The fashion of football : from Best to Beckham, from mod to label slave / Paolo Hewitt and Mark Baxter.
Publisher: Edinburgh : Mainstream, 2004Description: 224 p., [16] p. of plates ill. (some col.) 19 cm001: 9620ISBN: 1840188073Subject(s): Fashion - History | FootballDDC classification: 394.3 HEWItem type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Book | MAIN LIBRARY Book | 394.3 HEW (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Checked out | 05/03/2024 | 080845 |
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Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
The Fashion of Football is a groundbreaking work that examines for the first time the link between football and fashion. Featuring a selection of rare photographs which enliven the text, the book divides itself into a work of two halves - the first depicting how fashion has influenced the players and the second showing how it has been represented in the stands.We begin in 1962, when restrictions limiting earnings from professional football were lifted and footballers started to splash out on looking good. First we visit George Best's boutique in Manchester, try on the Terry Venables wig and reveal how the 1970s Chelsea team used flamboyant King's Road boutiques to gain the upper hand in psychological battles with fierce rivals Leeds. We then move on to the '80s to consider the influence British black footballers brought to bear on fashion, leaving room to mention the hairdressers and the mullet. Into the '90s and, well, we're confronted with Liverpool FC in white suits and David Beckham in a skirt . . . Back in the stands for the second half, The Fashion of Football describes how football fashion has been influenced by the world around it - from the '60s working-class Mod look to skinheads in Dr. Marten boots and Crazies in Crombies. Thanks to rapid developments in transportation, fans became more mobile, leading to the easy spread of fashions throughout the county. This resulted in the birth of the Casuals - a cult that one fan describes as 'the biggest underground revolution this country has ever seen'. From Best to Beckham, from Mod to label lover, this book is both unique and highly entertaining.
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