A Propaganda War Embedded in the propaganda of the time was the idea that the nuclear family was what made ... promoted of American women, with their feminine hairdos and delicate dresses, tending ...
She has spent the past 15 years studying portraits of women ... century by American painters like John Singer Sargent and Mary Cassatt. But while historians have long analyzed the clothing ...
In today’s fast-paced world, the clothing industry is vast and continually evolving. However, not all brands have kept up ...
The ubiquity of the “American Look” is not a downstream effect of American cultural dominance but the result of a decadeslong industry and marketing push.
Eddie Bauer, JCPenny, Wrangler—these are the labels you’ll spot in The NYHS’s latest exhibition, which opens today.
Work, play, fashion, economic class, religious faith, even politics—all these aspects of American life and more are woven into clothing. The Museum cares for one of the nation's foremost collections ...
They’re also discriminatory: 67% of American women wear a size 14 or above ... closet in San Francisco holding two different dresses, both made by the same brand, both labeled size “small.” ...
“We’ve always had a strong belief that we should make patriotic clothing right here in the US. Every year since we started, we make an American-made version ... the men and women on the ...
In the early 20th century, women's sports ... said American tennis champion Elizabeth Ryan, a contemporary of Lenglen. Getty Images Suzanne Lenglen's knee-length white dresses - seen here at ...
Embedded in the propaganda of the time was the idea that the nuclear family was what made Americans ... promoted of American women, with their feminine hairdos and delicate dresses, tending ...