Famous Dress Designers Names

Today we present the 10 design clothes that have made history. It is real must that should find a place in every woman’s wardrobe.

Today we propose a journey through the fashion of the twentieth century and evolution of the textile sector. We will tell the birth of prêt-à-porter and iconic dresses that have accompanied the history of women and women’s empowerment.

The Dior’s “New Look” (1947): soft shoulders, waist and full skirts wrung a little ‘wheel. This was the woman Dior after World War. The term was coined by the editor of Harper’s Bazaar that she exclaimed: “It’s such a new look!” To mark the wave of novelty and innovation that this collection had brought in the fashion world. The success was epic.

The pink dress shocking: Few people know that the inventor of the shocking pink was a name designer Elsa Schiaparelli. Designer eclectic and quirky, eternal rival of Coco Chanel, had contacts with the Surrealists and brought many innovations to the fashion of , was a true pioneer in the use of completely new sartorial elements such as zippers, shoulder pads and extremely bright and garish colors : these include the emblematic shade of pink that colored the packaging of its first “Shocking” perfume . Hence the idea of using this color for a dress from the romantic line. An ultra-feminine blend.

The Chanel suit: In the late ’50s, Coco Chanel wanted to produce comfortable but elegant that would reflect good on women of the time: free, dynamic, casual. For this he created his personal version of the suit: the times of the war offered only the jersey fabric, simple but with an extraordinary versatility, with whom he created a knee-length skirt and a jacket with an essential edged profiles trimmings contrasting and embellished with gold buttons. Thousands of women around the world wore the suit, and still do today, and its unmistakable allure makes it even a chief timeless today.

The Little Black Dress: Better known as the little black dress. How can we forget what longuette Givenchy made ​​by beautiful icon Audrey Hepburn in the film “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” in 1961? The little black dress is the master key to all formal occasions. With a sheath dress is never wrong. It ‘a simple short sleeveless dress whose length can reach to the knee or ankle. Black, simple, minimal and eternally chic, is an indispensable leader, absolutely essential in every woman’s wardrobe .

The dress Mondrian: When art and fashion come together in a geometric hug the result can only be the Mondrian dress. In 1965 Yves Saint Laurent moved from canvas to cloth the famous “Composition in yellow, red and blue” of the Dutch painter Piet Mondrian to create an outfit from the straight line contours blacks and colored blocks sewn together. It was one of the most successful collections of history of fashion.

The “Red Valentino” dress : How Elsa Schiaparelli, Valentino invented its own color which became the emblem of the maison. A particular shade of red very heated between the purple, crimson and cadmium red. Valentino was inspired during a holiday in Barcelona where he was greatly impressed by the bright shades of this color. There have been hundreds of women who have worn this garment unmistakable sensuality and elegance, from Jacqueline Kennedy to Sophia Loren, Monica Vitti to Elizabeth Taylor . today it is still the tip of the maison diamond, which puts at least one item in this color in all its shows, as if it were a kind of superstition.
The mini dress: The sixties: that is the decade when the hems of skirts grew shorter at dizzying pace. In 1965 the young London designer Mary Quant invented the mini-dress and the skirt inspired by another famous Mini (the famous automobile) and in so doing catalyzed public attention. Paled conformists, the bigots were scandalized, but it mattered little; ’68 was near . He is pulling air of change, small great revolutions. And this revolutionary new colored the streets of a gray and gloomy London. The success was soon spread worldwide and gave a new style and a new identity aa all the girls of the time. Even Queen Elizabeth II was convinced to slightly shorten the hem of his robes.

The Wrap Dress: That the dress “wraparound” created by Diane Von Furstenberg in 1973. Similar to a wrap dress is a dress in jeresey or cotton to cross and tie on your side and lends itself beautifully to the working days as to evening look. it fits perfectly to the shape of the body slipping soft hips and highlights the neckline with a more or less wide V neckline. the perfect combination is with a pair of knee-high boots. The good news is virtually all good.

The strapless sheath dress: In the early 90s, Calvin Klein launched a sheath dress without straps from the absolutely minimal cutting. It was the BEGINNING of a new decade. The sobriety and the minimalism of this dress sanctioned the definitive exit from the opulent and kitchissmi 80s, he became a veritable also divided by occasions not quite as formal parties and cocktails, and never ceases to be so even today.

The mermaid dress: Having become one of the favorites for the wedding dresses, the mermaid dress was given a new life in 1997 by British designer Julien MacDonald, who in the same year Lanco her “Mermaid” collection that was a great success with the press. Elegant and sinuous, it is the red carpet dress par excellence .

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