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An easy hairdo for Christmas (Christina Dueholm) – anne-marie houles
An easy hairdo for Christmas (Christina Dueholm)
Perhaps you have already come to think box to find out what to have on Christmas Eve. Like so many others, we have at least in my family a tradition… The post An easy hairdo for Christmas appeared
Early Western travelers, who travel to Persia, Turkey, India or China, would often object to the absence of fashion changes in their respective locations. The Japanese shogun's secretary broke (not exactly) to a Spanish visitor in 1609 that Japanese clothing had not changed for over a thousand years. But there is great evidence in Ming China about rapidly growing fashion in Chinese clothing. Changes in costume were often taken in times of economic or social change, which occurred in ancient Rome and the medieval caliphate, followed by a long period without major changes. In the eighth century Moorish Spain, musician Ziryab was introduced to Córdoba's sophisticated clothing styles based on seasonal and daily fashion from his native Baghdad, modified by his own inspiration.
Similar changes in fashion occurred during the 19th century in the Middle East following the arrival of Turkey, which introduced clothing styles from Central Asia and the Far East. The beginning of Europe of continuous and ever-faster change of clothing styles can be quite reliable dated. Historians, including James Laver and Fernand Braudel, are the start of Western fashion in clothing until the mid-15th century, but it should be noted that they tend to rely heavily on contemporary images and enlightened manuscripts were not common before the 14th century. The most dramatic early change in fashion was a sudden drastic shortening and tightening of the male outerwear from the jaw length to barely cover the buttocks, sometimes along with filling in the chest to make it look larger. This created the distinctive western contour of a tailored top worn over leggings or trousers. The gear speed was greatly accelerated in the following century, and women and men's models, especially in dressing and jewelry of the hair, became as complex.
Art historians can therefore use fashion with confidence and precision for day pictures, often within five years, especially when it comes to pictures from the 15th century. Initially, changes in fashion led to a split over Europe's upper classes of what had previously been a very similar type of dressing and the subsequent development of distinct national styles. These national styles were very different until a counter-movement in the 17th-17th centuries re-introduced similar styles, mostly from the Ancien Régime France. Although the wealthy usually led to fashion, the increasing prosperity of early modern Europe led the bourgeoisie and even the peasants to follow the trends from a distance, but still unpleasantly close to the elite - a factor that Fernand Braudel considers to be one of the main motors for changing fashion.
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