*****************************************************************
Message delivered directly to members of the group:
publish-the...@googlegroups.com*****************************************************************
Please consider this free-reprint article written by:
Rosie Williams
*****************************
IMPORTANT - Publication/Reprint Terms
- You have permission to publish this article electronically in free-only publications such as a website or an ezine as long as the bylines are included.
- You are not allowed to use this article for commercial purposes. The article should only be reprinted in a publicly accessible website and not in a members-only commercial site.
- You are not allowed to post/reprint this article in any sites/publications that contains or supports hate, violence, porn and warez or any indecent and illegal sites/publications.
- You are not allowed to use this article in UCE (Unsolicited Commercial Email) or SPAM. This article MUST be distributed in an opt-in email list only.
- If you distribute this article in an ezine or newsletter, we ask that you send a copy of the newsletter or ezine that contains the article to
http://www.isnare.com/eta.php?aid=1842649
- If you post this article in a website/forum/blog, ALL links MUST be set to hyperlinks and we ask that you send a copy of the URL where the article is posted to
http://www.isnare.com/eta.php?aid=1842649
- We request that you ask permission from the author if you want to publish this article in print.
The role of iSnare.com is only to distribute this article as part of its Article Distribution feature (
http://www.isnare.com/distribution.php ). iSnare.com does NOT own this article, please respect the author's copyright and this publication/reprint terms. If you do not agree to any of these terms, please do not reprint or publish this article.
*****************************
Article Title: Women�s Vintage Jeans: Timeless Chic
Author: Rosie Williams
Word Count: 549
Article URL:
http://www.isnare.com/?aid=1842649&ca=Fashion
Format: 64cpl
Contact The Author:
http://www.isnare.com/eta.php?aid=1842649
Easy Publish Tool:
http://www.isnare.com/html.php?aid=1842649
*********************** ARTICLE START ***********************
There�s something about vintage jeans that brings out the geek in any fashion fanatic. The branding, the cut, the stitching, the colour, the stressing, the length � well, this is about ten per cent of the features that determine a pair of jeans� kudos and wearability. And if you think this is a male preserve, you�ve really not been paying attention � the market for women�s vintage jeans is just as cut-throat and obsessive.
Women have been wearing jeans just as long as men have. They�re inextricably linked with pioneering Americans thrusting westwards and eventually building upwards as the cities scaled new levels of showy affluence. As jeans grew from being a cheap, hard-wearing denim garment to a fashion item, they took this iconography with them, with names and straplines like Wrangler (literally a handler of horses and cattle � the cowboy personified) and Lee (�The jeans that built America�). But while the menfolk were working the land and building the skyscrapers, the hardy women were doing their fair share of the manual labour raising families in often inhospitable climates. Somehow this image has remained timeless and almost aspirational; even chic fashion houses still sometimes revert to it when they�re marketing their denims.
The success of jeans can all be traced back to the 1950s, though � particularly fifties America. Memories and privations of war were beginning to fade and youngsters were growing up in an age of relative plenty, and were pushing the boundaries of what they could get away with in terms of music, art and fashion. Thanks to the era also hailing the explosion of mass media television, the looks of the day were captured for posterity and have become something of a template for measured rebellion ever since.
Young women were quick to take advantage of this change in attitudes. While we might associate 50s women�s fashion with the enormous, structured dresses and a look of glammed-up domesticity, these days were limited, and this is partly due to the striding advance of the skin-tight denims jeans that are instantly recognisable, along with their sisters, the pencil skirts, as archetypically rock and roll.
More and more in our fashion magazines and on the streets, elements of the burlesque are becoming embedded in 2010s culture. The attraction of the tattoos, the jet-black or bleached-blonde hair worn high and the extravagant Parisian garb is not hard to see; it�s a look that oozes power, rebellion and creativity while definitely remaining feminine. But it�s a look that has great resonance in the genuine first-generation rock and rollers, and some authentic vintage jeans will be the part of any such wardrobe, even if they are never worn after sundown.
Best of all, it�s a great time to be shopping for authentic jeans from the 50s and 60s. Mosey into any good vintage clothing store and the chances are you�ll find some tailored examples that can be worn off the peg, allowing you to carry on your retro look without missing a beat. They represent easily the most glamorous phase of women�s jeans� history � after that they became rather slovenly and workaday for a decade or two � so grab them while they�re hot.
About The Author: A pair of authentic womens vintage jeans can fetch a healthy price these and vintage clothing stores such as
http://www.rokit.co.uk/ always reserve premium shelf space for these popular garments. Rosie explains the popularity and history of denim jeans and why women too are regular buyers.
Please use the HTML version of this article at:
http://www.isnare.com/html.php?aid=1842649
*********************** ARTICLE END ***********************
- To distribute your articles go to
http://www.isnare.com/distribution.php
- For more free-reprint articles go to
http://www.isnare.com