1960s in Fashion - Image Gallery

Image Gallery

A selection of images representing the fashion trends of the 1960s:

  • First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy wearing a red wool dress with matching jacket. She was a fashion icon in the early 1960s.

  • Singer and actress Barbra Streisand in 1962 wearing a top with a crew-neck. Her hair is teased at the crown.

  • Fashion models in the GDR, 1962.

  • Audrey Hepburn in a scene from the comic thriller Charade dressed by Givenchy 1963.

  • The dress Anneke Grönloh wore the night of the 1964 Eurovision Song Contest 1964

  • Colleen Corby, teenaged supermodel of the mid-1960s.

  • In 1965 sleeveless shift dresses were popular with women.

  • Young woman in Florida, 1965.

  • A velvet minidress from 1965.

  • American girl wearing a mini skirt and patterned tights, 1966.

  • Fashion model from Leipzig, GDR wearing a wool suit trimmed with fur and a matching fur hat, 1966.

  • Young woman wears her hair in a pageboy flip, 1967.

  • Woman at a Singapore zoo, 1967. Note her Pucci-style print dress.

  • Family photograph taken in Los Angeles, California, 1968. The man is wearing a medallion necklace.

  • Lars Jacob wears the popular "dandified" male fashions in Austria in 1968.

  • Young girl wearing a mini dress and white go-go boots, 1968.

  • In the late 1960s, brides often wore white mini wedding dresses.

  • Two men at the Woodstock Festival, 1969

  • Girl in late 1969 wearing a tiger-print mini jumper dress and matching beret.

  • Boy with a mop top hair cut, 1969.

  • Singer Maria Muldaur in 1969, wearing a gypsy-style kerchief and hoop earrings.

Read more about this topic:  1960s In Fashion

Famous quotes containing the words image and/or gallery:

    Nature is a self-made machine, more perfectly automated than any automated machine. To create something in the image of nature is to create a machine, and it was by learning the inner working of nature that man became a builder of machines.
    Eric Hoffer (1902–1983)

    It doesn’t matter that your painting is small. Kopecks are also small, but when a lot are put together they make a ruble. Each painting displayed in a gallery and each good book that makes it into a library, no matter how small they may be, serves a great cause: accretion of the national wealth.
    Anton Pavlovich Chekhov (1860–1904)