Fashion at Woodstock Vs. The Millennials
The Haight-Ashbury area in San Francisco and Greenwich Village in New York City were hot spots for Hippie fashions in particular. The style became more represented in mainstream culture after 1967's "Summer of Love" and the look was popular from that point on until the mid-seventies. Hippie fashion represented a rebellion against consumerism and the clothes and accessories were often handmade or purchased from flea markets (1960's Fashions including Prices).
If you jump ahead to years later and look at the new millennium clothing style it is nothing but a mock of the 1960's Woodstock. If you were to visit one of today's most popular music festivals, Coachella, though you would notice many similarities in the fashion from the two different time periods, though, there would be no siting of worn out clothes, nudity, or mud slinging, like there was at Woodstock.
If you jump ahead to years later and look at the new millennium clothing style it is nothing but a mock of the 1960's Woodstock. If you were to visit one of today's most popular music festivals, Coachella, though you would notice many similarities in the fashion from the two different time periods, though, there would be no siting of worn out clothes, nudity, or mud slinging, like there was at Woodstock.