Graham Hill Analysis

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Cataclysmic is that of the damage that society collectively has brought forth to both our inner and outer environments. The median size of a house in 2015 in the U.S.A was 2,467 square feet according to the Census Bureau and is only expected to grow. However, with all of this free space, one could shelter all the materials they do not actually use or just keep for the sentimental feeling brought upon by hedonistic materialism. Maybe store new five $100 dresses in an old dusty closet or maybe store away a never-used stainless steel barbecue grill in the three door garage. While materialism is not inherently bad, there are ways of being efficient while being modern to avoid the situations aforementioned. These concepts are exquisitely explored in both Jessi Arrington’s “Wearing Nothing New” and Graham Hill “Less Stuff, More Happiness.” Although, designer Jessi Arrington has a rather extrinsic narrative and clear message, writer Graham Hill is effectively more relevant providing dynamic examples, an appeal to emotions, and a superior transparent message. …show more content…
Hill presents a rather diverse presentation including an extended metaphor, colorful visual aid with an underlying color theme of eco-green, examples of others who used his criteria on his website, and outlines criteria to achieve his points: “edit ruthlessly, think small, make multifunctional.” Arrington uses a cosmic backdrop and a visual aid, mainly pictures of herself modeling different outfits to exemplify her message of “dressing well can do

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