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Click here to buy this shirt: Colorado Buffaloes 2024 Maui Invitational Champions T-Shirts, hoodie, v-neck tee
I happened to be rummaging through my mother’s closet because I needed something to wear to a friend’s wedding last weekend. Obviously, my mother is no Cindy Crawford or Susan Sarandon, but in this new fashion sense, I felt different sneaking into her closet—less like a frustrated teenager in need of something to wear than like I was rifling through a rack of old classics waiting to make a comeback. I pulled out a John Galliano for Christian Dior dress that she had worn to the 56th Emmy Awards in 2004. However, when she saw a photo of me wearing it “without permission,” she was not happy, to put it mildly. Plus, I accidentally cut my ankle and nearly stained the lilac fabric with my disgusting blood.
Recently, stylist Molly Dickson styled Kaia Gerber in a reimagining of the Hervé Léger gown her mother, Cindy Crawford, wore to the 1993 Oscars. "I thought it would be great to honor Cindy's iconic moment," Dickson told Vogue. A few weeks later, Susan Sarandon's daughter, Eva Amurri, re-wore her mother's 2003 Donna Karran Oscar dress to the Metropolitan Opera House Opening Gala. "Swipe all the way to see where I got this vintage @donnakarran dress," she wrote on Instagram.
Of course, there is a distinct difference between a sincere homage and appropriating an iconic moment in the hopes of creating your own. I won’t name names for the latter, but sometimes the results can seem lifeless and stale. In the former, a sincere homage that comes to mind is Miley Cyrus honoring godmother Dolly Parton’s iconic bob at the Grammys or any time Kate Middleton imitates her late mother-in-law, Princess Diana. People say imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, but as someone with a sister, I have to call that bullshit. Imitation can be a sincere form of flattery, but with it comes the potential to cheapen the original by turning it into a caricature of itself. This is always the problem with imitation. Each time a look is copied, it tends to lose its original flair, just as a meme becomes more obscure as it is more memeified until, eventually, the original loses all meaning.
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