A skirt is a garment that goes in fashion as well as being comfortable for a woman. Yet the shape of the skirt, its length, has always been a topic of discussion. In many schools and colleges, rules are made about the length of the skirt that the girl will wear. Surprisingly, many times a skirt-like outfit has caused as much controversy as a bikini.
If Bikini had got the name Bikini for having the same explosive power as the first explosion of the hydrogen bomb on the Bikini Atoll Islands, now the variety of skirts that have come to make a splash in the country have to be given the same explosive word name. Which doesn’t show everything like a bikini. Also hints at what the skirt has the ability to show.
Skirts are a welcome outfit that parents can't refuse and young women can wear and enjoy fashion.
The skirt has mesmerized everyone. Even middle-aged mothers, starting from their first convergent school teenager, find it more convenient than a slippery sari. Not all micro mini skirts make the legs proud everywhere. Indian skirts are just as provocative as sarees, giving preference to concealment. Indian women take full advantage of these opportunities. Sometimes to dazzle people in the conservative crowd by wearing a skirt showing the buttocks protruding, sometimes wearing a hemline skirt that comes slightly above the waist, stopping the provocative gaze, or playing a safe game by wearing a long skirt that maintains the dignity of an Indian woman. But the fact is that hemline skirts that used to be restricted to middle-class girls are slowly becoming acceptable. Even in a city like Madras, the traditional pavadai (semi sari) has paved the way for short hissing skirts.
When it comes to new trends in fashion in Delhi, Chennai seems to have gone a long way. Women who choose short skirts are like women who shorten their hair. Who wants to break the old imprint of Indian women. They now wear all kinds of skirts like mini, mirror work skirts, long skirts or split skirts.
Mumbai girls find skirts more comfortable. So he wears more. Even sari, salwar kameez or trousers do not prove to be comfortable in the atmosphere of Mumbai and especially due to continuous four months of rains. Mini and mid-claw length skirts are more popular while long flared skirts are worn in limited quantities as a party dress. Women and girls in Mumbai do not have to worry about greedy looks or CTOs like girls in Delhi.
Rita Chaudhary, who works as an executive in Delhi's leading advertising firm and has also worked in Mumbai, finds it difficult to adapt to the repercussions of wearing a skirt in the office. Even though most of her skirts are long below the waist, from the rickshaw puller to her office colleagues, she can't stay without comment.
He says, 'I wear a skirt with a jacket in winter, because I think it's more chubby than wearing a shawl or sweater with a sari salwar kameez.'
Only girls with cars in Delhi can dare to ride in a mini. Other girls limit themselves to less adventurous mirror work skirts. There is nothing new in the mirror work skirt, but there is only an improved version of the abhala skirt. Delhi women are not able to be completely free against the prejudice of showing feet. In this regard, trousers are more acceptable to them, as they do not show bare feet.
Thus says college student Poonam Sinha. "We have accepted the compromise of wearing Indian style skirts which even our parents have accepted without much fuss. Yet I like to wear tight and short fashionable skirts. Only at a girls party do I mostly wear such skirts.
All kinds of skirts are kept in the well-known stores of Delhi which sell western clothes which are bought by women of all ages. However, the owner of the shop admitted that he did not ask for the price of the mini skirt kept in the showcase outside. According to a skirt expert, getting a good tailor to sew a skirt is a daunting task. You have to go to a designer shop and pay a hefty amount to buy a fashionable and well-fitting skirt. But the cotton skirts sold on the sidewalks are worn by the poor.
Used at home on Sundays or as a nightdress, these skirts are also worn while doing housework.
Bina Ramani, owner and designer of a boutique in Delhi, thinks that skirts are the most comfortable outfit for women and if a woman maintains her physical beauty, there is no reason not to continue wearing it till middle age. Girls who come shopping with their mothers prefer long skirts. But more courageous girls come alone and buy micromini skirts.
Although gypsy skirts are very popular among modern young ladies, the girls of Delhi do not know how to wear them properly, as they go to match some western attire with traditional Indian attire. These colorful skirts look absurd with a collared blouse, Ramani said.
The designer enjoys designing the hemline of the hemline skirt. The length of the skirt dominates on every fashion trend. Maya Roy, a former designer at Garden Mills who now owns her own design bank area, says the length of the skirt extends from here to skirts that are much longer for denim. Shorts type skirts are tight. While denim skirts are much longer. Skirts are very popular in the college crowd.
Leading fashion houses in Mumbai keep skirts for all occasions. The hemline skirt can now be made higher or lower due to the feature of elastic. The figure of the skirt is also flexible. You can keep the skirt fluttering around the body and suppose you can stimulate the buttocks.
Shweta Shah, a mother of two teenagers, says she can wear whatever she wants. The only condition is that it should not be more nasty or more revealing. 'Personally, I prefer skirts and blouses, as they need to have an attractive body. Which most Indian girls do not have. Indian girls have fallen to the ground to break this one legend.
The clothes she is wearing now are helping to break the traditional impression of a fat Indian girl. The girl does not have to worry about the symmetry of the body as long as she wears a sari or pavadai. Now they are ready to show off their sleek curves and feel great through it. Personal choices and styles aside, skirts have made a splash in Indian markets. Indian girls will prefer to be wrapped in this glamorous dress for many years until the wind of change blows.
- Aditi
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