China Daily (Hong Kong)

REVOLUTION­ARY ROAD

- TWITTER: @ZAYNMALIK

In the finale of Prabal Gurung’s autumn 2017 fashion show, the designer and his models startled the audience with their T-shirts, stamped with provocativ­e political slogans such as: “The future is female.”

“I am an immigrant.” “This is what a feminist looks like.” Cleancut white T-shirts have become the perfect means for fashion designers to convey a blunt message — and they’re easy to match with just about anything in your closet.

Evolving from the late 19th century when the one-piece garment was divided in two for miners and others working in hot environmen­ts, the history of the T-shirt took shape in the early 1900s when the US Navy began issuing the white, form-fitting, crew-neck cotton undergarme­nts. First attributed in print to F Scott Fitzgerald in his debut 1920 novel This Side of Paradise, the T-shirt served as an unofficial uniform for laborers in the US, from farmers to factory workers — yet it wasn’t considered fashionabl­e at all until the 1940s, when it became popular among teenagers.

When Marlon Brando wore his tightfitti­ng white T-shirt in A Streetcar Named Desire in 1951, the whole world began to discover the hidden sexiness under the soft cotton. T-shirts became associated with masculinit­y and confidence. The 1955 film Rebel without a Cause, with James Dean, further pushed the T-shirt’s “bad-boy” image, with Dean’s iconic white T-shirt paired with a red nylon jacket and lightblue jeans. With comfort, inexpensiv­eness and style rolled into one, Tshirts became a man’s wardrobe staple.

Feminine power

Slightly after the craze hit the men’s scene, the T-shirt was also earning feminine power through elegant silhouette­s on French screens. Juliette Greco interprete­d the woman-on-the-go image in the 1959 film Whirlpool with various T-shirt styles; on the movie’s poster, she’s in a fitted black V-neck T-shirt, with her unruly facial expression adding to the garment’s status as a rebellious symbol.

In the 1962 film A Very Private Affair, Brigitte Bardot also contribute­d to the look with a shortsleev­ed, black boatneck T-shirt,

Dirk Sanders and Brigitte Bardot in Gigi Hadid.

AVeryPriva­teAffair leaving a lasting impression, particular­ly in the scene when she slaps Dirk Sanders.

Fruit of the Loom is one of the oldest US garment manufactur­ers still active in the business today; it was founded in 1851 in Rhode Island as a quality cotton cloth and textiles producer. Later, the company expanded from nightshirt­s and underwear into classic mono-colour T-shirts. Graphic T-shirts came into the public attention around the 1950s, when Miami-based company Tropix Togs acquired the exclusive rights from

Though it’s impossible to nail down a date, T-shirts certainly rose to prominence as tools of political activism in the 1980s. English fashion designer Katharine Hamnett created her series of oversized block-letter T-shirts, originally with the “Choose Life” slogan, in 1983. Hamnett was famously photograph­ed shaking hands with British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, wearing her T-shirt that read “58 percent Don’t Want Pershing” to reference the anti-militariza­tion stance of the British public. Thatcher was claimed to have “uttered a shriek of horror” when they met.

Far from irrelevant today, modern celebritie­s have also shown their love of message-based T-shirts. Last year, fashion model Gigi Hadid wore a white cotton top emblazoned with the slogan “lol ur not zayn malik” to publicly endorse her boyfriend Zayn Malik, former member of British boy band One Direction. The gesture won her boyfriend’s sweet (albeit not particular­ly grammatica­l) response on Instagram: “Thas ma girl”. Hadid’s friend and fellow fashion model Kendall Jenner also sported a famous sloganembl­azoned T-shirt — “I’m Yours for a Tenner Kendall Jenner” — for her 2016 collaborat­ion with House of Holland.

Be it plain comfortabl­e or effortless­ly sexy, a classic rock concert memory or everyone’s favorite tourist souvenir, a harmless fashion triviality or a powerful political statement, the T-shirt remains an essential piece in everyone’s wardrobe.

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 ?? ALAMY STOCK PHOTO; ?? (1962). Katharine Hamnett meets Margaret Thatcher, 1983;
ALAMY STOCK PHOTO; (1962). Katharine Hamnett meets Margaret Thatcher, 1983;
 ?? INSTAGRAM: @HOUSEOFHOL­LAND; ?? Clockwise from top: Kendall Jenner.
INSTAGRAM: @HOUSEOFHOL­LAND; Clockwise from top: Kendall Jenner.

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