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Forties Fashion
 
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Forties Fashion [Paperback]

Jonathan Walford

List Price: CDN$ 38.00
Price: CDN$ 23.94 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 25. Details
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Review

Shows how fashion gave form to the anxieties and aspirations of the times. . . . Engrossing.

Book Description

This is the definitive book on fashion in the 1940s, covering everything from French style under the Occupation and the make do and mend mentality, through issues of dress, patriotism and propaganda and the development of faux fabrics and rationing, to the rise of American fashion houses and the creation of Christian Diors New Look. International attitudes emerge from some 250 illustrations, including period advertisements, images of real clothes, and first-hand accounts from contemporary publications.

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Amazon.com: 4.8 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)

19 of 19 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Forties Fashion, Mar 18 2009
By H. Rosenau - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Forties Fashion (Hardcover)
I wear late 30s and early 40s clothing 7 days a week, and have been so sorry till now not to have a modern, extenstive text on the subject. This amazing volume is a fantastic addition to my library of period magazines and department store catalogues as it fleshes out the story brilliantly and has given me a much greater sense of the ramifications of war and rationing on the industry not just in America but in Germany, France, and England. Daywear and accessories are included too...advertisiments, photos. I highly recommend this book, which is terrific means for better understanding this fascinating period's fashions.

11 of 11 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars vintage clothing, Nov 4 2010
By angeline liebel - Published on Amazon.com
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Forties Fashion (Hardcover)
This is absolutely the best book I have found on vintage fashions. I wear and collect vintage clothing. I am always looking for books that have beautiful color pictures of the actual article of clothing instead of drawings. Drawings do not show how an item hangs on a real body. This book also took the displays to the next level by adding appropriate accessories. Forties fashion is my weakness but I do love and wear 1920 thru 1960's clothing and am hopeful there will be other books like this one with such outstanding photography and design. If anyone has any suggestion please respond.

26 of 31 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Forties Fashion - Jonathan Walford - A Reveiw, Dec 4 2008
By N. D. Meikle - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Forties Fashion (Hardcover)
While not being a particular fan of lots of clothes being `displayed' via the medium of the mannequin - no matter the period appropriateness of such - the broad use of mannequins in this book works particularly well. While viewing the contemporary fashion scene in the likes of Britain and America during WWII in publications of this nature is nothing new, the research that has gone into material for the book has certainly gone a great deal further than that of the `extra mile'. I particularly like the perspectives taken from Germany, Italy, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Canada and even New Zealand, Australia and Japan. The even today revelation that Paris `ignored the war', and to a certain extent continued to move forward fashion's representational mode, is surprising in itself. But perhaps, the actual meaning of this is given little meaning - in terms of what physical clothing of the time looked like - in hitherto publications of this nature, in this book it is well-exampled.

Given the part title of the book, and putting aside arguments as to whether what Christian Dior established with his `New Look' was a good or bad thing for women, the chapter dedicated to the post-war years is certainly not simply `a trotting-out' of the same tired old images heavily featured in other publications. As has been achieved throughout the book, fashion representation, and therefore to a large extent, women's self-defined representation of themselves at the time, is given a broader slant.

A number of the material in the book comes immediately before the 1940s, emphasising the relevancies of the 1930s - and what had gone before - to what was going on in fashion - and within the world as a whole in the 1940s itself. As you would expect, and is obviously furthermore befitting, given the momentous nature of WWII, the period features heavily in this publication. Again, international aspects of wartime fashion - and how this was represented in print media of the time are particularly interesting - emphasising the international nature of the research that has gone in to the book.

In essence, the goal of the book - to show women's fashion of the 1940s period from international perspectives - has been particularly well rationalised and executed in the drawing together of images and text that make this book an essential purchase to anyone interested in what fashions of the 1940s period were actually like. Rather than, for example merely being another gathering of relative glamour and well-to-do people's clothing taken from publications such as international versions of Vogue magazine. Perhaps the only criticism of the book would be the sparse representation given to men's clothing. Given what Anne Hollander suggests as a need to acknowledge developments to both men's and women's clothing, to more accurately understand either - the momentous changes happening to women's social position throughout most of `the developed world' in the first-half of the twentieth century naturally befits that fashion, image and meaning is given the rightful position as a representation of women's self-expression through clothing.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 6 reviews  4.8 out of 5 stars 

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