Divine Blood Magicke: The Swinging 60’s - Sensual Carnaby Street & Beyond
The Eternal Cotton Candy Blissfully Sensual Fashions
Good evening darling Readers…
In 2021 the best movie of the year IMHO that captured the erotic and naughty essence of 60’s and early 70’s Carnaby Street was Disney’s ‘Cruella” see trailers below…
Just think besides phases of the Counterculture Music with:
British Invasion 1964-1965
Mods 1965-1966
Psychedelic 1966-1967
Along came Carnaby Street and Boutique the Youthquake!
Coïncidence???
NOT.
Seriously Darlings, the British MI5 was behind EMI and Carnaby Street in part of that old Roundtable plot to play Social Engineering…. Except a Something happened!
The Swinging 60’s Counterculture got out of the Elites and Royals’ control and countless people had a profound Awakening minus any mass media stimulation with Music, Fashion, and an Evolving Culture that had NO racism, NO prudish polite society norms, NO avarice to colonize with Imperialist aims, NO prejudice that judges and condemns unfairly, NO hate, NO misogyny, NO excessive feminism, NO stupid passive aggressive bullshit…
To be nakedly honest… the Dye was cast and Fashion at Carnaby spread globally changing EVERYTHING without any conflict…
Youthquake, Swinging London & Boutique Fashion
‘Youthquake’ was the overarching 1960s cultural youth movement that changed the landscape of the fashion industry away from the dominance of Parisian and London couture houses.
The term was coined by Diana Vreeland and first applied to the likes of New York socialite Edie Sedgwick.
Nowhere was the Youthquake more prevalent than in Swinging Sixties London.
A Style Merry-Go-Round: Fashion From the 60s
This Is What London Fashion Shows Looked Like In The ’60s
Byron’s Muse - 1960s Swinging London Fashion
Swinging London: A Look Back at Carnaby Street in the Sixties ~ Vintage Everyday
London was the best place in the world in the 1960s.
Youth culture flourished and post-war austerity finally gave place to a decade of optimism and exploration – of everything.
Rock music was instrumental in youth culture and teenagers and young people were crazy about The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, The Kinks and The Who.
Psychedelic rock also grew more popular every day with bands such as Pink Floyd and The Jimmy Hendrix Experience setting a psychedelic underground scene in London.
Culture was at its peak and Art schools developed what we know as the 60s.
Carnaby Street in the Swinging 60s - birthplace of Merc London - Retro Star
Fashion History- The Look of the 1960’s | by Kalyani Kala | Medium
CARNABY STREET - THE SWINGING 60’S
Fashion icons in the 60s London were Twiggy, Mary Quant, Pattie Boyd, Jane Asher, Jean Shrimpton, members of The Beatles, Pete Townshend of The Who and Brian Jones etc.
First half of the decade was characterized by Mod styles but around 1967.
The Mod fashion started to blend heavily with hippie fashions.
George Harrison and Pattie Boyd were typical Mod-turned-hippie couple.
Mod fashion became extremely popular among females and Mary Quant encouraged not only this style, but also young people to play with fashion.
Post-war generation were the first to have money to buy records, new clothes and makeup.
That was ideal because there were dozens of new styles being invented every day, especially in Carnaby Street in London.
Mary Quant invented mini-skirt and this is where all begins in the 1960s fashion.
Dresses were becoming shorter and shorter every day until they were covering the legs only ten centimeters.
Pop art brought geometric patterns and two-coloured (mostly black-white) dresses.
Mini-dresses were often worn with long tight boots.
Stripes, dots and other geometrical patterns were everywhere; they decorated the skirts, dresses, blouses… PVC raincoats and bobbed hair were IT for women.
Twiggy was known as ”the queen of Mod” and she was ”the face of 1966”
Twiggy wore the shortest dresses ever, but with no neckline.
Combined with skin-coloured or white stockings and flats she looked gorgeous with long, skinny legs, bobbed blonde hair and blue eyes with extremely long (false) eyelashes.
These kind of dresses were rather simple, high waisted, short-sleeved and in baby doll style.
Another look that I find was quite popular was a mini skirt combined with a turtle-neck pullover.
Psychedelic scene developed in London half way through the decade. Syd Barrett was, along with Pink Floyd and The Jimmy Hendrix Experience, instrumental in creating the style.
Syd was very fashionable and often wore velvet trousers, bandana knotted like a tie around his neck, blouses with psychedelic prints, waistcoats and colourful shirts. Sunglasses in different shapes and colours were also popular.
At around 1967. Mod fashion started to alter to a new, laid back hippie style.
The following year was known as the summer of love, and many festivals helped to promote hippie style.
As I already said, George Harrison and Pattie Boyd were fashion icons, mainly representing Mod fashion, but around this time they embraced the new flower power style.
Pattie begun wearing paisley printed trousers, waistcoats, lots of jewellery, mini dresses with floral prints, wooden bracelets, wide sleeved blouses, crazy patterns and sandals.
I love the 1960s as a decade in everything!
Swinging London fashion and culture is so interesting and I hope I inspired you in a fashion way and I hope I managed to capture the essence of wonderful, colourful and optimistic 1960s London.
Groovy History - What Was Swinging London? Mods, Miniskirts & Music In '60s England
1960s Swinging London & Boutique Fashion
Gasp! Watch The Smothers Brothers and The Flower Child clip on YouTube 1960s.