This one-piece, shiny, cotton satin bathing suit is boned, creating a strapless "evening gown" top. She's dressed as if she just walked off a ballroom floor. It's dreamy fashion from 1951.
Showing posts with label bathing suits. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bathing suits. Show all posts
Friday, January 10, 2014
Thursday, January 9, 2014
Resort Wear Month - At the Beach
It's 1951 and oh yes, I love to lounge on the beach in my alluring strapless suit, my make-up perfect - but I just pretend to smoke. ;) I do look cool, don't I? Definitely gorgeous.
Wednesday, January 30, 2013
Vintage Resort Fashions 2013 - My Favorites
Over the past month I have posted in my shop a number of wonderful swimsuits, playsuits, sundresses, and ensembles for sunny days. They span from the 1930s to the 1970s, for all ages.
My particular favorites include the following, many of which "flew off the shelves". :D My top pick? The Pictorial Review "dressmaker" swimming suit and dress from 1931 - what a rare treasure. Enjoy this view of summer fashion through the decades!
My particular favorites include the following, many of which "flew off the shelves". :D My top pick? The Pictorial Review "dressmaker" swimming suit and dress from 1931 - what a rare treasure. Enjoy this view of summer fashion through the decades!
Playsuits
Sundresses and resort ensembles
Swimsuits, Beach Coats, Beach Dresses
Playsuits and Beach Ensembles for the Kids
Labels:
1930s,
1940s,
1950s,
1960s,
1970s,
bathing suits,
beach coats,
playsuits,
Resort Fashion,
sundress,
swimsuits
Thursday, January 24, 2013
Resort Fashions 2013 - Swimsuit Retrospective 1945 Swimsuits - East Coast, West Coast
West Coast 1945
"California" suits for 1945 are styled for active swimming. Strictly functional, they have no shoulder straps, and minimum "diaper-style" pants. These suits are the ultimate development of the skintight knitted suits which first appeared in the early 1920s.
East Coast 1945
These East Coast suits are a bit more dressy and feminine. Made of draped
material, they hint at the beginning of regression to ruffles and
frills. Many have long detachable skirts. The suits are paired to show each
with and without the skirt.Monday, January 21, 2013
Resort Fashions 2013 - Swimsuit Retrospective 1940, 1942, 1945
1940
It was 1940 and the second year of the war. A girl could still appear on the beach and be in fashion with a one-piece suit. This was the year for short skating skirts on suits, many dots and flowers.
1942
1945
The Jantzen suit in 1945 made for mass sale is comparatively conservative. It has a fair-sized bra, and skirt that covers the pants.By now almost all US beaches have given up trying to regulate bathing suits.
Saturday, January 19, 2013
Resort Fashions 2013 - Swimsuit Retrospective 1935, 1936, 1938
1935
This Jantzen suit was almost a bra and pants bathing suit but had a thin isthmus of material between top and bottom. Sun bathing had by now become a national craze, and women let down suits when no one was looking. :0 !
1936
By 1936, bare midriff suits like this one were widespread. It is really the Riviera maillot cut in half. The bra was ot shaped but it was still too much for Rye, New York and Dover, New Jersey, where it was banned.
1938
In 1938, "lastex" suits, very tight with molded bras, were worn everywhere. It was also the era of the clammy, easily torn, all-rubber suit. This was about the last summer that men wore any tops.
Thursday, January 17, 2013
Resort Fashions 2013 - Swimsuit Retrospective 1932, 1933, 1934
1932
Backless one-piece suits were the new thing! Skirts had now been hiked to the top of the thighs but necklines were still quite high and few had dared to think of a bare midriff.
1933
The first really slinky bathing suit was the maillot, borrowed from the Riviera. Police had to control crowds when it was first displayed in a window in New York. It was skin-tight all over and cut very low in back.
1934
This was an adaptation of the maillot. It consisted of a discreet halter fitting into separate pants. The bust was still not shaped. This conservative halter and pants paved the way for the two-piece bra and pants combination. Tuesday, January 15, 2013
Resort Fashions 2013 - Swimsuit Retrospective - 1929, 1930, 1931
1929
In 1929, the dressmaker suit still let a girl with a poor figure look pretty when she went swimming. This was a boom year when people drove to the beach in big open Cadillacs and paid $500 for a cabana.
1930
In 1930, the Depression and a sudden trend to nudity set in together. On the beach, men and women looked about the same in their belted suits. In pools about the country, Eleanor Holm, an Olympic gold medalist swimmer, was beginning to be famous.
1932
Stores sold 12,000,000 suits in the Depression. People had discovered swimming and sea bathing were cheap recreation. In 1932, the rage for dressmakers was declining except for older women.Wednesday, January 9, 2013
Resort Fashions - Swimsuit Styles from 1915 to 1945
It's resort fashion month, and in this retrospective, courtesy of Life Magazine from 1945, I begin a series of posts that cover 30 years of swimsuit style, from 1915 to 1945.
I'll start with some history: In 1905 a lady's bathing suit was made of 10 yards of material. In 1945, it is made from one yard. Between these two statistics and two dates lie a social revolution and an annually expanding area of bare flesh.
Prime mover of the revolution was Annette Kellerman, the first famous woman swimmer. In 1910, Miss Kellerman became more famous by discarding the ruffles and heavy corset that went with bathing dresses and appearing unabashed in a tight, one-piece suit. This set a pattern for the Mack Sennett girls and the Atlantic City bathing beauties, who found that scanty suits could bring fame and fortune.
In 1926 Gertrude Ederle wore only brassiere and shorts to swim the English Channel. Her brief costume was chosen for athletic reasons but it gave a great many nonathletic women an idea. Women in the US took up the cult of sun bathing. More bodily area exposed and tanned each summer was acclaimed as the secret of good health.
Since 1930, US bathing suit manufacturers have made money by cutting something more off their suits each year. Neither sermons nor ordinances nor arrests have slowed the steady progress from bloomers to one-piece suit to bra and "diaper pants".
1915
1945
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