Laura Chase
One Too Many
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- 1,354
- Location
- Copenhagen, Denmark
The title of this thread is intended to be a little provocative, but feel free to replace Paris Hilton's name with which ever fashionista today. My intention with this thread is to have a discussion and perhaps also challenge the hostility towards modern fashions that is sometimes expressed here on the forum. We have so many great threads about clothing, shoes, makeup and so forth, and I thought we could take little cultural-historical look at our interest in the fashions of the past.
The fashions we admire, and the flapper in particular, were all modern fashions at their own time. The women we admire wore the modern fashion of their time and expressed a revolutionary spirit. In particularly the flapper is the epitome of everything modern and new: she has her hair bobbed in the most modern and shocking fashion, her behavior is socially unacceptable, she smokes, drinks, goes to wild parties, a real society girl.
Think about the two sisters from The House of Eliott - they also represented two different views on fashion: the conservative and the progressive, the reactionary and the revolutionary.
Looked at it from this optic, the real epitome of the values of the flapper is a modern figure like Paris Hilton. Compared to her, our interest in the fashions of times past can be viewed as conservative. We are constantly looking back, while she is modern, looking forward, wearing the newest fashions and setting the newest trends - just like the flapper in the 20's. And not to mention, the shocking behaviour, wild parties...
Kiki de Montparnasse:
Louise Brooks:
Paris Hilton:
The fashions we admire, and the flapper in particular, were all modern fashions at their own time. The women we admire wore the modern fashion of their time and expressed a revolutionary spirit. In particularly the flapper is the epitome of everything modern and new: she has her hair bobbed in the most modern and shocking fashion, her behavior is socially unacceptable, she smokes, drinks, goes to wild parties, a real society girl.
Think about the two sisters from The House of Eliott - they also represented two different views on fashion: the conservative and the progressive, the reactionary and the revolutionary.
Looked at it from this optic, the real epitome of the values of the flapper is a modern figure like Paris Hilton. Compared to her, our interest in the fashions of times past can be viewed as conservative. We are constantly looking back, while she is modern, looking forward, wearing the newest fashions and setting the newest trends - just like the flapper in the 20's. And not to mention, the shocking behaviour, wild parties...
Kiki de Montparnasse:
Louise Brooks:
Paris Hilton: