Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Fashion American Style

Fashion American Style
Fashion American Style
If we were to take an unscripted took throughout history - looking at pictures that were not identified by year or event - we could still more than likely place the period of time by the fashion worn in the pictures. Fashion is a visual timeline, distinguishing one generation from the next and, yet, having the uncanny ability of finding its way back around again from time to time.

Nothing influences American society more than fashion. It's a trend seen over and over again as designs find their way from the designers to the masses. As a culture, we are pre-disposed to be "in style;" and those who set the benchmark of style have changed throughout the generations. But no time period saw greater changes in fashion than the twentieth century.


Fashion American Style
Fashion American Style
The fashion of the early 1900s was influenced by the advent of the automobile - as women's dresses began to include the dustcoat which protected clothing from the dirt coming off the road. Then as quickly as the 1920s, women's fashion shifted completely as the Jazz Age produced the "flapper" style - complete with short, simple fringed dresses and long pearls.

Not even a decade later, the Depression greatly changed the style of fashion - no longer was material a luxury item; women wore what they could find and afford. The 1930s began a trend towards following movie star fashion. And in the war-torn 1940s, a uniform-like sophistication including padded shoulders, short skirts, and a close tailored look became popular.


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