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Popular fashion trends the year you were born

If you were born in 1918, congratulations. According to the Pew Research Center, you lot're one of well-nigh only 72,000 centenarians in the U.s.a. and fewer than 500,000 worldwide. If yous've lived that long, you've seen some large changes in way along the style. Some have come up, gone, and come back again. Others were regrettable fads that thankfully stayed dead one time they went out of vogue. Others caught on rapidly and never went out of style.

Some fashion trends are the result of war, others are the brainchildren of bold, innovative designers. Some are born out of necessity, some are triggered past a single celebrity's taste, and others arrive by accident. No matter the reason, fashion both steers and reflects the climate and civilisation of the time. Hither are 100 of the nigh memorable trends over the past century.

RELATED: Popular fads from the year yous were built-in

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Les Elegances parisiennes Public Domain // Wikimedia Eatables

1918: Parasols

In the 1920s, tanned skin came into vogue and by 1930, small, delicate, and decorative sun umbrellas were all but a memory. In 1918, nonetheless, parasols were still a common sight as women sported the accessory both for its function and its course. Parasols, after all, had long been a symbol of high society.

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Public Domain // Wikimedia Commons

1919: Trench coats

Long outerwear made from rubberized cotton had been around since the 1820s, but what is now called a trench coat exploded in popularity subsequently returning soldiers brought them back from World War I. Long, heavy, warm, and durable, they protected soldiers in the trenches not just from drenching rains, but also from the toxicant gas that has come to recap the disharmonize—the trademark wide collar was designed to constrict a gas mask into to make it closed. Upon returning to civilian life, many soldiers just kept the rain jackets they were issued on the front.

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Auckland Museum // Wikimedia Eatables

1920: Bandeau tops

By the 1920s, women had mostly abased the bust-enhancing corsets and girdles of generations past. The era of the flappers was underway, and adolescent bob cuts with boyish bodies were the hot new look. Women in vogue were at present sporting tight bandeau tops that intentionally flattened their breasts.

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George Grantham BainLibrary of Congress // Wikimedia Eatables

1921: Cloche hats

Hats were a role—if not the most important part—of the standard uniform for men and women during the Roaring '20s, and few hats were more popular in 1921 than the all-encompassing cloche hat. Snug and worn depression over the eyebrows, cloche hats perfectly complemented the brusque bob cuts that flapper women made famous.

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NASA // Wikimedia Commons

1922: Trousers for women

Few people impacted 20th-century mode more thoroughly than Coco Chanel, and although women briefly sported trousers while working in industry while the men were abroad during World War I, it was Chanel who fabricated pants a female fashion statement. Chanel reportedly loved the look and feel of trousers, wore them often and publicly, and past the early on 1920s, she started designing them for women.

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Swallowtail Garden Seeds // flickr

1923: Art deco clothes

The fine art deco motility that swept Europe and the Us in the 1910s was in total event by 1923, and the style impacted article of clothing equally much as compages. That year, women's vesture was trending toward geometric shapes and patterns, often with seaming intentionally left visible to add together detail, along with surface designs and graphic embellishment.

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Auckland Museum // Wikimedia Eatables

1924: High-heeled shoes

High heels had been effectually for centuries before the '20s roared—in fact, they were originally designed for men and were often preferred by royalty. In the 1920s, however, the modern designer high heel was born. A typical advertizement from 1924 might offer heels with intricate detailing and an elongated toe with bows or crisscrossing straps, not dissimilar the kind you lot'd likely see in a catalog today.

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Sobebunny // Wikimedia Commons

1925: Wingtip shoes

Brogue-way shoes had been around long before the 1920s, but during the so-unprecedented affluence of that decade, accessories like shoes and hats became more fashionable to keep up with the dapper men's suits of the era. By the mid-'20s, a brogue spinoff chosen wingtips emerged, and their pointing toe caps, circular perforations and, of course, swooping "wings" came to ascertain panache in footwear.

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1926: Little black clothes

Few pieces of women'due south clothing are more ubiquitous or enduring than the versatile and reliable LBD—the little black dress. Contrary to popular belief, nevertheless, it didn't start with Audrey Hepburn in "Breakfast at Tiffany'due south" in 1961. In 1926, Vogue published a drawing of a basic, narrow-sleeved dress designed by Coco Chanel that the publication dubbed "Chanel'south Ford" because information technology was affordable, accessible to the masses and, of course, black.

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Paul A Hernandez // Wikimedia Commons

1927: Saddle shoes

A.G. Spalding introduced the genderless saddle shoe in 1906, and by the late 1920s, they had become virtually ubiquitous—a trend that would hold for decades to come. Preferred by young people merely also oftentimes seen on older Americans, saddle shoes contain a separate piece of leather sewn over the waist of the shoe, often in a contrasting color.

