I am not really a control freak but can i show you the right way to do that Shirt
From the earliest time, the T-shirt has been the world’s favorite and most practical intimate garment. We’ve watched as our favorite item of underclothing has grown up, shed both buttons and Victorian sensibilities, gone swimming, joined the army, headed off to work and helped to open a few cold ones on the weekend. It has clothed kings, criminals, astronauts, presidents and men and women of every creed, color, nationality, and station of birth. In the last half of the twentieth century it was the politics and fashion of the t-shirt, not its practicalities, which were honed and redefined by the tidal wave of change brought on by the counter-culture movement and the sexual revolution. In a time of enormous social upheaval the T-shirt established itself as a power player in every social and cultural movement which defined much of the latter half of the last century. The T-shirt revolution began somewhere in the 1950s…
I am not really a control freak but can i show you the right way to do that Shirt
And then came Punk. That glorious, singular moment where music, youth culture and London and New York seemed to collide. A movement that reveled in the destruction and deconstruction of the T-shirt, and rapidly resurrected it like a fashion Frankenstein with safety pins and protest buttons, and then promptly destroyed it again. The T-shirt, could not have received a better baptism of fire than punk to firmly establish it as the holy grail of street culture. The aftermath of the T-shirt revolution of the twentieth century is a gender dodging, slogan waving, indispensable coin-of-the-realm in the visual currencies of subculture and cool. The T-shirt revolution had taken over the wardrobe of the world. There would be no going back.