
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/28/fashion/28COUTURE.html?scp=1&sq=Paris%20fashion&st=cse
A fashion history class that focused on styles of dress in Ancient Greece, an assignment to review various fashion blogs and reports of the couture runway shows in Paris have led to this posting and my humble attempt at artistry. Mostly it was Karl Lagerfeld's pink sorbet gown for the Chanel show that set my imagination aflutter. So here goes... Let's see if I can condense my thoughts into a few simple paragraphs.
Influences for modern fashion can be found in numerous places, but much of the basic silhouettes, principals of design and foundation of proper proportions stem from ancient Greece. Essentially, this is where western dress began, and its influence on modern fashion is still profound today.
Style elements like the empire waist, soft draping fabrics and the current one-shoulder trend can all be credited to ancient Greece. Grecian dress is based on a tubular silhouette and began with a long rectangular length of fabric that was draped in various ways to create specific styles of dress for both men and women. The Chiton (ky'tn), which was essentially an early version of a modern tunic, was the primary garment worn in many variations by both sexes. Pictured below is the Doric Chiton, worn by women during the classical period of Greek civilization.

