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Show EVERY STYLE HAD ITS DAY Winter A Decade Of Wedding News . . . EdiW Mte Fw McMes fcv svdi upheavals . the tawvM or4 as ttw Sixties. In beauty Th'S anicte Cathanne Brenrvter. Fas nm anF beauty E4ter at wamen s News Service traces the sanetmes chaoc fashien bevelaments tl the an 4 I and became 5V wnat tells Redeemer uitheran Church was the setting Saturday for the wedding of Mii-- s Barbara Jean Kidston and Vernon Lee pev may a$tnn (Tertarruw. The beauty Revbiutian) By CATHARINE BREWSTER Womens News Service vv Tra.k. They Hems rose higher and dropped lower than in any othei part of the er.ur. Fashion idols slutted from a White House occupant 1 C hippies. vied with total 'x&. 1 YORK p a de..,1e fi e most pet haps t: e extremes et cc'used. O't v.U tj'hIon era :re m or leg m to wear clothes for sonciurg n.ore th;-- w.irn.th. -- Tr n Of all the dizzying -i changes of the Sixties, t .e only one to endure through the Seventies jury be in the field of fabrics. The outgoing decade saw the full acceptfilers ance of the Vniteti which enabled to simulate States, at every known r.atuial maeri.d. im ludmg leather and fur. and rran-mad- e t. , 1 t . ''4 v .k. .. I .Ij'JA-- i ' - . S v ' V;'- - ;. ; dictators of Madame taste. Their thief disciples were an elegant your.g actress. Audrey Hepburn, and an ea.uallv elegant young First Lady. Jao (incline Kennedy. The hallmarks of the fashions they wore and led an adoiing public to wear were hemlines just below the knees, a silhouette that niO't- - Fabric innovations of the Sixties include man-mad- e furs, as shown in coat of fur print mohair. Cl Monday, December 29, 1969 Questions About Etiquette Bv ELIZABETH L. POST Dear Mrs. Post : I have a graiidson whom we adopted and reared. He is now 21 years old. His mother ar.d stepfather lived in a distant state until last autumn, v i.cn they moved back to our city. They have never contributed to his support. He is now going to be married and I am wondering if the wedding invitations should bear our name or those of his mother and stepfather. reception, would if be ethical lor his mother and stepfather to be in the receiving line along with us? What would be the correct rearing the during arrangements church service? Mrs. K. Dear Mrs. K.: Your grandsons mother and stepfather should have no official part in At a his wedding. A' o u and your husband are his ntoiher and father morallv and legall- tions hould be sent in your-n,m- e. H.s mother and stepfather should not be in the receiving line, but it is up to vou whether to have them seated at the in table. Since, parents effect, you and your husband have always been the boy's parents, it is your right to sit in tiie front You may. if you wish, u r4 a free ceer et Emily Posts EtiweHt. Te letter chosen end it's eoswer. will be punished an tins column every Friday. Send your nuet ften e Elizabeth Pest m care ef The week I will Deseret News, dex 12S7. Salt Lake City. Utah fane, end don't ferpet yeur nemo and address. Miss Betty Christensen. Miss Kathleen Cluff. Mrs. Kenneth Ludwig. Mrs. William Majes-k- a and Mi's. Hans Levvitzki. Nielsen-Barne- s During the sixties, hemlines evolved into the shortest of the century. An example, above, is Hadley's kicky flannel skirt with cashmere cardigan sweater. ly ignored the bouy. and a cleanly tailoted look. "Accessorizing wa restrained, and the entire effect aimed at a ladylike aristocratic purity. BIG CHANGE Jacqueline Kennedy's reign as a fashion idol signaled the first great change of the decade. TV had dethroned the . .., maxi-leng- h look of modern architeaure. raised hemlines well above the knee, cut pants in a totally new way. and substituted slim white boots for shoes. MOD LOOK But even Courreges wasn't entirely alone. Over in Lon which had previously supplied the feminine idols (with the notable exception of Miss Hepburn i and tiie new First Lady came along ju- -t in time to fill the new gap. Yet by the end of tiie Sixties, she had lost her public power, largely through her second marriage, and was taking its cues from the streets. But before that happened. Chanel, who had returned to fashion in 1951. reached the peak of her new influence around 1965 and a new designer in Paris had created a stir with what proved to be the only original couture look of the decade. Andre Courreges, who for years had been an assistant to Balenciaga, took the tailoring of his master and used it to look. create a space-ag- e Working almost entirely in white, he gave his clothes the m OPEN MAKf YOU NEW YEAR S Htchland Samsonite AIRPLANE LUGGAGE the first years marrow Village For Your Personal ... Service Sava Maletich Linda Adams Stylist IlOU 6A M. No ... to 9 P.M. phone 487-169- Appo.ntment 5 Necessary FASHIOlsl, Shermans OF RESERVATIONS NOW PEACOCK in into oi In Foothill HAIR PARTIES Bazaar, and she branched manufacturing, and. through fashion magazine promotions, brought lier short skirts, pants and boots to the l.'nited States. Not all fashion in the early (See STYLE Page M of the Sixties, u TfiMTOTW NOW tow behind you. PRIVATE don. something, called the 'Mod look had already been getting attention, especially in the clothes of u girl named Mary Quant. She had already been her clothes selling her own shop through Miss Beeki Nielsen became the bride of Ross Darrell Barnes a ceremony performed Saturday at the Elvvood Ward. They were hon-ed at a duiner. The bride is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Allen C. Christensen. Tremonton. Parents of the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. Ralph D. Barnes, also of Tremonton. The former Miss Nielsen is a senior at Weber Slate College. ITT ak how would I ask him? Sandy Dear Sandy : You didn't say how old you are. but if you are fifteen, or older, you may ask a boy to join your birtli-da- v celebration. A.k him this A moim. your grandson's mother and step father to sit with you. but it would be perfectly correct to have them seated in the Dear Mrs. Post; My father and mother are taking me to dinner for m.y birthday. I would like to invite a boy. Is it proper to do so? And if so, '& VI JL " v If s v. .. V.1 i In sharp contrast to the mini, the became a fashion of the '60s. This coat is of Forstmann wool. . pc-w- y- Wedding invitations, however. are always sent out in the name of the brides family, unle?s the groom's family is giving the wedding. If this is so in vour case, the invita way: "Mon and Dad are taking me out to dinner on my birthday, and we would love to Lace you go with us." wut it vuur must puiM tfce most tk sender problem? interest i4 duestia Pal I receive peed d t the Entertaining at prenuptial parties were Miss Evelyn Maixhant. Miss Becky Petty, cone up vvith such p:e-- v unknown icu'l inaprov as fahncs that need no n omng. SO ENTERTAINING But whether or not at.y of ihe fashion ideas of the Sixties lat. they ptoduced a motor entertainment for a decode sorely in need of something 10 tike its mind off war. assignation. racial strife, and urban pollution. When the oixties began, there were few signs of fashion upheaval. Balenciaga and the Givenchy, often dubbed were the Heavenly Twins. to after--war- e. Tie Sit;es were of !. 'liion were honored at a reception Doll Ilou-Attending the bride were Miss Ann Kidston and Miss Linda Kidston. Lairv Tra-- k was best man.. The hrule is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Ger-- ' aid Kidston. IWJ S. Cottonwood Lane. Mi. and Mrs. Vet non R.' Trask. 1982 Imperial St., are parents of the bridegroom. They honored the bridal pair at a rehearsal dinner at their home Friday. The bride is a graduate of the University of Utah. 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