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Oct 24, 2023 · Teddy Boy clothing included drape jackets reminiscent of 1940s American zoot suits worn by members of Italian-American, Chicano and African-American communities, usually in dark shades, sometimes with a velvet trim collar and pocket flaps, and high-waist “drainpipe” trousers, often exposing the socks.
It was Jaracz whose opinions on dress were put in place for the Art Department. In photos or illustrations seen in Watch Tower literature, Witness women or girls were never to wear pants or pant suits. Witness men, and even young boys if possible, had to wear a suit, or a shirt and tie with dress pants in all pictures.
- School Group - South Wales 1945
- Assorted Pictures of The Late 1940s
- Young Cousins Having Fun in The Early 1950s
- Fireworks at Porthcawl in South Wales 1953
Here on the right, is a primary school photograph of children taken in South Wales UK in 1945. Bows were used to keep the girls' hair tidy and a fresh hair ribbon was a treat when new clothes were unlikely.
The First Siren Suit 1940
The story as I remember it is as follows - Veronica's mother, Mrs Laura Mason worked at the London store, Bourne & Hollingsworth, I imagine as a dress designer or tailoress. However, I believe she designed the siren suit which Veronica is wearing in the photo and it is the first one ever made - I was lucky enough have the second one! They were made in a lovely clover coloured wool material, lined with a champagne coloured silky material. I remember my Mother saying that one day she and Mrs Ma...
In the picture to the left, the girls are wearing gathered skirt dresses typical of the era. On the right, they wear simple little skirts. Note the shoulder straps on skirts in both pictures. Tartan was always popular and was used often. These groups are the children of the infants in the top image taken in 1923.
Here are a family wrapped up warm for a night at a 1953 Porthcawl fireworks display. Lorraine (second from the left) is dressed in quite a glamorous way, whereas today such an event would be considered sporty and call for functional more casual clothes. These photographs must not be downloaded or used without permission from Fashion-era.com
Feb 19, 2019 · The main differences between Teds’ outfits and the Zoot suits were that in Britain, the drape jackets were worn with skintight jeans or trousers, known as ‘drainpipes’, and that many American kids wore large hats.
The Teddy Boys or Teds were a mainly British youth subculture of the early 1950s to mid-1960s who were interested in rock and roll and R&B music, wearing clothes partly inspired by the styles worn by dandies in the Edwardian period, which Savile Row tailors had attempted to re-introduce in Britain after the Second World War.
These four working class young lads pictured at Stepney, East London in 1951, dressed in the drab suits of the immediate post war era, were along with thousands of British teenagers waiting for something to happen that would give them a sense of identity and purpose.
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Sep 21, 2016 · Magnum photographer Chris Steele-Perkins witnessed the emergence of the Teddy Boys in the 1950s as a child, but when they appeared once again in a third-wave revival in the 1970s, he set out to document this maligned and misunderstood subculture.