Issue No. 1— not one of mine |
Last fall I wrote about an unusual effort at publishing a fashion/lifestyle magazine for the hippie nation. You can read the post by cutting and pasting this link:
http://allwaysinfashion.blogspot.com/2015/10/dusting-off-rags-magazine.html
Someone took me up on the offer to purchase my collection of seven "Rags" magazines from 1970-71. The publication had a short life— from June 1970 to June 1971, so these issues represent a good chunk of its existence.
http://allwaysinfashion.blogspot.com/2015/10/dusting-off-rags-magazine.html
Someone took me up on the offer to purchase my collection of seven "Rags" magazines from 1970-71. The publication had a short life— from June 1970 to June 1971, so these issues represent a good chunk of its existence.
I'm happy to say they have gone to a scholar, a textile/costume curator at a major American museum. I couldn't be happier.
For years they took up (very little) space on a closet shelf. As a former magazine designer, I have quite a collection that I wouldn't part with: from the first issue of "People" to an early Beatles fanzine. I was never really attached to those copies of "Rags", though I certainly kept them long enough.
Part of the problem |
Now that they are out of my
possession, I am wondering what there was that I didn't
treasure and want to keep always. I
think what bothered me most was that a commercial publication for counter-culture fashion now meant it was a firmly entrenched enterprise, with retail and
manufacturing establishments, bottom lines to meet and
percentages to sell-through. "Hippies" had morphed from a vile social
movement (according to the establishment) to acceptance and a
desire to emulate.
The
greatest proof of that might have been my brother-in-law, who put hippies
down at every chance early on but sported a moustache and sideburns by
the mid '70s.
Today
"boho" is just a look and maybe a nostalgic look back to a more naive
time when those who wore them really believed love beads could change
the world.
Waving them goodbye... |
Good for you! Now they will find a permanent home.
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