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Post by mc98 on Sept 11, 2021 5:08:50 GMT 10
1920s, no question about it,
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Post by slashpop on Sept 11, 2021 5:10:23 GMT 10
1.90s 2.80s 3.60s 4.70s 5.50s
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Post by mc98 on Sept 11, 2021 5:15:01 GMT 10
1.90s 2.80s 3.60s 4.70s 5.50s Nah, they don’t compare to what the 1920s were. It was a very liberating decade for women, especially mid skirts and looser waists. Men also started to wear fedoras.
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Post by Telso on Sept 11, 2021 5:27:16 GMT 10
I also would go with the 1920s for women. After centuries of conservative dressing, the fact that women could show up their ankles for the first time without being associated with prostitution was a revolution. Not to mention the boxy looks and the tiny hats were extremely cutting edge, even for now, let alone the Edwardian era that preceded the decade. As a close second the 1960s as the mini-length and bubbly fashions of the decade strongly contrasted the traditionalist styles of the 1950s.
For men, I'd go with the 1970s. Although it happened progressively throughout the 1960s, the 70s were the first decade where wearing a suit wasn't part of casual clothes for men. Let alone all the strange trends throughout the era like jumpsuits and unbottuned shirts. The 1980s sort of undid that with the revival of the blazer look, but that didn't matter again afterwards anyway.
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Post by slashpop on Sept 11, 2021 5:30:42 GMT 10
1.90s 2.80s 3.60s 4.70s 5.50s Nah, they don’t compare to what the 1920s were. It was a very liberating decade for women, especially mid skirts and looser waists. Men also started to wear fedoras. Casual 90s fashion still reigns supreme imo. I prefer the colorful punk, mod, gothic, glam, hippy, two tone, teddy boy, hip hop and grunge fashion of 50s to 90s. Nothing comes close to them in the 00s and 10s. 1920s were definitely interesting and different especially compared to the drab fashion in surrounding decades but not enough overall imo compared to other decades
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Post by pumpkin14 on Sept 11, 2021 6:00:05 GMT 10
1960s. Men’s and women’s fashion changed dramatically and paved the way for the casual fashion that continues today
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Post by mc98 on Sept 11, 2021 6:16:44 GMT 10
Nah, they don’t compare to what the 1920s were. It was a very liberating decade for women, especially mid skirts and looser waists. Men also started to wear fedoras. Casual 90s fashion still reigns supreme imo. I prefer the colorful punk, mod, gothic, glam, hippy, two tone, teddy boy, hip hop and grunge fashion of 50s to 90s. Nothing comes close to them in the 00s and 10s. 1920s were definitely interesting and different especially compared to the drab fashion in surrounding decades but not enough overall imo compared to other decades Certain aspects of 90s fashion were inspired by the 60s/70s.
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Post by 10slover on Sept 11, 2021 6:45:02 GMT 10
1. 1920s: had a very iconic and recognizable style, very different from the 1910s and 1930s
2. 1980s: 80s fashion was nothing like 70s fashion and nothing like 90s fashion
3. 1950s: very iconic and recognizable but less so than 80s and 1920s fashion
10s fashion was quite unoriginal, aside from the weird (and wavy) dyed haircuts that I'm 100% sure will be seen as "silly" 10 years from now
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Post by ItsMichael on Sept 11, 2021 10:16:52 GMT 10
Probably the 20s. I can't even recall what the 1910s had for fashion and the entirety of the 30s was marked by the Great Depression which made fashion barely a thing. Some of the fashion that was big from the roaring 20s can still be relevant today.
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Post by Telso on Sept 12, 2021 20:09:20 GMT 10
Probably the 20s. I can't even recall what the 1910s had for fashion. Really? Not even from the movie Titanic which captures the Edwardian fashions of the early 1910s pretty accurately? As for the 1930s, I think they're very underrated for fashion. IMO they're by far the oldest decade that women could still wear some of the outfits without looking out of a museum: It was also the decade where women started wearing pants before it exploded in popularity in the 1940s: And 30s pants could certainly be something:
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Post by 10slover on Sept 13, 2021 0:02:37 GMT 10
Probably the 20s. I can't even recall what the 1910s had for fashion. Really? Not even from the movie Titanic which captures the Edwardian fashions of the early 1910s pretty accurately? As for the 1930s, I think they're very underrated for fashion. IMO they're by far the oldest decade that women could still wear some of the outfits without looking out of a museum: It was also the decade where women started wearing pants before it exploded in popularity in the 1940s: And 30s pants could certainly be something: So that's where people from the 70s got the inspiration for bell-bottom pants
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Post by Telso on Sept 13, 2021 1:13:12 GMT 10
So that's where people from the 70s got the inspiration for bell-bottom pants I guess. In fact, some of the 70s "business casual" trends do remind me a lot of the 40s fashion. Especially when you compare both to the tighter pants of the 50s to mid-60s: So it's interesting how much fashion goes through cycles in this regard.
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Post by 10slover on Sept 13, 2021 1:36:37 GMT 10
So that's where people from the 70s got the inspiration for bell-bottom pants I guess. In fact, some of the 70s "business casual" trends do remind me a lot of the 40s fashion. Especially when you compare both to the tighter pants of the 50s to mid-60s: So it's interesting how much fashion goes through cycles in this regard. 80s padded shoulders came from the 1940s too
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Post by al on Oct 16, 2021 5:48:05 GMT 10
Most transformative or actually the original as in, the most unique looks? (That will probably never come back.)
For the latter, the 80's. Hence the changes between the following eras having calmed down. Modern fashion had reached its peak.
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