| In common usage the word “fashion”
refers to what people wear in any given place and time. A further
meaning of the word refers to what is in style at a more particular
moment, and that can change from season to season. This meaning
can bring to mind the stereotype of the woman who is “born
to shop,” and her awareness of fashion may be seen as whimsical
or even frivolous. While an obsession with any good thing is dangerous,
an interest in fashion should not be looked on as frivolous. At
the present time in the history of women, an interest in fashion
is actually a responsibility.
Why should serious women in the professional world and the public
sector of society take an interest in the latest trends in garments?
Because everyone wears clothes. And whether you like it or not,
because all women affect culture through fashion.
The responsibility falls upon women in the public eye, professionally
or socially, for two reasons. The first is that women’s fashions
are more interesting and complicated than those for men. There are
few fashion magazines for men, and dozens for women. We have more
to work with in terms of colors and variety of styles to express
ourselves.
The second and more important reason for professional women to
take a particular interest in today’s fashion is that women’s
roles have expanded in the last fifty years. Therefore, as women
are more often in prominent positions in our society, our clothes
need to reflect the woman of the twenty-first century, and help
create who she is to become.
Clothing Speaks Volumes
In the 1970’s there was a popular sentiment among young people
that was expressed something like this: “It doesn’t
matter what you look like. It’s who you are that counts.”
While it is true that a person’s character is much more important
than her clothing, it is inevitable that her character will be assessed
according to her clothes. Shakespeare used the adage, “the
apparel makes the man,” and though these words are given to
the stuffy character Polonius, in Hamlet, they are true. We let
the world know much about who we are by how we present ourselves.
In many instances, people can be classified as to place or origin,
age, marital status, economic level, or even religion by how they
are dressed. We are more familiar with the Indian sari than the
black cap worn by widows in European countries a hundred years ago.
The burkha worn in many Islamic countries is an expression of the
religion. Clothes are a symbolic language whether we like it or
not. They say a lot about who we are on first sight, and therefore
it is necessary to have at least a working knowledge of this language,
so we don’t inadvertently say the wrong thing about ourselves
and what we stand for. Each of us has the opportunity to be a costume
designer who can help to portray her own character in a visual way.
It is well to remember that the last century has wrought unprecedented
changes in women’s fashions, along with the more amazing developments
in technology, transportation, and globalization. A glance at some
historical considerations of fashion can help us to see and understand
the panorama of opportunity that lies ahead of us.
Modesty and Culture
What is or is not modest in dress is determined by the culture
of a particular society. We all have probably seen National Geographic
photos of primitive tribesmen and women in garments, which show
more of the body than we would be comfortable showing, and yet they
are not immodest in terms of their society.
In western European and American Society it is only in the last
hundred years that skirts shorter than floor or ankle length have
been worn. Trousers for women made a few false starts in the nineteenth
century, but only became mainstream for women in the l920s or '30s.
We are now able to choose among skirts and pants of varied lengths,
and most are reasonably modest.
Although the standards shift in terms of yardage and coverage,
we need to know whether our dress has become in any way suggestive.
If we do not pay attention to this, we fall into danger of being
admired more for our bodies than for our intellects. This would
be the same in any culture.
An Age of Plenty
It is also enlightening to consider the way we acquire and wear
clothes in the light of the traditions of the past. To turn again
to 1900, we can see a major change in the manufacture of clothing.
Before that time, clothes were usually made at home by women in
the household, or by a dressmaker. Now, few women sew their own
clothes because it is simply not worth the time it takes. We have
much simpler garments, more suited to our increased mobility, and
a world full of sources for fabrics and labor to make our clothes.
We also have methods of cleaning, which, while keeping our clothes
fresher, shorten the life of our clothes. We wear them out and buy
new ones as needed.
Until the 1900s, people had very few clothes, by our standards.
Even people of the middle class would have only one or two sets
of clothes (which we like to call “outfits”) for everyday,
and one for Sundays and special occasions. It is amazing to think
that people would leave their two or three suits of clothing to
heirs in their wills until about a hundred years ago.