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Lewis Hine // Wikimedia Eatables

1928: Newsboy cap

Kids hawking newspapers while shouting, "Actress! Extra!" were a mutual sight in U.S. cities in the 1920s—and their headwear of choice came to be known as the newsboy cap. Once popular with European elites, the iconic eight-piece cap was available to all castes in the United States, from kids in candy stores to grownup automobile enthusiasts.

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Ding Photo Studio // Shutterstock

1929: A purse with straps

In 1929, groundbreaking designer Coco Chanel did what groundbreaking designers do: she bankrupt new ground. That twelvemonth, she designed a new kind of purse inspired by the shoulder slings she saw military men use to comfortably behave their gear. According to Glamour, she said in a biography years later, "I got fed up with holding my purses in my hands and losing them, and so I added a strap and carried them over my shoulder."

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-oo0(GoldTrader)0oo- // Wikimedia Commons

1930: Driving gloves

By 1930, cars were cheaper and more accessible than they'd ever been earlier, and the fashion of the era shifted to reverberate America'south booming machine culture. By 1930, both men and women sported driving gloves, which by that year had get shorter, thinner, tighter, and unlined to give the fingers a tighter grip on the cycle.

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Brooklyn Museum Costume Collection at The Metropolitan Museum of Art // Wikimedia Eatables

1931: Car coats

In 1931, driving was part of the American experience—merely the start in-dash automobile heater was still years away. Car coats, therefore, were a manner trend born out of necessity. Both men and women wore them, and they were made for unlike seasons, in dissimilar styles, and from dissimilar fabrics. It was mutual to see people wearing them even when they weren't in their cars.

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Artem Avetisyan // Shutterstock

1932: Modern bras

In the late 19th century, archaic Victorian corsets gave way to girdles, which presently gave way to split top-and-lesser women'southward underwear, which was followed by the brassiere. In 1932, however, three things happened that ushered in the mod era. "Brassiere" was shortened to "bra," bras got eyehooks and adjustable bands, and the alphabet-based loving cup-size system was born.

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Unknown // Wikimedia Commons

1933: Sport shirts

While formal wearable is perhaps the virtually remembered manner for men in the 1930s, multiple leisure looks began to have off during the Depression and by 1933, sport shirts were in vogue. Men flocked to buy bush shirts, polo shirts, and button-downs with broad, open up collars.

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T. Eaton Co. Limited // Wikimedia Commons

1934: Set-to-wear designer dress

Designer wearing apparel had long been the exclusive rule of women who could beget to have each slice individually tailored to her body, but all that changed in 1934. Thanks largely to Chanel's collections and those offered by her imitators, eye-class women were now sporting the high-fashion tailored looks long seen in magazines.

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IVASHstudio // Shutterstock

1935: Tuxedos

Tuxedos arrived in Europe in 1865 every bit a regal alternative to formal tailcoats, and by the early on 20th century, America had adopted the tuxedo as the male formal wear of selection. The tuxedo'due south popularity waned in the '20s, but came dorsum in a big way in the 1930s. By 1935, blue wool was more pop than blackness wool, double-breasted tuxes—which would previously have been too informal—were the preferred look and black-tie was back in vogue equally white-tie by that betoken was more often than not left to special occasions.

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Tlc3707 // Wikimedia Commons

1936: Chuck Taylor All Stars

Although the Converse Safe Corporation unveiled the All Star basketball shoe in 1917, everything changed in 1936. That year, the familiar canvas shoe—the oldest and best-selling basketball sneaker in history—debuted in a white high-elevation model during that year'southward Olympic Games, making it an instant awareness.

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Lamarquezahats // Wikimedia Commons

1937: Panama hats

Panama hats have gone in and out of vogue from the early on 1500s all the fashion up to the nowadays day. The brimmed harbinger hats enjoyed a massive resurgence in popularity in the late 1930s, however, thanks to stars like Gary Cooper and Orson Welles, who wore them both on screen and in real life. By 1944, hats were Ecuador'due south chief export, topping even bananas.

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Ysbrand Cosijn // Shutterstock

1938: Suspenders

By 1938, the tendency of men wearing visible suspenders was growing, but it was notwithstanding considered and then risque that one town on Long Isle, N.Y., tried to ban men from wearing suspenders without a coat. The ban failed, the trend was set, and actors like Humphrey Bogart would enshrine the look by wearing visible suspenders on the big screen.

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Arnold T. Palmer / Library of Congress // Wikimedia Commons

1939: Snoods

Knitted or crocheted hairnets have kept women's pilus out of their faces since fourth dimension immemorial. In the 1940s, withal, snoods soared in popularity—primarily cheers to something that happened in 1939. That twelvemonth, Vivien Leigh'due south character Scarlett O'Hara burned them into the American imagination with her performance in "Gone With the Wind."

