Kayelle
Member
- Location
- California, southern central coast
Did you even care about the Hippie culture then or now? Did it have any lasting value for today?
I'll be back.
I'll be back.
Groovy, Peram! ✌Heck yeah....flower power
Fringes on everything I wore
Extreme flared long pants
Hot pants....the exact opposite to flares
Platform shoes....not that I needed them because I was tall
Mini skirts or hot pants with knee high fringed boots
Long hair (my own) I could sit on but it was so super curly like sheep's wool
Using a cloth to prevent scorching and the ironing board I ironed most of the crinkles out
No Dafni hair straightening brush like I use now
Peace Man
View attachment 114069
The only hip-ness I'm concerned with these days is trying to avoid a broken one.
1967: Trying to find a hip new joint.
2020: Trying to find a new hip joint.
I consider myself fortunate that I did not need to be 'up close and personal' with it, but as the sister of a United States Marine and Vietnam veteran I did not have a positive opinion of the subject. My viewpoint then and now: "Peace: yes! Disrespect our military: NO!"Did you even care about the Hippie culture then or now? Did it have any lasting value for today?
I'll be back.
I was more of a "folkie" than a "hippie". I had the long hair with bangs down to my eyelashes and wore bellbottom jeans and ponchos and carried my guitar around everywhere ('cause you just never knew when a hootenanny might break out). We'd get a mite annoyed if called "hippies".
I did have one really hippie-dippie outfit, though, that I dearly loved. "Elephant bell" jeans (very, very wide at the bottom with tiny bells sewn on) and a big gauze hippie top. I had packed it away and when I got pregnant, I converted the jeans into maternity pants and wore the outfit one day to the base. The base commander got one look at me in my full glory, called my husband in and told him, "YOU TELL YOUR WIFE TO WEAR SOME PROPER CLOTHES AND STOP PARADING AROUND LIKE A @#!&%#* HIPPIE!" Hippies were not welcome on military bases.....apparently it was some form of leprosy and might be contagious.
The only hip-ness I'm concerned with these days is trying to avoid a broken one.
1967: Trying to find a hip new joint.
2020: Trying to find a new hip joint.
I was more of a "folkie" than a "hippie". I had the long hair with bangs down to my eyelashes and wore bellbottom jeans and ponchos and carried my guitar around everywhere ('cause you just never knew when a hootenanny might break out). We'd get a mite annoyed if called "hippies".
I did have one really hippie-dippie outfit, though, that I dearly loved. "Elephant bell" jeans (very, very wide at the bottom with tiny bells sewn on) and a big gauze hippie top. I had packed it away and when I got pregnant, I converted the jeans into maternity pants and wore the outfit one day to the base. The base commander got one look at me in my full glory, called my husband in and told him, "YOU TELL YOUR WIFE TO WEAR SOME PROPER CLOTHES AND STOP PARADING AROUND LIKE A @#!&%#* HIPPIE!" Hippies were not welcome on military bases.....apparently it was some form of leprosy and might be contagious.
The only hip-ness I'm concerned with these days is trying to avoid a broken one.
1967: Trying to find a hip new joint.
2020: Trying to find a new hip joint.