Tag Archives: dress

Hippy Fashions Part 2 Tie Dye

tie_dye_photo1

Part 1 Introduction

Part 3 The Military Look

Part 4 Hippie Accessories

Last week’s post was a short history of how and why hippy fashions developed but now we look at individual facets of hippy fashion and hippy ideas to see how the look was created.

All fashion is a restatement of what has gone before, there is nothing new, and hippy fashion exploited this to the full. Many old crafts were resurrected, artistically changed and put to work decorating the mix of Victorian (and older) styles and ideas which form the basis of hippy clothing. It was a colourful time, a time of rustic charm and harmony in complete contrast to the period that had gone before and nowhere was this more obvious than in the process of tie-dying.

Continue reading

Fashion Hippies Part 1

hippy_fashion

Part 2 Tie-Dye

Part 3 The Military Look

Part 4 Hippie Accessories

We are now at the end of the 60s decade and heading for a style which will take us through one of the oddest fashions trends in the topsy-turvy fashion merry-go-round that was the 1960s.

Hippies appeared in America in the mid-60s and were composed mainly of middle-class teenagers disaffected with life and culture who drew on the experiences of 50s anti-conformist beatniks. Psychedelic drugs were common by this time and hippy culture merged the two ideas to create a movement that expressed itself by promoting anything contrary to the excepted society of the day.

Continue reading

60s Fashion – An Introduction

fashion 60s miniTalk about the 1960s and people say – there was a revolution in fashion, wasn’t there? In fact, compared to the decades that had gone before, it was more a bombshell than a revolution!

The war years cared little for fashion and many women wore whatever clothes they could find while men were mostly in uniform. The immediate post war years saw a revival of fashion but progress was slow, finances had to adapt, there were homes to find and furnish, hungry men and new children to feed and these took priority.

Continue reading