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'Peak of Chic'--Revised


Article # : 16562 

Section : LIFE
Issue Date : 11 / 1989  1,702 Words
Author : Wendi Winters
Wendi Winters is the fashion writer for Manhattan's West Side Spirit as well as a special correspondent for the Antelope Valley Press. She has written several fashion articles for THE WORLD & I.

       Hot pants. Mood rings. Nehru jackets. Platform shoes. Leisure suits. Op art-patterned A-line dresses. Day-Glo T-shirts. Love Beads. Peace symbol pendants. Bell-bottoms. False eyelashes. Popcorn bodysuits. Bonnie and Clyde gangster suits. The Annie Hall Look. Mini-, maxi-, midi-, and microskirts. John Travolta's three-piece white suit from Saturday Night Fever. Nik-Nik shirts. Batman memorabilia.
       
        What is this? An inventory of a Vogue fashion editor's closet? Perish the thought! It's a three-hankie stroll down fashion's memory lane, a promenade past racks of clothes and accessories that, once, the fickle fashion aficionado had to have or die of fad famine. Once heralded as the peak of chic, they are now relegated to the compost heap of Failed Fashion.
       
        "It's tacky!" That's the kiss of death for any fashion trend. For the most part, tackiness titles are reserved for anything that's several years off the style track. If hindsight is 20/20, we must have been blind the day we brought some of these things home. Others we purchased under the assumption they were "timeless fashions"--yet in the fashion world, nothing is timeless for more than two seasons.
       
        Some fads speed through life faster than a fax transmission--they're out of style before they even arrive in the stores. For example: two or three Hollywood "notables" wear "the look" to an after-hours disco; soon it appears on Entertainment Tonight and every tabloid cover; Elle does a story on the hot new look; designers scramble to copy it; then, once it hits the racks eight weeks later, it dies. You don't hear of it again until you read year-end retrospective articles like ... (1999 of 9953 Characters)
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