Tuesday 26 June 2012

The fashion style of "boho-chic" in the early 21st century was thought Ironic by the "Sunday Times" and they said that only that a fashionable girls wore ruffly floral skirt to be look like Bohemian, Nomadic, spirited and non-Bourgeois" comparing to a gypsy girls themselves. these are sexy and delightful females and they don't give a hoot for fashion by contrast. 

Female Bohemians in the early 20th century "Gypsy Look" was a returning theme, and popularized by among many Dorothy "Dorelia" McNeil (1881-1969), she was the muse and lover of the painter named Augustus John (1878-1961), with full skirts and bright colors has made the so called "Dorelia Look" rise.

The Slade School of Arts in London adopted the short bobbled hair that was often a bohemian trait. several years before film actress Collen Moorand Louise Brooks has become associated with it in the mid 1920's. this style was plainly recognizable on the self portrait of Dora Carrington (1916) who had entered the Slade in (1910).

In the late 1960s Journalist Bob Stanley remarked that the "boho-chic" was never entirely out of fashion, they just need a new and modern angle to make it de jour. in this manner the feature of hippie fashion return at different stages during the ensuing forty years. In the mid 1980s the variations of the short and fundamentally non-Bohemian rah-rah skirt were matched with leather or denim to create a look with some bohemian features.

In the late 1990s the term "hippie chick" was used to Tom Ford's collection for the Italian house of Gucci. among the other influences, these drew the style, popular in retrospect of Talitha Getty (1971) the actress wife of John Paul Getty and Step Grandfather of Dorelia McNeil, who represented the most famous Photograph of her Husband taken by Patrick Lichfield in Marrakesh, morocco in 1969 reintroduce the influx of hippies into Marrakesh in 1968.


Reference:
Mc Flaire, J. (2009) History of Bohemian Style I Top Street Fashion 2009. 26 Jun 2012. Retrieve from http://onlinefashionistas.blogspot.com/2009/08/history-of-bohemian-style-top-spring.html




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