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Sweater girl

Actress well-known for wearing tight clothing


Actress well-known for wearing tight clothing

The term "sweater girl" was made popular in the 1940s and 1950s to describe Hollywood actresses like Lana Turner, Jayne Mansfield, and Jane Russell, who adopted the popular fashion of wearing tight, form-fitting sweaters that emphasized the woman's bustline. The sweater girl trend was not confined to Hollywood and was viewed with alarm by some. In 1949 a Pittsburgh police superintendent even singled out the sweater girl as a symptom of the moral decline of postwar youth:

Fashion influence

New, soft fabrics like cashmere and angora were being used to make sweaters. The conical shape bra, sometimes called a bullet bra, raises and separates the breasts. In its original form, the look was often tied to the promotion of new bra technology.

Interest in the bullet bra revived after Madonna wore a cone bra during her 1990 Blond Ambition World Tour. The bra was designed by Jean Paul Gaultier who was inspired by the vintage Perma-Lift bullet bra of the 1940s. By that time, the style was regarded as erotic and provocative. The bullet bra has also become popular with burlesque and rockabilly enthusiasts, both of which draw inspiration from the 1950s.

References

References

  1. Herbst, Philip. (2001). "Wimmin, wimps & wallflowers: an encyclopaedic dictionary of gender and sexual orientation bias in the United States". Intercultural Press.
  2. Ostler, Rosemarie. (2005). "Dewdroppers, waldos, and slackers: a decade-by-decade guide to the vanishing vocabulary of the twentieth century". Oxford University Press US.
  3. [http://fultonhistory.com/Newspaper%205/Brooklyn%20NY%20Daily%20Eagle/Brooklyn%20NY%20Daily%20Eagle%201949%20Grayscale/Brooklyn%20NY%20Daily%20Eagle%201949%20Grayscale%20-%209594.pdf "Plunging neckline, falsies get blame for rise in sex crime,"] ''Brooklyn Eagle'', December 16, 1949. Retrieved July 9, 2014.
  4. "Madonna on the Blond Ambition World Tour (photo)".
  5. "Sweater Girl (1942)".
  6. (February 15, 1943). "Army-Navy Screen Magazine #20".
  7. (21 September 1968). "10,000 Wait in Vain for Reappearance of Wall Street's Sweater Girl". New York Times.
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