As I sifted through my closet yet again, I came upon a few
items I’ll never wear but have saved for what can only be called sentimental
reasons. A long white dress that I wore when I was pregnant with my first child
– and afterwards; it also made an appearance (on someone else) as a Jane Austen
costume in a skit a few years ago at Wildacres. There were a pair of green
chunky-heeled sandals – which I’ll never wear again but am unable to toss as
they were my favorite ‘nice’ shoes of all time for color and comfort.
They accompanied a dress that lies at the bottom of a cedar
chest – another favorite and very Sixties. Black voile with pink and green and
white flowers splashed over it, above the knee A-line with long flaring
sleeves. Maybe Josie can use it for a costume some day
And this got me to musing on my relationship with fashion
over the years . . . I don’t have strong memories of any garment except my Girl
Scout uniform (of which I was quite proud) before 1953 -- sixth grade. I
suspect my mother bought it and I wore it, not caring much about clothes. This
would change as my friends and I became aware of Fashion.
6th grade
The go-to look was full skirts (three yards of fabric gathered
to a waist band) and blouses. Worn with as many heavily starched crinolines as
possible. I had a classmate who owned five skirts and wore them all at once, moving
a fresh one to the outer layer each day. I suggested to my mother that I might
do the same, but she squelched the idea.
There was also a pink and green plaid organdy shirtwaist from
Best and Co in NY (my mother loved their catalogue.) It was probably an Easter
dress, but I remember it because I was wearing it when, waiting outside
Morrison’s cafeteria with my grandparents, two boys whistled at me – a first.
And I remember fondly a pair of flannel lined blue jeans from
the summer after sixth grade. At Camp Junaluska I wore them daily them till a
counselor forced me to send them to the laundry to remove the smell of horse
Junior High
Fashion turned to circle skirts (some with poodles) and
cinch belts. And little silk scarves tied around your neck. I didn’t have a
poodle skirt but did have a white felt
circle skirt adorned with a big pink and red felt rose. Also, a somewhat
iridescent navy taffeta circle skirt, worn with a see through blouse (over a
slip) with elbow length puffed sleeves and dotted with tiny gold stars – tres
elegant – or so I thought at the time -- worn with an slightly iridescent navy blue taffeta circle skirt.
High school
Now Fashion became sadly crucial. Suddenly crinolines
disappeared. One of my favorites was this white Easter dress (actually a full skirt
and blouse) I wore it (probably against my mother’s advice) because it made me
feel beautiful to the train station to meet a visiting aunt and got flecks of
soot all over the outfit, ruining it forever
This was when my mother (hoping to make me glamorous and,
ultimately, marriageable – yes, that was the goal back then -- how Jane Austen!) really took an
interest in what I wore, and I was the beneficiary of quite few shopping trips.
Notable acquisitions include:
Black suede flats with a toe decoration of dull gold keys
that jangled as I walked, worn (to parties) with a spaghetti strapped red plaid
dress with another circle skirt.
A luxurious heavy red cashmere sweater that was more like a
pet than a garment. I had to take good care of it and I couldn’t stop stroking
its softness.
A special shopping trip across Tampa Bay to a little
boutique in St. Petersburg yielded a skirt ad blouse of beautiful
impressionistic autumnal print on cream background and dull yellow flats in
buttery leather – with a little rosette of yellow and cream leaves on the toes.
Maas Brothers was, I think, Tampa’s largest department store
and at certain times of the years they were awash in beautiful clothes. I remember a special selection of woven wool skirts from somewhere like Czechoslovakia
in gorgeous colors and I wanted them all. I ended up with a peasanty- type
skirt in turquoise wool with purple border pattern, paired with a thin purple
wool blouse.
At about the same time I was captivated by a display of what
I guess were called cocktail suits – velvet slim skirt and jackets, paired with
satin blouses to match the jackets’ satin lining. The color combinations were
all delightful – claret red velvet with pale pink, black with white, deep blue
with light green, and brown with pink are some that I remember. I couldn’t make
up my mind which I liked best, but it didn’t matter – as a seventeen-year-old,
I had no need for a cocktail suit. But I still remember (obviously) the lust
they inspired.
College '60-'63
My mother put together my college wardrobe
for my freshman year at Emory with all the intensity of planning a military campaign.
As I recall, there was a lot of black and white with some red. And a classic
camel-hair coat that I wish I still had. After I transferred to University of
Florida, things got a good bit more casual -- Villager shirtwaists, madras (the
kind that really fades) bermudas, a-line skirts -- I lived just a short walk from Donegan’s, the local purveyor of college fashion and spent far too much of my time and allowance there.
Wedding '63
I got married and that was another occasion for my
mother’s strategizing as a suitable trousseau was assembled. (When it was
complete, she had her friends come over to view it – another time in a galaxy
far away.) The star of the show was my going away outfit -- a Chanel/Jackie Kennedy type suit
in cream wool boucle, worn with a periwinkle blue silk blouse and cream colored
lizard skin heels.
And then I was spending our money, not my parents' and I learned to sew and made little A-line shifts out
of linen that got me through some years of teaching at a prep school where I had
to wear a dress, heels, and (argh) pantyhose.
But relief was coming. After our motorcycle tour of Europe
where I wore jeans most of the time, I begn teaching at a school with relaxed
dress standards – i.e. blue jeans. And that was the beginning of the end. Once
we moved to the farm, I was in a place where it truly didn’t matter what one
wore. And it still doesn’t.
After forty-some years without worrying about Fashion, revisiting
the time before that is almost like looking back at someone else’s life. Hard to believe that if something hadn't changed, I might have gone on to dress like the lady in the picture below . . .
But probably not.
6 comments:
OMG.........Best & Co........Donegan's........what memories! I had a yellow cable-knit cardigan from the former, and bought a madras
shirtwaist dress from the latter when at U of F! Thanks for the memory flash, Vicki.
What a fun trip down memory lane...I was wearing much the same, and sewing lots into the 70's, those Vogue patterns helped me try to stay in style. I also tossed away about half of what I sewed, because I had the ideas and tried to be creative without patterns often. Silly me. My first fashions had been crafted by my seamstress grandmother when I was very small...lots of photos of them were taken to send back to her. Then about the time I became a teen, I was purchasing dance and school clothes. Yummy. Now I had choices! But one of the last of my grandmother's creations was a taffeta dance dress, bold plaids!
I enjoyed this little trip down memory lane. Those green shoes above are really pretty! And so many of the clothes were. Still, casual is so much more comfortable. Like you, I enjoy my jeans.
This post was fun! I too went through these fashion changes, loved every moment of it! Thank you for sharing. xx
Wow! This was a "memory lane" trip! My most vivid memory was when my father took us to Catos in Elkin to shop for Christmas while my mother was in the hospital after giving birth to my youngest brother. One outfit each! That was extravagant since there were 4 girls! I chose a red plaid, quilted skirt and a soft short sleeved blue blouse with white trim. It was the first "store-bought" outfit I ever had! I remember thinking how beautiful it was! My father never took us shopping again! 😊
The sixth grade class photo is pretty cool. Early in my life my mom made all of my clothing. A few I remember vividly. My favorite was a green plaid dress with a gathered skirt on a bodice with a laced bib. I was probably four and dubbed it my purple people eater dress. I can only speculate why. Thanks for the stroll down memory lane.
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