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1930's fashion a Trend for Fall 2009

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By Becca's Blog

Tailored was in but it screamed femme.
Tailored was in but it screamed femme.

 

Everything old is now again is an adage that is especially true in the area of fashion. Some fashion pundits are saying that fall and winter styles that on coming on the scene will harken back to the glamour days of the 1930’s. I am a lover of all things vintage and love the fact that vintage clothes did not leave women looking like weird neon aliens or dressing like men only not as mannish. Yet to clothing that lets us show our curves and celebrates all things femme.

The style in the 1930’s was not austere fashions that reflected the economic hardships of the time. They were a period time when the clothing that women who were now increasingly in public life that was practical and very feminine. Gone were Victorian leftovers hobble skirts and corsets and the boyish looks of 1920’s.

Women wanted ease of movement and to still show off their best feminine assets. Tailored was in and hemlines dropped, but styles were made to show and create hour glass figures. Daywear was famed up with stylish pleats and sexy draping. Fabrics like rayon and wool crepe made fashions light and easy to wear. Evening wear as always, was sensuous and featured more metallic fabrics. Day dresses were cut to show a little cleavage and to be sweet in appearance in an amazing selection of pastel hues. They were not your 1950’s women’s shirt dresses with a little feminine flair in the skirt.

Accessories from the 1930’s were still a great deal art deco in style. Still there was a revival of interest in the beaded bags of the ladies might have carried to the theater in the Victorian era. Jewelry made of manmade gems and geometric shapes reflected the more auteur economic attitudes of the day. Still the world was forward looking and things that were more of the undefined modern art variety had large appeal.

Take a look at the fashions in the old 1930’s films and books. Get an idea what 30’s glamour you can add to your wardrobe this fall. I am looking at some of the thirties bobs as the hair styles like the clothes were sexy and practical.

 


1930's fashion a Trend for Fall 2009 in the News

  • The sisterhood of Girls GolfGolfWeek1 second ago

    One woman is taking the Motor City in a slightly different direction – from cars to fashion.

  • Fashion Forward: Blanchett is bright in Armani's Black Lace makeupUSA Today2 days ago

    This week: Makeup, scarves and hair clips to make you sparkle for the holidays.

  • The sneaker pimpsSMU Daily Campus1 second ago

    Alternative rock band Weezer sports the indy-cool look with button-up shirts, sweater vests, skinny ties and obscure, vintage T-shirts. The band wrote 'The Sweater Song' as an ode to their favorite clothing.

  • The Year in StyleNew York Times3 hours ago

    Lady Gaga is as modern as a video gamer’s creation.

  • Faraway Mobile Home Comes to Represent RootsNew York Times4 hours ago

    When her mother died, Lynne Kortenhaus inherited a 1987 Oldsmobile Cutlass and a 1,500-square-foot mobile home on the west coast of Florida.

  • Vintage fashions fit boutique owner perfectlySan Francisco Chronicle4 days ago

    As a high schooler in suburban New Jersey, Valerie Singer once played cat-and-mouse with a truant officer in blue-suede platform shoes, black tights and a negligee. A fiend for quirky fashion, she discovered thrift stores and collected castoff parasols,...

  • Grain of TruthForbes4 hours ago

    The odd couple: Frank Pollaro, a blue-collar kid from New Jersey, has devoted his life to reproducing the furniture designs of Emile-Jacques Rhulmann, one of Art Deco's grandees. And he's now the go-to guy if that's what your heart desires.

  • Faraway Mobile Home Comes to Represent RootsPittsburgh Post-Gazette1 second ago

    Largo, Fla. -- A 1987 Oldsmobile Cutlass with just 23,000 miles on it and a 1,500-square-foot mobile home here on the west coast of Florida were among the possessions bequeathed to Lynne Kortenhaus when her mother died four years ago. The mobile home had been the family residence since her parents bought it in 1980 and moved here from a 26-acre farm near the Jersey Shore.

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