Pierre Cardin: Difference between revisions

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Cardin was born near [[Treviso]] in northern Italy, the son of Maria Montagner and Alessandro Cardin.<ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.wsj.com/articles/pierre-cardin-sent-fashion-out-of-this-world-11597768245|title=Pierre Cardin Sent Fashion Out of This World |first=Marc|last=Myers |date=18 August 2020 |website=wsj.com}}</ref> His parents were wealthy wine merchants, but lost their fortune in [[World War I]].<ref name="World Clothing">{{cite book|last=Snodgrass |first=Mary Ellen |title=World Clothing and Fashion: An Encyclopedia of History, Culture, and Social Influence |year=2013 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0765683007}}</ref> To escape the [[Fascism#Fascist violence|blackshirts]] they left Italy and settled in [[Saint-Étienne]], France in 1924 along with his ten siblings.<ref name="World Clothing"/><ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.italyonthisday.com/2017/07/pierre-cardin-fashion-designer.html |title=Pierre Cardin - fashion designer |publisher=Itay On This Day |access-date=31 December 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Hesse|first=Jean-Pascal |title=Pierre Cardin: 60 Years of Innovation|year=2010 |publisher=Assouline|isbn=978-2-7594-0424-7}}</ref> His father wanted him to study architecture, but from childhood he was interested in [[dressmaking]]<ref>{{cite web|url= https://library.scad.edu/patroninfo?/0/redirect=/wamvalidate?url=http%3A%2F%2F0-academic.eb.com.library.scad.edu%3A80%2Flevels%2Fcollegiate%2Farticle%2FPierre-Cardin%2F20295 |title=Savannah College of Art and Design |website=library.scad.edu}}</ref> and at age fourteen apprenticed with Saint-Étienne tailor Louis Bompuis.<ref>{{cite journal |editor1-last=Camière |editor1-first=Marie |title=Portrait: Pierre Cardin, une destinée sur mesure |journal=Loire Magazine |date=2012-07-01 |issue=94 |page=30 |url=https://www.loire.fr/upload/docs/application/pdf/2012-06/lm94_bd.pdf |access-date=2025-03-07 |location=Saint-Étienne, France |quote=...[C]hez un tailleur, un jeune apprenti coupeur de 14 ans donne ses premiers coups de ciseaux....[I]l fait son apprentissage chez le tailleur Louis Bompuis à Saint Étienne. [At a tailor's, a young, 14-year-old apprentice cutter gives his first cuts with scissors....He does his apprenticeship with tailor Louis Bompuis in Saint Étienne.]}}</ref>
Cardin was born near [[Treviso]] in northern Italy, the son of Maria Montagner and Alessandro Cardin.<ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.wsj.com/articles/pierre-cardin-sent-fashion-out-of-this-world-11597768245|title=Pierre Cardin Sent Fashion Out of This World |first=Marc|last=Myers |date=18 August 2020 |website=wsj.com}}</ref> His parents were wealthy wine merchants, but lost their fortune in [[World War I]].<ref name="World Clothing">{{cite book|last=Snodgrass |first=Mary Ellen |title=World Clothing and Fashion: An Encyclopedia of History, Culture, and Social Influence |year=2013 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0765683007}}</ref> To escape the [[Fascism#Fascist violence|blackshirts]] they left Italy and settled in [[Saint-Étienne]], France in 1924 along with his ten siblings.<ref name="World Clothing"/><ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.italyonthisday.com/2017/07/pierre-cardin-fashion-designer.html |title=Pierre Cardin - fashion designer |publisher=Itay On This Day |access-date=31 December 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Hesse|first=Jean-Pascal |title=Pierre Cardin: 60 Years of Innovation|year=2010 |publisher=Assouline|isbn=978-2-7594-0424-7}}</ref> His father wanted him to study architecture, but from childhood he was interested in [[dressmaking]]<ref>{{cite web|url= https://library.scad.edu/patroninfo?/0/redirect=/wamvalidate?url=http%3A%2F%2F0-academic.eb.com.library.scad.edu%3A80%2Flevels%2Fcollegiate%2Farticle%2FPierre-Cardin%2F20295 |title=Savannah College of Art and Design |website=library.scad.edu}}</ref> and at age fourteen apprenticed with Saint-Étienne tailor Louis Bompuis.<ref>{{cite journal |editor1-last=Camière |editor1-first=Marie |title=Portrait: Pierre Cardin, une destinée sur mesure |journal=Loire Magazine |date=2012-07-01 |issue=94 |page=30 |url=https://www.loire.fr/upload/docs/application/pdf/2012-06/lm94_bd.pdf |access-date=2025-03-07 |location=Saint-Étienne, France |quote=...[C]hez un tailleur, un jeune apprenti coupeur de 14 ans donne ses premiers coups de ciseaux....[I]l fait son apprentissage chez le tailleur Louis Bompuis à Saint Étienne. [At a tailor's, a young, 14-year-old apprentice cutter gives his first cuts with scissors....He does his apprenticeship with tailor Louis Bompuis in Saint Étienne.]}}</ref>


Cardin moved to Paris in 1945 after World War II. There, he studied architecture, briefly pursued an acting career,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Obrist |first1=Hans Ulrich |title=The Legendary Pierre Cardin |journal=System |date=2014-07-01 |volume=2 |issue=4 |url=https://system-magazine.com/issues/issue-4/the-legendary-pierre-cardin |access-date=2025-03-06 |quote='...[A]s the end of the war arrived I returned to Paris...I wanted to become an actor'.}}</ref> and met [[Jean Cocteau]], who employed him to do costumes for his 1946 film [[Beauty and the Beast (1946 film)|''Beauty and the Beast''/''La Belle et la Bête'']].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Obrist |first1=Hans Ulrich |title=The Legendary Pierre Cardin |journal=System |date=2014-07-01 |volume=2 |issue=4 |url=https://system-magazine.com/issues/issue-4/the-legendary-pierre-cardin |access-date=2025-03-06 |quote='...I met other personalities who introduced me to Jean Cocteau. I was employed by him and I did the costumes for ''La Belle et la Bête''. That was the first money I earned...That was how I started in couture, via the theatre'.}}</ref> He worked with the fashion house of [[Jeanne Paquin|Paquin]], then [[Elsa Schiaparelli]], until he became head of [[Christian Dior]]'s tailleure atelier in 1947, but was denied work at [[Balenciaga]].<ref>{{cite web|last=FashionUnited|date=2014-11-12 |title=Eternal futurist of fashion Pierre Cardin opens new museum at 92 |url= https://fashionunited.uk/news/culture/eternal-futurist-of-fashion-pierre-cardin-opens-new-museum-at-92/2014111214535 |access-date=2020-12-29 |website=fashionunited.uk|language=en-gb}}</ref> While at Dior, he contributed the popular Bar suit to Dior's inaugural 1947 "Corolle" collection, already displaying the deft tailoring that he would be known for in later years.<ref>{{cite journal |title=Dior: Fashion's Ten-Year Wonder Leaves Couture Leadership a Question |journal=The New York Times |date=1957-10-25 |page=41 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1957/10/25/archives/cardin-laroche-givenchy-called-likely-successors-dior-fashions.html?searchResultPosition=3 |quote=Pierre Cardin is Dior's protégé. He got his first big break in 1947, when he helped Dior design the sensational New Look. Since then he has been the only one of Dior's assistants to start a couture house of his own.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |title=Cardin First Struck Gold with Suit Made for Dior |journal=The New York Times |date=1958-08-27 |page=22 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1958/08/07/archives/cardin-first-struck-gold-with-suit-made-for-dior.html |access-date=2023-04-05 |quote=...Cardin...designed one of the most successful models...a suit called 'Bar,' which buyers the world over bought.}}</ref>
{{stack|[[File:Dior denver art1.jpg|thumb|The "Bar Suit" on display at the [[Denver Art Museum]] (2019)]]}}
