LIFESTYLE / Fashion |
Restrained swimsuits back in style!(The Los Angeles Time)Updated: 2007-06-04 16:40 Women of the world rejoice: This is not the season of the skimpy swimsuit. Michael Kors put full-cut bikinis on the runway two years ago, and Abaete designer Laura Poretzky has made pinup-style suits since 2004. But the retro swimwear trend really took off with the spring collections, when Stella McCartney showed a playful blue-and-green two-piece with bloomers on the bottom, and Karl Lagerfeld channeled Brigitte Bardot with a boucle knit bandeau and briefs at Chanel. Miuccia Prada made the most convincing case for poolside modesty when she paired jewel-tone satin tunics and turbans straight out of "Sunset Boulevard." Click to view Scarlett Johansson on Vogue More than anyone else, Prada broke from the kind of ornamentation that had been driving fashion. Above all, she exulted the female form, putting the spotlight on the most innocent of feminine assets, a great pair of gams. And as unimaginable as it might have seemed, our bare-it-all pop culture is catching on to the cover-up trend. Scarlett Johansson played the 1940s starlet in the April issue of Vogue, baring very little as she posed in Dolce & Gabbana and Prada at the pool and the beach. Another curvy girl, Beyonce Knowles, posed for the cover of the latest Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue in a yellow-and-orange bikini of her own design with an ample boy-cut brief. This move toward covering up could be a reaction to too many years of Britney Spears and Paris Hilton. But it's also about a renewed interest in getting dressed, even for the pool. It's about returning the mystery to fashion by not letting it all hang out. Wearing today's retro-inspired styles with ruching around the middle, low-cut legs and sweetheart necklines requires the confidence to appear as if one might have something to hide - a flabby midriff, rounded thighs or breasts not augmented by implants. Add a turban and you're really challenging the notion of what's conventionally sexy, with headgear rarely seen on anyone younger than 70.
Bathing suit history 1907 Aussie marathon swimmer Annette Kellerman arrives on U.S. shores, where she
is arrested for trotting out a bare-legged bathing costume at Revere Beach near
Boston. At the time women are still splashing around in pantaloons and sailor
dresses. She famously says in court, "I want to swim. And I can't swim wearing
more stuff than you hang on a clothesline." The charges are dropped, and she
turns the overburdened, puritanical exercise of bathing into the body-conscious
act of swimming.
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