As fashion seasons come and go, floral dresses rise and fall in popularity yet have remained a constant in women's clothes since the early 20th century. Ultra feminine, they provoke an association with womanliness and softness - it's hard to feel aggressive and hard-headed in a flower print dress.
When it works, the floral look can be sexier than a young Brigitte Bardot naked in an open sports car...
Wow....Sophia Loren in floral print |
Yet florals can also conjure associations with 'old maids' in sensible shoes....
Not too sexy... |
A Feminine Statement
Shades of the 1920s/30s. Holly Willoughby floral print. |
Florals have a rejuvenating effect, perhaps because of their strong spring/summer associations. You don't see see too many floral dresses around in winter, yet as Spring bounces around, out come the flowers, as a young maiden''s thoughts turn to...retail shopping.
Garden inspired dresses are also versatile...they can be tight fitting and sexy, loose and willowy - long, short, mid length, dressy, casual or dressy and and worn with flats, sandals, heels or boots.
The Birth of the Floral Dress
Amazon.$27.24 |
In Rosemary Harden's hardcover book, Floral Frocks, the author explores the design history of floral prints over the last hundred years, through text and 140 luscious illustrations - "from the naturalistic to the painterly, from the graphic to the abstract".
Audrey Hepburn collecting her 1954 Academy Award in a white floral embossed gown. |