Cardin moved to Paris in 1945 after World War II. There, he studied architecture, briefly pursued an acting career,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Obrist |first1=Hans Ulrich |title=The Legendary Pierre Cardin |journal=System |date=2014-07-01 |volume=2 |issue=4 |url=https://system-magazine.com/issues/issue-4/the-legendary-pierre-cardin |access-date=2025-03-06 |quote='...[A]s the end of the war arrived I returned to Paris...I wanted to become an actor'.}}</ref> and met [[Jean Cocteau]], who employed him to do costumes for his 1946 film [[Beauty and the Beast (1946 film)|''Beauty and the Beast''/''La Belle et la Bête'']].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Obrist |first1=Hans Ulrich |title=The Legendary Pierre Cardin |journal=System |date=2014-07-01 |volume=2 |issue=4 |url=https://system-magazine.com/issues/issue-4/the-legendary-pierre-cardin |access-date=2025-03-06 |quote='...I met other personalities who introduced me to Jean Cocteau. I was employed by him and I did the costumes for ''La Belle et la Bête''. That was the first money I earned...That was how I started in couture, via the theatre'.}}</ref> He worked with the fashion house of [[Jeanne Paquin|Paquin]], then [[Elsa Schiaparelli]], until [[Jean Cocteau]] and [[Christian Berard]] introduced him to [[Christian Dior]] and Dior made him head of his tailleure atelier in 1947,<ref>{{cite journal |title=Cardin First Struck Gold with Suit Made for Dior |journal=The New York Times |date=1958-08-27 |page=22 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1958/08/07/archives/cardin-first-struck-gold-with-suit-made-for-dior.html |access-date=2023-04-05 |quote=Cocteau and Berard...introduced...Cardin to [Dior,] who was...preparing his first fashion collection...Cardin designed, cut, and made a coat and a suit. He showed them to Dior, who...enrolled him on his team.}}</ref> but he was denied work at [[Balenciaga]].<ref>{{cite web|last=FashionUnited|date=2014-11-12 |title=Eternal futurist of fashion Pierre Cardin opens new museum at 92 |url= https://fashionunited.uk/news/culture/eternal-futurist-of-fashion-pierre-cardin-opens-new-museum-at-92/2014111214535 |access-date=2020-12-29 |website=fashionunited.uk|language=en-gb}}</ref> While at Dior, he contributed the popular Bar suit to Dior's inaugural 1947 "Corolle" collection, already displaying the deft tailoring that he would be known for in later years.<ref>{{cite journal |title=Dior: Fashion's Ten-Year Wonder Leaves Couture Leadership a Question |journal=The New York Times |date=1957-10-25 |page=41 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1957/10/25/archives/cardin-laroche-givenchy-called-likely-successors-dior-fashions.html?searchResultPosition=3 |quote=Pierre Cardin is Dior's protégé. He got his first big break in 1947, when he helped Dior design the sensational New Look. Since then he has been the only one of Dior's assistants to start a couture house of his own.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |title=Cardin First Struck Gold with Suit Made for Dior |journal=The New York Times |date=1958-08-27 |page=22 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1958/08/07/archives/cardin-first-struck-gold-with-suit-made-for-dior.html |access-date=2023-04-05 |quote=...Cardin...designed one of the most successful models...a suit called 'Bar,' which buyers the world over bought.}}</ref>


===1950s===
===1950s===
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Though Cardin's womenswear of the early sixties hadn't reached the [[Christian Dior|Dior]] levels of prestige predicted for him in the late fifties,<ref>{{cite journal |title=Portrait of a Designer |journal=The New York Times |date=1961-07-25 |page=30 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1961/07/25/archives/portrait-of-a-designer-cardin-says-he-provides-keyboard-on-which.html?searchResultPosition=5 |quote=M. Cardin did not succeed Dior and...despite what has been assessed as great talent, especially in his tailoring of suits and his choice of colors, he has still to win many of the top buyers.}}</ref> his work continued to be well received in Europe. In the US, however, his women's clothes were still considered overly avant-garde and sales remained low.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Donovan |first1=Carrie |title=Paris Collections: Marc Bohan and Pierre Cardin Among Top Designers |journal=The New York Times |date=1961-02-28 |page=28 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1961/02/28/archives/paris-collections-marc-bohan-and-pierre-cardin-among-top-designers.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=Pierre Cardin is one of Paris'[s] most avant-garde couturiers....[H]is styles are sometimes labeled 'too advanced,' often 'unwearable'.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Talk on Couture Shows Draws Stylish Audience |journal=The New York Times |date=1964-08-11 |page=28 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1964/08/11/archives/talk-on-couture-shows-draws-stylish-audience.html?searchResultPosition=18 |quote=...[Fashion columnist William J.] Cunningham...said that although Cardin's designs were influential in Europe, they did not win favor with American buyers or press representatives.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Couture Copies in Debut Here |journal=The New York Times |date=1964-03-06 |page=34 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1964/03/06/archives/couture-copies-in-debut-here.html?searchResultPosition=7 |quote=Macy's was the only store to buy models at Cardin...}}</ref>
Though Cardin's womenswear of the early sixties hadn't reached the [[Christian Dior|Dior]] levels of prestige predicted for him in the late fifties,<ref>{{cite journal |title=Portrait of a Designer |journal=The New York Times |date=1961-07-25 |page=30 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1961/07/25/archives/portrait-of-a-designer-cardin-says-he-provides-keyboard-on-which.html?searchResultPosition=5 |quote=M. Cardin did not succeed Dior and...despite what has been assessed as great talent, especially in his tailoring of suits and his choice of colors, he has still to win many of the top buyers.}}</ref> his work continued to be well received in Europe. In the US, however, his women's clothes were still considered overly avant-garde and sales remained low.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Donovan |first1=Carrie |title=Paris Collections: Marc Bohan and Pierre Cardin Among Top Designers |journal=The New York Times |date=1961-02-28 |page=28 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1961/02/28/archives/paris-collections-marc-bohan-and-pierre-cardin-among-top-designers.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=Pierre Cardin is one of Paris'[s] most avant-garde couturiers....[H]is styles are sometimes labeled 'too advanced,' often 'unwearable'.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Talk on Couture Shows Draws Stylish Audience |journal=The New York Times |date=1964-08-11 |page=28 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1964/08/11/archives/talk-on-couture-shows-draws-stylish-audience.html?searchResultPosition=18 |quote=...[Fashion columnist William J.] Cunningham...said that although Cardin's designs were influential in Europe, they did not win favor with American buyers or press representatives.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Couture Copies in Debut Here |journal=The New York Times |date=1964-03-06 |page=34 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1964/03/06/archives/couture-copies-in-debut-here.html?searchResultPosition=7 |quote=Macy's was the only store to buy models at Cardin...}}</ref>
Cardin traveled to the [[Soviet Union]] for the first time in 1963, two years after the country had first sent [[Astronaut#Cosmonaut|cosmonauts]] into orbit and the year [[Valentina Tereshkova]] became the first woman to enter outer space. Cardin was directly inspired by seeing Tereshkova in her cosmonaut jumpsuit and helmet and would soon begin introducing into his work elements of Space Age styles.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Kuprina |first1=Nadya |title=How Pierre Cardin Fell in Love with Soviet Russia |journal=Russia Beyond |date=2020-12-30 |url=https://www.rbth.com/arts/333239-pierre-cardin-ussr-russia |access-date=2025-06-06 |quote=His first trip was in...1963, as part of a delegation of cultural workers....He openly admitted that his revolutionary female outfits resembling spacesuits were conceived in his mind from photographs of Valentina Tereshkova, the first woman in space. His Space collection, inspired by Yuri Gagarin’s flight, became emblematic of his work and the development of 1960s fashion as a whole.}}</ref>


