Gothic Mode is a clothing style characterized by dark, mysterious, old-fashioned, and homogeneous features. It is worn by members of the Goth subculture. A dark fashion, sometimes morbid and dressed styles, typical gothic fashion including pale skin with colored black hair, black lips and black clothes. Both goth men and women can wear dark eyeliner and dark nail polish especially black. Style is often borrowed from punk fashion, Victoria and Elizabethans. Goth mode is sometimes confused with heavy metal and emo fashion.
Video Gothic fashion
Characteristics
Cintra Wilson states that "The origin of contemporary goth styles is found in a mourning cult in Victoria." Valerie Steele is an expert in style history.
Goth fashion can be recognized by its striking black outfit. Ted Polhemus describes the goth mode as "a collection of black velvet, lace, fishnets and leather colored with red or purple, fitted with corsets, gloves, stilettos and sterling silver jewelry depicting religious or occult themes". Researcher Maxim W. Furek notes "Goth is a rebellion against the chic fashion of the disco era of the 1970s and protests against the pastel colors and luxuries of the 1980s.Hair black, dark clothes and pale skin give the basic look of a Goth Dresser. paradoxically argues that the look of the Goth is one of the deliberate exaggeration statements as merely a casual view of heavy emphasis on dark robes, ruffles cuffs, pale makeup and colored hair showing a modern version of Victorian overload. "
Nancy Kilpatrick The Goth Bible: A Compendium for the Darkly Inclined defines the "poseur" for the goth scene as follows: "goth wannabes, usually youngsters through the goth phase who have no goth sensitivity but want to be part of gothic crowd (...) ". Kilpatrick's contribution to "Daoine O '" degrades the goth poseur as' Batbabies 'whose clothing is purchased at Hot Topic's [mall store] with their parents' money. "
Maps Gothic fashion
Icons
One of the female role models is Theda Bara, a femme fatale 1910 known for its dark eyeshadow. Siouxsie Sioux is very influential on the style of dress from the Gothic rock scene; Paul Morley from NME described the appearance of Siouxsie and the Banshees 1980 in Futurama: "[Siouxsie] modeled his latest outfit, which will affect how all girls dress for the next few months." About half of the girls in Leeds have used Sioux as the basis for their appearance, hair to ankle. "Robert Smith, Musidora, Bela Lugosi, Bettie Page, Vampira, Morticia Addams, Nico, Rozz Williams, David Bowie, Lux Interior, Dave Vanian, is also a style icon. The 1980s established designers such as Drew Bernstein of Lip Service, while the 1990s witnessed a spike in US-based gothic fashion designers, many of whom continue to evolve through today's styles. Fashion magazines like Gothic Beauty have provided repetitive features to some of the gothic fashion designers who started their labels in the 1990s, such as Kambriel, Rose Mortem, and Tyler Ondine from Heavy Red. Influential goth models include Wednesday Mourning and Lady Amaranth.
Variations
Haute Goth
In 1977, Karl Lagerfeld hosted the SoirÃÆ' à © e Moratoire Noir party, which established the "tenue tragique noire absolument obligatoire" (a black tragic dress absolutely necessary). This event includes elements related to leatherman style.
Gothic fashion has a reciprocal relationship with the fashion world. At the end of the first decade of the 21st century, designers like Alexander McQueen, Anna Sui, Rick Owens, Gareth Pugh, Ann Demeulemeester, Philipp Plein, Hedi Slimane, John Richmond, John Galliano, Olivier Theyskens and Yohji Yamamoto carry elements from the goth to the runway. It's described as " Haute Goth " by Cintra Wilson in New York Times . Thierry Mugler, Claude Montana, Jean Paul Gaultier and Christian Lacroix are also associated with gothic style. In Spring 2004, Riccardo Tisci, Jean Paul Gaultier, Raf Simons, and Stefano Pilati wore their models as "magical ghosts dressed in coat-fitting suits and coal-colored cocktail dresses". Swedish designer Helena Horstedt and jeweler Hanna Hedman are also practicing gothic aesthetics.
Gothic lolita âââ ⬠<â â¬
Gothic lolita, sometimes shortened to gosu rori ( ???? ) in Japanese, is a combination of Gothic and lolita mode. This mode comes from the late 1990s in Harajuku.
Gothic lolita fashion is characterized by makeup and darker clothes. Red lipstick and smokey or neatly defined eyes, made using black eyeliner, are a distinctive style, though as all lolita sub-style look remains pretty natural. Although Gothic make-up has been associated with white powder faces, this is usually considered a poor taste in the lolita fashion scene (mostly Japanese).
Brands that exemplify the Gothic lolita style include Atelier-Pierrot, Atelier Boz, Black Peace Now, H. Naoto Blood and Moi-mÃÆ'ême-Moitià ©. Writer and Host TV La Carmina is a popular model of Gothic lolita fashion.
Aristocrat
Aristocrat is a type of Japanese street fashion, championed by a music visual kei Mana musician with his fashion label Moi-mÃÆ'ême-Moitià ©, and is influenced by gothic and Neo-Victorian modes. The typical outfits will combine elements of Victorian and sometimes steampunk amulets, including tights, velvet sportcoats, top hats, cravats, bodice, ankle length skirts, lace skirts, and frayed pirate shirts previously popularized by Romanticism New from the 1980s.
Cybergoth
The Cybergoth and rivethead subcultures appeared in America during the late 1990s, and incorporated classical gothic modes such as leather lap coats, tripp pants or Demonia platform shoes with clothing worn by industrial metal fans and rave music to create dystopian, futuristic science. fiction display. Shaved heads, neon synthetic gimbals, camouflage, leather tights, chains, platform shoes, stretched piercings, arm tattoos, glasses, bodice, PVC or leather skirts, and black trenchcoats dotted with metal buttons are often seen in members of this subculture.
See also
- Heavy metal mode
- Halloween Costumes
- The fetish mode
- New Gothic Art
- Punk Mode
References
- Foot Records
- References
External links
Media related to Gothic mode on Wikimedia Commons
Source of the article : Wikipedia