I really do believe that my style is informed by the fact that I had such issues with my appearance at various times of my life.

I used to be more self-conscious about style because when you're younger, you want to exist, you want to show everything you do.

Submit your sentiments with diffidence. A dictatorial style, though it may carry conviction, is always accompanied with disgust.

Now, I worry a bit about the TEDification of the world where style trumps substance, so hopefully you have a good blend of both!

I think that my preaching style and many of my ideas and ideals about faith are based in both Pentecostal and Baptist background.

I like clothes that exude feminine charms, a gentle style. It's just like being able to match with a dress with an attached hood.

I like to say that I had a really good musical education because it was inclusive of all styles of music and I like it like that.

With the style of music that I do, I don't think it's at the top of their agenda to push me into doing any compromising material.

I don't want to make a style. Not tragedy, not comedy. Life is a mixing of all kind of things: comedy and tragedy going together.

It's just that some things more important for this and less important for that, and this is true regardless the style of the art.

When I am in form, my style is a little bit stubborn, almost brutal. Sometimes I feel a great spirit of fight which drives me on.

Think like a photographer. Look at every vignette in your home like it's being shot for a shelter magazine and style accordingly.

There is an interior style we intellectuals and design policy wonks know as Haut Euro Pooftastic, which really takes the biscuit.

I believe that photographers should be passionate, determined, disciplined and ready to seek out their own styles and identities.

It's often only other people who notice you have a signature style. I don't think I've got one, though other people tell me I do.

I liked being able to work with all the different producers and take what they brought to the table and bring my own style to it.

Because everything about the voice interests me, I felt it would be fascinating to learn a completely different style of singing.

The core of airport fashion is 'not too much.' It is the best way to put a small amount of edge to your daily, comfortable style.

You can't just stick with one thing. You have to let your natural style come through, and paint what you naturally like to paint.

In making portraits, I refuse to photograph myself as do so many photographers. My style is the style of the people I photograph.

I think when you have a band that are so separate and isolated then you have to know each others styles and characters quite well.

So I try to re-invent my own eye every time I tackle a new subject. But it's hard, because everybody has style. You can't help it.

It is great to work on different scripts with different directors who have different styles. You get so much experience from that.

The way for a person to develop a style is (a) to know exactly what he wants to say, and (b) to be sure he is saying exactly that.

To be honest with you, I literally don't even know how to style my hair unless I'm doing an event because I rely on hair stylists.

Digging up graves is backbreaking work. So I just like that the genre of horror can embrace so many different styles and textures.

Style, in its finest sense, is the last acquirement of the educated mind; it is also the most useful. It pervades the whole being.

Tokyo may have more money and Kyoto more culture; Nara may have more history and Kobe more style. But Osaka has the biggest heart.

Thought and speech are inseparable from each other. Matter and expression are parts of one; style is a thinking out into language.

A style is not a matter of camera angles or fancy footwork, it's an expression, an accurate expression of your particular opinion.

Good grooming is integral, and impeccable style is a must. If you don't look the part, no one will want to give you time or money.

Yes, you need substance in politics - but I think your style also says something about how you arrive at some of your conclusions.

I like to add personal touches to my decorating style, including photographs and nostalgic items that remind me of family and home.

When you see me on the air, I always have jackets on. I like to think I have a flair and a style but I'm always in a business look.

I think the media made Manson, turned him into some larger than life figure and surrounded him with mystery and some shady glamour.

I am a big fan of music and clothing style of the 1960s. Whether in England or the United States, I like everything from that time.

There are a lot of period movies where they say, 'This is a portrait of Lady Whatever.' And it's done in like a 1950s or 60s style.

Playing quarterback ... it's no joke ... The difference here with Johnny Manziel, there's a lot of style and very little substance.

I don't have a particular style I like, it just changes daily, depending on the mood or the situation. I don't have a style chosen.

I don't repeat that many styles if I can help, although some have become classics. I try not to repeat. I'd rather surprise people.

I've had my best times when trailing a Mainbocher evening gown across a sawdust floor. I've always loved high style in low company.

I know in fashion what's new is old and trends repeat but the 90's trends ala '90210' aren't exactly styles I'd want to wear today.

I'm timeless, I got that Dickensian, London street-urchin look in high school. I'll never be in style, but I'll always be different.

I see other black women imitate my style, which is no style at all, but just letting our hair be itself. They call it the Afro Look.

The old prose writers wrote as if they were speaking to an audience; while, among us, prose is invariably written for the eye alone.

Obscurity in writing is commonly an argument of darkness in the mind. The greatest learning is to be seen in the greatest plainness.

Instead of just looking back, whiplash-style, I can assume there's something else coming. Time just folds over itself, like origami.

If one means by style the voice, the irreducible and always recognizable and alive thing, then of course style is really everything.

This is the democratic process at work, What you're seeing with this process is the Iraqi people embracing American-style democracy.

I paint in oils, I paint in acrylics. I paint figurative and landscape portraits. It's all in my own kind of style. I'm self-taught.

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