FLDS gals sell fashion
Women from the busted polygamist sect in Texas are turning their publicity to profit. They’ve started a website selling “quality, handmade, modest, affordable” clothing in their own Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter Day Saints (FLDS) style. They report “a flood of interest.”
Their clothing choices —- pompadour hair, long dresses in pastel colors, capacious sleeves — attracted fascination earlier this year. Project Runway’s Tim Gunn demanded, “Who’s talking about their crimes against fashion?” The Associated Press called their clothes a fashion statement for modesty, conformity, unity and femininity.
Oddly, some of their choices (in a … slightly more modern silhouette) are actually trendy. The floor-length maxi dress is in, along with puffed sleeves and pastels last spring. The AP article says, “It’s not outlandish to imagine the prairie look influencing today’s styles, given that trends can come from unexpected places. … You can already find blouses with high necks and ruffles in stores, and puffed shoulders on short and long-sleeved shirts.”
FLDS competition includes sites like modestclothing.com, www.tznius.com (which even boasts a Hollywood collection), www.hannahlise.com and www.justdenimskirts.com. If FLDS ladies want to beat out the competition and “make a living” on this, they might want to lower their prices, which run about the same as a pricey Brooklyn children’s clothing boutique I stepped into day — sixty bucks for a newborn baby’s jumpsuit. (Modestclothing.com’s bungee skirt is a far more affordable $29.95.)
They also might want to listen to Gunn’s tactful suggestions on how to make the prairie dress chic: chop off the sleeves, lower the neckline to show some cleavage, shorten it by a foot and accesorize with a wide patent leather belt and metallic ballet flats. “It’s not gonna say high fashion,” Gunn admitted. “Who knows? Next year on Marc Jacob’s runway? You never know!”













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back to top11 Comments to “FLDS gals sell fashion”
I don’t know. Do I really want my clothes to be a billboard for teen rape?
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I have often lamented the difficulty on finding reasonably modest fashions for my daughter.
Modest? Yes, but I don’t think I’ll go for these.
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FLDS doctrine and practice aside, one can dress modestly without looking like an extra from “Little House.”
Holiness doesn’t necessitate prairie-muffin-ness.
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On the other hand, give a look at “The Skirty” …
http://www.amoretti-designs.com/theskirty.html
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I am very dismayed that these cultists have caused the public to associate modest dresses with sexual immorality.
I enjoy dressing modestly and femininely. However, I will be sure never to wear anything that resembles one of their dresses. Iam an ambassador for Jesus the Messiah, not Joseph Smith the liar.
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If this is successful, maybe it will get them off welfare.
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First, I admit to being a guy, but the article mentions the dresses are in pastel colors. The picture doesn’t show what I consider to be pastel colors. Looks like dark blue, green, and gray? Do I just not understand “pastel”? I’ve been tested and know I’m not colorblind!
And actually the dresses are OK. It’s the hair that looks really bad.
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Frank,
Thanks for the “Skirty” link. I really like that idea and am inclined to get some for my little girl.
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BTW, Frank, I realize that you might have posted the Skirty link as a negative example of “prairie-muffin-ness”. I really can’t tell by your wording.
Regardless, I think something like that is a great.
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I think that conservative cross dressers might consider these ready to wear, pastel clothes a real bargain and a way to make a real fashion statement their partners might enjoy. What am I saying….cross dressers aren’t conservatives by definition.
Never mind.
I gues this does show there are few limits to the success of capitalism
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After having grown up in Spanish Fork Utah in the ’60’s I consider the FLDS style passé.
It’s difficult for me to imagine women actually paying for clothing like this.
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