Possible first signs of Space Age influence appeared in fall of 1963, when Cardin joined other designers in showing a more youthful silhouette consisting at base of hip-length blouson-like tops/jackets over narrow skirts hitting at the top of the knee worn with muffled collars, helmet-like or hood-like hats and caps, tights, and flat boots,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Peterson |first1=Patricia |title=Paris Designers Favor Lean and Natural Look |journal=The New York Times |date=1963-08-05 |page=F39 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1963/08/05/archives/paris-designers-favor-lean-and-natural-look-sportswear-in-paris.html?searchResultPosition=30 |quote=...[T]he look of the new clothes is lean and natural...Necks are muffled...or are emphasized by upturned collars, cowls, or turtlenecks...Long-sleeved tunics and pullovers abound....Skirts are...short...Legs are covered by...boots and heavy stockings...}}</ref> with Cardin's boots reaching the knee.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Peterson |first1=Patricia |title=Cardin's Youthful Styles are the Highlight of a Busy Day in Paris |journal=The New York Times |date=1963-07-27 |page=18 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1963/07/27/archives/cardins-youthful-styles-are-the-highlight-of-a-busy-day-in-paris.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=His coats and suits were snappy and young...Collars up and with high kid boots as snug as gloves...Jackets pulled down like long sweaters over the hips. Hats were either caps or boaters..... Along with the rest of Paris, Cardin muffled the neck. There were out and out turtlenecks, soft and crushy, or cadet collars, stiff and hard.}}</ref> It was in this collection that he would first present the geometric cutouts that would become widespread by 1966. Cardin's 1963 cutouts were applied to tunics worn over slim dresses.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Howell |first1=Georgina |title=In Vogue: Sixty Years of Celebrities and Fashion from British Vogue |date=1978 |publisher=Penguin Books Ltd. |location=Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England |isbn=0-14-00-4955-X |page=280 |chapter=1963 |quote=From Paris,...Cardin's cut-out smocks baring the skin or the close-fitting dress beneath.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Peterson |first1=Patricia |title=Cardin's Youthful Styles are the Highlight of a Busy Day in Paris |journal=The New York Times |date=1963-07-27 |page=18 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1963/07/27/archives/cardins-youthful-styles-are-the-highlight-of-a-busy-day-in-paris.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=Cardin also played with a cut-out theme. A dress in tangerine orange showed through the round holes of a perforated gray tunic.}}</ref>
Possible first signs of Space Age influence appeared in fall of 1963, when Cardin joined other designers in showing a more youthful silhouette consisting at base of hip-length blouson-like tops/jackets over narrow skirts hitting at the top of the knee worn with muffled collars, helmet-like or hood-like hats and caps, tights, and flat boots,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Peterson |first1=Patricia |title=Paris Designers Favor Lean and Natural Look |journal=The New York Times |date=1963-08-05 |page=F39 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1963/08/05/archives/paris-designers-favor-lean-and-natural-look-sportswear-in-paris.html?searchResultPosition=30 |quote=...[T]he look of the new clothes is lean and natural...Necks are muffled...or are emphasized by upturned collars, cowls, or turtlenecks...Long-sleeved tunics and pullovers abound....Skirts are...short...Legs are covered by...boots and heavy stockings...}}</ref> with Cardin's boots reaching the knee.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Peterson |first1=Patricia |title=Cardin's Youthful Styles are the Highlight of a Busy Day in Paris |journal=The New York Times |date=1963-07-27 |page=18 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1963/07/27/archives/cardins-youthful-styles-are-the-highlight-of-a-busy-day-in-paris.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=His coats and suits were snappy and young...Collars up and with high kid boots as snug as gloves...Jackets pulled down like long sweaters over the hips. Hats were either caps or boaters..... Along with the rest of Paris, Cardin muffled the neck. There were out and out turtlenecks, soft and crushy, or cadet collars, stiff and hard.}}</ref> It was in this collection that he would first present the geometric cutouts that would become widespread by 1966. Cardin's 1963 cutouts were applied to tunics worn over slim dresses.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Howell |first1=Georgina |title=In Vogue: Sixty Years of Celebrities and Fashion from British Vogue |date=1978 |publisher=Penguin Books Ltd. |location=Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England |isbn=0-14-00-4955-X |page=280 |chapter=1963 |quote=From Paris,...Cardin's cut-out smocks baring the skin or the close-fitting dress beneath.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Peterson |first1=Patricia |title=Cardin's Youthful Styles are the Highlight of a Busy Day in Paris |journal=The New York Times |date=1963-07-27 |page=18 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1963/07/27/archives/cardins-youthful-styles-are-the-highlight-of-a-busy-day-in-paris.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=Cardin also played with a cut-out theme. A dress in tangerine orange showed through the round holes of a perforated gray tunic.}}</ref>
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Cardin resigned from the [[Fédération française de la couture|Chambre Syndicale]] in 1966 and began showing his collections in his own venue.<ref name="Agnauta"/> He also designed uniforms for [[Pakistan International Airlines]], which were introduced from 1966 to 1971 and became an instant hit.<ref name="Kureishi">{{cite news|url= http://archives.dawn.com/weekly/dmag/archive/030504/dmag7.htm |title=Pierre Cardin comes to PIA |journal=Dawn Magazine |first=Omar |last=Kureishi |date=4 May 2003 |access-date=26 March 2012}}</ref>
Cardin resigned from the [[Fédération française de la couture|Chambre Syndicale]] in 1966 and began showing his collections in his own venue.<ref name="Agnauta"/> He also designed uniforms for [[Pakistan International Airlines]], which were introduced from 1966 to 1971 and became an instant hit.<ref name="Kureishi">{{cite news|url= http://archives.dawn.com/weekly/dmag/archive/030504/dmag7.htm |title=Pierre Cardin comes to PIA |journal=Dawn Magazine |first=Omar |last=Kureishi |date=4 May 2003 |access-date=26 March 2012}}</ref>


Cardin had entered his Space Age phase by 1966, as had much of the rest of the fashion world following [[André Courrèges]]'s landmark 1964 and '65 collections and the widespread influence of Britain's [[Mod (subculture)|Mod]] culture.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Howell |first1=Georgina |title=In Vogue: Sixty Years of Celebrities and Fashion from British Vogue |date=1978 |publisher=Penguin Books Ltd. |location=Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England |isbn=0-14-00-4955-X |page=256 |chapter=1960-1969: The Revolutionary Sixties |quote=In the middle sixties ''Vogue'' ran headlines like, 'The World Suddenly Wants to Copy the Way We Look. In New York it's the London Look, In Paris it's Le Style Anglais....English girls now....can enjoy watching others copy them'.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Bender |first1=Marylin |title=Teen-Agers Put Mods at the Top of Fashion Poll |journal=The New York Times |date=1965-06-03 |page=38 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1965/06/03/archives/teenagers-put-mods-at-the-top-of-fashion-poll.html?searchResultPosition=24 |quote=For the American teen-ager, fashion begins with the British Mods [and] Courrèges looms high on the horizon...These are some of the results of a survey conducted by ''Seventeen'' magazine among girls 16 to 18 years old...Although this age group is not particularly designer-conscious, the names of Mary Quant (sometimes designated the mother of the Mod movement) and Jane & Jane are familiar and respected because of the importance of the British Mods to girls of high school age...}}</ref> His menswear collections now also included a Cosmonaut or Cosmocorps line characterized by jumpsuits, hip-belted tunics, and tights-like or flared trousers, all with prominent, often ring-pulled zippers and ultra-modern boots that sometimes rose to the knee.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Bender |first1=Marylin |title=Maxi? To Cardin, C'est Bon |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-10-14 |page=42 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/10/14/archives/maxi-to-cardin-cest-bon.html?searchResultPosition=5 |quote='[Cardin] is the space couturier,' said Mrs. [Nicole] Alphand, referring to the cosmonaut style introduced for men and women three years ago [1966].}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Barry |first1=Joseph |title=Cardin Discusses – 'La Mode Masculine'  |journal=The New York Times |date=1968-04-21 |page=84 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1968/04/21/archives/cardin-discusses-la-mode-masculine.html?searchResultPosition=3 |quote=...'I propose the "Cosmocorps",' [says Cardin]...The male models in 'Cosmocorps'...reminded some of frogmen, others of miners and skindivers, though outerspacemen seems to be what Cardin may have had in mind.}}</ref>
