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Fashion icon

Influential people who introduce new styles From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Fashion icon

A fashion icon or fashion leader is a influential person who introduces new styles which spread throughout fashion culture and become part of fashion. They initiate a new style which others may follow. They may be famous personalities such as political leaders, celebrities, or sports personalities. For example, during the 1960s, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis was a great fashion icon for American women, and her style became a sign of wealth, power, and distinction; and her famous Pink Chanel suit is one of the most referenced and revisited of all of her items of clothing. Twiggy was an It girl, she was a teenaged model and fashion icon of Swinging Sixties.[1][2][3][4][5]

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Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Pink Chanel suit

Fashion leaders

"Fashion leaders" are an older term replaced in the second half of the 20th century. Fashion leaders were important people of higher hierarchy and society such as royalty, aristocrats and their wives and mistresses.[2]

Other style icons

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Wearing the Travolta dress, Diana, Princess of Wales was a well-known fashion icon

Mary Quant was a famous fashion designer and fashion icon of the 1960s who introduced miniskirt, She is also attributed for hotpants, the slip dress, and PVC raincoats.[10][11]

Power dressing

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Margaret Thatcher wearing a typical power dressing outfit

Power dressing a clothing style that enables women to establish their authority and power in the traditionally male dominated profession such as politics. Margaret Thatcher's style sets the rules on how female politicians should dress, which is a conservative, powerful but simultaneously feminine way.[12]

Dresses

Similar to the Little Black Dress that is associated with actress Audrey Hepburn.[3] the following dresses and garments are famous with the names of fashion icons.

Quotes

"Style is not fashion until it has reached the street"[16]:286

See also

Citations

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