vardathemessage: (Default)
vardathemessage ([personal profile] vardathemessage) wrote2004-06-20 12:46 am
Entry tags:

Costumes

script:
MONTAGE (ARCHIVAL FOOTAGE): GLITTER KIDS – 1972

... It appears today's youngsters have fashioned a whole new bent on the so-called sexual liberation of the flower-power set.

Costume designer Sandy Powell was a teenager in London in 1974 and made a lot of her own clothes, a look she gave the kids in the film, glamming their regular clothes up on a budget. "It was a homemade look, which I incorporated into my designs for the film. A lot of people criticized it, saying it wasn't really like that. But I thought, 'Well maybe it wasn't in your world, but it was in mine.' "

Varda Mistress Bona!

[identity profile] vardathemessage.livejournal.com 2004-06-20 06:57 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't suppose you have a picture of that? I agree with you, of course. The little details regarding the way the kids were dressed were true to me. My pal had a near exact copy of that rather unfortunate plaid jacket that Arthur wears. There was a revival of the styles of the 30's and 40's, in general, so you couldn't buy a pair of trousers that weren't high waisted and those cropped "Eisenhower" jackets were everywhere. Things like the little rhinestone star pins, the red cherry pins and rainbow designs were very popular. You might beg your dad for his old 'tuxedo scarf', a usually white fringed silk scarf that men would wear when all dolled up for those dates with mom before you were born. And if you were lucky your mom, aunt or even grandma had a pair of platform ankle straps made popular by Carmen Miranda or Joan Crawford stashed away somewhere.

I supposed the DIY phenomenon holds true for punk today, you can get the t-shirt at the mall, but a vintage Ramones or Clash one from your dad has more cachet. (Just don't tell anyone where you got it.)