CHOOSING AND REFINING MY TOPIC
Initially, the search for an adequate research topic was quite frustrating for me and I struggled to settle on one topic. Although throughout the process, I realised that my avid interest in design and fashion stuck with me right through. I am a passionate design student, and art has always been one of my strengths. Last semester my Design class competed a folio on the Art Deco movement and the 1920’s. We were to choose one aspect of the movement and further research it. I chose to look into the fashion of the 1920’s. This topic very much interested me and the intriguing fashion of the era has stuck with me since. I am keen to delve further into the fashion of the 1920’s as the history of fashion is something
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I have considered different ways to approach my idea in order to develop a question and have deliberated some other questions to narrow it down. Questions like “How has the fashion of the Art Deco movement influenced modern day society?”, “Where are features of 1920’s fashion still seen today?” and “How accurate are modern day representations of Art Deco fashion?”. I found that representations of fashion are frequently seen in movies. So I chose to narrow my topic down to women’s fashion and then more specifically to women’s formal dresses. I then decided to focus on Baz Luhrmann’s 2013 rendition of The Great Gatsby as a source of representations fashion during the Art Deco era. I have refined my ideas and decided to base my research on the question, “To what extent do the formal women’s dresses from Baz Luhrmann’s 2013 film ‘The Great Gatsby’ accurately represent the
From newspaper articles in 1964 announcing the London Look, to an article by Mary Quant in Vogue in 1966 and an article at the end of the decade that declared the return of Paris Power, young people in the U.S. had the opportunity to read and examine British contributions to fashion and make decisions about whether to adopt or not. The 1960s in the United States was a turbulent time –a decade of political and social upheaval. The youth quake of British styles helped to set a new energetic pace for America and a means to deal with the turmoil. College campuses in the U.S. were often the place of change and acceptance of new ideas and thus a place to study the
Throughout American history and the 1900’s, fads have been a hugely successful form of self expression. From fashion, to recreation, to dumb and sometimes dangerous things that youths do, fads are a way to distract from the troubles of the world and find something else fun to do.
The 1920s was an age of drastic social and political changes. For the first time in history, more Americans started living in cities rather than on farms. Americans were wealthier than ever before. People from coast to coast bought similar goods, listened to the same music, did the same dances, and even used related slang. Numerous Americans were uncomfortable with this unfamiliar, urban, and occasionally racy “mass culture”. In fact, for a large number of people in the United States, the 1920s brought more conflict than celebration. However, for a minuscule handful of youth in the nation’s larger cities, the 1920s were roaring. Prohibition gave criminals a way to illegally make money; gangsters, young men who worked in criminal gangs, began selling on the black-market alcohol. Young woman emerged during the 1920s with different appearance, attitude, and behavior; with a bobbed haircut and short skirts.
The Jazz culture inspired multiple dances, such as the Black Bottom and the ever-popular Charleston. These dances required lots of movement leading to a shift in women’s fashion. Women wore less undergarments, went without coresets, and designed dresses that allowed for more freedom of movement. In 1921, Coco Chanel introduced the “drop-waist” dress, which were worn with long strings of glass beads or pearls. By 1925 these dresses resembled the shifts that were worn under the dresses of the early 1900. Evening dress were made up of mesh material, sleeveless, low v-neckline or backless, and sometimes adorned with sequence. These new fashions were advertised in fashion magazines that made their appearance in the 20s, Vouge, The Queen, and the
Women’s fashion was a social controversy in the 1920’s. This controversy was influenced by women’s clothing, swimwear, hairstyles, makeup, and attitude alone. This attire and new found character traits added a certain attitude and confidence to these women, starting what would eventually be remembered as a revolution.
The Roaring Twenties brought many fads and fashion rages. During the 1920's, Americans were given the honor of being called the "best- dressed". Several things contributed to this honor: Affordable pricing, mass production clothing, the birth of the "flapper girl", and rise of fashionable movie stars that Americans wanted to imitate.
Fashion reflects the attitudes of a society more than any other art form. Like art, fashion is a material record of the ideals that swayed the nations at the time of their creation. Through examining the styles, and tastes of a particular era, we can realize where the interests and priorities of a time lie. As Frank Parsons wrote in his 1920 study, The Psychology of Dress, "There is surly no better field in which to trace the devious paths of human thought than in that of clothes, where man has ever given free play to self expression, in a way which, thought not always a credit to his intelligence, is yet quite true to his innermost self, whether he will acknowledge it or
The fashion industry is rapidly growing and constantly generating new fashion trends almost weekly. Fashion for some may seem ridiculous and unnecessary; but fashion is not just a meaningless usage of article of clothing or farcical materials sew together for coverage. There is more to fashion than meets the eyes, fashion is precious and significant. It is a reflection of self-image, it speak the ream about who we are and how we review ourselves. Not only is fashion the reflection of self-image but also the reflection of our history as Coco Channel have said, “Fashion is not something that exist in dresses only. Fashion is in the sky, in the street, fashion has to do with ideas, the way we live, what is happening.” Fashion
This essay will explore the effects social and political changes had on fashion in the 1980’s. This period was chosen because the new romantic fashions were so different to the punk fashions that had been before, this essay will therefore identify the changes that had taken place to influence this change. Primary evidence used to support findings will include interviews and photographs which will show a firsthand account of the period.
Let’s take a look at the women’s of the 1920’s, the changes that took place in fashion and the roles of women in society. Women’s fashion will be compared from early days up until the 1930’s, with a brief comparison of the roles of women before and after the 1920’s. A discussion of the different avenues that opened up for women after 1920 and the impact that it has had on modern day women will also be covered within this paper. you need a stronger introduction
As Coco Chanel quotes: “Fashion is an architecture: It is a matter of proportion.” Fashion during the Harlem Renaissance and the roaring 20s define the culture of males, females, whites & blacks.
If in the 19th century French writer, Baudelaire, in his essay ‘painter of modern life’ (1865) said that “every dress style is beautiful in its own time” To investigate if this was true or not I looked and researched into an Art movement back from the era that had a big impact on nearly everyone and how it changed the style of everything so much. My chosen art movement was the Arts and Crafts movement as well as how the Islamic/Japanese art influenced the work of William Morris; I researched all the key practitioners majorly involved in this arts movement as well as some of the contemporary designers which could’ve possibly took influence from this movement. As a Muslim, myself I love to learn all the new and the things that happened back
In the 1900s, Europe was the country that dominated the fashion industry, with many famous fashion designers and designs. In 1914, World War I sparked within Europe and eventually turned into a global war. The War lasted for four years, ending in 1918. Like any other war, World War I impacted Europe drastically, and of course, it affected the fashion industry. This research paper will focus on how the period of World War I impacted women’s fashion in Europe from 1914 to the 1920s.
The 1920’s fashion was a period of liberation, change, and even more importantly a movement towards the modern era. Fashion in the 1920’s varied throughout the decade but one could see the noticeable change from the previous fashion statements and eras. At the start of the decade, women began emancipating themselves from the constricting fashions by wearing more comfortable apparel. As women gained more rights and World War I forced them to become more independent, flappers came to be, mass-produced garments became available, and artistic movements increased in popularity, one can see how the fashions from the roaring twenties characterized the time and redefined womanhood. (1920s clothing 1)
Throughout the 1920s through the 1950s Women’s clothing in America was affected by World War II, which lead to the exploration of different styles, the encounter of new trends and the exchange of ideas and new styles.