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Friday, May 22, 2020
लॉकडाउन का असर, जब राणा दग्गुबाती की सगाई में सामंथा अक्किनेनी को रिपीट करने पड़ गए अपने कपड़े May 22, 2020 at 05:32PM
How Often Do You Really Need To Change Your Pajamas Or Sweats?
Getting out of bed is hard most of the time, let alone during a global pandemic when we’re all required to stay indoors. It feels effortless to just lie around in your pajamas or sweats all day, and honestly I won’t apologize for doing that. Still, there are some questions we should know the answers to, like, say: How often do I need to switch the underwear I’m wearing? And how often do I have to change into a different set of silk pajamas that I spent way too much on? Luckily, we’ve got the answers that you definitely don’t want but probably need to hear.
There actually is data on how often it’s advised that you change out of one set of clothes — especially during the pandemic when it’s important to keep up hygiene of all kinds — and when they become too dirty to stay in. According to the American Cleaning Institute (ACI), how often you need to change out of and wash your clothes all depends on what you’re doing while wearing them, the fabric type, as well as the weather. There are also rules about basic hygiene, even in isolation when we’re not seeing anyone besides roommates or partners we live with.
The ACI says that it’s best to wash your pajamas after three or four wears, but if you shower before bed, you may get a few more wears out of them before washing them. This applies to sweats, too. Of course, there are always exceptions to the rules.
For example, if your pajamas or sweats have stains on them, those should be washed as soon as possible and not worn again immediately. Spot cleaning might help, if you have special fabric cleaner, which will ultimately help extend the life of that piece of clothing, especially if it’s one of your favorites. On top of that, if your pajamas or sweats are white, you definitely don’t want to re-wear those too frequently between washes considering that they’re more prone to getting dirty.
In general, it’s easier to get away with re-wearing clothes like pajamas and sweats more often when it’s colder out, but with hot weather arriving, the sweat is about to get turned up a notch. If you’ve been doing yoga, walking around your home, or doing anything else that might cause you to sweat frequently (and let’s be honest, summer weather is here), it’s also a good idea to change into a different set of clothing to stay comfy and clean.
Robes also count in the realm of pajamas, and should also be taken off and washed about every four wears. Most importantly, however, is washing your sheets, which are meant to be washed on a weekly basis. After all, there’s no point in cleaning the clothes you wear to bed if you’re not washing the sheets you lie on as you try to convince yourself to get out of bed for the billionth time.
At the end of the day, there’s nothing shameful if you need to be as comfy as possible and don’t want to wear regular clothes, but that doesn’t mean we can’t take proper hygiene precautions.
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Thankfully, the most recent drop of denim skirts doesn't look anything like the mini skirts you "rocked" at the mall in middle school. Instead, we're seeing all of the classic fits and dye jobs — some with a teensy bit, but not too much, flair — that remind us why we've always rallied behind denim skirts. To make shopping for this year's jean skirt collection an easy feat, we've scoured the market and rounded up the best denim skirts available now. From off-white to traditional blue, mini to midi — guaranteed, your ideal denim skirt is somewhere ahead.
At Refinery29, we’re here to help you navigate this overwhelming world of stuff. All of our market picks are independently selected and curated by the editorial team. If you buy something we link to on our site, Refinery29 may earn commission.
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While we all have that pair of cut-off denim shorts that we reach for during too-hot weekends, you won't regret having an alternative on hand that's a little more of a conversation starter. Wouldn't you rather show up to your weekly Zoom party and stand out? Exactly. Click on to shop some next-level denim, and leave those denim diaper shorts in the back of your drawer in exchange for these picks ahead.
At Refinery29, we’re here to help you navigate this overwhelming world of stuff. All of our market picks are independently selected and curated by the editorial team. If you buy something we link to on our site, Refinery29 may earn commission.
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9 Celebrity Outfits To Inspire Your Memorial Day Weekend Looks
With social distancing rules still in place, this year’s Memorial Day Weekend plans are sure to look different from those of years past — and that goes for celebrities, too. Gabrielle Union won’t be island hopping in Greece in a baby blue bikini we're still thinking about, as she did a year ago. Neither will Sophie Turner spend the long weekend on a rooftop in London wearing silk pajamas of our dreams while drinking cocktails with friends. Instead, we'll probably see celebrities by their pools or spending time inside their homes. Still, if the last few weeks are any indication, this won’t stop them from dressing up in their holiday best to celebrate the first long weekend of summer 2020.
Ahead, find out what all of your favorite celebrities are wearing ahead of this long weekend, from Kim’s very-subtle string bikini-and-chaps combination to Alana Haim’s trending nightgown (and matching needlepoint) and Dua Lipa’s ultra-’90s mismatched bikini. And with three days still left to go, we’re expecting a whole lot more summer outfit and swimsuit inspiration to come.
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An Ode To Virgin Suicides, The Film That Introduced The Fashion Nightgown
Almost any movie that director Sofia Coppola helms automatically enters the fashion film canon. From Marie Antoinette, a pastel-tinted flaunting of opulent, epoch-defining fashions, to The Bling Ring, an encompassment of every great (and cringe-y) fashion trend of the early aughts, Coppola’s films are as notable for their for their showcase of memorable fashion as they are for their nuanced portrayal of loneliness and young people on the verge of adulthood. And, at the beginning of it all, is The Virgin Suicides.
