I personally preferred vintage - this was a time when older people were shedding 50s party dresses and giant twirly skirts to charity shops that sold them for a buck or two apiece, which even the teenaged me could afford - and when I wasn't taking in the seams on a dress I was sewing up vintage patterns I found in the same shops. I have particularly vivid memories of the way dart construction set a 60s blouse apart from the 50s equivalent.
(incidentally, both versions were seriously high in the armpits. I honestly don't know how people moved around back in the day - what price long-waistedness, to the max.)
It was in the 80s that I learned to knit, too, and while I eyed vintage knitting patterns I'd learned my lesson from the armpit experience and focused on the other end of the current fashion spectrum. By which I mean big shapeless sweaters you didn't need to knit a gauge swatch for. Yay!
So you can imagine how intrigued I was when Vogue started putting out books like this one...
After all these years, I still love love love the vintage look:
and was therefore bewildered by the 80s update of same:
Shall we have that again? Before:
... and after:
Yes. I am shaking my head. The updated versions lost all the punch, which is not so much what I remember about 10 years that produced giant pants and giant shoulder pads and giant hair all designed to allow a girl (and also, Joan Collins) to dominate the visual landscape. I guess there was a season or two of a more relaxed, natural look that I either missed entirely or found forgettable.There was a punch moment, though. Look!
1 comment:
I am seriously liking that leafy-stranded sweater. Some of the 80's preferences work for me. I've always favored loose and shapeless when it comes to sweaters (though ruffles, lacy fingerless gloves, and fedoras- not so much). The original model on the leaf sweater looks familiar too- Christy Turlington maybe?
I'm particularly fond of Groundhog Day Andie McDowell...
Post a Comment