The Hemline Index, an economic theory almost a century old, suggests that women’s hemlines rise and fall along with the stock market. In boom times (the 1920s or 1960s), women show more leg. In lean times (the 1930s or 1970s), their hemlines drop towards the ankle. In 2010, researchers took a look at the predictive power of the Hemline Index and found it to be surprisingly accurate.
A trend for longer hemlines was already underway even before the Covid-19 crisis hit and, if the Hemline Index theory has it right, we can expect it to continue. In the last couple of years, dresses have not only become longer, but also acquired higher necklines, more substantial sleeves, and baggier waists. John Lewis’ 2019 retail report reveals that “restrictive, tight-fitting clothing has been replaced with voluminous cashmere, longer lengths and looser-fitting styles”, with midi dresses and wide-legged culottes now hugely popular.
Last summer, a long-sleeved ankle-length dress from Zara, white with black polkadots, became something of a retail phenomenon. Christened ‘The Dress’ in media coverage, this almost shapeless tunic was worn by women of all ages and body shapes. Other retailers imitated the style and this year the uniform for fashionable young urban women leaves very little skin on display.
This may be a result, not only of the economic downturn, but also of changing demographics. So-called ‘modest fashion’, designed for women from conservative religious minorities, has recently broken into the mainstream. Big brands like Uniqlo, ASOS, and H&M have taken the lead from high end designers in producing modest ranges, including hijabs and other hair coverings. In the UK, a disproportionately young population of Muslim women offers a growing market for high street retailers willing to diversify their ranges; in America, Orthodox Jewish women have been similarly influential.
A few devotees of modest fashion are critical of women outside of these religious communities for ‘appropriating’ modest styles, and suggest that this may be just a fleeting trend that will be abandoned after a couple of seasons.
But I’m not so sure. The joy of ‘The Dress’ is practical as well as aesthetic — this is a style that protects from sunburn, doesn’t require shaving or Spanx, and that can accommodate sagging, bloating, pregnancy, weight loss or gain, and all of the other realities of the female body that designers often prefer to forget.
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SubscribeProbably far more to do with the fashion industry.
They need something “new” every now and again to boost sales.
If you read the research piece, you see that there does appear to be a correlation. If it were only a result of random fluctuation in fashion trends, that correlation wouldn’t exist.
Maybe, maybe not!
As that old saying goes correlation is not causation.
Indeed. But as the follow-up joke says, correlation doesn’t imply causation, but it does waggle its eyebrows suggestively and gesture furtively while mouthing ‘look over there’.
I wish – expecting my 16 year old daughter to consider wearing some dress/skirt/shorts below the knee is about as likely as the world having an epiphany and fleeing covi world. Seriously – discussed this just the other day with my wife and she called me reactionary for asking why women adhere to fashions that expose so much flesh. Apparently I’m an idiot – women like the attention, it looks good. Now lets explore this ……… gave up as we became entangled in every possible argument. We retired to the local pub (not really connected as usually pop down there – when covi allows) and won £10 on trivia machine. Winning answer – on fashion! I conceded defeat. Three children, all daughters and wife. I on a loser here – I often observe how can you buy clothes with such little cloth. Some of the clothes they buy I postulate would be tight on a child. They look at me as if I’m mad. Dad you do not have a clue – concede that point happily.
Louise, be careful not overclaim these results. The research you cite does show a correlation, but centred on a three-year lag. So if there has been a rise in long dresses for women over the last year, that suggests that it is in response to the post-Brexit downturn of three years ago, not the current economic calamity. Presumably in 2023 the length of dresses will be, dare I say it”unprecedented.
Actually, as the picture above the article suggests, a lot of the “modest” but fashionable Muslim clothing may cover skin and hair, but it actually hugs the body closely…Love the contradiction!
As if the women are saying to the imams, “see, I’m following the rules”, but subverting the whole idea of dressing so as to hide ones’ “assets” and not be attractive to men…
The Orthodox Jewish and fundamentalist Christian women (which you didn’t mention, but are also a strong force) with their own fashion sites) are more into the loose clothing.
But lots of mainstream women have long complained about how difficult it is to find summer clothing with sleeves, and generally clothes that are flattering for older women and not dowdy.
I for one would welcome the return of elegance as a fashion value, rather than the “sexy” and “pushing the envelope” styles. The picture above the article is of elegant clothing. It still requires a slim, youthful figure though, it does not look as good on a flabby, overweight body, but then, what clothing does?
But I always found the tunic over pants costume Pakistani women wear elegant and flattering and practical (unlike the sari that always has to be adjusted or it falls off…), as long as it isn’t too tight.
Is the answer knickers?
What an outrageous suggestion!
“So-called ‘modest fashion’, designed for women from conservative religious minorities, has recently broken into the mainstream.”
I suspect this is the dynamic at play – for some years now, women’s clothing has been generally becoming more ‘modest’ with massive pants for bikini bottoms and very ‘middle-aged lady’ style swimming costumes. Gym wear is often far more covering than it used to be and so on. It’s not just skirt length.
Hijabs will become the norm in the not-too-distant future, regardless of faith. The origin of the burkha was women trying to ‘out-modest’ each other. Something similar will happen again, but in Western countries.
Wouldn’t be the first time. In ancient Greece women wore the himation, which covered the entire body and face and predated the burka by more than 1,000 years.
Oh poppycock, fashions come and go. Long dresses look better on most people, but skimpy clothes can be sexy and also comfortable in the hot weather. In the early seventies hemlines were thrown out the window, i was called mini,midi, maxi – anything goes and it really has been like that ever since.
Any amount of sartorial elegance is nullified by a pair of trainers. Keep them for casual please ladies.
More muslim p.o.s. infiltration and idiot American ignorance allowing it to happen.