Peasant Skirts
The soft, fluid fabric of cotton gauze and bright
middle-Eastern prints of peasant skirts were quintessential hippie
wear. With the allure of ethnic looks infiltrating mainstream
fashion, Batik patterns, gauze skirts, and bell ties left their
homes in Eastern Europe and Southeast Asia to travel west.
Peasant skirts were so-called for the long, ankle-length cut of
a gathered skirt. This style was common in most countries, a
wardrobe for working women - that is, women who were not
privileged enough to have a servant dress them in more fanciful
clothes.
The skirt was easily hitched up into the waistband if trudging
through mud, it could form a pocket if picking vegetables, or it
could be wrapped through the legs for a pant style when stomping
grapes.
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