Based on the Jeffrey Eugenides book of the same name, Coppola’s first film is set in the ’70s, in a Michigan suburb. A melancholy look at what a conservative existence behind a white picket fence can do to young women on the brink of adulthood, it follows the Lisbon sisters, a quartet of girls who have just lost their youngest sister to suicide. As they attempt to get over this trauma, their freedom and sexuality are further repressed by their strict Catholic parents — a fact that’s made clear by the shapeless clothes they wear, among other things. According to Nancy Steiner, the film’s costume designer, these clothes weren’t just a reflection of their familial circumstances, but a fairly normal occurrence in the United States at the time.
“We really were just trying to make them average kids in the ‘70s,” she says of the vision she discussed with Coppola. “The girls were mysterious in the way they acted and all the other stuff. We didn’t feel like you had to press that in the way they dressed or anything. We just wanted to be not a big showy 1970s, but the real ‘70s.”
Those looks included prairie dresses (Steiner says Gunne Sax is responsible for some of the most popular versions from the time) and floaty gowns. It’s ‘70s fashion at its most delicate, with soft knits draping naked shoulders, and pastel florals and barely-there lace enveloping the sisters who appear as ethereal as the clothing they wear. While all popular in the ‘70s, the Lisbon girls’ clothes are in stark contrast to what the other characters in the film wear. This is made most evident in the prom scene, where the girls show up in white nightgown-like dresses — likened to “four identical sacks” by the boys who take them — while others appear in an explosion of colorful pinks and blues.
“The prom dresses, we made those. My idea was that their mom had made the dresses for them and that she wouldn’t spend money going out — she would make their dresses. So I made the design based on what I thought back then you would have: a pattern, and it would come with four different options — different flowers, colors,” says Steiner, noting that each dress was designed to “give the girls their own style.” While the dress of Lux (Kirsten Dunst), the most rebellious of the Lisbons, featured shorter sleeves and a tighter empire waistline, that of Therese (Leslie Hayman), the studious sister, had full billowy sleeves and cuffs.
Though the dresses were already sleepwear-like, the sisters’ looks turn into literal nightgowns once they’re put under house arrest, after Lux doesn’t come home the night of the prom. “All the girls would wear these flannel nightgowns,” says Steiner. “That was a big thing back then when girls still wore nightgowns.”
Still, there is something intimate and innocent about seeing the young women in them. Watching them sprawled on the bedroom floor, not allowed outside, we are reminded of how abruptly the sisters’ childhood has ended with the untimely death of their sibling. They are no longer girls, and yet they are not allowed to become women, having been literally trapped inside by their concerned parents — a fashion limbo that perhaps only a nightgown, one of the few items of clothing worn by children and women alike, is able to accommodate. “We felt the imprisonment of being a girl,” says one of the boys narrating the film. “We knew that the girls were really women in disguise, that they understood love and even death.”
“As they were kept in the house, they reverted to nightgowns which were [actual] pajamas,” confirms Steiner. “It was just like a degradation of making any effort to look good or anything because they were kept in the house, they didn’t need to. It was just kind of depressing, and they just reverted to staying in nightgowns all day, which is kind of what we’re doing now… with our sweats and our T-shirts. It’s interesting.”
The parallel between The Virgin Suicides and our world right now is undeniable. Trapped within our own homes by the shelter-in-place orders, we are drawn to the comfort and ease that nightgowns provide. No wonder there’s been a #nightgown explosion on TikTok, instantly revitalizing the fashion trend. But also, the resurgence of nightgowns is yet further proof of fashion’s fixation with eras like the ‘70s. “It seems like, to me, that style comes back every 20 years… but it’s a new version of the ‘70s. It’s combined with more modern takes on it,” says Steiner, likening the fashion nightie comeback to the recent revival of the high-waisted, full-leg pants, now featuring a shorter, ankle-length cut. “It’s just these little style details that make something more modern or less.”
We saw that with prairie dresses, updated to feel modern by the masterful hands of labels like Batsheva and, more recently, The Vampire’s Wife. We’re now seeing an extension of that, with more literal nightwear becoming trendy thanks to brands like Sleeper. The latter trend is interesting for the fact that, to wear something that’s intended for the indoors, where no one can see you, is an act of rebellion. There is something powerful about the choice of Lisbon sisters to wrap around the tree in their yard that they don’t want to be cut, while in sleepwear outfits that their mom surely doesn’t approve of being seen by the men who are intent on cutting it down. There’s also something about Therese styling her nightgown with a chunkily knit scarf, even if it is because of her preference for more conservative fashion in comparison to her sisters.
As the trend continues to take a turn for the fashion-forward, it’s once again becoming clear that the nightgown is no longer a look that’s only suitable behind closed doors. It’s one that deserves to be styled, with heels and jewelry, and taken outside — if only to hug a tree (and maybe take a TikTok video) — fashion rules be damned.
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Across the catwalks of SS20, yellow dresses made their mark with designers as far-ranging as Balmain and Bella Freud getting in on the action. While shapes and styles differed drastically, collections were united in their fondness for mustard, sherbet, and chartreuse hues. At New York Fashion Week, Carolina Herrera gave the color palette her seal of approval with a range of yellow floral designs, while Emilia Wickstead showed her love for pastel yellow with a plethora of puff-sleeved gowns at London Fashion Week.
The many iterations of yellow frock this season prove that the mood-boosting hue isn’t going anywhere fast, so you’ll be happy to know that we’ve compiled a list of the best that brands have to offer right now. From minis to maxis and everything in between, click through to find a spring-ready yellow dress for every occasion...
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