je viens de supprimer ce sujet............

  • Auteur de la discussion Auteur de la discussion Fred
  • Date de début Date de début
oui ça m'a fait pareil lilo...
:icon_wink:

c'est suite à la suppression certainement
 
j'avais compris pourquoi le compte de messagerie était revenu à zéro mais je n'avais tjrs vu que le masque de discussion spécifiée non valide tel que paraît auj le lien de frederie
 
bonsoir... comme dans le titre

Fashion in clothes change for almost as many different reasons as there are fashions. The main causes are changes in the type of work we do, the cost and availability of materials used and the invention of new materials such as synthetic fibers. The attitude of different societies towards the body and how to display it is also important. For example, if a girl in the Middle Ages had been a mini-skirt that would have been regarded as insane or evil, social norms change from one era to another from one country to another. There have been dramatic changes in fashion in this century, due in part to the availability of new and cheap rnaterials and partly because this generation believes that clothes should be a matter of personal choice, and ILS ILS comfortable and well attractive. Many of the clothes of our ancestors fussy, often require yards and yards of fabric, would be too expensive to produce today. It would also be inappropriate to imagine modern life cycling in a crinoline. Major wars often influence fashion. During World War II-style women's clothing became military. Jackets, for example, had padded shoulders square. After the war, this trend has changed voluminous, feminist, new face of Dior, the great French designer. Another major change occurred after the First World War. Women who had worked for the first time with men in the factories during the war began to dress more freely and began to wear short skirts. Today, what we wear is largely a matter of personal choice, comfort and what they can afford.