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    Home»Prayers»The garments that changed clothing history
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    The garments that changed clothing history

    adminBy adminApril 17, 2026No Comments7 Mins Read0 Views
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    The garments that changed clothing history
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    1. Satin dress in John Singer Sargent’s ‘Madame X’ painting (1884)

    © The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Image Source: Art Resources, NY

    “It was designed by the sitter Madame Pierre Gautreau (Louisiana-born Virginia Amelie Avegno), who was an American Parisian socialite who was married to a French banker,” says Erdem Moralioglu, a 48-year-old British Turkish fashion designer. Later it was repainted. For me, this is a beautiful example of women’s power.

    2. Henriette Negrin’s Delphos gown for Fortuny (1907)

    Jack Mitchell/Getty Images

    “You can keep it draped and it’s easily packable, which is very modern,” New York-based designer Rachel Scott, 42, creative director of Proenza Schouler and her own line, Diotima, says of this pleated, column-shaped silk dress. Inspired by Greek tunics, Negrin created the garment in partnership with her husband, Mariano Fortuny, a Spanish-born Venetian designer and artist known for his innovative use of materials. “Its wearability, and the fact that it doesn’t fit over one body, makes it modern,” says Scott. “It influenced Madame Grace, Halston and Issey Miyake and feels like it would be revolutionary if it were still made.”

    3. Gabrielle ‘Coco’ Chanel’s little black dress (1926)

    Condé Nast via Getty Images

    “By changing the shape and length of women’s dresses, she changed their lifestyle,” says American designer Norma Kamali, 80. Through her little black dress – often made from black crepe de Chine with a nipped waist and long sleeves – Chanel, who had begun wearing looser, more comfortable jersey dresses in place of corsetry in the 1910s, said goodbye to restrictive clothing and transformed black from a mourning color. Changed into more. “She changed the way women walked, giving them the confidence and power to move through the world with ease,” says Kamali. “There are other designers who have changed women’s lives, but none as profoundly as Chanel.”

    4. Christian Dior’s Bar Jacket (1947)

    “With his New Look collection, Christian Dior changed fashion,” says Carla Sozzani, 78, president and co-founder of the Fondation Azzedine Alaïa, which recently opened an exhibition in Paris comparing the couture work of the Tunisian-born French designer Alaïa, who died in 2017, and Dior’s couture. With his Bar jacket, a cream-colored silk shantung piece, with a flared waist and padded hips, Dior “brought back the corset” (as well as rounded shoulders and a structured bust), which had fallen out of fashion. At the same time, he brought back the feminine lightness that still influences not only the Dior collections (by Jonathan Anderson) but also the Métiers Féquelles (a brand started by Hannah Rose Dalton and Steven Raj Bhaskaran). When people want to do something feminine, they wear a big skirt and a very tight jacket – the effect is eternal.

    5. angelina dashiki (1962)

    © Vlisco. Image courtesy of the Philadelphia Museum of Art

    “Dashiki is a mysterious garment,” says Edward Buchanan, a 55-year-old American designer and creative director. Ghanaian highlife band) Sweet Talks, it was first produced for the Central and West African markets in the early 1960s, In 1967, two New Yorkers named Jason Benning and Howard Davis began selling them in Harlem, and the dashiki was, and still is, a symbol or sign worn by black people as protest apparel during the civil rights and Black Power movements.

    6. mini skirt (mid 1960s)

    Bert Stern/Condé Nast via Getty Images

    “For the first time in history, women were wearing skirts above their knees or to mid-thigh,” Kamali says of the advent of the miniskirt, which is often credited to the English designer Mary Quant, who popularized it in London in the mid-1960s, and the French designer André Courrèges, who included it in his 1964 collection. (The one featured here was produced by Annemarie Gardin, a New York-based Swiss designer of the time.) “People went crazy. They couldn’t believe it. As quickly as you can imagine, I pulled up my skirt. Cars would stop and (people) would call me a whore!”

