?> Fashion: History's shocking styles
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Fashion: History's shocking styles

Fashion: History's shocking styles

 

louis vuitton uk shopLondon Fashion Week has kicked off and usually manages to cause some controversy. But that's only to be expected - style has been scandalising for centuries.Last year it was a dress made from 3,000 cow and yak nipples - this year it's anyone's guess what will cause a storm at London Fashion Week (LFW).High fashion often seems to translate into some rather strange looks: shower cap shoes, Pac-Man helmets and table skirts to name just a few.But LFW is lightweight compared with some of the shocking styles of the past. Trends from centuries gone by have caused public outcry, been branded indecent, decadent - even unpatriotic. Others have played their part in shaping history.Fashion sometimes clashes with the prevailing social mores, says US fashion historian Katy Werlin. "Change happens so quickly and often in our modern world that we don't really think twice about it. "So a radical new fashion trend probably would not have the same shock value as it did 100 years ago."So step aside Lady Gaga, here are styles from history that have startled and even outraged.They would laugh in the face of today's metrosexual man and what he considers to be looking after his appearance. They'd scoff at David Beckham in his sarong. When it comes to male preening and blurring the gender divide, it was a group of young British aristocrats who led the way in the Known as the Macaronis, they shocked and scandalised - and revelled in doing so. The style was started by a group of rich young men who took the Grand Tour around Europe after finishing their formal education.

 louis vuitton online sale Think of it as a very expensive and very exclusive 18th Century gap year. They adopted the flamboyant continental styles of the French and Italians, but taking every detail to the very extreme. Supposedly, the name Macaroni came about because they also developed a taste for the food in Italy. Towering, elaborate wigs were worn with tiny hats perched on top. Garishly patterned waistcoats clashed with brightly coloured stockings. Every detail, down to the buckles on their shoes, was over the top. They even developed their own form of language, mixing French and Italian words with English and using different pronunciation.It was in stark contrast to well-to-do men's fashion at the time. It had toned down from the start of the century and was all about careful tailoring and simple, plain garments, says Werlin. It had developed out of the countrywear worn by the English gentleman. Heavily embroidered and jewelled silk coats were not practical for running a country estate. But what also scandalised was the fact that Macaronis were so obsessed with fashion in the first place, regardless of their outlandish taste, says Werlin. The 18th Century was the period when fashion became gendered and they were ripping up the rules. "For a variety of reasons, fashion became known as a woman's thing. So for a man to engage in such frippery was seen as silly and effeminate.

 louis vuitton for saleIn engaging with high fashion, they were taking on a woman's role, which was of course highly scandalous in this age of gender inequality."Word of the Macaronis spread to other countries. In the song Yankee Doodle there is a reference to their fashion. The line: "Yankee Doodle went to town a-riding on a pony, stuck a feather in his cap and called it macaroni." Outcry soon turned to ridicule and they became the target of satirists of the time. But ultimately it was a fad. Men's fashion quickly moved on to more simple styles championed by Beau Brummell, the arbiter of men's fashion in Regency England. He believed good dressing came across in immaculate details, not ostentatious display. His style was a direct reaction to the Macaronis, says fashion historian and trend forecaster Amber Butchart.now she managed to scandalise the nation by ditching the glitz and taking a more simple approach to her outfits. So simple, in fact, that the nation thought she had posed for the portrait in her underwear. Imagine the reaction if the Duchess of Cambridge was thought to have posed in her briefs and you get an idea of the shock it created.The French queen had adopted the new style of dress to go with the more simple lifestyle she was leading at her private country retreat. The Petit Trianon was situated in the grounds of the Palace of Versailles and while there, a lot of the elaborate ceremony of the French court was dropped - including the fashion. Marie Antoinette began wearing a light, shapeless dress called a gaulle. It was made of layers of simple muslin, loose-fitting and shaped by a sash tied around the waist. It also didn't have the usual panniers under the skirt, which were often so extreme that door frames had to be widened to accommodate dresses.

louis vuitton online store uk It meant the material could mould around the legs, also shocking at the time. Everything about it was in direct contrast to court fashion, which was incredibly elaborate and all about over-the-top luxury. When Elisabeth Vigee Lebrun painted the queen in her new dress and it went on public display, there was a huge scandal. "The simplicity and lightness of the dress design looked a lot like the chemise, which was the basic foundation garment worn by everyone at the time," says Werlin. As a result it gained the moniker "chemise a la reine".Even when it was established she was wearing a new style of dress, the public furore did not die down. The simplicity of the garment was seen as an insult to the glory of the monarchy, as French queens were supposed to be a reflection of the greatness of the king.She was also accused of trying to put French silk merchants out of business. At the time, they were a vital part of the French economy and by wearing imported fabric , the queen was considered to be supporting a rival textile industry.But despite initially being decried as indecent, by the 1790s French and British women had started to adopt muslin chemise dresses, says Sonnet Stanfill, a fashion curator at the V&A. It was the precursor to the light. Woe betide a woman who showed an ankle in the mid-1800s. In large parts of the world, skirts were long to protect a woman's modesty, corsetry was tight and restrictive and wearing anything that was remotely masculine would raise the nation's collective eyebrow - to put it mildly.