Cardin had entered his Space Age phase by 1966, as had much of the rest of the fashion world following the launch of the [[Soviet Union]]'s space program, [[André Courrèges]]'s landmark 1964 and '65 collections, and the widespread influence of Britain's [[Mod (subculture)|Mod]] culture.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Howell |first1=Georgina |title=In Vogue: Sixty Years of Celebrities and Fashion from British Vogue |date=1978 |publisher=Penguin Books Ltd. |location=Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England |isbn=0-14-00-4955-X |page=256 |chapter=1960-1969: The Revolutionary Sixties |quote=In the middle sixties ''Vogue'' ran headlines like, 'The World Suddenly Wants to Copy the Way We Look. In New York it's the London Look, In Paris it's Le Style Anglais....English girls now....can enjoy watching others copy them'.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Bender |first1=Marylin |title=Teen-Agers Put Mods at the Top of Fashion Poll |journal=The New York Times |date=1965-06-03 |page=38 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1965/06/03/archives/teenagers-put-mods-at-the-top-of-fashion-poll.html?searchResultPosition=24 |quote=For the American teen-ager, fashion begins with the British Mods [and] Courrèges looms high on the horizon...These are some of the results of a survey conducted by ''Seventeen'' magazine among girls 16 to 18 years old...Although this age group is not particularly designer-conscious, the names of Mary Quant (sometimes designated the mother of the Mod movement) and Jane & Jane are familiar and respected because of the importance of the British Mods to girls of high school age...}}</ref> His menswear collections now also included a Cosmonaut or Cosmocorps line characterized by jumpsuits, hip-belted tunics, and tights-like or flared trousers, all with prominent, often ring-pulled zippers and ultra-modern boots that sometimes rose to the knee.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Bender |first1=Marylin |title=Maxi? To Cardin, C'est Bon |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-10-14 |page=42 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/10/14/archives/maxi-to-cardin-cest-bon.html?searchResultPosition=5 |quote='[Cardin] is the space couturier,' said Mrs. [Nicole] Alphand, referring to the cosmonaut style introduced for men and women three years ago [1966].}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Barry |first1=Joseph |title=Cardin Discusses – 'La Mode Masculine'  |journal=The New York Times |date=1968-04-21 |page=84 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1968/04/21/archives/cardin-discusses-la-mode-masculine.html?searchResultPosition=3 |quote=...'I propose the "Cosmocorps",' [says Cardin]...The male models in 'Cosmocorps'...reminded some of frogmen, others of miners and skindivers, though outerspacemen seems to be what Cardin may have had in mind.}}</ref>


His Space Age-period womenswear featured mini lengths,<ref>{{cite book |last1=Hasson |first1=Rochelle |title=The 1967 World Book Year Book: A Review of the Events of 1966 |publisher=Field Enterprises Educational Corporation |page=338 |chapter=Fashion |quote=Paris designers Yves St. Laurent and Cardin not only raised hems to above the knees but also uplifted entire silhouettes of dresses for styles with high cuts, narrow shoulders, and gliding but controlled cone shapes.}}</ref> extensive cutouts, large geometric figures on simple shift dresses, geometric necklines, rolled hems and collars, and cutaway shoulders.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Mulvagh |first1=Jane |title=Vogue History of 20th Century Fashion |date=1988 |publisher=Viking, the Penguin Group |location=London, England |isbn=0-670-80172-0 |page=244 |chapter=1957-1967 |quote=Pierre Cardin experimented with geometric clothes in his Eve boutique, perfecting his fluid line and acidic colors by the mid-sixties...}}</ref> He was the leading advocate of cutouts<ref>{{cite book |last1=Taylor |first1=Angela |title=Collier's 1967 Yearbook Covering the Year 1966 |publisher=Crowell Collier and MacMillan, Inc. |page=210 |chapter=Fashion |quote=Led by Paris designer Pierre Cardin, designers began cutting holes everywhere.}}</ref> and prominent zippers<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Now a Cardin Label is for 2-Year-Olds |journal=The New York Times |date=1967-05-02 |page=50 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1967/05/02/archives/now-a-cardin-label-is-for-2yearolds.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=Cardin wasn't the first in France to use the big, working man's zipper, but he is the man who made the idea famous.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Chanel and Cardin Share Spotlight in Paris |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-07-30 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/07/30/archives/chanel-and-cardin-share-spotlight-in-paris.html?searchResultPosition=14 |quote=There are industrial zippers on suits and dresses; Cardin even puts them on mink windbreakers...}}</ref> as those details peaked among designers in 1966. His cutouts included bare midriffs overlain with geometric shapes.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Pierre Cardin: Always a Leap Ahead |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-01-29 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/01/29/archives/pierre-cardin-always-a-leap-ahead.html?searchResultPosition=27 |quote=Two-piece dresses with low hipster skirts and loose little tops bared the midriff except in front, where a diamond-shaped insert linked the two.}}</ref> He favored geometric diamond shapes,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Pierre Cardin: Always a Leap Ahead |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-01-29 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/01/29/archives/pierre-cardin-always-a-leap-ahead.html?searchResultPosition=27 |quote=One of Cardin's favorite necklines for day and evening dresses has cut-out diamond-shaped design.}}</ref> jackets that fell to a low triangular peak at the bottom of the front closure,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Chanel and Cardin Share Spotlight in Paris |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-07-30 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/07/30/archives/chanel-and-cardin-share-spotlight-in-paris.html?searchResultPosition=14 |quote=...Cardin showed...suits with jacket hems forming a V in front...}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Castillo, Cardin and Chanel Present 3 Views of Spring, 1967 |journal=The New York Times |date=1967-01-28 |page=R34 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1967/01/28/archives/castillo-cardin-and-chanel-present-3-views-of-spring-1967.html?searchResultPosition=1 |quote=Suits often have the hems of jackets cut in triangles or half moons.}}</ref> T-bar cutout necklines,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Chanel and Cardin Share Spotlight in Paris |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-07-30 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/07/30/archives/chanel-and-cardin-share-spotlight-in-paris.html?searchResultPosition=14 |quote=...Cardin showed...his usual T-bar or cutout necklines.}}</ref> metal neck rings anchoring shift dresses,<ref>{{cite book |last1=Howell |first1=Georgina |title=In Vogue: Sixty Years of Celebrities and Fashion from British Vogue |date=1978 |publisher=Penguin Books Ltd. |location=Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England |isbn=0-14-00-4955-X |page=292 |chapter=1966 |quote=Cardin's dresses are half sculptures, little shifts suspended from ring collars, or cut-out discs and squares.}}</ref> and the large-scale targets, circles, and triangles that were popular at the time across simple A-line shift minidresses.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Pierre Cardin: Always a Leap Ahead |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-01-29 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/01/29/archives/pierre-cardin-always-a-leap-ahead.html?searchResultPosition=27 |quote=....[H]is new spring-summer collection...is full of not-so-new triangles, bull's-eyes and cutouts...