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The History of the Bikini
In
the overall history of swimsuits, it seems almost strange that the
bikini, a piece of swimwear design that is so entrenched in our
culture, should be less than 60 years old. From its introduction
to the world in 1946, however, to the latest trends and designs
of 2005, the bikini has made much of its brief, illustrious history.
While the two-piece swimsuit we know of today as the bikini has
only been marketed and sold as the “bikini” for 60 years,
the fashion that inspired it is nearly as old as civilization itself.
Years ago, archaeologists discovered Minoan wall paintings from
1600 B.C. and Roman mosaics from 300 A.D. that depict the bikini.
Six years after the introduction of the bikini to the modern world,
one Italian archaeologist was stunned to uncover wall paintings
in the gymnasium of a traditional Sicilian villa that portray eight
female gymnasts in diaper-like panties and strapless, bandeau-style
tops. Clearly, the history of the bikini begins much earlier than
1946. Still, it is the explosive, modern debut of the bikini in
the year 1946 and subsequent modifications of the bikini that truly
define the popular two-piece swimsuit.
The bikini was invented and launched almost simultaneously by two
French fashion designers: Jacques Heim and Louis Reard. Heim was
a swimsuit designer who had created a two-piece suit to be sold
in his beach shop in Cannes. He marketed the swimsuit as the “Atome,”
(named for its small size and meant to be compared with the atom,
the smallest particle of matter yet known). To market his new innovation,
Heim hired skywriters to advertise his new, scandalously tiny swimsuit.
The same summer of 1946 in which Heim was introducing his “Atome,”
Louis Reard was creating his own similar, two-piece swimsuit. He
named and marketed his swimsuit as the bikini, proclaiming that
it was “smaller than the smallest bathing suit in the world.”
Reard christened his swimsuit the bikini in honor of post-WWII,
experimental atomic bombs being detonated in the South Pacific,
near the Bikini Reef. The bikini swimsuit was supposed to have caused
the same earth-shattering reaction among those who viewed it as
was inspired by the rising mushroom clouds of atomic bombs. The
bikini soon superseded the “Atome” as the official appellation
of the two-piece swimsuit.
The bikini received its first official induction into swimwear
fashion on July 5, 1946 when French model Micheline Bernardini paraded
onto the runway in it at a poolside fashion show in Paris. A number
of American correspondents responsible for reporting the fashion
show were both shocked and titillated by the model’s skimpy
attire. While many Americans believed the bikini was simply too
scandalous for virtuous American women to adopt, the bikini would
make its debut into American fashion only one year later.
The original bikinis of the 1940s and 1950s were fairly modest
in their coverage, as compared to current standards. Bottoms were
cut above the navel, and tops provided full coverage of the bust.
Despite this rather modest beginning, the bikini would undergo several
transformations as the decades progressed. Fashion designers practiced
with many varieties and innovations for the swimsuit, including
a bikini top with attached propellers, a suit made entirely of red
hair, and a rather discomforting version constructed of porcupine
quills. In the 1940s and 1950s, the bikini was so small that it
could easily be packed into a matchbook, but the suit would undergo
even more drastic shrinkage as the years went on.
In the 1970s, following a shocking sexual revolution in the United
States, fashion designers revamped the bikini to be even more revealing
and titillating. The string bikinis of the 1970s exposed the navel
for the first time by fitting the bottoms just on the hips. The
top left little to the imagination, providing only minimal bra-style
coverage. In the 1980s, the popular thong bikini was introduced
into American fashion. Fashion designers claimed the origin of the
thong bikini to be from the traditional clothing of Amazonian tribal
groups in Brazil. The thong bikini offered the scantiest coverage
yet imagined in the rear of the suit.
In the 1990s and 2000s, fashion designers have continued to revamp
the old bikini and have innovated new styles for the two-piece swimsuit.
While the thong bikini and string bikini have only grown in popularity,
the tankini has recently been added to the growing selection of
bikini swimwear.
In its short, modern history of 60 years, the bikini has managed
to repeatedly shock the world with its ever more revealing nature.
Nonetheless, the history of the bikini is hardly finished. Fashion
designers will, without a doubt, continue to experiment with the
“smallest bathing suit in the world.”
http://www.historyofwaterfilters.com/bikini.html
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