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Showing posts with label fashion history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fashion history. Show all posts

Saturday, June 13, 2015

A Short history of shoe style:

How far have we come and how far have we gone? Here is a great little shoe style infographic on how our favorite shoe trends aligned with history:





infographic courtesy of farfetch.com
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Monday, August 5, 2013

Exhibit: Lingerie Francaise

Do you love lacy underthings?  The French do.  They just debuted a pop-up exhibit in tribute to the history of their own lingerie at the Chelsea Market in New York City.  The Lingerie Francaise exhibit covers intimate apparel from the corset's heyday at the end of the 19th century through the movement towards more functional garments and using knit fabric in undergarments.

Bras became mainstream for women at the beginning of World War I.  In the 1920's, with straight bodied shifts and flappers in vogue, the girdle became a staple. In the 1930's, curvy, body conscious fashion was the style of the day and then supportive girdle belts and brads became indispensable.  Key brands in France included corsetiers Lisa Charmel, Simone Perele and Gaby, later Lejaby.

After World War II, the introduction of nylon revolutionized the industry with its durability, cost and ease of maintenance.  Fashions like the popularity of the mini-skirt and pants changed the way women dressed underneath once again.  You couldn't wear a girdle or garters with that, so stockings and brief style panties became de rigeur.   With the bra-burning feminist movement in the 1970's, lingerie manufacturers designed underwear that was light and comfortable enough to feel nude.  The 1980's brought lingerie to the exterior for fashion, so the styles had to be worthy.

The end of this exhibit is a showcase of the sponsoring lingerie brands most recent collections.  From those, I can interpret the trends of today are lots of embroidery and luxury.  So what pretty thinks are YOU wearing underneath?

The exhibits ends on August 6, 2013.  It is located at Chelsea Market at 75 Ninth Avenue in New  York City.
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Sunday, July 15, 2012

Bastille Day - Post Revolutionary Fashion




Did you think Gothic style was an invention of recent generations?   Citizens of post-revolutionary France had us beat.  Following the executions of Marie Antoinette, Louis XVI and then the Reign of Terror, the bourgeois population worked out their death issues in fashion, hairstyles and nightlife.

In a radical 180 from powdered wigs, men and women cropped their hair short and exposed their necks to emulate the preparation ritual for a trip to the guillotine.   Jewelry was made in guillotine shapes and other morbid motifs along with mourning arm bands.  Red ribbons tied around the throat became a popular accessory to symbolize cut throats.  


Victim's Balls became the new hotspot, allegedly for those who were mourning friends and family who lost their heads.  Dark colored ensembles could also be scandalously brief, where looks may include only the ribbons themselves.  Gourmand Grimod de la Reynière (one of the first popular food critics) held mock funeral banquets serving multiple courses of black colored dishes on top of a coffin.  


Vive la France!
Image from Dreadful DrearyWitch is me other sources include Supersizer Go - French Revolution

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