Monday, 5 April 2010

Book



I have started reading this book, Men Under Construction, published by Premiere Vision. This book is very much related to what I am doing. it talks about men psychology, how the different terms came and their context and has graphs and statistics regarding how the fashion and men's take on it has changed over the years.

Friday, 1 January 2010

What is it that I am actually looking for?

Since I have started this research project, I knew one thing that I have to so something related to menswear. One reason my interest in it and another because I knew somehow or the other it will help me in my final project or in future. So when I thought about taking up the topic “Are men fashionable?” or “Men in Pink”, the drive behind this was that I wanted to know what is lacking in men’s fashion. Right now as I noticed men on streets, most of them are conventional wearers. So to give support to my observations, I started doing research on it. I thought there wasn’t much being done in men’s fashion by designers but after doing my research, I found out that I was mistaken. There is a lot being done in menswear. But then why cant I see it on streets? Then I thought maybe its consumers/customers who are not very acceptable to changes in style. This made me refine my question. Now, I decided to do my research on “Are men receptive to fashion trends?” or “To what extent are men receptive to changes in fashion?” I again formulated my research strategy. I went to different places and took pictures of men – at night, at day, when shopping, when hanging out with friends, when partying. I even looked at blogs and menswear trends, asked men questions. But when doing all this I realised – What is it that I am actually looking for? I had pictures, I had answers of men, but how do I measure if they are fashionable or not? How do I define the parameters? I see men not experimenting much with their clothes, yet when I ask them, most of them are happy with their wardrobe and with men’s fashion. Now that made me think – Why do I want to see if they are fashionable or not? How dies it help? I realised Fashion Designer not only gives customers what they want but also, and most of the times, give what customers don’t realize they need! So now again I am at the point where I am stuck. I don’t know how to move ahead with this research. Because I don’t really want to know to what extent they are fashionable. That is not the right question I guess.

While I was analysing men’s pictures that I took, I concluded that maximum of them were wearing conventional clothes – jeans + dark jacket/overcoat + shirt/t-shirt + muffler + shoes. I agree that is the typical silhouette in menswear but I found very few experimentation within it. One thing that men played with was color in mufflers and t-shirts to some extent. Other interesting article in their overall appearance was their shoes. And jacket looked the most important piece of their wardrobe.

Then I thought that maybe Jeremy was right. Maybe everyone could see it except me at that time because I guess I needed to realise it myself that maybe this is not the question that I actually want to research on. Or maybe now I cant see the point of doing research on it. Or again maybe this is the result of the research I have done so far. As Mark said, we should keep reflecting and analysing our research and keep going back to the actual question. And now, I need to take these answers/results from the research and find the question/topic that I can focus on in depth.

Monday, 21 December 2009

Where am I going??...what am I doing??

Yes, this is what exactly I am feeling right now with my research project.I am doing all I mentioned in my research strategy, I clicked photographs of men on streets, I looked at fashion trends, I went through blogs, asked people what they think about men's fashion but what I don't know is what to do with all this data?? I think what I really need right now is parameters to define and compare to what extent men are fashionable. The question is how do I define those parameteres? How do i decide if a person is fashionable or not? Is it because he is wearing a muffler or because he is wearing a different color? From observing men on street (believe me, dats what I have been doing all these weeks, looking at men left, right and centre!!) I realised that yes, men are fashionable in whatever they are wearing. They know how to dress (most of them atleast), and they do it stylishly. Even if they are wearing a typical shirt-jacket-jeans-muffler combo, they look good in it.

So then I thought, where does all this put me in my research? What am I exactly looking for? Like Jeremy said, what is the drive behind my research? I got the answers about men being fashionable or not...now what??

I know I know I am asking questions and questions but I guess that is how I work. I need to answer them (hopefully wil find answers soon!). One thing that came to my mind was to restrict it. Like to look at outerwear and see how many men experiment with it. But behind all this, I keep thinking, what will be the result of this experiment? How will it help me?

Ahaan...brainwave- Maybe I can look at outerwear and knits, two main components of menswear, and see how I can combine them!

Tuesday, 8 December 2009

Damn Lies!



This video shows how Bush and his people kept changing their statements regarding the connection of Saddam Hussein with September 11 tragedy.

Tuesday, 1 December 2009

Research module – Learning/understanding so far

Research module – Learning/understanding so far
I went through my notebook again, where I have been writing notes these past two months, and realized I have actually learnt quite a bit. When we worked on research projects in our BA level, we did do a lot of reading and collecting information, but what lacked was a methodology to do it. I understood the importance of literature review for any successful research. Often we just do research on superficial level, whenever we saw any link to our project, we put that in our research. But after learning about literature review, I actually started looking at the importance of article or literature I am reading – when it was written, the authenticity of it, if it is actually relevant information, basically to do an in depth analysis of key text. Doing all this, makes my method very precise and research specific. I know what I am doing is not just copy pasting information but actually sorting and sifting through it and taking only necessary part. Another thing that I have started plasticising is reading a lot of books on that particular topic. I used to read earlier too, but now I do it with a purpose. I go to Amazon, read reviews of the book, and then see if it is actually what I am looking for. Also this gives me other book titles which always help.