}}</ref> That year, he showed tights and shoes that matched his miniskirts, often having them all exactly the same color, a combination he felt made mini lengths more wearable for women of various ages.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Pierre Cardin: Always a Leap Ahead |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-01-29 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/01/29/archives/pierre-cardin-always-a-leap-ahead.html?searchResultPosition=27 |quote=A red suit...comes out with red stockings and red shoes. That is the way he thinks his very short skirts look best.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Bender |first1=Marylin |title=Cardin Here for Busy Week |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-05-10 |page=40 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/05/10/archives/cardin-here-for-busy-week.html?searchResultPosition=13 |quote=Women of any age and shape can take short skirts, Mr. Cardin persisted, if they wear them with stockings to match the dresses. 'The stockings must be heavy, not light,' he warned.}}</ref> He also introduced the combination of jumper minidress over a bodystocking or over turtleneck and tights, a functional dress scheme also favored by other designers of the period and one that Cardin would continue to show well into the seventies. His jumper minidresses of 1966 often featured deeply cutaway shoulders, geometric cutouts, and suspender-like straps somewhat reminiscent of the suspender minis [[André Courrèges|Courrèges]] had shown in 1965. Colors were vivid and graphic.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Pierre Cardin: Always a Leap Ahead |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-01-29 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/01/29/archives/pierre-cardin-always-a-leap-ahead.html?searchResultPosition=27 |quote=A dress...in chevron strips of white, hot pink and bitter green could be this year's Mondrian....[S]leeveless short white crepe dress...dominated by a huge bull's-eye in orange, yellow and black.}}</ref> Shoes were flat and square-toed in the dominant style of the time.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Chanel and Cardin Share Spotlight in Paris |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-07-30 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/07/30/archives/chanel-and-cardin-share-spotlight-in-paris.html?searchResultPosition=14 |quote=...Cardin showed...his usual square-toed, flat-heeled shoes.}}</ref> Dome-shaped hats and geometric, flaring, helmet-like headwear that covered the entire head except for the eyes and resembled similar styles shown by [[Rudi Gernreich]] in 1964<ref>{{cite book |last1=Howell |first1=Georgina |title=In Vogue: Sixty Years of Celebrities and Fashion from British Vogue |date=1978 |publisher=Penguin Books Ltd. |location=Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England |isbn=0-14-00-4955-X |page=286 |chapter=1964 |quote=Rudi Gernreich...turns to...felt yashmaks and suede balaclavas.}}</ref> completed Cardin's 1966 Space Age look. He made his penchant for scalloped edges fit the new geometric mode by making it prominent and oversized on the hem or the leading edge of asymmetric jacket closures that often fastened on the far side, as Cardin had long preferred, but now were closed with tabs.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Pierre Cardin: Always a Leap Ahead |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-01-29 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/01/29/archives/pierre-cardin-always-a-leap-ahead.html?searchResultPosition=27 |quote=Cardin's suit jackets begin to button way over on one shoulder with a little tab: they have jagged closings and scalloped or half-moon cutouts on the bottom.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Chanel and Cardin Share Spotlight in Paris |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-07-30 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/07/30/archives/chanel-and-cardin-share-spotlight-in-paris.html?searchResultPosition=14 |quote=Daytime coats still have scalloped or cutout shapes in the front where they button.}}</ref> Fabrics were often the substantial double-faced ones of the period also favored by [[André Courrèges|Courrèges]].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Pierre Cardin: Always a Leap Ahead |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-01-29 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/01/29/archives/pierre-cardin-always-a-leap-ahead.html?searchResultPosition=27 |quote=There are plenty of double-faced coats...}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Winkelman |first1=Anne K. |title=Standard Reference Encyclopedia Yearbook 1967: Events of 1966 |publisher=Standard Reference Works Publishing Company, Inc. |location=New York, NY, USA |pages=152, 153 |chapter=Fashion |quote=One of the spring outfits from Pierre Cardin is a two-piece dress in white wool gabardine, the top having a stand-up collar and a zipper down the front.}}</ref> In 1966, he became one of the first designers to include purses in a couture show, his made by [[Gucci]].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Pierre Cardin: Always a Leap Ahead |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-01-29 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/01/29/archives/pierre-cardin-always-a-leap-ahead.html?searchResultPosition=27 |quote=Cardin showed handbags – possibly the first time any couturier has – ...done just for him by Gucci.}}</ref>
His Space Age-period womenswear of 1966 featured mini lengths,<ref>{{cite book |last1=Hasson |first1=Rochelle |title=The 1967 World Book Year Book: A Review of the Events of 1966 |publisher=Field Enterprises Educational Corporation |page=338 |chapter=Fashion |quote=Paris designers Yves St. Laurent and Cardin not only raised hems to above the knees but also uplifted entire silhouettes of dresses for styles with high cuts, narrow shoulders, and gliding but controlled cone shapes.}}</ref> extensive cutouts, geometric necklines, rolled hems and collars, and cutaway shoulders.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Mulvagh |first1=Jane |title=Vogue History of 20th Century Fashion |date=1988 |publisher=Viking, the Penguin Group |location=London, England |isbn=0-670-80172-0 |page=244 |chapter=1957-1967 |quote=Pierre Cardin experimented with geometric clothes in his Eve boutique, perfecting his fluid line and acidic colors by the mid-sixties...}}</ref> He was the leading advocate of cutouts<ref>{{cite book |last1=Taylor |first1=Angela |title=Collier's 1967 Yearbook Covering the Year 1966 |publisher=Crowell Collier and MacMillan, Inc. |page=210 |chapter=Fashion |quote=Led by Paris designer Pierre Cardin, designers began cutting holes everywhere.}}</ref> and prominent zippers<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Now a Cardin Label is for 2-Year-Olds |journal=The New York Times |date=1967-05-02 |page=50 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1967/05/02/archives/now-a-cardin-label-is-for-2yearolds.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=Cardin wasn't the first in France to use the big, working man's zipper, but he is the man who made the idea famous.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Chanel and Cardin Share Spotlight in Paris |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-07-30 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/07/30/archives/chanel-and-cardin-share-spotlight-in-paris.html?searchResultPosition=14 |quote=There are industrial zippers on suits and dresses; Cardin even puts them on mink windbreakers...}}</ref> as those details peaked among designers in 1966. His cutouts included bare midriffs overlain with geometric shapes.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Pierre Cardin: Always a Leap Ahead |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-01-29 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/01/29/archives/pierre-cardin-always-a-leap-ahead.html?searchResultPosition=27 |quote=Two-piece dresses with low hipster skirts and loose little tops bared the midriff except in front, where a diamond-shaped insert linked the two.}}</ref> He liked geometric diamond forms,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Pierre Cardin: Always a Leap Ahead |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-01-29 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/01/29/archives/pierre-cardin-always-a-leap-ahead.html?searchResultPosition=27 |quote=One of Cardin's favorite necklines for day and evening dresses has cut-out diamond-shaped design.