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Page 11 text:
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kj-vht Headquarten f i- V y---- Qui Your ( Dr. Wine •re the rest tad, in ouV oj their kind ev strutted iane •od holds it fortably, (her ing permanei •If women n wishing to r women stiff e tad before ti Inner belt hooks and ey a thin, slight gie-Alloy m- to cup into i abdomen Tn be straighten lines of the ri f i lk«« mm mmm. . Until 1930 no young lady was caught without a corset. These contraptions were the foundations of fashion. Mens fashion was not noticed until designers such as Bill Blass. The thin lapels and tie are popular once again. dads, 7ashums Old Made flew By the fifties the simple leather helmet had been replaced by a more durable one. Today it has become a sophisticated piece of equipment. The top fashion model of the sixties was a British import. Twiggy. She was the eptomine of fashion with her artistic eye make-up. Sassoon hair style, and the mod” look. Her thin twig look was the desired shape. Forward 7
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Page 10 text:
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From bustles and corsets, to the mini. midi, and maxi-skirts of the sixties, to the preppie look, fash- ion has undergone many transfor- mations. Since many students were farm children and the fashion of the day was from head-to-toe and sev- eral layers between, no dress code was established in the 1880's. The well-dressed high school girl wore two camisoles, a corset, a bustle, or set of narrow hoops, at least three petticoats, pantaloons, with a full-length wool dress covering the complete set of undergar- ments. The women never cut their hair, curling it in ringlets with met- al curling irons. These were heated by placing them in kerosene lampsi with no way to test the hotness, many a curl was singed or burned away. This style persisted until the twenties when freedom was found in bobbed hair and shorter skirts. A proper young lady of 1927 did not go without shaping her figure into slim lines of beauty by wear- ing the Sears Pliant-B corset. In the thirties, hemlines hit be- low the knee and the corset be- came a thing of the past. The for- ties brought about slacks for wom- en with the start of the war. Shoul- ders were padded and the perfect K)” was the full figured girl. The biggest change since flap- pers came in the mid-sixties. The entire fashion world strived to be as bizarre as possible. Such fashion idols as Twiggy brought about the flat-chested, thin look. Hair was either worn as long as possible or in a bouffant. This was the time of psychedelics, body-painting, hip- huggers. and the mini-skirt. Even mens wear became more diverse with The Beatles and Johnny Car- son setting the trends. In 1974 skirts began their de- scent. The entire fashion world was pared down to a more conser- vative. establishment style. Wool skirts and blazers for women, and top siders and sweaters for both sexes. In men's fashion John Tra- volta made his contribution via Saturday Night Fever and a white 3-piece suit, sans necktie. Today, Twiggy has been re- placed by Brook Sheilds and her worldly Calvin’s.” No self-re- specting jean-lover was caught without someone's name on the hip pocket. The eighties could cer- tainly be described as one of the hippest” decades. There were other styles, plaid skirts with ar- gyle socks and Bass wee juns-, spiked heels and baggy jeans leather jackets and torn shirts. But the biggest gold mine was the hip pocket, appealing to everyone from the cowboy to the Wall Street executive, from old to young. Millions poured themselves into a pair of designer jeans and hoped the jeans left behind were talking to the right people. The working woman of the fifties became a molded figure with the advent of post-war girdles and hour-glass figure suits. The traditional formal of the fifties was a strapless affair in net and tulle, formats of the seventies became more diverse in material and styles with a more natural form. ill
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Page 12 text:
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Right: No decent woman bobbed (cut) her hair until the 20’s when the style, which gave birth to the flapper, appeared in Vogue. The members of the literary club pose in front of the new school built in 1871. The structure contained a dormitory area. In the 1880's women would save the hair from brushes and place it in their hair to make if full, using rags and heated irons for curl. Henry Hall came to Sabetha in 1879 and worked for the school until 1897 when he met the roll call up yonder. 8 Forward
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