Why does Kamala Harris want to change the power of his dress?

When Kamala Harris went to the podium to acknowledge her role as America's first coloured vice president on November 7th she had a white suit. The garment was made of brand “Carolina Herrera”, and no matter how good the outfit looked, the meaning of the white pants suit was political. The garment of [...]
When Kamala Harris went to the podium to acknowledge her role as America's first coloured vice president on November 7th she had a white suit. The garment was made of brand “Carolina Herrera”, and no matter how good the outfit looked, the meaning of the white pants suit was political.
The wearing of women's pants has been and continues to be a very real subject in the struggle for gender and white equality is a feminist color, dressed by voters during their struggle to recognise women's votes.
Hillary Clinton also wore a white suit when she accepted the Presidential nomination in 2016 and Democratic women in Congress wore it en masse to demonstrate unity and a commitment to protecting women's rights. Harris' white pants suit was not a fashion statement, it was a statement.
By the time Biden's victory was announced, Harris had gone out for a walk wearing a suit from Nike, a brand that is almost American uniforms, with the inscription “Just do it”.
It might look like a normal situation, but that dress had a message. It was the “Just do it” that went quite well with the sentence that Harris told Biden at the first moment they talked about after the result was “a day it Joe, which did it. ”
The message of that garment was that it “would continue to do it” nothing was wrong about the image when someone was an important face of one country and both Harris's clothing in the two key moments of her victory Harris was showing a vice president who would be different from everyone else. Historical, yes. Symbolic, yes.
Harris has been signaling this position “can it be” with her clothes throughout this entire election campaign and before that and in many ways her entire life. Looking at pictures taken by her during her career years, you will see that her clothes were “a <x2x3> street to get where she is today.
Harris always wore suits, but he replaced the skirts with pants. As for her jewelry, her numerous varieties of pearl earrings, and her necklaces of black, white pearls, with many strings, have been part of her clothing ever since she was a student of justice.
As she confessed in an interview in 2011 a preference for the Manolo Blahnik (“these are my only satisfaction” and Chanel's bags, her clothing often leans toward dailyness. She's wearing white shirts, jeans and sneakers Chuck All Stars what has attracted little attention
Harris does not prefer so - called power “” worn by women in the public sphere in the 2000s and 2010, without sleeves, cut for the body, chains to the bottom of the sun
Instead, it adheres to its costume formula in pants by mainly American designers ( Prabal Gurung, Altuzura), in black and gray shade. When it appeared together with Biden, it often wore a suit in just one tone, implementing their idea as a team.
Just as Michele Obama's bright colors and love for a blend of brands made a turn in the fashion world, Kamala Harris and her comfortable, practical, and e - mail clothing will be present in fashion and trend.
It will be interesting to see how this changes over the next four years.













