Vintage Adverts: The Restaurant Pyjama

1960s, janice wainwright, loungewear, underwear, Vintage Adverts, Vogue

Janice Wainwright for Golden Charm. Advert scanned from Vogue, April 1969.

Excitement abounds! My new lingerie and loungewear section of the website is taking shape behind the scenes and I am particularly excited about an upcoming Janice Wainwright for Golden Charm ensemble, not entirely dissimilar to this one.

I’m more into lounging in loungewear around the house than in a restaurant, but I suppose one only knows what one knows. The fact is that in 1969, people were so well-dressed when they went to dinner that you could be truly outrageous by wearing your pyjamas. In an age when nobody gets dressed for anything, well that is when you need to shock by wearing your finest frocks.

Inspirational Illustrations: Brides of the Month

1960s, barbara hulanicki, Honey Magazine, Illustrations, weddings

I wouldn’t normally post pictures of wedding dresses, but check out who the illustrator is. Oh yes, one Ms. Barbara Hulanicki!

Honey, January 1965. Scanned by Miss Peelpants.

Mensday: The Smiley Stones

1960s, Mensday, the rolling stones

Scanned from Television Stars Annual, 1966.

Awww, what a nice, clean-looking group of young men…

Inspirational Images: Apples and Pears

1970s, barry lategan, Glenda Jackson, jean muir, Vogue

Jean Muir "Apples and Pears" print dress, 1972.

Photographed by Barry Lategan for Vogue, April 1972.

Also worn by Glenda Jackson in the 1973 film A Touch of Class and briefly in her appearance on the Morecambe and Wise show.

Scanned from Jean Muir: Beyond Fashion.

Vintage Adverts: Pop Goes the Sound Barrier

1960s, pop art, Vintage Adverts

G.E.C Poppins Advert, 1967

Inspirational Images: Fresh Woods and Pastures New

1960s, belinda bellville, jean varon, john bates, Justin de Villeneuve, twiggy, Vintage Editorials, Vogue

Culotte dress and sash by John Bates for Jean Varon, 48gns.

The most Easter-themed spread I could come up with at short notice. Happy Easter and hello Mr Spring, I’ve missed you so!

Prints by Bernard Neville for Liberty. Photos by Justin de Villeneuve. Vogue, May 1969.

Scanned by Miss Peelpants

Gypsy dress, to order at Belinda Bellville.

Inspirational Illustrations: Magpie Eye

1960s, Barbara Hanrahan, Honey Magazine, Illustrations, psychedelia, The Beatles

Illustrating ‘Magpie Eye’ in Honey, July 1967. Illustrations by Barbara Hanrahan.

Portrait of a Generation – Levis and Honda

1970s, cosmopolitan, levis, Vintage Adverts

Kelly and Lars Bolander

Portrait of a generation. Advertisement feature from Cosmopolitan, June 1973.

Photographer unknown. Scanned by Miss Peelpants

Sheila Richardson and Mark Williams

Liz Forster and Robert Lacey

Linda Kelsey and Fernando Iturbide

Mensday: Golden Earring

1970s, glam rock, Golden Earring, Look In, Mensday, menswear

Pilfered from Mr Brownwindsor's extensive collection of Look-In magazines. 9th March 1974.

Captions on a postcard, or in a comment, please.

We are not the first, and we will not be the last…

1920s, 1930s, 1940s, 1960s, 1970s, biba, bill gibb, british boutique movement, bus stop, catherine buckley, cosmopolitan, ossie clark, yves saint laurent, zandra rhodes

I think it is safe to say that I love old clothes. I dream them, I live in them and I covet the ones I don’t have. But I am under no illusion that there is anything inherently unique or radical about this. The uniqueness comes from the impression of your personality in whatever you choose to wear. The fabrics, the colours, the shapes, these are the expression of my inner self in one, superficially superficial, way.

It is important to remember this: each generation thinks it invented sex, and I fear the same goes for ‘vintage’ clothing. This article makes for fascinatingly familiar reading. Commercialisation is the death knell each time, but in turn becomes the coveted piece of history for the next generation of disillusioned people (see the mention of Catherine Buckley’s old jacquard fabrics in the text of the article. My Buckley skirt is one of these pieces). The irony does not escape me; I wear clothes by Ossie Clark, Biba, Bus Stop… all of who were creating clothes heavily inspired by their own childhoods.

Just wanting a period look is not the important part, anyone can buy a reproduction and plenty of people will, the expression comes from the colours, fabrics, shapes and accoutrements you pick. There is absolutely nothing wrong with new clothing taking influence from old, although my thoughts on direct duplication are well known, but why would you limit yourself to the prints they have chosen this season? There are limitless possibilities when you look around you and take inspiration from a variety of sources other than from conventional fashion magazines or ‘how to’ guides.

That is partly the aim of this blog, and I hope to continue in such a vein for a long time yet…

The Cosmo Girl’s Guide to the Cast-Offs Cult… Cosmopolitan, August 1974.