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Fashion quote of the day: "Fashions fade, style is eternal." —Yves Saint Laurent
ETimes | April 28, 2026 9:39 AM CST

Have you looked at your feeds lately? It feels like there is a new micro-aesthetic dropping every single week. It is a relentless, dizzying churn of consumption. And frankly, it is exhausting. Right in the middle of this high-speed trend cycle, a legendary piece of wisdom from Yves Saint Laurent feels like a sudden breath of fresh air: "Fashions fade, style is eternal." It is a brilliant soundbite.

But Saint Laurent didn't pull the sentiment entirely out of thin air. The blueprint actually belongs to Coco Chanel, who famously declared, "La mode passe, le style reste" (Fashion passes, style remains). What Saint Laurent did was weaponize this philosophy for the modern wardrobe. When he launched his Rive Gauche ready-to-wear line in the late 1960s, his goal wasn't to make women look trendy for a single, fleeting season.


He wanted to build something bulletproof. Look at his introduction of Le Smoking—the definitive women's tuxedo—or the safari jacket. These weren't fads. They were monumental, architectural shifts in how we present ourselves to the world. And they remain as potent today as they were decades ago.

Commerce vs. Identity

Here is the fundamental difference. Fashion is an industry. Style is an identity. Fashion demands your constant attention. It thrives on the anxiety of obsolescence. It pushes loud logos, viral internet aesthetics, and seasonal drops designed to make your closet feel completely outdated by next month. It is inherently built to fade so that you are forced to buy the next big thing.


Style requires something entirely different. Self-knowledge. It is the quiet, unspoken confidence of knowing exactly what works for your life and your frame. It is choosing the elegant, natural drape of an unstitched veshti over a stiff, mass-produced suit just because an algorithm said tailoring is trending. True elegance doesn't ever need to shout to be remembered.