Fashion Lecture Introduction

52
The Pageant of Western Fashion from Antiquity to the Present

Transcript of Fashion Lecture Introduction

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The Pageant of Western Fashion from Antiquity to the Present

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Amaze

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Amaze

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Shock

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Shock

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Allure

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ny's”

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Merchandising

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Fashion as Art

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Fashion as Art

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Fashion as Social Statement: Anti-consumerism

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Fashion as Social Statement

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Getting the Public's Attention

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London, Spring, 2008

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Everyday Clothes

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?

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Gothic Fashion

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Fashion from Grecian times (500 BCE) to the Edwardian era (1910 CE) was primarily

the result of

Material Circumstances

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Fashions for a Mini Ice Age

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Greater Concentration of Wealth: The Black Plague (1100 – 1700 CE)

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Middle Eastern Fabric:

Paisley Velvet and Chenille

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Chinese Silk

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Poulaines

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Hennins: Cone-Shaped Caps

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Conspicuous Consumption:

The act of accumulating possessions as status symbols

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Venice, Italy

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Venetian Carnevale Costumes

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The Scarcity Of Resources

The smaller the quantity of something desirable, the more valuable it becomes.

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Sumptuary Laws

Sumptuary Laws dictated who could wear what in society; for example, from Roman times (750 BCE) to the Elizabethan period (1600 CE) only royalty could wear purple because the materials used to produce this color dye were so scarce.

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Roman Purple:

Mosaic

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Royal Purple

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Sumptuary Laws

Sumptuary Laws were intended to limit the consumption of luxury goods in order to prevent the noble classes from from going bankrupt in an effort to create an ostentatious display of wealth.

They were also intended to lessen jealousy among the classes.

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The Corset

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The Corset

The corset was a garment that painfully constricted women's waists into various shapes. It was never used again after World War I because the materials required in its construction were needed for the war effort.

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Corset Cartoon

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Victorian Chivalry (1840 - 1890)

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“Rosie the Riveter”

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Royal Purple

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Ro

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Chinese

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