louis vuitton shop online ukEven that smallest flash of the bloomers was enough to work people up into a frenzy of disgust. Designed by Elizabeth Smith Miller in New York in 1851 and championed by women's rights activist Amelia Bloomer, the small group of women wearing them regarded them as a healthy and rational alternative to the cumbersome skirts of the time. They made riding a bike and other tasks of daily life a lot easier. But society was not ready for women in trousers, even if they were almost entirely hidden under a skirt."They became a political statement and the wearers were attacked publicly," says fashion historian Rebecca Tuite. "Bloomers became a derogatory term, a name hurled at women who were involved in the temperance and women's rights movement." Again, satirists of the time jumped on the back of the moral outcry and ridiculed the look. They drew cartoons of women acting like men and dressed in bloomers. Conservative society won out this time and the bloomer suit went back in the wardrobe.When it returned decades later, it had lost none of its power to scandalise. In the early 1900s, bloomers started to be worn again, but this time without a skirt on top and the trousers were tied at the knee. Most people still thought they robbed women of their femininity. They were adopted by America's earliest female college students, but tight restrictions were put in place dictating where and when they were allowed. They were worn by women who played sports and basically only on the sports field. It still wasn't until the 1930s that all-female colleges accepted the trousers anywhere else.

 louis vuitton outlet online ukDespite the struggle to get them accepted in mainstream society, the bloomer suit went on to change what women wore forever. "The impact of the bloomer suit was an incredibly legacy whereby women could wear clothes that better suited their daily wants and needs," says Tuite. Nowadays it's wearing too few clothes that often creates a furore; not so for Christian Dior. In 1947, he showed his first collection since World War II in Paris. It shocked and outraged people and was even branded unpatriotic, simply because of the copious amount of fabric used to make the longer, more voluminous skirts.The war had finished but a lot of European countries were still undergoing. The UK government's Making of Civilian Clothing (restriction order) prohibited the wasteful cutting of cloth. It also set a list of restrictions that tailors and dressmakers had to work to which dictated the number of buttons and pockets and amount of trim an outfit could have. At the time, women's fashion had also become very tailored and masculine, with sharp shoulders. It was the influence of military styles and also reflected the work women had been doing during the war, in factories and fields.In stark contrast, Dior's New Look featured long hemlines and full skirts that were tightly nipped in at the waist. It created the perfect hourglass silhouette. The fabrics he used were expensive too - satins, fine wools and taffeta. With many people still hard-up and struggling, the lavish style was considered an insult by many.

louis vuitton uk online shoppingThe designer was also backed by textile manufacturers, and some saw the design as a way to increase their profits."The New Look seemed incredibly decadent, even unpatriotic," says Butchart. "It caused a huge fuss when it was first seen."Modern designers still cite Dior's New Look as a shocking and seminal part of fashion history. Alexander McQueen, famous for his own extreme styles, called it a "radical fashion moment".It was also a return to an almost Victorian silhouette, with the nipped-in waist and softer shoulders. This was interpreted as sending a message to women."In this way, the Dior New Look really symbolised the 'return to the home' ethos that many governments were trying to impose on women since the end of the war," says Butchart.It may have scandalised initially, but Dior's instinct proved right. Fed up with the restrictions imposed by the war, women eventually started to embrace the new style. It went on to influence women's fashion well into the next decade. Spanish opera singer Jose Carreras has been confirmed as the headline act for a classical musical event as part of the 2012 Preston Guild festival.Preston Proms in the Park, featuring Manchester Camerata Orchestra, will be staged in an amphitheatre in the city's Avenham Park on 7 September.Avenham and adjacent Miller Park will be staging a 10-day long festival to mark the 2012 Preston Guild.The celebration has been held every 20 years since 1179.Lancashire-born fashion designer Wayne Hemmingway is to create a vintage village in the parks which will celebrate Preston's creative culture through fashion shows, music and art.Other highlights of the 2012 Preston Guild include a live religious drama filmed in the city called Preston Passion, to be broadcast on Good Friday, and the Methodist Collection of Modern Art.

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