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Roaring Twenties Beach Fashion – Photos of the Classic Unisex Bathing Suits

Bikinis and shorts are quite distinguishable today as the swimsuits intended for female and male users, respectively. However, during the “Roaring Twenties”, it was very hard to tell the two apart. The design was kind of unisex, with both men and women wearing full-body swimsuits, as moral norms were stricter than today.

While it might seem odd from a modern perspective, swimsuits have come a long way from bathing gowns of the 18th and 19th century, which made sure that not a single segment of a lady’s skin was visible to the observer. To be fair, the gowns also had another function ― to keep the lady safe from sunburns, but this too was considered part of the norm, as tanned skin wasn’t really desirable among aristocrats of the time.

11 women and a little girl lined up for bathing beauty contest, USA
11 women and a little girl lined up for bathing beauty contest, USA

 

Beatrice Kyle next to a fire engine eating a pickle, 1924
Beatrice Kyle next to a fire engine eating a pickle, 1924

 

Bill Norton the bathing beach policeman measuring distance between knee and bathing suit on woman, Washington, D.C.
Bill Norton the bathing beach policeman measuring distance between knee and bathing suit on woman, Washington, D.C.

 

High diver Beatrice Kyle sitting on a fire engine wheel between acts at the Society Circus at Fort Myer, Va. for the benefit of the Army Relief Fund; Apr. 25, 1924
High diver Beatrice Kyle sitting on a fire engine wheel between acts at the Society Circus at Fort Myer, Va. for the benefit of the Army Relief Fund; Apr. 25, 1924

 

Ernest and Pauline Hemingway, San Sebastian, circa September 1927.
Ernest and Pauline Hemingway, San Sebastian, circa September 1927.

 

Women dancing on beach, Toronto, Canada
Women dancing on beach, Toronto, Canada

 

1920s swimsuit postcard .
1920s swimsuit postcard .

The reason behind the designs that seem so impractical today, was that going to the beach wasn’t mostly about swimming, as much as it was about enjoying the fresh air and socializing.

Therefore, the swimsuits were made of wool ― a material that would keep you warm but became very heavy once wet. With that in mind, the change actually came when swimming became a popular pastime among men and women alike. Soon the material became lighter and more suitable for water.

Featuring a simple design, most women and men wore their one-piece swimsuits, which covered their torso, leaving their legs and arms exposed. The main difference was that while men’s models featured shorts, the women’s included a dress which covered the underwear.

Bathing Suit 1920s.
Bathing Suit 1920s.

 

Bathing Beach, 1920
Bathing Beach, 1920

While men stuck with a simple design, a number of accessories were included for ladies, such as a swimming cap, and beach footwear.

As times changed, so did the bathing suits. By the mid-1920s, Vogue had famously proclaimed that:

the newest thing for the sea is a jersey bathing suit as near a maillot as the unwritten law will permit.

Argentine swimmer Alberto Zorrilla in 1925.
Argentine swimmer Alberto Zorrilla in 1925.

 

1920s swimsuit
1920s swimsuit

 

Viola Swinnerton & Anna Neibel
Viola Swinnerton & Anna Neibel

 

Beach Photo
Beach Photo

 

Rudolph Valentino with Aleta Farnum and Gertrude Selby. Motion Picture, January 1921
Rudolph Valentino with Aleta Farnum and Gertrude Selby. Motion Picture, January 1921

 

Bathing models in a museum, 1920. Photo by Alraunenstern – CC BY SA 4.0
Bathing models in a museum, 1920. Photo by Alraunenstern – CC BY SA 4.0

 

Beach 1920
Beach 1920

 

Woman on a beach in Bermuda with seaweed, 1929
Woman on a beach in Bermuda with seaweed, 1929

 

Human tower on the sands at South Stradbroke Island, 1922
Human tower on the sands at South Stradbroke Island, 1922

But it wasn’t only the unwritten law that dictated the fashion ― at the time, beaches were patrolled by the so-called “swimsuit police” whose task was to measure the length of women’s bathing suits and to determine whether or not were they dressed in “improper attire”.

Apart from an obligatory 10 dollar fine, some women who chose to argue with the officers were arrested and brought to court.

Read another story from us: Flappers: subverting society with their shoes

However, the public soon turned against this controversial law enforcement, and by the 1930s, the swimsuit police were no more.

Nikola Budanovic

Nikola Budanovic is a freelance journalist who has worked for various media outlets such as Vice, War History Online,The Vintage News, Taste of Cinema,etc. He mostly deals with subjects such as military history and history in general, literature and film.