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Lubbock Evening Periodical // Wikimedia Commons

1940: Fedoras

Fedoras have gone in and out of style from the time they arrived at the plough of the 20th century until the nowadays day. The hat'south heydey, however, was a vast period between the late 1920s and early 1950s when the functional hat was the finishing touch on the formal attire that men wore in that era—although fedoras have long been popular with women, too. By 1940, the man who would come to define the chapeau, Frank Sinatra, hit the radio.

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U.S. National Archives and Records Administration // Wikimedia Commons

1941: Propaganda scarves

In 1941, the Us entered Globe State of war II, and past that fourth dimension, head scarves had already gone from functional garment to high-fashion accompaniment. That twelvemonth, several companies cashed in on the patriotic fervor sweeping the nation by offering so-called propaganda scarves, which were emblazoned with slogans like "Into Boxing" and "Salvage Your Rubber."

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Ladies Dwelling house Periodical // Wikimedia Commons

1942: Wrap dresses

In the early 1940s, a fancier version of the common day dress came into style—the wrap wearing apparel. Commonly worn to Lord's day brunches or while entertaining guests, wrap dresses had gathers and pleats that wrapped around the front.

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Ollie Atkins // Wikimedia Eatables

1943: Zoot suits

The Zoot Suit Riots were a series of attacks in 1943 by white policemen and American service members on young Latinos and other minorities in their own Los Angeles neighborhoods. Although racial tension and not manner was the source of the mele, the zoot suit became a symbol of the conflict. The baggy suits—which were the preferred manner for black musicians in New York and Latinos in California—were viewed with suspicion every bit a "bluecoat of malversation" by much of affluent white America, just equally the hoodie would exist 70 years later on.

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Playingwithbrushes' // Wikimedia Commons

1944: Brooch

By the mid-1940s, a detail kind of jewelry was becoming a common sight. It wasn't worn effectually the neck, on the fingers, or in the earlobes, but on the lapel. They were brooches, and although they weren't invented at the end of World War Two, that's when they enjoyed a groovy of popularity equally designer accessories.

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1945: Fur coats

Fur coats have been around for as long equally humans have been killing animals for their skins—sometimes for function, but oft for mode. Fur as fashion was, in fact, crucial to mid-1940s fashion. From muskrat to mink, leopard-stenciled Coney to fitted princess, fur coats were the concrete embodiment of elegance in that era.

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Teichnor Bros., Boston // Wikimedia Eatables

1946: Bikinis

Few moments in fashion history accept been more world-shatteringly scandalous than the one that took identify in 1946. That year, the world'southward outset bikini made its debut at a poolside show in Paris, but the revealing cut was so risque that many French models refused to brandish it. The designer instead hired a nude dancer named Micheline Bernardini, who was the first adult female e'er photographed wearing one, just certainly not the terminal. Bikinis would shortly take over the beaches of the United States and the western earth.

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insidehenderson // Pixabay

1947: Belts

By the end of the 1940s, belts had largely replaced suspenders because by that fourth dimension, pants were more fitted at the waist. Men flocked to stock upward on the accompaniment, which was both functional and fashionable, fifty-fifty though the options were limited more often than not to tan, brown, or black leather with small buckles.

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1948: Lampshade dresses

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Erik Holmén, Nordiska museet // Wikimedia Commons

1949: Peep-toe shoes

By the end of the 1940s, peep-toe shoes were a pop footwear option. They exposed just enough to be dishy without breaching the conservative standards that governed the era.

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1950: Pillbox hats

Equally the 1940s transitioned to the '50s, there were lots of advances in the world of fashion, merely some things didn't modify. I of those things was the pillbox chapeau, a small, circular, directly-sided hat that sometimes included net veils. It grew by several inches over the years, but remained largely the same. It besides became one of the merely hats that endured from the 1940s into the 1960s, thanks in office to Jackie Kennedy.

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1951: Total suits

The early on 1950s signaled the beginning of an unprecedented ascension in wealth and employment as the U.S. economy boomed. Legions of men moved their families to the suburbs and took upward white-collar jobs—and those jobs required suits. Night, full, conservative suits became so ubiquitous, in fact, that they were worn en masse even to the virtually coincidental events. When Bobby Thompson hit the "shot heard circular the globe" home run in the 1951 New York Giants pennant game and a crush of fans rushed the field, virtually all of the men were dressed in total suits.

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U.S. Army Alaska // Flickr

1952: Poodle skirts

Poodle skirts now serve as a symbol of the innocence of the mail service-World War II era. In the 1950s, yet, they were a fashion statement for girls and women across America. The full-length, swinging skirts were adorned with handmade embellishments, stitching, designs, and patches, often sewn on by the wearer or her mother. Among the most famous embellishments was, of course, a poodle on a ternion.

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1953: Smoking jackets

Smoking jackets have a long and storied history, first as leisure article of clothing designed but for relaxing at domicile and then as formal wear that was appropriate for high-end public gatherings. The yr 1953, still, was a watershed moment for the velvet and silk shawl-collared garments. That year, the first issue of "Playboy" came off the presses and Hugh Hefner—and his trademark smoking jacket—became a household name.

