American Decades
New Fashions for Young People
Dress Codes.
Not many high schools and colleges had school uniforms in the 1960s, but most had dress codes. For a good portion of the 1960s young women were not allowed to wear pants of any kind to class, and young men were forbidden to wear blue jeans. Students were expected to maintain a neat appearance, and until the second half of the decade they generally complied without much complaint.
Young Women.
Many young women in the early 1960s wore skirt/blouse/sweater combinations, and clothes by such manufacturers as Villager, McMullen, and John Meyer of Norwich were the most sought after. Wool A-line skirts that fell about midknee, usually in muted heather colors, and flesh-colored stockings went with Bass Wee-juns. Cotton blouses, often with a button-down or Bermuda collar, had long or elbow length sleeves. They could be either in a plain solid or have a tasteful, subdued, often flowery print. The sweater was most...
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1960's Fashion
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Big Cars, Small Cars
- Big Hair
- Looks and New Looks: The New High Fashion
- Men's Fashion: Care More, Dare More
- New Fashions for Young People
- The Rise of the Youth Market
- Secondhand Clothes and Tie-Dyed Shirts: Antifashion and the Hippie Influence
- A Significant Decline in the Couture System
- Style over Substance: Furniture Goes Pop
- Styles of Modern Architecture
- The Twilight of Modernist Architecture
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Fashion, 1960–1969
