Model Twiggy's Trademark Look
"Mod" fashion, a movement short for "modern" spread to the United States quickly from Europe. Focusing on innovative slim fits and bold geometric shapes, these fashions were made available to the public through mass production. The youth culture of rebellion developed new fashion items, such as the mini-skirt, a radical rise of the hemline from the previous knee-length standard. Mini-skirts were perceived as statements by women of their personal ownership of their own bodies. Other youths embraced the newly emerging hippie culture, welcoming lifestyles emphasizing peace, love, freedom, and alternative lifestyles with drugs and communal living. Their clothing, which was often inspired by non-Western cultures, included paisley prints, beads, fringes, leather, and embellished or tye-dyed t-shirts. New styles of jeans emerged, the most popular being bell-bottoms.
1960's Hippie Culture
In coats, shorter, fuller coat shapes were favored, and layers were used to create various outfits. Tunic tops and tiered skirts were popular for this purpose. Clothing emphasized a new sort of "soft fullness", often achieved through relaxed shaping or relaxed waistlines. Designs nevertheless emphasized contoured figures.
1960's Fashions
First Lady and Fashion Icon Jacqueline Kennedy
If you want to do some more reading up on how fashion trends of the 60's have impacted modern fashion, here's a cute site titled appropriately, "10 Ways the 1960's Invented Today's Fashion Trends". It's wonderful to see how history connects within itself in a network of cause and effect.
Link: http://sammydvintage.com/vintage-style/60s/fashion-in-the-1960s/
Sources:
http://www.skwirk.com.au/p-c_s-14_u-189_t-507_c-1878/fashion-in-the-1960s/nsw/history/australia-s-social-and-cultural-history-in-the-post-war-period/social-and-cultural-features-of-the-1960s
http://historywired.si.edu/detail.cfm?ID=119
http://www.paperpast.com/html/1960_fashion.html
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