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YourCastlesDecor // Flickr

1954: The pioneer wait

Ruffled buckskin jackets and coonskin caps were functional clothing worn past Native Americans and pioneers for practical reasons, not because they were winning any fashion awards. The look largely disappeared correct forth with the frontier—until 1954. On Dec. 15 of that year, Disney presented "Davy Crockett: Indian Fighter," a one-60 minutes segment that was part of the "Disneyland" television series, and suddenly, boys across America were begging for classic frontier apparel.

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Liu Wen Cheng 我希望成為 // Wikimedia Commons

1955: two.55 handbags

The iconic Chanel ii.55 purse remains amongst the most popular loftier-end purses in the entire Chanel collection—the cheap ones currently outset at $2,500. The 2.55 stands for February 1955, the yr designer Coco Chanel released the original, which was loosely modeled afterwards the get-go bag she designed in 1929. It was a watershed month in the history of designer women'southward accessories.

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1956: Denim jackets

From the Beatles to Bruce Springsteen, Marilyn Monroe to Beyonce, the classic American denim jacket has literally never gone out of manner since Levi Strauss designed the original in 1870. In the mid-1950s, nevertheless, it became the embodiment of cool youth civilisation. The New York Times ran sewing patterns for denim jackets for girls and boys, while Levi'southward unveiled its Type II trucker jacket to the masses.

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Everett Drove // Shutterstock

1957: Berets

Exemplified by Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, and William Burroughs, the trounce movement immortalized the kind of coffee store cool portrayed in the flick "Funny Face" and in Kerouac's classic novel "On the Road," both of which debuted in 1957. If y'all were enamored of the culture that year, chances are practiced yous endemic a black beret, which was a trademark of beatnik stylings.

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Magdalena Wielobob // Shutterstock

1958: Chemise

In 1958, women across America were wearing dresses that were spitting images of what the French queen Marie Antoinette popularized as undergarments in the 1780s: the chemise. Straight cut and unfitted at the waist, the chemise had long been a staple of women's underwear and dark wear, only that all changed in 1957. That year, Parisian designers Christian Dior and Cristóbal Balenciaga unveiled directly, unbelted chemise dresses, and by 1958, the effigy-concealing game-changers had gone mainstream.

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Public Domain // Wikimedia Commons

1959: Halter dress

The nigh famous halter apparel in history is the i Marilyn Monroe wore in "The Vii Yr Crawling," which the starlet coyly struggled to continue in place after a blast of air from a street grate. The motion picture came out in 1955, but halter dresses were pop throughout the decade.

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1960: Polka dots

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Viktoria Minkova // Shutterstock

1961: Bug-eye sunglasses

In 1960, John F. Kennedy was elected president and he, along with his wife Jackie, would become the embodiment of loftier social style and svelte elegance. The first lady's trademark oversized "bug-center" sunglasses would prove to exist a trendsetter, and by the following yr, women everywhere were hiding behind them.

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Durene Association of America, New York // Wikimedia Commons

1962: Miniskirts

Although versions of it existed throughout history, a certain fashion staple didn't hit the mainstream until 1962. That year, a newspaper in Montana made the outset known reference to the earth's most controversial hemline: the mini-skirt.

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1963: Pleatless pants

The 1960s were an uneven decade in terms of fashion, and pre-British Invasion 1963 looked much more like the '50s than the latter role of the '60s. In that location was ane shift, however, that signaled a dramatic bounding main change in conceptions virtually formality. That twelvemonth, it became widely adequate for men to wearable pants without pleats.

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Yesterday Today // YouTube

1964: Go-become boots

Earlier the 1960s, boots were mainly designed for function, non course. That all changed, nonetheless, in 1964 when André Courrèges unveiled a new kind of women's boot in his fall 1964 collection. The white, plastic, dogie-high boots were part of his Moon Girl wait— become-go boots had arrived.

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1965: Cutouts

In the mid-1960s, it wasn't at all unusual to come across women with a clamper of their clothes missing—don't worry, information technology was on purpose. The expect was called the cutout, and windows through vesture could be modest or sizable, round or square. They could be found on the backs of dresses or on the bellies, on the sleeves, on the neckline, or fifty-fifty on go-go boots.

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Ida Tolgensbakk // Wikimedia Commons

1966: Slogan buttons

Little buttons safety pinned onto clothing had long been a staple of political campaigns, with "I similar Ike" and other slogans serving equally personal statements for those who wore them. By 1966, however, the Vietnam War was raging and social turmoil was engulfing the country back home. Slogan-pasted buttons pinned onto shirts, pants, backpacks, and jackets became a staple of the counterculture wardrobe, with familiar letters including "Hell no, we won't go," "Ban the bomb," and simply "Peace."

