Mens Designer Clothing and Mens Designer Clothes

Designer clothes are designed by someone - so why are only some called designer clothing? Designer clothing bears the name or signature of one designer. Some designers have their own style which makes their clothing instantly recognisable and called them designer clothes.

Established designer labels and designer clothes include:

Alberta Ferretti, Alexander McQueen, Anna Molinari, Burberry, Nutler and Wilson, Chanel, Christian Dior, Christian Louboutin, Collette Dinnigan, Dolce & Gabbana, Elspeth Gibson, Gina, Giorgio Armarni, Gucci, Hermes, J&M Davidson, Jane Brown, Joseph, Liza Bruce, Louis Vitton, Manola Blahnik, MArni, Miu MIu, Mulberry, Prada, Ralph Lauren, Sergio Rossi, Versace, Vivienne Westwood, Yves Saint Lauren. There are many up coming designers from teh UK who are making a name for themself in UK fashion e.g Brand Ex Clothing , Jags Online Designer Clothing, Designer Perfumes and Designer fragrances
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Mens Designer Clothing

Designer clothing


is clothing that bears the logo of a recognisable fashion designer.
The designer whose name is on the label may be:
A European couturier, e.g. Chanel, Christian Dior, Yves Saint Laurent
A European luxury goods house, e.g. Gucci, Louis Vuitton
An American sportswear label, e.g. Calvin Klein, Donna Karan
When talking about designer clothing, the highly creative, expensive (and often outlandish and unwearable) creations of top fashion designers are rarely what is meant.
Rather, 'designer clothing' is typically used to describe clothing that was not designed or made by the high fashion luminary, but bears their name due to a licensing agreement the designer has entered into with a mass market apparel manufacturer.
These agreements allow manufacturers of commodity apparel items to sell their wares at a premium price due to the cachet the designer's name; and provide the designer with another income stream.
The quality of the resultant clothing, and resemblance (or lack thereof) to the designer's work vary considerably depending on who the licensee is, and the terms of the agreement the designer has struck. Some terms of these agreements may include limits on the number of styles of different types of garments that may be produced, or a final approval clause allowing the designer to veto any designs they find unappealing.
This licensing of designer names was pioneered by designers like Pierre Cardin in the 1960s and has been a common practice within the fashion industry from about the 1970s.
There are now also labels that imitate the 'designer label' marketing model of attaching a high status name to otherwise-ordinary items of clothing. These labels have built up cachet through their marketing campaigns rather than using the name of an already-established designer on their clothing. Two examples of these labels are Ralph Lauren and Tommy Hilfiger.

 
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