Nov 28, 2011

Sonakshi Sinha will change her image for ‘Son Of A Sardar’

The sharp gaze, the luscious figure, the low-waist ghaghra and a backless choli in Dabangg made Sonakshi Sinha an instant hit among the men, for obvious reasons, and women, coz she portrayed a real-life woman and not the wafer-thin model-turned-actors. We too loved her Indian sex appeal! But then she got stuck with that image like a broken record.  Though off-screen every once in a while she dresses in those body-hugging dresses, it was not enough to wipe away her deeply-ingrained trad-gal image. Perhaps because that way she can get away without having to count her calories. But all that is finally going to change. Sonakshi will now have to worry what goes on her plate. And thank God – or rather, her director Ashwini Dheer and co-star Ajay Devgn of Son Of A Sardar for the big step.
Our well-placed informant has revealed to us that Ajay and Ashwini want her to ditch the boring and safe saris and salwar kameezes for sexy and haute dresses and tattered denims in the film.Discounted Blazers and Dresses at Charlotte Ronson. We are glad at last Sonakshi will go through some kind of transformation. Whether she will pull it off or not only time will tell, but the young lady desperately needs to do something to shock the generation that thrives on instant gratification. Just one word of caution, Sonakshi better not consult Vidya Balan’s stylists who dressed her in those hideous outfits for Kismat Konnection and Heyy Babyy!
"When we started, we had this intention to tell you your size ... (but) people's preferences play an enormous role. Some people want their clothing tight, and some want it loose," he explained. Now UPcload just provides details on the fit.Haldre of Fits.me agrees. "The fitting room looks at size from the perspective that 'it's a matter of a style', he said."It's surprising how many people choose a size that is not recommended by the size chart. Almost half would go for a size smaller, or even a couple sizes larger."
Looking ahead, Haldre envisions an online shopping world where people will "see how clothing will look on them -- with their face and other apparel they might be wearing."For instance, another company, Zugara, lets customers overlay garments on themselves using a webcam.Haldre predicted the convergence of various technologies would create a big shift in shopping, eventually leading to online making up 30 percent of apparel purchases.But Mulpuru was more skeptical."I don't know that we'll ever get to 30 percent, because ultimately it's a very personal decision," she said.

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