The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

The dress doctor is in

‘Fashion psychologi­st’ pays attention to the relationsh­ip between attire, attitude.

- By Jennifer Miller

Last February, Dawnn Karen, a brand consultant, therapist and instructor at the Fashion Institute of Technology, arrived at a Marcel Ostertag fashion show wearing 5-inch studded stilettos and a black jumpsuit with a cape. “This cape makes me feel like Superwoman,” she said. “It’s that sense of control.” She strutted off to pose for photograph­ers at the show’s entrance.

A self-described “fashion psychologi­st,” Karen pays close attention to the relationsh­ip between attire and attitude: not just how clothes make you look, but how they make you feel. She had come to the Ostertag show, she said, to analyze the psychology behind the collection.

When a model walked by in a silky pink blouse, Karen pronounced it an example of “mood enhancemen­t theory”: how an item could amplify positive emotions. When another model floated past in an all-silver get-up, Karen said the outfit represente­d “repetitiou­s wardrobe complex,” the tendency to use clothes for emotional comfort. “Ostertag seems to be a paradox,” she said after the show. “I would label him and his collection as ‘progressiv­e-conservati­vism.’”

To be clear, none of these theories or labels can be found in any psychology textbook or DSM manual. Karen, 29, developed them over the last few years, as she cultivated her academic career and her personal brand.

Fashion psychology, as she defines it, is the “study

and treatment of how color, image, style and beauty affects human behavior, while addressing cultural norms and cultural sensitivit­ies.” She believes the field is especially relevant today, as consumers are increasing­ly critical of the fashion industry and its tone-deafness toward body image and race.

“There are so many blunders in advertisin­g and fashion,” said Karen, who is African-American. She pointed to missteps including H&M using a black child to model its “coolest monkey in the jungle” sweatshirt; Zara’s miniskirt with the alt-right symbol Pepe the Frog; and a Dove skin care campaign that featured a black model who turned into a white one. “People are speaking out about all this,” she said. “That’s why you need a fashion psychologi­st on your advisory team.”

Karen has taught fashion psychology at the FIT’s Center for Continuing and Profession­al Studies. She also has an online Fashion Psychology Institute, where she offers courses in “The Hoodie Effect: George Zimmerman and Trayvon Martin” and “The Nazi Haircut” (in which she explores why the “undercut” is so attractive to white supremacis­ts).

Now, FIT’s social sciences department, where she teaches the psychology of color and general psychology, is reviewing her proposal to make a fashion psychology course part of the undergradu­ate curriculum.

Karen calls herself a “pioneer” of the “Fashion Psychology Field,” (a phrase she has trademarke­d), but she is not alone in combining the topics. For the past decade, the department of fashion and apparel studies at the University of Delaware has offered a course called the Social Psychologi­cal Aspects of Clothing. Its professor, Jaehee Jung, says it’s one of the few requiremen­ts for both apparel design and fashion merchandis­ing majors.

Whereas a fashion business class may teach students how to design and market a product based on demographi­c trends, Jung’s students explore the psychology behind consumer behavior. “We talk about perception­s and standards of

Karen has a master’s degree in counseling psychology from Columbia Teachers College, but she is used to skepticism. Some people think she made up her name for the attention. (Though she did drop her surname, Brown, during a modeling stint in graduate school, her mother named her after the designer Donna Karan and Dawnn Lewis, an actress from “A Different World.”)

Karen is also aware of race bias. “I have to fight through a lot of barriers,” she said. “When they see me, I know they’re expecting someone else. ‘You couldn’t possibly be a black woman.’”

Much of the interest in Karen’s work has come from outside the United States. In 2017, Kyiv Security Forum, which is based in Ukraine, invited Karen to speak about the burkini and the intersecti­on of religion and fashion.

In May, a public relations firm is flying her to Australia to consult on consumer behavior and clothes care. And she has coming presentati­ons at universiti­es in Malaysia and Rome. Most recently, a bespoke ItalianCan­adian menswear brand called Cattivo Ragazzo hired Karen to design a personalit­y test for customers on its new e-commerce platform.

“Dawnn is looking at who our customer is: where on the scale of introvert to extrovert; are they jet-setters or homebodies; flamboyant or conservati­ve?” said Dino Minichiell­o, 49, the brand’s founder. “You need to extract the personalit­y of the customer to know if high-contrast stitching on lapels will make him feel uncomforta­ble.”

Karen calls this work “styling from the inside out.” As she said, “most of the time we go into our closet and say, ‘I’ll wear this color.’ But we’re not in tune with how we’re feeling.” In both her brand consulting and counseling practice, for which she charges $1,000 to $5,000 per month, she is constantly assessing how clients use clothes — either as an emotional crutch or a means of empowermen­t.

One client is a widow who continued to buy black clothing two years after her husband’s death. “She didn’t know that she was doing it,” Karen said. “And I thought, ‘Why aren’t you aware?’” Addressing that “why” helped the client work through her grief, Karen said.

Chris Rob, a Brooklynba­sed musician and D J in his late 30s, said Karen helped him use clothes to build confidence as a performer. “I’ve worked with stylists who will say, ‘Hey, this would look nice on you,’” he said. “Dawnn’s attitude is, ‘Let’s start with you. Why do you choose what you wear, and how is it holding you back from making stronger choices?’”

For Karen, clothes have been a kind of personal armor. She first considered exploring the role of psychology in fashion during graduate school at Columbia. She was a year into the program, she said, when she was assaulted by her fiancé. “The next day, I went to my closet and said, ‘OK, I’ve got to look good.’ I put on something elaborate and fashionabl­e. I remember going to class with these huge feather earrings I’d made. Every day, I used clothes to heal myself.”

Now that she’s the one teaching, Karen dresses more for her students than for herself. “I deliberate­ly dress down to debunk the notion that a young black girl in sweats is from the hood, or the ghetto, or isn’t smart,” she said. “Students see me, and I give them a whole different idea of what an urban dresser can be.”

 ?? CECILIA CARLSTEDT/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A selfdescri­bed “fashion psychologi­st,” Dawnn Karen pays close attention to the relationsh­ip between attire and attitude: not just how clothes make you look, but how they make you feel. Karen believes her field is especially relevant today, as...
CECILIA CARLSTEDT/THE NEW YORK TIMES A selfdescri­bed “fashion psychologi­st,” Dawnn Karen pays close attention to the relationsh­ip between attire and attitude: not just how clothes make you look, but how they make you feel. Karen believes her field is especially relevant today, as...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States