Wednesday, January 8, 2020

Story image for fashion industry from WWD

How to Fix Fashion's Cultural Appropriation Problem

WWD-Mar. 18, 2018
That quandary has also permeated the fashion industry on a multitude of levels — the maxim is finding strong pushback as it applies to fashion brands and ...
Story image for fashion industry from Adweek

As Waste Plagues the Fast-Fashion Industry, Asos Is Taking a ...

Adweek-Jun. 29, 2018
Sustainability is not a new concept in the fashion industry. The past decade has seen the rise of eco-friendly brands such as Reformation, Veja, and Simon Miller ...
Story image for fashion industry from Fast Company

5 Innovations That Could Help Make Fast Fashion More ...

Fast Company-Mar. 12, 2018
It's one step in making clothing more recyclable: Right now, disassembling a ... The fast-fashion industry, where retailers can turn out new cycles of clothing ...
Story image for fashion industry from CleanTechnica

The Growing Fashion Industry Needs More Sustainable ...

CleanTechnica-Nov. 15, 2018
According to Fashion for Good, a brands incubator in Amsterdam, the fashion industry is going to grow by 63% by 2030, and the fashion industry will take up ...

1 comment:

Pearl Necklace said...

In fact here are not one but a group of questions (therefore they are called combined) combined single form (which is why it is called table). Sociologists are quite willing to use table questions, and there is a good reason.
First, they are very capacious and at the same time take up little space. Imagine that the table might be represented by a series of single issues with the full name of each question and the full set of alternatives. It would have taken at least three times more space than now. Considering that the place in the questionnaire is always limited, one can understand the commitment of sociologists to combined, or table, questions.
Second, the application of this type of question is advantageous from the point of view of graphic design of the questionnaire. They relieve monotony, add variety to the questionnaire, the researcher interrupts the series of traditionally built questions such table issues.
But they are still quite difficult for the respondents. They are more difficult to understand and they are difficult to answer, especially those who do not have skills of working with texts. Methodical research shows that tabular, or combined, did not answer questions from 15 to 30%, sometimes more, depending on the complexity of the build and maintenance of sub-questions. In addition, significantly reduced the purity of the responses.
The number of refusals to answer different types of questions