    7. Yves Saint Laurent’s Le Smoking (1966)

    Helmut Newton Foundation/Trunk Archive

    “As the story goes, the classic tuxedo” — often made of velvet or satin and worn after dinner over formal evening dress — “was created for men to wear while smoking a cigar,” says Buchanan, “to absorb the odor.” “And then in 1966, Saint Laurent said, ‘I want to make a tuxedo for women.’ But he didn’t want to just put a man’s tuxedo on her, so he cut a new silhouette for a woman’s bust and gave it a more generous collar. For me, le smoking – that’s when the word ‘chick’ was created. All subsequent women’s tuxedos” – from Marc Jacobs, Helmut Lang, Phoebe Philo or Stefano Pilati – “came from Le Smoking.”

    8. Stephen Burroughs’ lettuce-hem dresses (1970)

    Peter Simmins/WWD/Penske Media via Getty Images

    “What most people don’t know is that when they see a lettuce hem” — a wavy edge, usually reserved for knits — “at Miu Miu, Proenza Schouler or Rick Owens, he invented it,” Buchanan says of Burroughs, the first black American designer to achieve international recognition. “When you’re sewing the edge of the fabric, you stretch it and then do an overlock stitch. When you let it go, it goes boeing – Making a slightly rolled edge. That was his description. Today, when everything is being upcycled and patchworked, designers are exploring the technique as it is the easiest way to sew two pieces of fabric together.

    9. Azzedine Alaia’s leggings (early 1980s)

    ‘Nobody was doing it,'” says Sozzani. “She was inspired by the work of (20th-century French designer) Madeleine Vionnet and the fact that she allowed the body to move freely. She developed all these threads, making her creations like sculptures, and introduced knitwear as a way of life. (Chanel and) Sonia Rykiel had created knitwear before, but there’s so much of it in your wardrobe. It was unusual. Alaia knitted everything from leggings to dresses to coats.”

    10. Alexander McQueen’s amazing pants (Fall 1993)

    Katherine McGann/Getty Images

    “It was a strange take on sexuality and sensuality, exposing a part of the body that you would normally despise,” Scott says of the British provocateur’s low-slung trousers, which were cut to expose the tops of the buttocks. “Bizarre turned sensual. I love the tension between tailoring and sensuality. Bad taste, expertly done.”

    11. Jean Paul Gaultier’s printed mesh top (Spring 1994)

    “It was scandalous,” Buchanan says, referring to the French designer’s collection, which included trompe l’oeil mesh tops made to look like tattooed skin. “Pure excitement with skill and design. Remember, Gaultier was the man who taught (avant-garde Belgian designer) Martin Margiela.”

    12. zuli bet’s puma collaboration (Spring 1995)

    Guy Marineau/Condé Nast Archives

    “Created by Malian designer Lamine Kouyaté, this collaboration was the first of its kind,” says Buchanan. “In the 1990s, if you were a sportswear brand, you stayed here, and if you were a luxury brand, you stayed there. But Kouyaté” – who made colorful clothes from recycled fabrics and dead-stock textiles – “was passionate about sportswear, and he connected with PUMA and they collaborated on this funky, cool streetwear collection. It consisted of deconstructed dresses and tops in technical fabrics with PUMA logos on them. The logo was way ahead of that. The ongoing partnership between Yohji (Yamamoto) and Adidas wouldn’t have happened without it. Or Baleniaga and Under Armour.

    13. Marjan Pejowski’s swan dress (Fall 2001)

    “The Oscars are for the most traditionally dressed people,” Moralioglu says. “And in 2001, (Icelandic singer) Björk, who is very progressive culturally, decided to wear a swan dress made by (Macedonian designer) Marjan Pejowski, which was completely crazy. But she looked amazing. It happened during a time of openness and exploration, and I think this dress encapsulates that.”

    These interviews have been edited and condensed.

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