Our image of the clothes of the past often come from painted and
photographic portraits, which lead us to believe that clothes could
be made of costly fabrics with lots of expensive embellishments.
These are not a fair sample of what people wore, because they were
dressing in their very best clothes for the special occasion of
having their likeness taken. The costly fabrics of the Renaissance
were often worth a literal fortune—whether part of a bride’s
dowry, or a gift from the husband’s family. There were laws
called “sumptuary laws” from around the 1300s well into
the 1600s to regulate the wearing of clothing that was considered
too luxurious. One reason was to reduce the senseless spending on
something that could be conceived as an occasion for vanity.
Another reason was to limit the rising middle-classes. As a person’s
social status was read in the cost of their clothing, a wealthy
middle-class person could appear to be of the aristocracy. The upper
classes wanted to save for themselves certain distinctions of dress.
In the late nineteenth century, the rise of the fashion plate,
engravings of fashions, which were printed and widely circulated,
gave birth to the idea of frequent alterations in detail. Women
could see what was worn in Paris, and could alter their dresses
or at least the trim on their hats to update their styles. The availability
of information led to a swifter change in what was fashionable.
The market was eager to see something new. Finally the concept of
new clothes for each new season, or at least spring and fall, developed.
Obviously, those with more financial means could afford to be more
up-to-date, then as now.
In our more democratic times, most people can afford to wear silk
or velvet, once marks of nobility. Fabrics are plentiful, and much
less expensive in relation to other things. But with the advantages
of simpler, less expensive clothing, comes a danger. We can be careless
about the contents of our closets in relation to our needs, which
can lead to a lot of wasted time and money.
Appropriateness
Aside from the question of modesty, we have an opportunity to
analyze and define what is appropriate. We dress in a more casual
fashion than ever before. The old rules no longer apply, and we
don’t really have new ones to replace them. Even in the early
20th century, Emily Post in her Book of Etiquette laid down the
law on when to wear black tie, white tie, or a tea dress. There
was also a time when older women simply did not wear certain clothes
that were considered fashionable for young women. Now, on many occasions,
anything goes. This is liberating, but we should remember that we
are still making a fashion statement.
We all like to be comfortable. The days of wearing white gloves
while traveling are gone, but what do we say about ourselves if
we go to Paris dressed in shorts and running shoes? We might well
let the French think we consider their capitol city a kind of Disneyland,
rather than a real place. When we have a casual Friday at work,
we have the challenge of finding clothes that show respect for our
colleagues and clients, and yet are more comfortable and less formal
than our normal workday attire.
We no longer have to look like older women when we hit fifty. Along
with our ability to keep away the grey hairs, we can wear youthful
colors and styles. But again, to try to look twenty when one is
sixty is going to make us look silly.
Good News and Opportunities
Some designers and catalogs are featuring older models and catering
to a variety of figure types, so that we don’t have to feel
bad if we do not look like Barbie.With the turn of the millennium,
there seems to be a shift towards a new elegance, bringing back
some of the best of the old, while continuing to search for the
right fashion statement for the women of the present. We have abandoned
the unisex pantsuit characteristic of the seventies, and can wear
trousers with the elegance of the thirties. Fashion has revived
every older style until now even the 90s (yes, the 1990s) can be
referenced as historical. This gives us the freedom to wear many
styles that could be becoming to us as individuals without being
out of fashion because they are “vintage.”
There is no need to be dowdy to be modest or feminine. We can simply
choose the most becoming styles, and those that we feel best represent
the dignity of women as professionals and forces in society.
Women are the main consumers of fashion, and professional women
in particular spend more. Therefore, as professionals, we have an
impact by what we buy and what we wear. We can use our knowledge
and sensitivity to the fashion statement to become the driving force
behind the fashion industry. Each person can take advantage of the
options provided by the variety of lengths, fabrics and historical
references, to design a wardrobe suited to the part she plays in
the continuing drama of the twenty-first century woman.
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