THE 1960s are one of the favourite decades for vintage clothing lovers and it’s no wonder.

The Swinging Sixties were a turning point for so many facets of society, and it was all reflected in the fashions of the day.

You can divide the decade’s vintage fashion into three distinct segments: the Jackie Kennedy suburban look of the early 1960s, the Mod look of the mid-60s, and the anything-goes anti-designer ethic in the later years.

Today, retro designers tend to emulate the two earlier vintage fashion periods, but there’s a lot to be said for all three vintage-style tropes.

The early 60s were characterised by the matchy-matchy syndrome. Fashion designers took the “complete look” to its ultimate conclusion, creating entire ensembles that matched, from chapeau to shoe.

It was the era of the perfectly coiffed. suburban housewife in her pillbox hat, boxy jacket and straight skirt, accessorised with matching gloves, shoes, belt and purse.

The major exception was Hubert Givenchy, whose designs for Audrey Hepburn’s Holly Golightly (Breakfast at Tiffany’s) introduced the little- waif look, that was to becaome so popular and exaggerated later in the decade.

The wide, swingy skirts and dirndl designs of 1950s’ dresses was passé – sophistication, as characterised by slim silhouettes, tweeds and leather were all the rage.

Of course, fashion could only stand that kind of restriction for a few years before revolution would necessarily break out.

By 1964,the swingy skirts of fifties’ dresses were back, though they featured both less fabric and less swing.

As hemlines climbed to the knee and above, textured stockings became more and more popular.

And in an effort to give femininity a real workout, Coco Chanel brought back the hair bow and the perfect outfit topper.

The fashion pendulum swung back and forth several times between 1964 and 1968. The ruffles and lace of ’64 swung to the pared-down poor boy look of ’65.

Balenciaga, of the fabulous fifties’ dresses for formal occasions, created a ball gown with one bare shoulder which lit up runways like wildfire.

It was in 1966 that , though, that the real fashion revolution happened as the London Mod designers took over the pages of the fashion magazines. Miniskirts, mod tights, Carnaby jackets and fishnet stockings all characterise ‘60s’ vintage fashion more than any other style of the long decade.

In 1968, fashion icon Twiggy hit the scene and the world would never be the same. Mary Quant took the Holly Golightly look, shortened it, brightened it and added hardware to turn the whole fashion world on its head.

If London designers had declared a revolution against traditional fashion in ’65, though, consumers declared their independence of fashion designers as the decade came to a close.

When it came to style, it was all about self-expression. Men and women alike mixed and matched fabrics, patterns, colours and designers with abandon. They dug into Grandma’s attic and created their own individual style. Some things never change!

Emma Brown is the owner of My Vintage, The Circus, Darwen
Telephone: 01254 774701  Website: www.myvintage.co.uk