In the early 1980s, my mother had a hot
pink, silk, after-five dress from the Australian label Covers.
It was the pink of Marilyn Monroe’s evening
dress in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes,
but it had the sleeve-shape and tight skirt of Krystal Carrington in Dynasty.
It shared equal status with her pale blue
Prue Acton maxi from the mid-1970s as my favourites in her wardrobe. She wore the
pink Covers dress with multi-coloured carnival glass beads hat shimmered blue,
green, purple or pink depending on the light.
I coveted that Covers dress. My sister got
to wear once in the late ‘80s. Alas, it never fitted me.
Why am I thinking about ‘80s fashions? The
Victoria & Albert Museum, in London, has just opened an exhibition called Club to Catwalk showcasing London's clubbing and fashion
scene in the ‘80s.
A picture gallery from the exhibition by The Guardian got me reminiscing about what I wore here to
the likes of Toucan Two and Limbo’s, in the West End, to Leon’s, on the Parade,
and Doug Govan’s My Place, in Hyde St, Le Rox, in Light Square and later the
Venue, in Hindley St.
Although I lived in London at the end of
the ‘80s, and even went to some of the clubs captioned in The Guardian, it’s not the mainsteam ‘80s fashions I mostly remember
wearing. It’s styling straight out of the era’s video clips.
When I think of ‘80s fashions, I think of
high-waisted Corfu jeans, made right here in Adelaide. And Canterbury rugby
tops.
Yes, I had leg warmers but never stirrup
pants.
I loved my dusty pink thick cord jodhpurs –
Stuart Membery from memory. Or were they Jag? A white lacey shirt worn with a
grey-striped taffeta skirt from Cream, on Unley Rd; and shopping across the
road at Naffine’s with my mother.
What about the giant Cherry Lane store in
Rundle Mall that you had to ride an escalator down to? Most of my work clothes came
from there during 1986-88. And the funny-shaped Sportsgirl store at
Burnside – was it a hexagon or a pentagon? Oh, and Demasius.
K-K-Katies seemed so much more stylish back
then, although it’s the reverse with Witchery. Did you follow the advertising call
to action that jingled “this goes with that at Sussan’s”? Now that’s an excuse
to watch this blast from the past.