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Geva Newsreel 430, 1968

Mini Skirt Fashion in Tel Aviv

1968
Genre:
Moment

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Directed by: Unknown
Subtitles: English, Hebrew
Such a small garment – such global uproar. The daily press of the time was reporting an anti-miniskirt crusade led by extremists in several Middle Eastern countries, including Israel. And whilst the IDF and work environments approved of the miniskirt – it was ‘persona non grata’ during office hours and as such, women and young girls were banned from showing more than 3cm of thigh over the kneecap. In Turkey, religious militants threw acid at the bare legs of women in miniskirts whilst in the UK an order was issued, formally banning miniskirts from all courtrooms. The main idea behind the skirt was for it to look ridiculous on the full, voluptuous figure of anyone past her teenage years. At the time, there were those who put it down to social changes that seemed to flourish in the periods following a crisis when youth is at once given unchecked freedoms – followed by a boom in “girly girl” chic amongst young women. The same thing happened after the French Revolution, and in the 1920s in the aftermath of World War I. The miniskirt was also a symbol of teenage girls’ newfound and hitherto unprecedented financial independence. And of course, this was all accompanied by the young women’s quest for gaining and displaying all the freedoms and sexual liberation that their older peers were now enjoying. The footage here is from 1968. And it really is hard to believe that only the previous year, everyone was convinced that the miniskirt was not long for this world and that this was all just a passing, aesthetic, and social fad, exclusive to the English capital. The miniskirt trend, however, persisted and persevered even through the harsh London winter. Young Londoners gave the miniskirt the all the ‘leg-up’ it needed (and then some!) to take root in the fashion world, and in doing so incurred the wrath of the English, for reasons that went beyond mere chastity. It soon emerged that HMRC (the British Inland Revenue Service) were in a huff as the miniskirt, it turned out, was exempt from purchase tax – like children’s clothes. A decision then followed to tax any item of clothing of a length exceeding 51cm (20 inches) (i.e. from the belt down). Fashion designers, however, were not fazed in the slightest. By that point, they had already come up with mini-miniskirt and the micro-miniskirt, meaning that even after the new tax had taken effect, the skirts remained fully exempt.

Women in mini skirts walk around the streets of Tel Aviv. The camera peeks below their skirts.

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