Disposable paper dresses enjoyed a brief vogue in the turbulent late 1960s, when young people literally wore their politics and interests on their sleeves—but were prepared to discard them as easily ...
In the 1960's, "paper dress" made of paper became popular, and many artists and designers including Andy · Warhol announced paper dress of various designs. The origin of this epidemic is to ...
‘Watch disposables become indispensable!” declared Women’s Wear Daily on March 31, 1967. The fashion-industry rag was trumpeting a new textile on the horizon—paper—during a decade that was witnessing ...
“I tried one out and wore it three days, cleaned the house, mopped, waxed the floors, washed five girls’ heads, bathed the dogs and did everything else necessary in a house with five bedrooms, two ...
The 1960s paper fashion movement lasted for only two short years but it was two years of paper, paper and more paper. Paper saris, knit paper dresses, paper purses and paper jewelry. Now, you can see ...
In the late 1960s, paper dresses were at the height of fashion. They would soon become a symbol of a throw-away consumerist society. But the paper dresses lining the windows and gallery of PRESS at 49 ...