Women In The 1900's Fashion Essay

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Women’s Fashion in the 1900’s
“Fashion has the power to not only redefine our own industry, but become a role model for others to reinvent their practices.” Fashion has become an important industry for many women and men. The way that women are dressed is what determines their personality. In the 1900’s to 1939 the women dressed differently. In the 1900’s the women would wear lots of layers underneath their dresses to shape their figure.
The women’s dresses in the 1900’s had crinolines, bustles, polonaises, dolmans, abundant frills and furbelows. Women would wear bustles under the skirt, below the waist, in the back to keep the skirt from dragging. The dolman sleeves were sleeves the were wide at the shoulder and with armholes extending almost …show more content…

Edwardian Era). It was usual to make dresses into two pieces; the shirt and the skirt attached together. The bodice was similar to a mini corset alone that was worn over the S-bend corset. The top bodice would give an extra stability, contour and a directional shape under the top fabric that was worn by women. The pale tops and dark skirts were the common colors for the Edwardian women’s day-wear. The high collar, S bend corset, trained skirt and lavish hat all had an effect on the posture of an Edwardian lady and it gave her a certain swaying grandeur ( La Belle Epoque 1890 to 1914 Fashion History 1. Edwardian era). The type of fabrics were cotton; for the middle class, linen; for the poor, silk and high grade cotton for the upper class. The silhouette moved gradually along a decreasing s-curve from 1901 to the empire line by the year 1910 (History of Womens Fashion - 1900 to …show more content…

Gibson was known for her silhouette of long dresses that fitted over a tightly corseted figure. Combining a tall and slender figure with an ample bosom and hips to create what was described as the ‘personification of the feminine ideal of beauty’ (The Real Gibson Girls); the first American pin-up look that several young women, models, and also actresses strive was the Edwardian Gibson Girl. What was most remembered about the Gibson Girl illustrations were the bouffant, chignon and pompadour hairstyles - which were all the rage in the early Edwardian Fashion up to and during the first World War (The Real Gibson Girls). The Gibson Girl wore tight corsets to create an hourglass figure and the shirts contained long elegant necks. It was viewed as having a tiny waste and a round

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