Fashion: Modern Romance – How Menswear Fell Back In Love With Frills, Lace And Flamboyance

At the premiere of The Whale at last summer’s Venice Film Festival, American playwright Mr Jeremy O Harris stood out among his fellow guests, and not just because he is 6ft 5in. Rather it was his outfit: a frilled shirt, pastel suit and Gucci clutch bag. It felt louche, dandified and inherently romantic. Romantic dress has a long history in menswear. It takes its name from the artistic movement of the late 18th and early 19th centuries when ruffle shirts with puffed sleeves, elaborately knotted cravats and frothy neckcloths in silk and lace were de rigueur. More than a century later, those references were fused with the androgyny and theatricality of 1970s glam rock and gave birth to the self-styled New Romantics of the 1980s. With their powdered makeup, big hair, voluminous blouses and layers of scarves, sashes and brooches, they displayed a penchant for the more flamboyant side of fashion and challenged the gender norms.

from Mr Porter - The Journal https://ift.tt/2UChOjP
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