}}</ref> jackets that fell to a low triangular peak at the bottom of the front closure,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Chanel and Cardin Share Spotlight in Paris |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-07-30 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/07/30/archives/chanel-and-cardin-share-spotlight-in-paris.html?searchResultPosition=14 |quote=...Cardin showed...suits with jacket hems forming a V in front...}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Castillo, Cardin and Chanel Present 3 Views of Spring, 1967 |journal=The New York Times |date=1967-01-28 |page=R34 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1967/01/28/archives/castillo-cardin-and-chanel-present-3-views-of-spring-1967.html?searchResultPosition=1 |quote=Suits often have the hems of jackets cut in triangles or half moons.}}</ref> T-bar cutout necklines,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Chanel and Cardin Share Spotlight in Paris |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-07-30 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/07/30/archives/chanel-and-cardin-share-spotlight-in-paris.html?searchResultPosition=14 |quote=...Cardin showed...his usual T-bar or cutout necklines.}}</ref> metal neck rings anchoring shift dresses,<ref>{{cite book |last1=Howell |first1=Georgina |title=In Vogue: Sixty Years of Celebrities and Fashion from British Vogue |date=1978 |publisher=Penguin Books Ltd. |location=Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England |isbn=0-14-00-4955-X |page=292 |chapter=1966 |quote=Cardin's dresses are half sculptures, little shifts suspended from ring collars, or cut-out discs and squares.}}</ref> and the large-scale targets, circles, and triangles that were popular at the time across simple A-line shift minidresses.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Pierre Cardin: Always a Leap Ahead |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-01-29 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/01/29/archives/pierre-cardin-always-a-leap-ahead.html?searchResultPosition=27 |quote=....[H]is new spring-summer collection...is full of not-so-new triangles, bull's-eyes and cutouts...}}</ref> That year, he showed tights and shoes that matched his miniskirts, often having them all exactly the same color, a combination he felt made mini lengths more wearable for women of various ages.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Pierre Cardin: Always a Leap Ahead |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-01-29 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/01/29/archives/pierre-cardin-always-a-leap-ahead.html?searchResultPosition=27 |quote=A red suit...comes out with red stockings and red shoes. That is the way he thinks his very short skirts look best.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Bender |first1=Marylin |title=Cardin Here for Busy Week |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-05-10 |page=40 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/05/10/archives/cardin-here-for-busy-week.html?searchResultPosition=13 |quote=Women of any age and shape can take short skirts, Mr. Cardin persisted, if they wear them with stockings to match the dresses. 'The stockings must be heavy, not light,' he warned.}}</ref> He also introduced the combination of jumper minidress over a bodystocking or over turtleneck and tights, a functional dress scheme also favored by other designers of the period and one that Cardin would continue to show well into the seventies. His jumper minidresses of 1966 often featured deeply cutaway shoulders, geometric cutouts, and suspender-like straps somewhat reminiscent of the suspender minis [[André Courrèges|Courrèges]] had shown in 1965. Colors were vivid and graphic.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Pierre Cardin: Always a Leap Ahead |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-01-29 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/01/29/archives/pierre-cardin-always-a-leap-ahead.html?searchResultPosition=27 |quote=A dress...in chevron strips of white, hot pink and bitter green could be this year's Mondrian....[S]leeveless short white crepe dress...dominated by a huge bull's-eye in orange, yellow and black.}}</ref> Shoes were flat and square-toed in the dominant style of the time.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Chanel and Cardin Share Spotlight in Paris |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-07-30 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/07/30/archives/chanel-and-cardin-share-spotlight-in-paris.html?searchResultPosition=14 |quote=...Cardin showed...his usual square-toed, flat-heeled shoes.}}</ref> Cardin's 1966 Space Age look was completed by dome-shaped hats and flaring, helmet-like, geometric headwear that covered the entire head except for the eyes and resembled similar styles shown by [[Rudi Gernreich]] in 1964.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Howell |first1=Georgina |title=In Vogue: Sixty Years of Celebrities and Fashion from British Vogue |date=1978 |publisher=Penguin Books Ltd. |location=Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England |isbn=0-14-00-4955-X |page=286 |chapter=1964 |quote=Rudi Gernreich...turns to...felt yashmaks and suede balaclavas.}}</ref> He made his penchant for scalloped edges fit the new geometric mode by making the scallops prominent and oversized on the hem or the leading edge of asymmetric jacket closures that often fastened on the far side, as Cardin had long preferred, but now were closed with tabs.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Pierre Cardin: Always a Leap Ahead |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-01-29 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/01/29/archives/pierre-cardin-always-a-leap-ahead.html?searchResultPosition=27 |quote=Cardin's suit jackets begin to button way over on one shoulder with a little tab: they have jagged closings and scalloped or half-moon cutouts on the bottom.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Chanel and Cardin Share Spotlight in Paris |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-07-30 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/07/30/archives/chanel-and-cardin-share-spotlight-in-paris.html?searchResultPosition=14 |quote=Daytime coats still have scalloped or cutout shapes in the front where they button.}}</ref> Fabrics were often the substantial double-faced ones of the period also favored by [[André Courrèges|Courrèges]].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Pierre Cardin: Always a Leap Ahead |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-01-29 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/01/29/archives/pierre-cardin-always-a-leap-ahead.html?searchResultPosition=27 |quote=There are plenty of double-faced coats...}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Winkelman |first1=Anne K. |title=Standard Reference Encyclopedia Yearbook 1967: Events of 1966 |publisher=Standard Reference Works Publishing Company, Inc. |location=New York, NY, USA |pages=152, 153 |chapter=Fashion |quote=One of the spring outfits from Pierre Cardin is a two-piece dress in white wool gabardine, the top having a stand-up collar and a zipper down the front.}}</ref> In 1966, he became one of the first designers to include purses in a couture show, his made by [[Gucci]].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Pierre Cardin: Always a Leap Ahead |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-01-29 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/01/29/archives/pierre-cardin-always-a-leap-ahead.html?searchResultPosition=27 |quote=Cardin showed handbags – possibly the first time any couturier has – ...done just for him by Gucci.}}</ref>


