or features. Other factors that might indicate discrepancies in content are product price ranges, with lower priced ready-to-wear fashion featured more frequently online. Alongside such differences in content, several technical features can also cause differences in content. As the internet allows for instant updates on the latest news and fashion, magazine websites are now outputting content on a daily basis as opposed to their print counterparts who typically produce editions on a monthly basis. This phenomenon can ultimately lead to differences in content between the print and online versions of a fashion magazine. My Major Research Project will seek to identify key developments and patterns that might derive from discrepancies in content between women’s fashion magazines’ print editions and their corresponding websites. Using a primarily qualitative approach, my research study will include a content analysis of four North American women’s fashion magazines and a series of interviews with corresponding fashion editors. The content analysis will look for several characteristics present in each fashion magazine’s print edition and its corresponding website, including product pricing, demographic target, as well as celebrity references. The content analysis will further work to compare data between each fashion magazine’s print edition and its corresponding website. In order to further my evidence I will conduct interviews with fashion magazine editors to gain a professional perspective on the subject. The interview portion of this research study will work to provide professional opinion on the subject of content and demographic discrepancies between print fashion magazines and their corresponding websites. Overall, I am interested in the topic of content discrepancies between published print fashion magazines versus their corresponding websites. My aim is not to argue for or against one medium, but instead to look at the implications that might result from content discrepancies between the two mediums. Finally, I hypothesize two primary results: (1) that there are discrepancy patterns in content between a fashion magazine’s print edition and its website, and (2) these discrepancies suggest a difference in demographics, in which online formats target a younger audience and print versions aim to appeal to an older demographic. These findings will work to illuminate key patterns in the fashion publishing industry in terms of content and demographic discrepancies found between online and print versions. As little research has been conducted in this area, it will act as a starting point for future research to explore these patterns more in depth. As digital fashion journalism is still a topic under development, this study will contribute towards a larger goal of conceptualizing digital journalism more broadly. Similarly, the results of this study aim to provide insight and analysis into the current trends in fashion journalism, further assisting fashion editors and journalists in the industry. The overall goal of my research project will seek to establish that within the field of fashion publication in the year 2015, age is an important factor in patterns of print versus online fashion journalism.


2019 ◽  
pp. 74-79
Author(s):  
A. V. Kuzmenko

Objective: to determine the types of localization, frequency of occurrence and quantity of the intrapelvic anastomoses of the inferior gluteal artery. Material and methods. 117 cadavers from men (at 35-78 years of age) and 31 cadavers from women (at 32 to 90 years of age) who had died of accidental causes not related to pelvic pathology were used as the material for the research. The vascular injection method, preparation method, and statistical method were used to achieve the aim of the research. Results. It has been found out that most often in men and women the intrapelvic anastomoses of the inferior gluteal artery develop in the middle one-third of the intrapelvic part of this artery, significantly more rarely - in its proximal one-third, and very rarely - in its distal one-third. The research has found no linear correlation between the sizes of the diameters of the inferior gluteal artery and the sizes of the diameters of its intrapelvic anastomoses. Conclusion. The performed research has demonstrated that in men and women the intrapelvic anastomoses of the inferior gluteal artery have the definite regularity of origination.


2016 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 154 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tommy Tse

Fashion plays a significant role in the global creative industries and in urban social space, and has recently evolved from a peripheral topic to a valued interdisciplinary subject coined as “fashion-ology,” investigating how fashion as an intangible and changeable meaning is systematically produced by and amongst different cultural intermediaries, and how it is cyclically diffused in society. As an exercise in understanding the conflictual notions of fashion in operation under the rubric of production inside a local fashion media organization, this study emphasizes how text and image in fashion representation can be multifarious and are intertwined with the commercial and capitalist logic of the fashion industry. This research supplements related ethnographic studies and discerns how industry practitioners actually negotiate fashion meanings and are constantly torn between encoding desirable (luxury) fashionability, while at the same time anticipating and serving different advertisers’ interests.Fieldwork data portray partly conflicting, partly consistent notions of fashion among different workers in the fashion media. The focus was: What shapes the collective interpretation and production of fashionability within a media organizational setting? The responses demonstrate the effect of advertising on fashion editorial pages and its major role in shaping fashionability, in addition to the contradictory rules guiding how media people strive to present a preferred face of luxury fashion in the magazine and why such an attempt was unsuccessful in this case.


2019 ◽  
pp. 19-49
Author(s):  
Lynn S. Neal

This chapter examines the religion-oriented articles published by fashion magazines from the mid-1940s through the 1960s. These articles provide a valuable starting point for understanding how fashion conceptualized Christianity during this time. By fusing elements of liberal Protestantism and Catholic art and ritual in their construction of Christianity, fashion magazine articles fostered religious individualism, spiritual tourism, and the decontextualization of Christian elements. After establishing the religious context of the mid-twentieth century, this chapter examines three prominent themes—Christmas, church, and pilgrimage—through which this fashionable vision of Christianity was conveyed. Fashion magazines taught readers how to cultivate a stylish form of Christianity that aligned the sophistication of modernity with the enchantment of religion.


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