Sunday, April 10, 2011

1920's Fashion

During this era U.S. history was changing...World War I had ended and women were granted the right to vote... =>Enter the Flapper! She was a liberal and free-thinking woman who wore short skirts, sheer stockings, had a short hair cut, which was also known as "the bob" which many times was styled in a finger waive. And she wore drastically dark makeup with art deco jewelry. The Flapper was considered youthful and boyish, as they abandoned curves and restricted corsets for a more loose fitting dress with strait lines. Flappers were pioneers in many ways, and fashion was just used (as it was intended to be) as an outlet for expression. I think for the flapper; her style was an expression of change, freedom, and liberation. She herself allowed her fashion to be an expression of free thinking. It was the fashion that flipped upside down the idea of femininity and allowed women to take control over what it expresses about them as individuals and as American women.

photo from: photography.si.edu
photo from: flickr.com
photo from: sites.google.com
photo from: webspace.webring.com
photo from: lolly-tots.blogspot.com
photo from: fashiontina.blogspot.com
photo from: fashion-era.com
photo from: artdecoblog.blogspot.com
photo from: myvintagevogue.blogspot.com
photo from: mariah952008.glogster.com
photo from: flickr.com
photo from: lolly-tots.blogspot.com
photo from: flickr.com
photo from: glamourdaze.blogspot.com
photo from: http://www.zimbio.com

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Great article! Thank you! I could use this information for my project! :)

Anonymous said...

Great Article, and great photos!

Anonymous - I feel really appalled at your comments. You are so filled with hatred. Focusing your energy on something meaningful will get you further than commenting extremely negative, awful comments on fashion websites.

I am in total agreement with Maria.

Patricia said...

This is a very misleading article. The flappers you refer to were somewhat rare and had a reputation of being "the bad girls." The series of pictures depict only one, maybe two, women who could be considered, "flappers." The last picture is a modern one, with women in reproduction outfits, and the balance of the pictures are otherwise good examples of more general outfits.