0 Comments | News – Item, The; Shamokin, Pa., Jul 26, 2010 | by Jenna Wasakoski
Style. The dictionary says something about it being “the popular taste at a given time.” I completely disagree. Style doesn’t have to be popular. It doesn’t even have to be stylish. It pulls influence from many different times. Style should represent the individual person and what he or she likes. Whether that person chooses to care about what he or she portrays to those who choose to look at them, is up to them. Style can be many things. It is certainly much more than clothing. It’s the hair on your head. The hair on your face. The height of your socks. The way you speak. The car that you drive. The way you decorate your home. Whether they care to or not, people make style decisions every day.
At least grown-up people do.
Growing up, parents have the luxury of dressing their children like living, breathing versions of the dolls they played with when they were young, but eventually, after years of being tucked in and laced up, you slowly start making your own choices.
Many times those choices come with restricted freedoms. Growing up in Catholic school, we wore uniforms every day, limiting our style decisions. However, that did not mean decisions weren’t made
home decor