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imagine you are a designer who would like to design high fashion scrubs, what tag line would you use?
here is an example- nurse and fashion---- where fashion meets passion or nurse in style-- because we care.!!looking forward to hear from you!!
Even though I don't need them anymore, I liked the pants with the knit cuffs and cargo pockets AND side pockets. I sounded like a junk truck coming down the hall, but I never had to look for hemostats or tape or scissors or prep pads or 4 different color pens, or a receipt from last weeks salad in the cafeteria, or Jimmy Hoffa, or just about anything else
LOL. No, RL not branching out. I was just wondering.
Even if you were - so what? I like to sew and I know several companies based on cottage industries sewing scrubs. Seriously, you can buy scrub patterns with four pieces and you could probably get away with two if the front was all poofy but you could fix that with the lovely draw-string.
It depends on who your market is - I know! Let's see some sketches. You don't want a cutesy slogan if your designs are more tailored . . .nor do you want to market your preppy-looking Brooks Brothers scrubs with a cartoonish mascot.
Before the scrub mania set in I wore 100% polyester form fitting tops you didn't need to iron and being polyester the bright colors (I worked in peds then) never faded. I had a hot pink and royal blue plaid number with a white sailor collar you could actually stand up in the corner it was so thick and sponge-y.
I took a career break for a while and when I came back everybody wore scrubs and I'm still not sure why. Now it seems people want to make the old ways new again. It's a bumpy road back, though. I saw a scrub top that was chocolate brown with a "Heidi in the Alps" design on the front panel and an empire-level tie-back. Oh, no. :barf01:
resumecpr
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Check out the link from the Gesundheit Institute's (Patch Adam's) website. It has a few scrub tops and jackets that are pretty flashy (great for kids).