10 fashionable women in history you don't know

We often hear about women like Audrey Hepburn or Princess as a historical female fashion icons but there is an army of women who made progress in fashion many years earlier. These intrepid women in history have opened the way to us and our predecessors with their revolutionary actions and with a memorable sense of style.


We often hear about women like Audrey Hepburn or Princess as a historical female fashion icons but there is an army of women who made progress in fashion many years earlier. These intrepid women in history have opened the way to us and our predecessors with their revolutionary actions and with a memorable sense of style.

Marchesa Luisa Casati

Italian style icon, this heriparier was very forward for her time with eccentric looks that would have inspired Mick Jagger and tons of other musicians. She was rock'n'roll and androgene before he became what they will have decades later and even man ray immortalized her beauty of her. Luisa was a whole set of bold jewels with equally black eyeliner and dreamy dresses. Oh, she also randomly a cheetah on a leash.

Marchesa Pompadour

Greet the epitome of the extravagance, Madame de Pompadour, born in 1721, a lover of King Louis XV. This beautiful woman was always at the forefront with her arches and flowers of her, on a rococo dress swollen of a tonic pastel. She looked like a candy, in the best possible way. Today, all this would see only at fashion shows.

Dalí gala

Salvador's wife Dalí (and muse, well noted) was much more than the woman of a great baffuto artist. Her style of her timeless her consisted in tense hats, perfectly adherent dresses, wide-legged trousers and slap drawings that, in the end, worked with the Dalí. She not only was she a crash in her dresses of her, but she was an experienced entrepreneur who kept the snakes away and attracted gallery sheets with ease.

Simone de Beauvoir

Simone de Beauvoir was not one who dressed to go looking for a cute man, she was against corsets and fashion prisoners. This feminist actually said that for her the clothing was not important but, based on how she dressed, she had to have a natural talent for fashion. She's wardrobe included large accessories, earrings surrounded by silver and clothes like a black and white woolen wool dress in tweed. She loved her clothes found during her travel to her, like a Chinese lamb chinese silk dressing robe.

Elsa Schiaparelli

Elsa Schiaparelli was a Franco-Italian designer with a passion for surrealist fashion. This passion of her is what brought Elsa so close to Dalí and his wife. She inspired designers for years with her original creations of her, like a phone shaped bag and a white dress printed with huge lobsters. In the 1930s, you led the world of high fashion and has also imagined a new color nicknamed "pink shocking" of which the fashionistas were obsessed.

Evelyn Nesbit

Evelyn Nesbit, who lived until 1967, had a fairly scandalous story for her time. If the reality shows were already born, you no doubt you would get his own series. Nesbit was an actress and a married model but she lived a bad story. Her husband killed her lover of her, who at the time was a high-level architect. She was technically the first top model to be seen with bare shoulders (very outrageous for those times), narrow corsets and waterfall rings.

Nazimova

This icon without genre dates back to the 1920s. She was a star of muti movies and very open on her love of her for women, she often hosted great parties in her villa on her on sunset boulevard. The gardener's clothes, its naked back complete and silk clothes that mixed lingerie and outerwear, embody what is now defined as the style of old Hollywood. She is often wearing clothes designed by both wives of Rodolfo Valentino and Natacha Rambova, a designer with a talent for the Art Deco.

Misia serr

You may know the name Coco Chanel, but what about Misia Sert? This icon was in the Coco circle as a member of the Parisian society and she also knew many artists. With the nickname of "Queen of Paris", you can bet that her fashion was perfect, among huge hats ornate flowers, lace clothes and a loose chignon at the Gibson Girl. She often helped her friends of her artists.

Empress Elizabeth of Austria

This nineteenth-century empress lesiva magnificently but is the way it combed to make it an immortal icon. If we put aside multilayer underwent and close corsets to show that torn life. Why do her hair make her a style icon? Because they were madly long and every morning she passed hours to comb, embellish with diamond pins and wrap everything in a pearl pearl. Dripping jewelry!

Lesley Blanch

Lesley Blanch gave us almost 100 years style, yet people know Princess Diana better than this English lady. Blanch was a historic British writer and the Bohemian goddess that we all would like to be. She is that friendly friend of the world that we all have, constantly nomadic and always chic. Lesley was known for exotic jewels, scars and caftans, often extracts from travel around the world.


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