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  • Axios Salt Lake City

    The trend that introduced teen fashion to Utah

    By Erin Alberty,

    4 hours ago

    As Salt Lake City kids pick out their newest duds for back-to-school week, we're looking back on the rise of teen fashion in the 1950s.

    • This is Old News, our weekly twirl on the runway of Utah's past.

    The big picture: "Teen fashion" wasn't really a thing until the mid-20th century and one iconic look really got it going: the poodle skirt.

    Caveat: We're using "poodle skirt" as a catch-all term for full, felt skirts with appliquéd or embroidered decorations.

    The inspo: Juli Lynn Charlot, a 25-year-old aspiring actress in Los Angeles accidentally pioneered the fad when she cut a full circular skirt from felt and decorated it with cloth Christmas trees for a holiday party in 1947.

    • Full skirts were already popularized by Christian Dior in his postwar " New Look ," which celebrated the end of wartime thrift with designs that were generous with fabric.

    The intrigue: Charlot's cheap and easy skirt had wide appeal — but the personalized decorations made it especially fun for teens .

    Zoom in: The following fall, the wool circle skirt with applique had popped up in Utah's back-to-school clothing sales .

    • By 1951, the Salt Lake Telegram was calling the skirts " date bait ."

    The bottom line: The skirt has been called the " first teen fashion trend ," and I'd still wear one happily.

    Previously in Old News

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