Doing literature review before and during every research also made me more confident about the project, if I am going on the right path or not, considering the relevance of information I have collected, or if I am just building hypothetical situations. It also made me see flaws in my research, like in my topic of “Is fashion limited/restrictive for men?”, I was fixed with the notion that not much development has happened in men’s fashion, but when I researched, looked at current fashion shows, read articles, asked people, I realized that actually quite a lot is being done in that area. And so then I looked again into the problem and rephrased my question to “To what extent are men receptive to fashion trends?” This explains in a better way my research interest. Though I am still not sure, if this is the correct question, I am still reading and researching on this to see if this is actually true.

Another thing that I learnt is the need to find out what already has been done in relation to one’s topic. Often, we just get fixated with our idea and overlook the possibility that other people might have already done it. It is important to know this so that one can improvise on what has been done, think logically & rationally if we are going in the right direction, to find the gap and not just re-invent the wheel. While doing this, I learnt new sources f for researching. One of them is blog, I never considered blogs before – just books, articles, interviews. Second source I found useful was videos. I always searched for photographs as they are important source for fashion designers but never videos. But now, I realized they also are quite good source for knowledge. This happened during our second technology project – Ambient Intelligence. I browsed through many videos and blogs, and it actually helped me quite a lot in that project.

Next, during Matt Marsh’s lecture, I realized how we artists/designers often forget our market while designing. We tend to do what we think is needed, right for the people, which in a way is right because that is how we bring any kind of change or revolution in the society. But also, sometimes it is important to know what actually is needed by the consumers, to find the gap, involve consumers in the process of designing and then come up with something which is actually a revolution. We need to make things real before they are real but at the same time should know to what extent we can visualize so that all that just doesn’t become hypothetical situation in the end. This also means we need to find out things, facts before doing and not just make assumptions.

I also learnt the concept of paradox – to learn to keep contradicting yourself at every step. This was very important for me because it helped me reflect on what I have done so far, and also to see if I missed anything. It also challenged me every time, because like I said in research project, I changed my topic after I realized I was going the wrong way. Again, I try to come up with questions related to my topic, if I am doing what I initially started , or if it is actually right what in am doing. It keeps me motivated and forces me to improve myself at every step. When I was researching on my topic, I started with mind map, branching out in all directions, but then I also wrote in big block letters, if what I am saying is actually true. That thought kept me going, to find if I was wrong, and that was how I still keep improving, narrowing down on my research topic.

Then I started my research methodology. I usually do it by writing my topic and then coming up with all the questions I could think are related to it. Then I find the way to answer each of these questions, and that is how I come up with my research strategy. While doing this, I realized I need not look into every resource available. I should plan my time line and accordingly decide which is the best method because doing everything even when not needed is waste of time and becomes irrelevant too. But then the question comes, how will I know if this is the best method to do it. I still have to figure that question!

To sum up I can say that, past two months one thing that I sure learnt was to always verify the information and see its authenticity and to make your research as defined as possible.

Sunday, 29 November 2009

Research process so far!

My research process till now includes initial brain storming, mind maps, questions I came up with, and research strategies for them.

First I did mind mapping of what all I need to research in the topic "Is men's fashion restrictive/limited?" The reason why I chose this topic was, I always wondered why men are not as fashionable, and if some of them are, why are they considered gay? I want to carry out this research so that I get to know, what is that men are actually ready to wear, and how can I give it to them. I want to find the gap, and not just do some bizarre fashion collection, which most men wouldn’t even dream of wearing. So in this mapping, I wrote down all the factors, things I need to do to answer this question.


In the second one, I improvised on it, categorizing it into three stages - past, present & future and in the end, find the gap.

Hence I planned my research strategy based on this. I though how I could answer all these questions and came up with the following options.

After that, I did my research, read interviews of famous menswear designers, went through fashion show collections, asked people and came to the conclusion, that actually there has been a lot of development in menswear fashion. So then, I was back to square one. All this while, I knew one thing, I want to know what is missing in menswear fashion as of know, what changes are affecting it , and how can I do something about it. Hence, almost all my new research topics were based on cause-effect relationship.

I read few books on Research strategy, and learnt that to come up with a good research strategy, coming up with correct research question is very important. And so, I wrote all questions I thought could convey what I exactly want to research on. there were 3 ways of doing it -

1. To do the statistical way - starting question with "how many men..." or "What ratio/percentage of men...".

2. To see the depth/consistency in a non numerological way - starting question with "To what extent is..."

3. To find out the cause of the question, hence finding the answer to that cause - starting question with "What factors are mportant/affect".

I followed this and came up with some questions.


While doing this, I came up with question, “To what extent are men receptive of changes in fashion trends?” and decided to do further mind mapping on it. I wrote questions I needed to answer and then again planned my research strategy by seeing which resource is best to answer those questions.


And this was what I finally decided on. (as of now!)