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TIME: Almanac 1990s
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<text id=90TT1272>
<title>
May 14, 1990: Stripping Down To Essentials
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
May 14, 1990 Sakharov Memoirs
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
FASHION, Page 80
Stripping Down to Essentials
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Leggings, tights and body stockings give slink a high profile
</p>
<p>By Martha Duffy--Reported by Elizabeth Rudulph/New York and
Alexandra Tuttle/Paris
</p>
<p> Life must be sweet to Emilio Pucci. There can be few
satisfactions more pleasing to a designer than to savor success
twice, to lead fashion's promenade after years on the shelf.
A quarter-century ago, Pucci introduced bodysuits in vivid
geometric patterns. They became a chic international uniform
for several years and then, inevitably, were castigated as
cliches. Fortunately for Pucci, fashion repeats itself. Thus,
lively hosiery has become the rage of 1990, and the grand old
Florentine marchese, who began his career by running up slinky
playclothes for his girlfriends, may be out of stock before the
summer is over.
</p>
<p> Pucci owes his new fame to a revolution that began in the
gym and on the jogging track. Gradually, the line between
work-out gear and street clothes has blurred, and, as people
gazed into the studio mirrors, they began to see that an
unbroken silhouette looks longer and leaner than one cut up by
a skirt.
</p>
<p> That wasn't all they noticed. One humble service rendered
by the traditional skirt is to camouflage the knee: no one much
older than an infant has pretty knees. But an opaque legging
accomplishes the cover-up nicely. And more ancient wisdom comes
into play. Carolina Herrera, noted for her ladylike designs
that include Caroline Kennedy's exquisite wedding dress,
endorses the look for a sound reason: "The last thing to go in
a woman are the legs."
</p>
<p> Lively body skimmers now come in a limitless variety. Tigers
and leopards have lent their spots, the venerable house of
Hermes has adapted one of its signature rope prints, and
designer Betsey Johnson, always on the lookout for a laugh, has
fashioned a lifelike tattoo pattern. "The '60s were an
inspirational bounce-off point," she notes, "short, modern,
carefree, futuristic."
</p>
<p> The hosiery industry is jubilant. "I'm looking at a 300% to
400% increase over last year," gloats Glen Greenbaum, vice
president of sales for Danskin. Hue, whose lines are sold in
2,000 stores nationwide and in Canada, is up 70% since 1987.
At Hermes, leggings are selling like the famous heavy silk
scarves. "Even grandmothers are buying them," says a
salesclerk. One reason for the popularity of the fashion is
economic. As Christian Lacroix, whose palette is wild and whose
prices are hair-raising, points out, "This fashion comes from
the street, where young people create their own style." Tights
and body stockings, topped with a big sweater or jacket, can
be a cheap way to dress when a label like Lacroix's isn't
attached. The average Danskin tights in nylon or Lycra blends
range in price from $10 to about $13. At Barneys New York, the
house line costs from $5 to $16, with designer labels from $16
to $25. At the top of the line, hand-printed Puccis run from
$75 to $95.
</p>
<p> With patterned tights all the rage, this should be the most
colorful summer in a long time. The fall will see cashmere
leggings (tights without a foot), in cable knits, wools and
especially in velvet. Jean-Paul Gaultier and Karl Lagerfeld,
French fans of tights, are emphasizing the leg. So is the hot
young American designer, Isaac Mizrahi, who dismisses the '80s
as a time of "boring, rote, dress-for-success looks with
stock-tie blouses, flannel jackets and henny-looking long, drab
skirts."
</p>
<p> Herrera has fashioned a demure tweed costume with the merest
sigh of a skirt and rust-colored crushed-velvet tights--guaranteed to conquer any corporate board. But she cautions
against the indiscriminate use of patterns. "They have to be
very special," she says. "Otherwise you look as if you have a
terrible disease on your legs."
</p>
<p> Bill Blass, who has made precious few mistakes in his long
career, agrees. He likes woolly legs, not crazy legs. In fact,
he likes them well enough to denude his outfits of ornament.
"Small head, short hair, no jewels, no necklaces," is his 1990
message. Who will come to the defense of artifice? Not Issey
Miyake. Says the Japanese designer, who can conjure more shapes
than a sculptor: "Clothes aren't sexy, women are."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>