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Andrzej 22 // Wikimedia Commons

1967: Bell-bottoms

Though they're more than commonly associated with the 1970s, bell-bottoms got their start in the late 1960s, as cultural icons hit the town with flared pants. Jimi Hendrix, Sonny and Cher, and Twiggy all promoted the look. So did Nancy Sinatra, who wore an especially memorable set of bedazzled white flared pants on her 1967 television special Movin' with Nancy. No wonder Vanity Off-white after called bong-bottoms 1 of the fashion revolutions of 1967.

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Zolotarevs // Shutterstock

1968: Bohemian chic

Many immature people in 1968 weren't hippies, but hardcore-hippie article of clothing rubbed off on mainstream social club in the grade of a tendency that celebrated hippie civilisation without fully embracing it—bohemian chichi. That twelvemonth, peasant blouses, decorative handwork, and ruffles upon ruffles could exist establish far across Greenwich Village and Haight-Ashbury.

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1969: Tie-dye

If the radical 1960s counterculture movement had a compatible, it would have to include necktie-dye. Handmade rainbow clothing had defined the era's youth motility for several years, merely in 1969, there was no doubt that tie-dye was king. That year, a half-meg people gathered for a music festival in Woodstock, North.Y., and both on stage and in the sea of humanity in the crowd, tie-dye could be seen—at least on those whose dress weren't covered in mud or who weren't wearing clothes at all.

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Lenscap Photography // Shutterstock

1970: Platform shoes

In the 1970s, people everywhere suddenly got taller. Although Salvatore Ferragamo famously designed a pair of rainbow platform sandals for Judy Garland in 1938, platform shoes truly emerged in the 1970s. Men and women embraced the ascent, and the tendency would endure for the unabridged decade.

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Anefo // Wikimedia Commons

1971: Hot pants

The loose, draping ruffles of the bohemian chic movement weren't dead in 1971, but they were starting to take a dorsum seat to a more revealing and course-fitting style. That fashion was exemplified by hot pants. James Brown defended an entire song to the hip-hugging garment in 1971's "Hot Pants (She Got to Use What She Got to Go What She Wants)." Meanwhile, women ranging from Elizabeth Taylor to Raquel Welch proudly donned the short shorts.

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ABC Boob tube // Wikimedia Eatables

1972: Plaid

Past 1972, the '70s were truly the '70s, and department stores had the plaid to prove it. The crisp, linear await of plaid would have likely turned off counter-culture fashionistas in the '60s—plaid, after all, is made entirely of squares. By the '70s, notwithstanding, plaid was acceptable—encouraged, even—on merely near any type of fabric and all types of clothing, from hats to socks to jackets to shirts to pants and beyond.

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Alena Ozerova // Shutterstock

1973: Crocheted bikinis

Past the early 1970s, crochet bikinis were in. The woven swimsuits got their first big break in 1969, whenCosmopolitan put its covergirl in a green crochet bikini. The New York Times called the swimwear a "favorite" of boutique designers in 1971, and pretty soon Pam Grier was lounging poolside in a white knit 2-piece.

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HousingWorksPhotos // Flickr

1974: Polyester

If platform shoes were the footwear that defined the 1970s, polyester was the fabric. The 1974 Sears catalog was an homage to the synthetic cloth, which was spun into shirts, dresses, pants, jackets and, later on, unabridged suits, many of which were topped off with cartoonishly massive collars.

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Shannon W // Shutterstock

1975: Mood rings

In 1975, '60s mysticism collided with '70s commercialism in one of the most successful manner fads in history: the mood band. Like so many other fads, the color-shifting jewelry first found popularity in New York Urban center but apace spread as introspective soul searchers hoped to get a deeper understanding of their inner selves by peering into heat-sensitive crystals worn on their fingers.

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menswear-market place.com // Flickr

1976: Corduroy suits

If your legs make a swooshing audio when y'all walk, chances are skilful you're wearing corduroy pants. The corded woolen fabric dates back thousands of years, and information technology remains a fall staple for some to this day. Past 1976, withal, the heavy material was a sign of the times as entire suits were fabricated from the ribbed, united nations-wrinkleable cloth, which was sometimes worn caput to toe.

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vincent desjardins // pxhere

1977: Punk jackets

Sometimes denim, sometimes leather, always daring, punk jackets were a visible symbol of youthful rebellion in 1977. Every bit cities decayed, ghettos widened, and crime and unemployment soared, punk rock emerged to embody the spirit of youthful angst and, of form, to terrify parents. Designed to offend, punk jackets could be studded, bedazzled, torn or spiked, but all were required to be adorned with a message—the more antagonistic, the better.

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Nick-D // Wikimedia Commons

1978: Physician Martens

Like and so many fashion trends, Doc Marten boots and shoes were born out of necessity—the heavy footwear was originally designed to protect the feet of blue-collar workers who labored in dangerous industries. In the 1970s, however, they were a direct expression of the anarchic rebellion that divers the times. What started with punk would re-sally over and over once again with different musical movements: metal, pop, emo, alt, grunge, rave, and across.

