Sexy Soviet Underwear. Not!

svetlichnaya1 Sexy Soviet Underwear. Not!

Late 1960s. Actress Svet­lana Svetlich­naja is doing a wee strip dance for a movie. This was prob­a­bly the most R-rated scene of the Soviet cinematography.

Due to a series of not so for­tu­itous events ( the Great Octo­ber Social­ist Rev­o­lu­tion of 1917, the First World War, the over­all run­down of the young Soviet coun­try) women never had their needs attended to prop­erly. Under­wear was made, first and fore­most, for the work­ing class with no pref­er­en­tial treat­ment for the females so women had no choice other than to wear those sex­less gar­ments.  This is prob­a­bly the sad­dest part of the Soviet history.

Con­tinue read­ing

Catwalk Models With No Underwear On. Haute Couture Soviet Style.

model 428x500 Catwalk Models With No Underwear On. Haute Couture Soviet Style.

A cat­walk model, circa 1947 – 1957.

Haute Cou­ture, just like in any other other coun­try in the world, did have a place in the USSR. How­ever, it was a dif­fer­ent, iso­lated, strange and suf­fer­ing ele­ment, full of its own pecu­liar­i­ties and cat­fights. Two cat­walk mod­els, Leka Mironova and Tatiana Mikhalkova, rem­i­nis­cent about their jobs at the only Fash­ion House back in the USSR. Those were the days, my friend..!

Con­tinue read­ing

Fashion in the USSR. DIY.

Dur­ing the Soviet times fash­ion was first and fore­most, an instru­ment of pro­pa­ganda of hard work atti­tudes and edu­ca­tion of good taste. There­fore the way peo­ple were dressed was very strictly reg­u­lated – just like any­thing else, fash­ion had to be “planned” and “approved”.

Offi­cially the most pop­u­lar designs were the clas­sic ones. Not only were they set out to pro­mote the good taste of the clean cut and reserved ele­gance, it was also a very con­ve­nient way of pro­duc­tion:  once designed and approved, the clas­sic dresses and suits were not as respon­sive to changes in the trends and hence inex­pen­sive to main­tain. The often boring-looking pieces of cloth­ing were labelled as never going out of fash­ion and pro­moted as “eter­nally youthful”.

fashion8 Fashion in the USSR. DIY.

Eter­nally youth­ful, isn’t it?

Con­tinue read­ing