Glossary entry (derived from question below)
English term or phrase:
"A-line", "H-line" and "Y-line"
English answer:
"A-line", "H-line" and "Y-line"
Added to glossary by
CMRP
Feb 15, 2007 17:04
17 yrs ago
2 viewers *
English term
"A-line", "H-line" and "Y-line"
English
Other
Textiles / Clothing / Fashion
"A-line", "H-line" and "Y-line"
Greetings,
These terms were introduced by Christian Dior, but I am unable to find a precise definition of them.
Thank you,
Simon
Greetings,
These terms were introduced by Christian Dior, but I am unable to find a precise definition of them.
Thank you,
Simon
Responses
5 +2 | "A-line", "H-line" and "Y-line" | CMRP |
Responses
+2
17 mins
Selected
"A-line", "H-line" and "Y-line"
You keep it as it is. This were cutour lines that Christian Dior came up with right after WWII. The H-line came out in 1954, the Y-line came out in 1954, and the A-line came out in 1955.
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Note added at 24 mins (2007-02-15 17:29:11 GMT)
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even more, they were actually called that because they were a variation of the same style. Dior was obsessed with narrow shoulders and tiny waists.
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Note added at 24 mins (2007-02-15 17:29:11 GMT)
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even more, they were actually called that because they were a variation of the same style. Dior was obsessed with narrow shoulders and tiny waists.
Peer comment(s):
agree |
P.L.F. Persio
: yes, take a look: http://www.timelinefashion.de/designer/dior.htm
1 hr
|
Thank you :)
|
|
agree |
Pham Huu Phuoc
15 hrs
|
Thanks
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4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
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