Vintage Style Files

Posts Tagged ‘60’s fashions’

Woodstock Era Fashions

Saturday, August 15th, 2009

This week marks the 40th anniversary of the legendary music festival that took place at Yasgur’s Farm in New York.   Woodstock  has become the ultimate symbol of the  counterculture of the 60s,  the peace and love generation, hippies,  flower power,  psychedelic drugs and the anti Vietnam War movement.

There is an iconic style that also defines that time period.   I never adopted the hippie lifestyle, mainly because my parents would have kicked my butt!  But I did enjoy wearing hippie inspired fashions. 

I loved the long flowing dresses and bell bottom jeans that my friends and I would embroider and embellish with peace symbol patches.  Love beads hung around our necks and headbands were worn across the forehead, Native American style.  I remember the tiny floral “granny” prints,  op art and tie dye patterns. There was lots of texture in fabrics, tapestries, velvets and anything fringed, feathered, or crocheted.  Much of the clothing had  Edwardian, Victorian, ethnic and bohemian influences.

It was a great era for experimentation and creativity in fashion. Malls, with their cookie cutter merchandise,  didn’t clutter the landscape back then.  Unique little boutiques selling  funky, eclectic fashions were more common, making shopping so much more fun than it is today.  

Below are some hippie inspired 60’s fashions that are guaranteed to keep you looking and feeling groovy, baby!

Adorable Tina Leser 1960s  maxi dress in a green and white striped floral print with matching shawl. For sale at Kitty Girl Vintage.

Tina Leser 60's dress-34/26

Tina Leser 60's dress-34/26

 Embroidered gauze hippie shirt. For sale at Ballyhoo Vintage.

1960s embroidered gauze shirt.

1960s embroidered gauze shirt.

1960s scarf print dress offered at Posh Girl Vintage.
Silky 60's scarf print dress. M/L

Silky 60's scarf print dress. M/L

Fab 60’s hand tooled leather handbag with butterflies.  For sale at Light Years Vintage.

1960s hand tooled leather bag with butterfly design.

1960s hand tooled leather bag with butterfly design.

Halter style 60’s mini dress in pink and black floral stripe.  For sale at Blue Velvet Vintage-34/27

Hippie chic 60's floral stripe halter style mini dress.

Hippie chic 60's floral stripe halter style mini dress.

 

Those Sixties People-Young Vulgarians

Sunday, January 6th, 2008

A while back I found this book called Sixties People at a flea market and I’ve just gotten around to reading it.  It was written in 1990 by Jane and  Michael Stern , who specialize in books about travel and pop culture.  You can find it online from Powell’s Books  for a mere $4.95!   In a most hilarious, entertaining and informative way the Sterns cover several different subcultures of the 60s, my favorite being what they call the "young vulgarians".

In case you’ve never heard of these individuals, they were, according to the Sterns, "the street smart teenagers from hardscrabble neighborhoods such as south Philadelphia and the Bronx."    You see,  the 60s wasn’t just about Gidget, Twiggy, Mary Tyler Moore and peace loving hippies. These tough city kids were personally responsible for the rise in popularity of teased bouffant hairstyles, particularly the beehive, thick black eyeliner a la Elvira,  and makeup that looked like it was applied with a trowel.  For the guys,  Brylcreem was king.  The greasier and higher the pompadour, the better.  And when Dick Clark put these tawdry teens on  American Bandstand ,  it created a new ultra cool urban street style that resonated with youth across America.   No doubt thoroughly horrifying many parents.  But then, isn’t that a teenager’s job?

Youngvulgarian2 A quote from the book describes the style brilliantly. "The look was hoodlum baroque, combining a city tough attitude with formal hairdos as ornate as the chandeliers at the local catering hall. This was a look that was bigger than fashion. It expressed a turgid universe of teenage passion and despair."

No kidding. If I had to fix my hair like that everyday and pack on that much make up I’d be in depair too!

Supposedly there were all kinds of rumors about girls who had rodents and insects populating these towering masses of unwashed tresses.  They also provided great hiding places for switchblades,  blackjacks, brass knuckles and small flasks.  Heck, who needs one of those cumbersome designer handbags when you can stash everything right in your hairdo?

But if, like me, you were just a bit too young to adopt this style the first time around, here are some tips I garnered from the book,  in case you feel the urge to go out looking like the Temptress of Trashiness anytime soon. Maybe next Halloween for example!

Youngvulgarian4_2
1.Don’t wash your hair for several days.  Set with jumbo pink rollers. Generous use of Aqua Net hairspray is very important,  as is excessive teasing, backcombing then shaping, until the matted tangle resembles a halo of spun sugar. Finish with more hairspray. Sleep sitting up.

2. With a sponge, apply several thick layers of  makeup, preferably using Max Factor Pancake Number 2.  Erase any evidence of lips by first covering with concealer, then apply a coat of dead-white lipstick. Shave off eyebrows.  Then draw in a brow about an inch higher than natural brow with black eyebrow pencil. Use chalk white shadow on eyelids to match the lips. Black liquid liner applied along lash line and black eyebrow pencil along inner rim of bottom lid completes this ghoulishly sexy look. Oh yeah, don’t forget the white pearlescent polish on the nails.

3. Don a sheer white nylon "pussycat" blouse over a black bullet bra. Tuck it into a tight black pencil skirt cinched at the waist with a wide black belt.  Dress the legs with black nylon stockings, preferably with a run in them, and wear pointy toed cuban heeled shoes. Don’t forget to wear an ankle bracelet, under the stockings of course!

 

Youngvulgarian5_2

4. Other essential pieces of jewelry are necklaces with crosses or lockets with pictures of singers such as Dion or Fabian, boyfriends ID bracelets and dime store bangle bracelets.

5. Top the whole ensemble with a fuzzy mohair cardigan in peach or turquoise blue.  Carry a large leatherette bag filled with extra cans of hairspray, an emergency makeup kit, 45 records to trade with your friends, latest copies of Tiger Beat magazine, dozen pieces of Bazooka bubble gum, tube of Clearasil,  and a lucky rabbit’s foot.

6. Last, but not least, the ultimate symbol of coolness is to display a hickey on your neck to show the world just what a desirable vulgarian babe your really are!

These tough, streetwise chicks loved  the  music of the Shirelles, Shangri-las, Chiffons and Ronettes. Their dramatic songs about unrequited love and eternal tragedy struck a cord deep in their hardcore little hearts.

Their idol was, Jackie the K,   wife of famed disc jockey Murray the K .   With her jet black teased hair and eyeliner to match,  she was the ultimate tough girl role model.

In another post I’ll cover style tips for vulgarian tough guys!

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