Arab Times

1950s elegance celebrated in Paris fashion exhibit

‘Bonbon’ very elegant

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PARIS, July 23, (AFP): Cinched at the waist, with soft rounded shoulders and a swirling skirt, Christian Dior’s famous “Bonbon” dress today appears the epitome of modesty and restraint.

But in 1947 — after years of clothing coupons and wartime austerity — this simple dusty-pink wool dress with a brown belt was nothing short of scandalous.

The French fashion designer had been yearning for a return to a more feminine silhouette to replace what he called postwar “soldier women with a boxer’s build”.

The hourglass-shaped “Bonbon” or “Sweetie” dress — one of more than 100 haute couture outfits that have just gone on display at a new exhibition in Paris — fitted the bill perfectly.

Dubbed the “New Look” by Harper’s Bazaar magazine, this return to feminine curves was an immediate hit although the amount of fabric Dior’s new designs required caused outrage.

During the war years, dresses were typically made from just three yards (metres) of material. By contrast, one of Dior’s new evening dresses required no less than 25 yards of taffeta.

Dior himself attributed the huge success of the “Bonbon” dress not just to its being “pretty” but also to its price tag — it sold for much less than it cost to make because of a pricing error.

Resonance

The style was highly influentia­l and “found great resonance with other couturiers”, according to Olivier Saillard, cocurator of the exhibition at Paris’s Galliera museum of fashion.

For a decade from 1947, haute couture was dominated by a small group of male designers whose wasp-waisted dresses implied a return to the corset and the aesthetics of the Edwardian era.

“It’s very elegant but it can also give the idea of a woman who is trapped by the mysteries of her seduction,” Saillard said. Left to right: Three couture creations by fashion designers Balenciaga, Christian Dior and Pierre Cardin are displayed on July 10, 2014 at the Palais Galliera in Paris, as part of an exhibition on French fashion between 1947 and

1957. (AFP)

Such supremely feminine clothes were too much for Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel, who considered them unmodern and not suitable for liberated, working women.

Rebelling against this stylistic domination, she engineered a comeback at the age of 71.

Her 1954 collection expressed the desire of women who had worked their way through two world wars for style teamed with comfort and practicali­ty.

Its simple, straight suits and dresses with echoes of her pre-war designs were at first snubbed by critics, then acclaimed.

“Fashion in France 1947-1957” celebrates the last glory days of haute couture, an exclusive, labour-intensive type of fashion design through celebrated outfits by designers such as Dior, Chanel, Cristobal Balenciaga, Jacques Fath, Jacques Heim and Hubert de Givenchy.

“The 1950s was the last major period of elegance and the swansong of haute couture with the advent of ready-towear,” Saillard said.

Although the fashion world was on the brink of changes that would ultimately make stylish clothes available to everyone, it was a time when the wardrobe of women able to afford haute couture was still bafflingly complex.

Classic

Clothes were divided up into categories such as day suits, travel suits, classic suits, two-piece day suits, travel coats, everyday coats, lunch dresses, day dresses and formal day dresses.

For evening, there was yet more subtle variety with early evening dresses, eating out dresses, dinner dresses, dancing dresses, cabaret dresses and evening dresses.

“Clients used to change their clothes three or four times a day,” Saillard said.

The cocktail dress, which was to become a symbol of the decade, was the 1950s’ answer to the early evening dress.

First appearing after the war, this type of dress disappeare­d in the early 1960s with the arrival of ready-to-wear.

Combining “elegance with practicali­ty”, a 1950s edition of Vogue advised that it could be worn as “early as 8pm for dinner, going out to a restaurant or the theatre”.

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