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The Old and New in Dressing for 2010

Rebecca Furtado
Everything old is now again is an adage that is especially true in the area of fashion. Some fashion pundits are saying and winter styles that on coming on the scene will harkens back to the glamour days of the 1930's. I am a lover of all things vintage and love the fact that vintage clothes did not leave women looking like weird neon aliens or dressing like men only not as mannish. Yet to clothing that lets us show our curves and celebrates all things femme. The style in the 1930's was not austere fashions that reflected the economic hardships of the time. They were a period time when the clothing that women who were now increasingly in public life that was practical and very feminine. Gone were Victorian leftovers hobble skirts and corsets and the boyish looks of 1920's. Women wanted ease of movement and to still show off their best feminine assets. Tailored was in and hemlines dropped, but styles were made to show and create hour glass figures. Daywear was famed up with stylish pleats and sexy draping. Fabrics like rayon and wool crepe made fashions light and easy to wear. Evening wear as always, was sensuous and featured more metallic fabrics. Day dresses were cut to show a little cleavage and to be sweet in appearance in an amazing selection of pastel hues. They were not your 1950's women's shirt dresses with a little feminine flair in the skirt.
Accessories from the 1930's were still a great deal art deco in style. Still there was a revival of interest in the beaded bags of the ladies might have carried to the theater in the Victorian era. Jewelry made of manmade gems and geometric shapes reflected the more auteur economic attitudes of the day. Still the world was forward looking and things that were more of the undefined modern art variety had large appeal.
Take a look at the fashions in the old 1930's films and books. Get an idea what 30's glamour you can add to your wardrobe this fall. I am looking at some of the thirties bobs as the hair styles like the clothes were sexy and practical.

The fashion trends for 2010 spring are likely not to appeal to the ordinary female shopper. Ripped, aged, faded, spotted, excessively sheer clothing is all the rage. Deconstructed lines dominate the fashion scene for spring 2010. Your teen will love the ripped dress, faded jean, bleach stained tee shirt look, b us most middle aged women will not.
Neon colors that everyone loved for spring and summer are out. Red is the color of the spring season. Ruffles stay in fashion too this spring matched with unlikely tailored pin stripped jackets. Sheer and metallic fabrics also are staying. Cone shaped skirts that have sexy slits up the front are in vogue as well as dresses in distressed leather that have zippers in sexy places.
Sheath dresses and wrap dresses are in if you can pull them off. The flared skirt dresses in less defined floral patterns might appeal to the more average women. Tie dye, bleeding floral, and animal prints are still in for the spring season. There may be some cute opportunities to mix an extremely feminine flare skirt dress with a weathered jean or leather jacket. With the well worn look in there are no doubt some denim that you can make

reappear from your wardrobe and work with a sheer shirt or wrap skirtShoes and boots this upcoming season are in dark shades of color. Dark red, plum, and green are in style. Lace boots that come over the knee are poplar. Strappy heels are still in. Luckily, Mary James is in for the office look. New colors such as Cognac are still in style. A pair of dark red strappy six inch heels will perk up any little black dress from New Year's Eve 2009.

Published by Rebecca Furtado

I live in a small city in the midwest. I am the pet parent to four cats, two birds , and one lonely dust bunny dog named Nigel. I have two human children. They are both teenagers and I occasionally see them.  View profile

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