London’s Swinging Sixties: The Original Fashion Blitz

In London for the week and so happy to witness that fashion is very much alive and well on the streets here. I spent an entire day in Harrod’s and feel like I hardly scratched the surface. The next day it was on to Bond Street, Dover Street Market, Sloane Street, Harvey Nick’s. I also had the good luck to take in the 80’s Club Fashion exhibit at the V&A Museum. People everywhere here are “well turned-out” as they say… with chic and creative dressing lending a fresh fashion perspective.
Carnaby Street
It is no wonder then that every few fashion seasons Swinging London references come in and out of fashion, making a strong statement and reigniting interest in this inimitable 20th century transitional style. The 1960’s decade, for example, unilaterally heralded a global Youth Revolution, one promoting everything from new ideals for fashion models and their body types to new hemlines and silhouettes. The decade helped redefine what fashion ought to be and how it should be lived for the moment.

Hand tinted photograph by Christian Carez, 1971

Carnaby Street style, late 1960s

Fur jacket and ankle length trousers by Foale & Tuffin
What made this short period so revolutionary was its incubating quality, the multiple sartorial directions it helped cultivate. Whereas the US overwhelmingly fostered the Hippies in the San Francisco Bay Area, the UK nurtured the Mod movement and the Peacock revolution in London.

T.G.P. ROGERS, (1968) Measuring morale and motivation, Management Decision, Vol. 2 Iss 4, pp.215 – 217. SENSITIVITY to the attitudes and reactions of his employees is a fundamental attribute of any good manager. But how can the chairman of a large company obtain objective data to give him this information?

Youthquake in action: long socks or boots?

Youthquake goes mural

Prince Stash Klossowski de Rola (in the middle) with Sir David Napley, QC (left) and,
chauffeur and roadie of The Rolling Stones, Tom Keylock (right), June 2, 1967
The late 60’s-early 70’s were, by far, London’s more volatile and creative period. Philosophically, it optimistically locked eyes with the future, denying altogether the existence of post WWII austerity. For the young Brits, Carnaby Street became their ground zero, their new “boulevard” to flock to, a place to flaunt one’s originality and sartorial might.

Fashionable male wearing a bowler hat and fur coat standing in the middle of the road on Carnaby Street in London in the heart of the “Swinging Sixties“, April 16, 1968

Redefining gender styles on Carnaby Street, 1969

Still from the Carnaby Street sequence of international crime caper, “The Brain” (Le Cerveau) by Gérard Oury (1969)
London’s originality and creatively rich styles branched out in various directions feeding on music and a kamikaze approach to being the complete opposite of one’s parents. To passers-by, boys dressed feminine and confused with their extravagant style rejecting the 19th century sartorial Great Renunciation, while girls sported new looks flaunting legs and a child-like quality. All in all, Carnaby Street showcased the changes that are still managing to give us fashion inspirations.

“Male Plumage” in fashion LIFE, 1970

The Herd, 1968

Men’s Style Redefined | the short double-breast fur coat

The Carnaby Street Area

Back cover of “Gear Guide” published in 1967
London’s influence on fashion remains strong today…from the wildly creative aesthetic of St. Martin’s to the sartorial sagesse of the Londoner-on-the-street. If you haven’t been in a while, make a long weekend of it and visit London soon!