It was during this period that he began to be known for capes and ponchos, having shown capelet collars for a long time. He made them look futuristic via geometric circular or square armholes<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Chanel and Cardin Share Spotlight in Paris |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-07-30 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/07/30/archives/chanel-and-cardin-share-spotlight-in-paris.html?searchResultPosition=14 |quote=...Cardin showed capes with round portals where the arms slip through...}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=The Spring and Summer Look a la Cardin, Givenchy and Gres |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-02-01 |page=18 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/02/01/archives/the-spring-and-summer-look-a-la-cardin-givenchy-and-gres.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=...armholes that were cut like low little portholes or squared...}}</ref> and precisely curvilinear arches cut into the sides for the arms.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin's Collection Has Familiar Look, Both Pretty and Sexy |journal=The New York Times |date=1967-07-29 |page=FS14 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1967/07/29/archives/cardins-collection-has-familiar-look-both-pretty-and-sexy.html?searchResultPosition=5 |quote=The new Cardin cape, in long and short versions, has a high, cut-out arch where the arms go.}}</ref> Cape and poncho sleeves were also shown.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin's Collection Has Familiar Look, Both Pretty and Sexy |journal=The New York Times |date=1967-07-29 |page=FS14 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1967/07/29/archives/cardins-collection-has-familiar-look-both-pretty-and-sexy.html?searchResultPosition=5 |quote=...the one-shoulder cape-sleeve dress with the tilted hem...}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=The Spring and Summer Look a la Cardin, Givenchy and Gres |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-02-01 |page=18 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/02/01/archives/the-spring-and-summer-look-a-la-cardin-givenchy-and-gres.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=...poncho sleeves...}}</ref> He adapted his love of asymmetric hems, earlier a part of his 1930s look, to the new Space Age period by showing hemlines that were shorter on one side than the other, sometimes called a tilted hem, seen especially on evening dresses;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=The Spring and Summer Look a la Cardin, Givenchy and Gres |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-02-01 |page=18 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/02/01/archives/the-spring-and-summer-look-a-la-cardin-givenchy-and-gres.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=Here are some of the Cardinisms that made the last five years [back to 1964] such good ones: ...tilted hems on evening dresses...}}</ref> miniskirts longer in the front than in the back;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin's Collection Has Familiar Look, Both Pretty and Sexy |journal=The New York Times |date=1967-07-29 |page=FS14 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1967/07/29/archives/cardins-collection-has-familiar-look-both-pretty-and-sexy.html?searchResultPosition=5 |quote=A batch of Lurex dresses have strips instead of skirts, which are shorter in back than in front.}}</ref> skirts consisting of strips, panels, and loops of fabric of various lengths and widths,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin and Givenchy Showings Present a Study in Contrasts |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-08-02 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/08/02/archives/cardin-and-givenchy-showings-present-a-study-in-contrasts.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=...dresses that are nearly all doubled-up loops that have a fringey look...}}</ref> some petal-like;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=The Spring and Summer Look a la Cardin, Givenchy and Gres |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-02-01 |page=18 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/02/01/archives/the-spring-and-summer-look-a-la-cardin-givenchy-and-gres.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=...petal hems...}}</ref> pleated skirts with fluted hems that curled up and down;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=The Spring and Summer Look a la Cardin, Givenchy and Gres |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-02-01 |page=18 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/02/01/archives/the-spring-and-summer-look-a-la-cardin-givenchy-and-gres.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=...all-over pleated dresses with wavy hemlines...}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=It Will Be Cardin, but a Subdued Cardin |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-05-03 |page=26 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/05/03/archives/it-will-be-cardin-but-a-subdued-cardin.html?searchResultPosition=3 |quote=...[H]emlines have an upward flip at intervals so the pleats 'spread out like a flower'.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=It Will Be Cardin, but a Subdued Cardin |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-05-03 |page=26 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/05/03/archives/it-will-be-cardin-but-a-subdued-cardin.html?searchResultPosition=3 |quote=The many pleated dresses, in chiffons as well as wool crepes, certainly move.}}</ref> and other unusual forms. These trends became particularly notable beginning in 1967.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Nemy |first1=Enid |title=Cardin Boutique for Men at Bonwit's Acquires Sister Shop |journal=The New York Times |date=1967-09-13 |page=F50 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1967/09/13/archives/cardin-boutique-for-men-at-bonwits-acquires-sister-shop.html?searchResultPosition=6 |quote=...[H]ighlights of the Cardin collection...uneven hemlines...[T]here are skirts that rise in one place and fall in another...}}</ref>
It was during this period that he began to be known for capes and ponchos, having shown capelet collars for a long time. He made them look futuristic via geometric circular or square armholes<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Chanel and Cardin Share Spotlight in Paris |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-07-30 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/07/30/archives/chanel-and-cardin-share-spotlight-in-paris.html?searchResultPosition=14 |quote=...Cardin showed capes with round portals where the arms slip through...}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=The Spring and Summer Look a la Cardin, Givenchy and Gres |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-02-01 |page=18 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/02/01/archives/the-spring-and-summer-look-a-la-cardin-givenchy-and-gres.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=...armholes that were cut like low little portholes or squared...}}</ref> and precisely curvilinear arches cut into the sides for the arms.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin's Collection Has Familiar Look, Both Pretty and Sexy |journal=The New York Times |date=1967-07-29 |page=FS14 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1967/07/29/archives/cardins-collection-has-familiar-look-both-pretty-and-sexy.html?searchResultPosition=5 |quote=The new Cardin cape, in long and short versions, has a high, cut-out arch where the arms go.}}</ref> Cape and poncho sleeves were also shown.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin's Collection Has Familiar Look, Both Pretty and Sexy |journal=The New York Times |date=1967-07-29 |page=FS14 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1967/07/29/archives/cardins-collection-has-familiar-look-both-pretty-and-sexy.html?searchResultPosition=5 |quote=...the one-shoulder cape-sleeve dress with the tilted hem...}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=The Spring and Summer Look a la Cardin, Givenchy and Gres |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-02-01 |page=18 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/02/01/archives/the-spring-and-summer-look-a-la-cardin-givenchy-and-gres.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=...poncho sleeves...}}</ref> He adapted his love of asymmetric hems, earlier a part of his 1930s look, to the new Space Age period by showing hemlines that were shorter on one side than the other, sometimes called a tilted hem, seen especially on evening dresses;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=The Spring and Summer Look a la Cardin, Givenchy and Gres |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-02-01 |page=18 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/02/01/archives/the-spring-and-summer-look-a-la-cardin-givenchy-and-gres.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=Here are some of the Cardinisms that made the last five years [back to 1964] such good ones: ...tilted hems on evening dresses...