Before world war one,
women wore floor-length dresses, the waist was cinched restrained by the corset
and arms and legs were always covered. But then the war ended, times changed
and the world grandly entered the Roaring Twenties!
The 1920s witnessed
many changes one of which was the social position of women. The 19th
Amendment passed during this time gave women the right to vote. Women had
joined the workforce during the war and life beyond homemaking appealed to
them.
Fashion along with
every aspect of the society, had an impact. There were two distinctive styles
that ruled the 1920s, the first half had a more conservative outlook, but as
the roaring twenties took root women became more liberal. The latter half of
the decade saw a new class of women called the ‘The Flapper’.
Flapper was the slang
word, which used to refer to young bird flapping its wings while learning to
fly. In 1631, the word ‘flap’ was slang for a young prostitute, but over the
centuries the meaning underwent a change. In the 1920 when women wore their
galoshes unbuckled it would make a flapping noise as they walked. But flappers
represented women who rebelled against the norms of the society and adopted
unconventional ways.
As the fussiness of
prewar years dropped away, women forsook the restrictive corsets and ridiculous
petticoats of bygone years. The la garconne became the new fashion, where women
desired to have a figure like a teenage boy. To flatten the bust line a piece
of cloth was tied around the chest. The waist was dropped to the hip in order
to hide their womanly hourglass figures. The typical flappers cropped their
hair into boyish bobs, they wore make-up, began to wear shorter, straight loose-fitting
garments that allowed far greater freedom of movement.
Once the war ended
morals and rule went for a toss. Entertainment gained importance; silent movies
were on the rise and fashion magazines like Vogue was started. Instant
gratification became the mantra and the night life came alive. The flappers
with their new fashioned clothes, red lips and dark eyes frequented the illegal
clubs where they danced to jazz music all night long, and had affairs,
indiscriminately.
They drove cars, drank, a defiant act in the American period
of prohibition, and smoked through a long cigarette holder. The decade was a
reckless abandonment of propriety.
Women would wear a string of pearls that are typical of that age. The
light weight, sequenced dresses are something that still exists. The flappers
revolutionized fashion added jazz into it and made the life of the coming
generations a lot easier and more colorful!
No comments:
Post a Comment