“…An interpretive perspective is one of the favourite approaches of researchers who are concerned about 'the social production process of the belief in fashion which exists in people's minds, and which begins to have a substance and life of its own' (Kawamura 2005: 1). As a domain of studying material culture, numerous of fruitful studies have borrowed theoretical and methodological tools from this trajectory, resulting in a substantial body of literature concerning fashion consumption or collection practices (Cwerner 2001;Jones 2012;Özlem and Ger 2010), identity projects within the field of fashion (Green 2009;Parmentier and Fischer 2011;Rocamora 2011), the appropriation of fashion ideology and meanings in everyday life (Grove-White 2001; Thompson and Haytko 1997;Saucier 2011), ethnic or subcultural groups with a particular fashion style (Margiotti 2013;Rahman et al 2011Rahman et al , 2012, the spread of fashion ideology through advertising and marketing practices (Balasescu 2005;Joy et al 2012;Phillips and McQuarrie 2010), and the relationship between the aesthetic body and fashion Venkatesh et al 2010;Wilson 1992).…”