12-15-2022 06:21 PM
i heard susan graver use the term 'table drop dressing' today on one of her presentations....i thought another qvc designer (maybe george simonton or louis d'ollio)
was the one who 'coined' that term...anybody remember who originally said it?
12-15-2022 06:31 PM
I remember Simonton using that phrase frequently.
12-15-2022 06:50 PM
Its "table TOP dressing". What you see when you're sitting at a table. Who knows where it originated? Probably not with anyone at QVC.
12-15-2022 06:54 PM
This is what news anchors often do. They sit behind a desk, wear a nice blouse and jacket but may be wearing jeans and tennies from the waist down.
12-15-2022 06:55 PM
First designer that I heard use that phrase on QVC was Bob Mackie. This was many years ago.
12-15-2022 06:58 PM
i put table top dressing in the title...'drop' auto-corrected in message...anyway...if there's any non-rude person who remembers which qvc designer was the first to use the term(Not susan graver)...not sure if it was george s or bob mackie...thanks(to the kind responders)![]()
12-15-2022 06:59 PM
thanks fleetwood![]()
12-15-2022 07:12 PM
Vogue wrote about "'waist-up dressing". Said it was a thing started in the 1930's when newspapers would post articles about people with pictures showing them from the waist up. So it became important to look good from the waist up in the public eye.
12-15-2022 08:47 PM
@alohakz wrote:i heard susan graver use the term 'table drop dressing' today on one of her presentations....i thought another qvc designer (maybe george simonton or louis d'ollio)
was the one who 'coined' that term...anybody remember who originally said it?
That term is probably close to 100 years old, coined before WW2.
It really doesn't matter which vendor at QVC said it first; they didn't invent the term.
12-15-2022 09:08 PM