Description The 1970s was a decade of style contrasts: every extreme of fashion was met by an equally trendy opposite reaction.
Ankle-length maxi skirts vied for attention with super-short hot-pants.
Outfits in vibrant prints and obviously man-made fabrics contrasted with subtly-colored ensembles in wool jerseys and silky crepes.
Delicate floral cottons, hand-knits and hand-tooled leather came up against boldly synthetic and plastic looks perched atop platform shoes--for men and women alike.
More so than at any other time, fashion looked backwards in order to dress the future with quirkily ironic retro looks, while alternative street-style movements such as Punk used appearance to startle and challenge the establishment.
In this book, Daniel Milford-Cottam uses colorful photographs to illustrate an eye-opening introduction to the bold fashions that still have such resonance today.
About the Author Liza Hollinghurst, herself a child of the 1970s, has had over thirty magazine articles published since 2013, specializing in twentieth-century social history and vintage lifestyle.
Liza's first book, Vintage Knitting, was published by Shire in 2015.
Contrasts | Every extreme of fashion was met by an equally trendy opposite reaction |
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