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1979: Jordache jeans

By the time Jordache stormed the manner world in 1979, the visitor had already been in business organization for 17 years. But the visitor's meteoric rise can be traced to an ingenious ad campaign that featured a seemingly topless woman wearing skin-tight Jordache jeans, and nothing else, while riding a horse. She was soon joined by a shirtless man, also clad only in Jordache denim. The networks refused to air the advert but a few New York stations picked it upward, which stirred controversy—and overnight success for Jordache.

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New Africa // Shutterstock

1980: Daisy Dukes

First, there were miniskirts, then there were hot pants, only 1979 launched what just might be the near iconic trend in the history of ogle-inducing, leg-revealing fashion. That year, "The Dukes of Hazzard" debuted, starring Catherine Bach as Daisy Duke. She was an instant sex symbol, the denim cutoffs she wore became synonymous with her character's name, and by 1980, brusk shorts got just a piffling bit shorter.

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1981: Leg warmers

In the early 1980s, the aerobics craze took off, and in that location was plain widespread fear that the do fad could somehow freeze the legs of its practitioners—but only below the knee. Thick, footless socks—frequently colored in bright neon—began appearing en masse on shins and calves both inside exercise classes and out. The era of leg warmers had arrived.

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panthera leo heart vintage // Flickr

1982: Jelly sandals

Rubberized plastic shoes were the footwear of choice for girls and women alike all across America in the early 1980s. They've gone in and out of fashion in the ensuing years, but jelly sandals enjoyed their true heydey starting around 1982, when Grendene Shoes claims to have introduced them.

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Schröder+Schömbs PR _ Brands // Flickr

1983: Thriller jacket

On Dec. two, 1983, 13 minutes inverse the earth. That was the elapsing of Michael Jackson'southward "Thriller" video, the MTV masterpiece that both launched the music video era and at the aforementioned time represented its zenith. The iconic cerise jacket with V-shaped cerise stripes that the King of Pop wore in the video was an instant phenomenon. When the original sold for $one.8 million in 2011, the buyer reportedly chosen it "the greatest piece of rock and roll memorabilia in history."

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1984: Fingerless gloves

Madonna was not the but trend-setting celebrity whose ensemble included cut-off gloves, but she was one of the most visible. On the border of punk and pop, fingerless gloves soon establish their mode from the hands of Madonna to legions of her fans who copied her conformity-shattering style.

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Ting Him Mak // Wikimedia Commons

1985: Air Jordans

While Michael Jackson was busy owning the pop culture space of music, another Michael was setting cerise-and-black leather trends of his ain. In 1985, the original Air Hashemite kingdom of jordan sneaker was released—and the era of high-stop luxury athletic sneakers had begun. That year, Hashemite kingdom of jordan made the bound from basketball game great to global entrepreneur and manner mogul, and fans all over the globe rushed to the local shoe store to see if they could afford a pair of his sneakers for themselves.

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Nancy Bauer // shutterstock

1986: Friendship bracelets

From bell-bottoms to peasant blouses, the trends that defined the hippie era of the 1960s have resurfaced from fourth dimension to time. The mid-to-belatedly 80s were one of those times, every bit countless brightly colored, handmade bracelets crafted from thread or yarn were woven, exchanged, and worn as symbols of friendship, often until shut to the betoken of decay.

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Keith Richardson // YouTube

1987: Z Cavaricci pants

Z. Cavaricci launched in 1982, but when the brand's blockbuster Cateye pants hitting stores in 1987, customers flocked to those stores to snag a pair for themselves. Like Air Jordans before them, Z. Cavs were pricey, but if you had the cash, that little white tab in on the wing gained you instant access to the in-crowd.

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o.przybysz // Shutterstock

1988: Pinch-rolled jeans

In 1988, it wasn't and then much the make of jeans that mattered, merely what was going on at the gage around the ankle. The trend of pinching and rolling pant bottoms into talocrural joint-hugging cuffs took off in the '80s, becoming standard operating procedure past the shut of the decade. In 1990, "Beverly Hills 90210" would immortalize the look as a required element of the standard suburban prep uniform.

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1989: Scrunchies

In 1989, standard pilus ties would no longer suffice for pulling dorsum ponytails. Scrunchies, a riff on the brand name Scunci, were the must-have rubberband cloth bands that became all the rage in 1989 and endured well into the '90s.

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Jaguar PS // Shutterstock

1990: Hammer pants

Before 1990, puffy pants that taper from the depression crotch to the bottom of the leg were associated with mid-19th century feminists. That year, however, Thousand.C. Hammer released the boom hitting single "U Can't Bear on This." From that moment on, what had been called "parachute pants" or "harem pants" would exist forever known as Hammer pants.

