In the period of the establishment of communist ideology and
the short-term dawn of the Soviet New Economic Policy fashion went in two
directions. On the one hand the construction of the costume has continued the
tradition of pre-revolutionary period and focused on current trends in their
highest manifestations. For example, in 1922, with trust
"Moskvoshvey" opened a fashion studio, which was to be the
coordinating center for theoretical modeling of the household suit and a
prototype for fashion houses in the USSR. On the other hand, the new
fashion was in the nature of experiments of VKhUTEMAS artists and students,
under the idea of building a new life for a new proletarian society. This
period is largely associated with the name of Nadezhda Lamanova and the first
fashion magazines, which existed for a short time and soon were closed for lack
of ideas. During this period fashion was first declared a relic of bourgeois
taste, and the image of Soviet women was aligned with the words of Krupskaya, claiming
that the Soviet woman - is primarily a worker and a mother. In 1930, during the
period of the TsNIIShPa(institut ща seamstress) creation, private sewing workshops were abolished, and
the ability to masters was tried to be redirected to the development of quite
westernized wide cut suits and moderate fashion for women and children. This
attempt of industrial becoming was cut short by the complex of the Great
Patriotic War. After that, the Soviet fashion, having gone through a phase of
clothes in the style of "city romance", made a desperate attempt to
enter the international podium. How it happened at the World Exhibition
Montreal 1967, when Tatiana Kozeeva from Kiev
was elected "Miss Montreal," and her photo graced the covers of
Canadian magazines. A short-term fashion for "Russian" swept through
the world, while at home these esthetics came into conflict with the existing
harsh ideology of proletarian style and production planning. Despite this, a
brief renaissance in 1950 - 60th in the consumer sector gave the original
products not only from fashion houses serving the nomenclature, but also
consumer goods, backed up by the Soviet cinema beauties. "Cabins"
(home life houses) started to play a leading role and the production of a
working uniform. Posters urged to work more and spend less time running around
shops. Work places make a requirement on the length of skirts; they were not
supposed to be shorter than 10
cm from the knee. Area of the goods that are "non-essential"
was gradually filled with goods of foreign production (the socialist camp and
the capitalist), unevenly distributed, and gave rise to the legendary
"deficit". Following the emergence of deficits began to gain momentum
the black market trade and underground production of goods of acute
consumption, which already in the 1970s drew long queues at department stores.
The Soviet fashion publications and brochures from the fashion houses offered the
admass conceptual patterns with parting words "Sew by yourself" or
"Sewing by myself". As trendsetters in the fashion industry of the 70’s
were trying to be representatives of the movie and music spheres. For example,
such as Ludmila Zykina, constantly appearing in public in a Pavloposadsk shawl
or Nikolay Eremenko Jr., after filming the movie "Pirates of the twentieth
century," was referred to the status of Soviet macho in the early 1980s.
But soon this trendsetting was washed out with the new foreign music boom. And
in 1987 the Soviet space was invaded by the German magazine "Burda",
which became the primary source of "Western fashion" in this period
opening a string of beauties contest, but ... Even the abrupt change of course
could not reverse the situation - it was late and in vain. The population sewed
and knitted for years by the patterns from Polish and Soviet fashion
publications, over 20 years of deficit of fashionable products sufficiently started
doubting the slogan "The best – is the Soviet." Declared as a relic
of bourgeois - fashion, distributed by black-marketers and the underground
manufacturers increasingly won the minds of the Soviet people. Youth-music
lovers boom and the emergence of the first co-operators, and “shuttles”,
legally manufactured or brought from abroad, mass market clothing, completely
destroyed the hopes that the Soviet factory production in the fashion industry
will be able to catch up with the West. Cartoons on the mods, which appeared in
the early 1950s and gave rise to the term "dude" in the 1970s and
1980s, gave way to an abundance of images with hippies and fashionable women from
the "new wave". But all this pretentious mockery of taste and culture
of the Western model of consumption did not cause one irony and failed to
fulfill the assigned tasks. It did quite the contrary.
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