Today we are not going to start talking about the 2020 trend, but about learning. Because if we have been taught anything in recent years, it is that femininity, femininity, woman, in the broadest sense of the term, is a complex, rich and malleable reality that can be interpreted in a thousand and one ways.
And one of those interpretations goes through the purely visual level: there are clothing codes in terms of trends, fashion, and beauty that continue in force despite the passing of the centuries and the updates they have undergone.
The difference between male and female dress can easily be traced back to (to put a point on the timeline) Ancient Egypt, but it was the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries that welcomed (under the umbrella of Gothic fashion) a departure from Little more radical, a path that culminated in the Great Male Renunciation, created during the French Revolution (1789) and established during the 19th and early 20th centuries with the capitalist system, which left the ornaments and the demonstration of economic power for the field from home, where the woman was registered.
The historical journey has continued until now, with a series of ups and downs that have made both aesthetic principles vary, with those of women having recreated the most in the changes in silhouettes, colors, and intentions.
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