Fashionability is a kind of elevated vulgarity. G. Darley.
Fashion, a word which fools use, / Their knavery and folly to excuse. Churchill.
Fashion begins and ends in two things it 30 abhors most—singularity and vulgarity. Hazlitt.
Fashion is a potency in art, making it hard to judge between the temporary and the lasting. Stedman.
Fashion is aristocratic-autocratic. J. G. Holland.
Fashion is, for the most part, nothing but the ostentation of riches. Locke.
Fashion is gentility running away from vulgarity, and afraid to be overtaken by it. It is a sign that the two things are not far asunder. Hazlitt.
Fashion is the great governor of the world. 35 Fielding.
Fashion is the science of appearances, and it inspires one with the desire to seem rather than to be. Locke.
Fashion seldom interferes with Nature without diminishing her grace and efficiency. Tuckerman.