Although women have probably always adorned their necks, they did not wear neckties until the later 1800s. Feminine versions of men's neckties began to appear along with the more tailored clothing women wore while bicycling, skating, hiking, or boating. A pioneer of the Rational Dress Movement, Englishwoman Amelia Bloomer, invented a pair of long, loose woman's pants, which bear her name.
Even more women began wearing ties, and trousers, during World War 1, as millions of women headed to offices and factories to fill the vacancies created by men at war. Women in uniform are so appealing, even more so in a suit and tie. A tie draped down a woman states the obvious on both sides and points the way, such a handsome package.
The evolution of styles and the progress of fashion throughout the ages have been underpinned by art and science, the net result; economic formation of fashion clothing accessories, from silk ties to suiting, from Savile Row to Sunset Boulevard.
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