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Ewan Munro // Wikimedia Commons

1991: Flannel shirts

By 1991, the bars and coffee shops of Seattle could no longer contain the grunge music motion that was born in the city. That year served every bit a seismic shift in American music as iii seminal albums were released within the span of a single month: "X" by Pearl Jam, "Badmotorfinger" by Soundgarden and "Nevermind" by Nirvana. Grunge had gone national and then, too, had its Pacific Northwest stylings, which were defined by the centerpiece of the grunge compatible: the flannel shirt.

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James Doss // Shutterstock

1992: Hypercolor

Put your hand on a purple shirt and most instantly a perfect bright pink handprint is left behind. That was the magic of Hypercolor, a oestrus-sensitive clothing fad that won over much of America's youth in the early 1990s.

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Evgeniya Porechenskaya // Flickr

1993: Overalls

Overalls are currently experiencing a moment of resurgence, but null like the farmer-chic craze that swept American middle and loftier schools in the early on 1990s. If you wore them, hopefully you lot had the good sense to leave one strap unbottoned like Volition Smith.

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DMITRII SIMAKOV // Shutterstock

1994: Babydoll dresses

Past the mid-1990s, girls and women beyond the state had rallied around babydoll dresses, which were adequately modest, but also exuded sex entreatment. In 1994, the pop sensation supergroup Spice Girls formed, and Emma "Baby Spice" Bunton lived up to her stage name by donning babydoll dresses.

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Imahinasyon Photography // Flickr

1995: Birkenstock sandals

Birkenstocks appointment all the style dorsum to a German shoemaker in the late 1700s, merely the modern Birkenstock sandal was born in 1964. The familiar Arizona mode debuted in 1973 and from concerts to campus, boardwalks to bistros, they seemed to be on everybody's feet by the mid-'90s. In 1996, the company would offer more than 300 style and color combinations.

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Nesolenaya Alexandra // Shutterstock

1996: Denim skirts

From split-fronts to blue pockets, push button-fronts to cherry-red bombs, denim skirts in the mid-1990s seemed to be more popular than full-length jeans for anybody from middle-school girls to onscreen celebrities. The year 1996, however, proved to exist a watershed moment for the denim brim when ultimate '90s sex symbol and "Baywatch" babe Pamela Anderson rocked 1 with a skin-tight, girl-power crop summit.

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1997: Haversack purses

It can't exist definitively stated that Alicia Silverstone'south graphic symbol in 1995's "Clueless" started the tiny haversack craze, but by 1997, they were everywhere. Largely unflattering and horribly impractical, backpack purses, every bit they were oft called, were a cardinal accompaniment of the era.

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Raysonho @ Open Grid Scheduler // Wikimedia Eatables

1998: Hilfiger everything

Past the mid-1990s, Tommy Hilfiger had fix his massively successful brand apart every bit a downstreet culling to the chichi stylings of competitors like Calvin Klein and Ralph Lauren. Although the make went through several incarnations, the Hilfiger heydey was most certainly the 1990s, when the article of clothing was office of the uniform for both inner-city hip-hop artists and the legions of pretenders in the suburbs who hung on their every movement. The year 1998 was a watershed for Hilfiger cheers to supergroup Destiny'south Kid, who flaunted the cherry-red, white, and blue as their make of pick—Britney Spears, Gwen Stefani, TLC, and other headline acts got in on the craze too.

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melissamn / Shutterstock.com

2000: Trucker hats

In 2000, the show "Jackass" debuted and "That '70s Evidence" was at the summit of its popularity—and both Johnny Knoxville of the onetime and Ashton Kutcher of the latter were truthful believers in the trucker hat fad. Made from plastic mesh, foam, and little else, trucker hats were originally functional accessories born out necessity. But like flannel shirts, Dr. Marten boots, and and then many trends that came before, blue-neckband Americans who had worn them forever were largely dumbfounded when trucker hats were co-opted by celebrities and hip trendsetters.

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2001: Popped collars

Although Kanye West occasionally rocks a popped collar today, the controversial rapper by no means blazed a manner trail with that detail await. Collars intentionally raised on Polo shirts and button-downs was a trend among well-heeled country order yuppies—and the legions of pretenders—in the 1980s. Just the trend got another boost in 2001 from Usher'south "Pop Ya Neckband."

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2002: Neckties for no reason

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2003: Juicy rail pants

Juicy Couture brought the 1980s-1990s tracksuit movement dorsum into faddy, but with a twist. If you felt similar you couldn't leave the house in the early 2000s without seeing innuendo-laced writing on the butts of girls and women everywhere, you were not solitary. The word "Juicy" sparked a cultural movement, making the seat of your pants the go-to spot to slap a logo.

