Topic > The Development and Changes of Fashion - 1128

Fashion is usually placed in the same category as clothing and/or accessories. But in reality it is much more than that. It all depends on how it was made and the actual work that goes into it. Sometimes, the type of clothes you wear can help you express your inner beauty and personality. A long time ago, when people wore nothing, the idea of ​​putting something on your body to cover it was crazy. So basically, fashion was invented just like everything else. There is no easy way to determine when clothing was established. One theory is that modern humans are just the survivors of several primate species that may have worn clothes, and that clothes may have been in use as early as 650,000 years ago. Other theories proposed by different people place the introduction of clothing around 42,000-72,000 BC. Over all this time, the clothes we wear and show on our bodies have changed a lot. There is a very diverse range of styles in fashion, which vary based on geography. , culture and exposure to modern media, economic conditions and ranging from expensive haute couture to traditional clothing to thrift store grunge. All the clothes return to the work of the designers. All designers have a different style in their work. Some design clothes for men, some for women and some even design clothes for both men and women. There have been many designers over the years, but I will only write about two that are particularly influential and interesting: Coco Chanel and Christian Dior. Christian Dior was born on January 21, 1905 in Granville, France. He was the second of five children born to Alexandre Louis Maurice Dior, owner of a highly successful fertilizer company, and his wife, who was... halfway... I, Chanel was a nurse, even though her post-war popularity was significantly reduced by her affair with a Nazi officer during the conflict and she moved to Switzerland to escape the arguments. However, she ended this self-imposed exile in 1954, returning to Paris where she adopted Christian Dior's overtly feminine New Look. He expanded the signature style with the introduction of peacoats and bell-bottoms for women. His new collection, criticized by the European press, was a success in the United States. During her lifetime, Coco Chanel also designed costumes for the stage, including Cocteau's "Antigone" (1923) and "Oedipus Rex" (1937), and works based on films such as "La Regle de Jeu." Coco Chanel worked until her death in 1971 at the age of 88, spending her final moments in the style she had felt comfortable with in her beautiful and lavish private apartment at The Ritz.