Learning what not to wear
Deepa Bharath
Debbie Dierks hated to shop for clothes.
The clothes never seemed to fit right.
So the 39-year-old Newport Harbor High School special education
teacher always made her own clothes. She loved floral patterns
because she loved flowers.
Dierks was a good seamstress, but somewhere down the line the
clothes got shoddy. The cuts were nowhere near straight. The seams
were crooked. She didn’t have time for perfection.
And it showed in her clothes.
“It was straight out of the ‘50s,” her student Deejaye Trobman
said.
To the gym, Dierks wore “goofy shorts,” a tank top that could be
best described as ill-fitting and hiking boots.
“Oh my God, the hiking boots,” senior Jimmy Rutledge slapped his
forehead as he remembered.
“Those were...,” his voice trailed off into silence as he fumbled
for descriptors.
But on Monday, the students saw a different Dierks. One who had
just returned from spending a week in New York City, on the sets of
The Learning Channel’s “What Not to Wear,” a grueling
fashion-makeover program that offers participants nothing but the
bare facts about their fashion sense, or almost always, the lack of
it.
The teacher who wore frumpy floral frocks got lost somewhere
between the Big Apple’s Business District and Midtown Manhattan.
The Dierks who emerged from the experience was one who was
spouting designer names and wearing them. Monday was her first day
back to school after returning from New York.
More than her fancy clothes, people noticed her radiant smile,
said teaching assistant Fereshteh Amirazadi.
“She seems so much more confident,” she said. “She seems happy.
Her whole personality has changed.”
Dierks never realized people were looking at her clothes, she
said.
“I thought no one saw or even cared,” she said. “But I know now
that people do notice what you’re wearing and it does matter.”
The idea of entering Dierks in the show was initiated by her
colleague and friend Maxine Macha, who took her on what appeared to
be a lousy double date. Sometime in the middle of the date, the
camera crew and teachers from Newport Harbor walked into the
restaurant where the group was sitting, Dierks said.
“I thought and wondered if it was some kind of an intervention,”
she said. “But I remembered that I had no addictions.”
She then realized that it was a carefully planned fashion
intervention. A crew from the show had been following Dierks around
taking pictures and footage of her various fashion faux pas.
But that wasn’t the tough part. To see her clothes on a big, wide
screen with its imperfections was brutal, Dierks said.
“I’ve always been open to criticism,” she said. “But not about my
clothes.”
She left most of her old clothes behind and went shopping to
Bloomingdale’s, Anik and Searile.
The comments from the stylists on the show were ruthless, but
Dierks said she took it because of what she saw.
“I realized I needed to do this,” she said. “The shock of seeing
my bad clothes did it for me.”
Dierks has never been the one to dress up. She was the rugged,
outdoors type who enjoys scuba-diving, rock-climbing, surfing, hiking
and skating.
Being on the show also changed her own image of her body.
“I had some misconceptions which got corrected,” she said. “I
hated my big waist and my long, spidery arms and legs. But these
people showed me how to dress myself so the clothes actually make me
look good. And I realized there was some science to fashion.”
She also learned how to apply makeup appropriately, Dierks said.
“I used to wear this dark red lipstick earlier,” she said.
But the crew taught her to use a lighter lipstick and eye makeup
to complement that soft color.
Her lax attitude toward her clothes was also partly because of her
upbringing, Dierks said.
“We never had that much money growing up,” she said.
Dierks wanted to be a Christian missionary in West Africa, but
ended up putting herself through school in Europe and later in the
United States. Frugality has been an intrinsic part of her existence.
“This experience has helped me change that poverty attitude,” she
said. “I feel like a different person.”
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