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Norman Pogson // Shutterstock

2004: Livestrong bands

Earlier he was outed as a cheater, cancer survivor Lance Armstrong was the king of the cycling universe and the mind behind a well-intentioned fundraising prop that turned into a global fashion phenomenon. Xanthous rubbery Livestrong bracelets were originally sold to heighten coin for cancer, just soon became a must-accept fashion statement that spawned a laundry listing of associated bracelets with their own colors and causes.

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TexasDex // Wikimedia Commons

2005: Ugg boots

Although Uggs were born in 1978 and go on to endure to the present twenty-four hour period, the peak of the sheepskin-lined boots' reign was in the mid-aughts. Later Oprah named them as one of her favorite things in 2000, the boots spiked in popularity. By 2005, everyone from Beyonce to Ben Affleck was wearing them—sometimes on the job.

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2006: Crocs

These cream, Swiss cheese-holed clogs first appeared in 2002. Merely iv years later on, the visitor went from niche to juggernaut as Crocs made their stock market debut.

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De Repente // Shutterstock

2007: Fedoras once more

A century after the end of the hat'southward heydey in the mid-1950s, the fedora returned with a vengeance. This time effectually, it was no longer the capstone on an elegant formal expect that dominated men'south vesture civilization in the early 20th century, nor was it the trademark accessory of gangsters, Rat Packers, and sportswriters. Past 2007, the fedora had been co-opted past hip urbanites, popularized by idols similar Brad Pitt, and no longer required formal wear to friction match.

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2008: Maxi dresses

Women embraced long, flowing maxi dresses during the jump and summer of 2008, thanks in part to the and then-called "queen of the maxi dress," Angelina Jolie. Other celebs similar Kate Moss joined the craze, leading fashion magazines to proclaim the return of the maxi.

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menswear-market.com // Flickr

2009: Cardigan sweaters

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2010: Skinny jeans

Sid Vicious and the Ramones wore skinny jeans in the 1970s, while acts like The Strokes carried their fashion into the early aughts. In 2010, however, NPR proclaimed skinny jeans the new "rock manner." The pants too became associated with hipsters, normally in derisive fashion. Merely the trend got so out of mitt that eventually, even babies were sporting skinny jeans.

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2011: Jeggings

History is unkind to many fashion trends, few more ruthlessly than the much-maligned jeans/leggings combo known as jeggings, which stretched over legs of all shapes and sizes throughout 2011. The Daily Beast chosen them "denim-colored sausage casings" and "the 21st century'due south worst fashion trend," but it was the motility'southward adherents who got the final express mirth. In 2011, the Concise Oxford English Dictionary added "jeggings" to the official American vocabulary.

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2012: Hoodies

The commencement hooded sweatshirt was produced in 1919 and served for decades every bit a utility shirt for outdoor workers, but the hoodie became the uniform of a movement with the 2012 killing of Florida teenager Trayvon Martin. To supporters of gun-toting, stand-your-ground-law defendant George Zimmerman, who was eventually acquitted of Martin'due south murder, the hoodie was a sign of problem. To the Black Lives Matter movement and its supporters, hoodies represented a stand against prejudice, racism, and inequality under the constabulary.

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2013: Wedge sneakers

In 2012, Isabel Marant'south Willow Sneaker lit the spark that would plough into the wedge sneaker inferno, which engulfed America and much of the western earth the post-obit year. They were a bona fide craze by 2013, as Nicki Minaj and Ciara sported them in the music video for "I'one thousand Out" and Alicia Keys launched a wedge sneaker collection with Reebok.

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2014: Loom bands

The latest in a long and storied lineage of bracelets that aren't quite jewelry, loom bands dominated youth accompaniment civilisation above nearly all else in 2014. Office of the reason the brightly colored interwoven arm-vesture was then successful is that loom bands seemed to be loved equally by both boys and girls.

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2015: Athleisure

By 2015, yoga pants were no longer merely for yoga—or even mostly for yoga, in a lot of cases. It was the year of athleisure, when Under Armour and Nike surpassed the likes of Gap and Abercrombie & Fitch for millennial clothing purchases. That year, the #FitSpo hashtag dominated Instagram and stretch pants and sports bras became going-out wearing apparel.

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ragdolldesignz // Pixabay

2016: Chokers

Chokers take been hugging women's necks since at least the fourth dimension of Anne Boleyn, who died in 1536—and they've endured through the ages. The year 2016, notwithstanding, might just have been the tiptop of the manner statement. Precious stone-encrusted, plain, velvet, lace, or adorned with a nameplate, yous didn't have to look far to find a choker in 2016.

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Edward Kimmel // Wikimedia Eatables

2017: Girl-power shirts

In response to the election of Donald Trump and the #MeToo movement, masses of women began wearing feminist protest shirts as both a political statement and a mode statement. By 2017, girl-power shirts were a mainstay, with companies making fortunes designing shirts with slogans like "Dame," "Fight like a girl," and "Sushi rolls non gender roles."

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