Midi Skirts
When
the clothing industry tried to end the reign of that 60s icon
called the miniskirt by launching the Midi in 1968, opinion polls
revealed that as many as 8 out of 10 women had no intention of
ditching their minis.
Girls liked the thigh-high mini to show off their shapely legs
and celebrate their femininity, and the boys certainly weren't
complaining either.
But the miniskirt had dominated the market long enough, and the
fashion world needed a change. And what could be more different
from the mini than the mid-calf midi?
Actually, the hippies answered that question with the maxi
skirt, but fashion-conscious girls weren't ready to go back to
nature just yet.
The lowering of hemlines created a stir that matched the
protests of the Vietnam War. Demonstrators swarmed the major
department stores and threatened to boycott any store that took
the mini off the shelves.
A grassroots organisation called GAMS (Girls Against More
Skirt) fought for their beloved mini and protested with signs like
"Keep the Mini on the Market".
The youth revolution was ready to fight, and they were using
the power of their voices and their wallets to make a difference.
The fashion world was in a quandary: the manufacturers made
their money by changing over styles, and keeping a constant stream
of money in the apparel market, but no one was buying the new
midi.
If girls were satisfied with their minis, and weren't spending
on new styles (a new skirt length also meant new shoes and new
coats to match the new length), business wouldn't survive. So
manufacturers returned to manufacturing the mini in addition to
the midi on the shelves.
The midi skirt did receive some attention in the wake of the
30s revival brought on by the 1967 movie Bonnie and Clyde.
Faye Dunaway's role as a sexy gangster's moll, decked out in
30s-era midi skirts, sweaters, and berets helped to hold off the
midi's imminent demise.
The sleek style of the midi was carried into the 70s, when more
of an "anything goes" attitude was adopted by the
fashion conscious. Minis, maxis, midis, and micros could be mixed
up and worn any day of the week.
Mini or midi skirts overlaid with a flowing maxi-coat became a
popular way to intermingle the different lengths and make everyone
happy.
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