}}</ref> miniskirts longer in the front than in the back;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin's Collection Has Familiar Look, Both Pretty and Sexy |journal=The New York Times |date=1967-07-29 |page=FS14 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1967/07/29/archives/cardins-collection-has-familiar-look-both-pretty-and-sexy.html?searchResultPosition=5 |quote=A batch of Lurex dresses have strips instead of skirts, which are shorter in back than in front.}}</ref> skirts consisting of strips, panels, and loops of fabric of various lengths and widths,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin and Givenchy Showings Present a Study in Contrasts |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-08-02 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/08/02/archives/cardin-and-givenchy-showings-present-a-study-in-contrasts.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=...dresses that are nearly all doubled-up loops that have a fringey look...}}</ref> some petal-like;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=The Spring and Summer Look a la Cardin, Givenchy and Gres |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-02-01 |page=18 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/02/01/archives/the-spring-and-summer-look-a-la-cardin-givenchy-and-gres.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=...petal hems...}}</ref> pleated skirts with fluted hems that curled up and down;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=The Spring and Summer Look a la Cardin, Givenchy and Gres |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-02-01 |page=18 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/02/01/archives/the-spring-and-summer-look-a-la-cardin-givenchy-and-gres.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=...all-over pleated dresses with wavy hemlines...}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=It Will Be Cardin, but a Subdued Cardin |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-05-03 |page=26 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/05/03/archives/it-will-be-cardin-but-a-subdued-cardin.html?searchResultPosition=3 |quote=...[H]emlines have an upward flip at intervals so the pleats 'spread out like a flower'.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=It Will Be Cardin, but a Subdued Cardin |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-05-03 |page=26 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/05/03/archives/it-will-be-cardin-but-a-subdued-cardin.html?searchResultPosition=3 |quote=The many pleated dresses, in chiffons as well as wool crepes, certainly move.}}</ref> and other unusual forms. These trends became particularly notable beginning in 1967, and the skirts of strips, loops, and panels would be shown through 1970.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Nemy |first1=Enid |title=Cardin Boutique for Men at Bonwit's Acquires Sister Shop |journal=The New York Times |date=1967-09-13 |page=F50 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1967/09/13/archives/cardin-boutique-for-men-at-bonwits-acquires-sister-shop.html?searchResultPosition=6 |quote=...[H]ighlights of the Cardin collection...uneven hemlines...[T]here are skirts that rise in one place and fall in another...}}</ref>


Interest in Space Age looks would peak in mainstream fashion during 1966 and part of 1967 and then most designers would move into other areas.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Howell |first1=Georgina |title=In Vogue: Sixty Years of Celebrities and Fashion from British Vogue |date=1978 |publisher=Penguin Books Ltd. |location=Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England |isbn=0-14-00-4955-X |page=259 |chapter=1960-1969: The Revolutionary Sixties |quote=By [the end of] 1967 fashion had finished with the 'space age' look, and designers began to see the future in terms of the present again.}}</ref> Cardin was one of a small group of designers who remained enamored of futuristic Space Age looks for several more years. The best known of these designers were [[André Courrèges]], [[Rudi Gernreich]], [[Emanuel Ungaro]], and [[Paco Rabanne]], all of whom tied their ideas of the future to mini lengths.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Mulvagh |first1=Jane |author-link=Jane Mulvagh |title=Vogue History of 20th Century Fashion |date=1988 |publisher=Viking, the Penguin Group |location=London, England |isbn=0-670-80172-0 |page=295 |chapter=1967 |quote=...Courrèges, Rabanne and Ungaro...refused to give up the long-legged, short-skirted mode.}}</ref> Cardin's work was noted for including a variety of lengths from 1967 on, particularly his characteristic asymmetric hems, while keeping it all futuristic-looking.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin's Collection Has Familiar Look, Both Pretty and Sexy |journal=The New York Times |date=1967-07-29 |page=FS14 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1967/07/29/archives/cardins-collection-has-familiar-look-both-pretty-and-sexy.html?searchResultPosition=5 |quote=Dresses and coats reach way up above the knees, cover them, or conceal most of the leg....[M]any of his skirts have mixed-up hems.}}</ref>
Interest in Space Age looks would peak in mainstream fashion during 1966 and part of 1967 and then most designers would move into other areas.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Howell |first1=Georgina |title=In Vogue: Sixty Years of Celebrities and Fashion from British Vogue |date=1978 |publisher=Penguin Books Ltd. |location=Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England |isbn=0-14-00-4955-X |page=259 |chapter=1960-1969: The Revolutionary Sixties |quote=By [the end of] 1967 fashion had finished with the 'space age' look, and designers began to see the future in terms of the present again.}}</ref> Cardin was one of a small group of designers who remained enamored of futuristic Space Age looks for several more years. The best known of these designers were [[André Courrèges]], [[Rudi Gernreich]], [[Emanuel Ungaro]], and [[Paco Rabanne]], all of whom tied their ideas of the future to mini lengths.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Mulvagh |first1=Jane |author-link=Jane Mulvagh |title=Vogue History of 20th Century Fashion |date=1988 |publisher=Viking, the Penguin Group |location=London, England |isbn=0-670-80172-0 |page=295 |chapter=1967 |quote=...Courrèges, Rabanne and Ungaro...refused to give up the long-legged, short-skirted mode.}}</ref> Cardin's work was noted for including a variety of lengths from 1967 on, particularly his characteristic asymmetric hems, while keeping it all futuristic-looking.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin's Collection Has Familiar Look, Both Pretty and Sexy |journal=The New York Times |date=1967-07-29 |page=FS14 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1967/07/29/archives/cardins-collection-has-familiar-look-both-pretty-and-sexy.html?searchResultPosition=5 |quote=Dresses and coats reach way up above the knees, cover them, or conceal most of the leg....[M]any of his skirts have mixed-up hems.}}</ref>
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Also in 1968, Cardin opened a furniture and interior decor store called Environnement.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=The Spring and Summer Look a la Cardin, Givenchy and Gres |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-02-01 |page=18 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/02/01/archives/the-spring-and-summer-look-a-la-cardin-givenchy-and-gres.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=There's a new Cardin-owned boutique for home furnishings...called Environnement that opened at the end of December [1968].}}</ref>
Also in 1968, Cardin opened a furniture and interior decor store called Environnement.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=The Spring and Summer Look a la Cardin, Givenchy and Gres |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-02-01 |page=18 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/02/01/archives/the-spring-and-summer-look-a-la-cardin-givenchy-and-gres.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=There's a new Cardin-owned boutique for home furnishings...called Environnement that opened at the end of December [1968].}}</ref>


In 1969, his futuristic looks were augmented by Space Age belt fastenings covered by transparent plastic domes;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin and Givenchy Showings Present a Study in Contrasts |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-08-02 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/08/02/archives/cardin-and-givenchy-showings-present-a-study-in-contrasts.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=...[B]ig belts with transparent plastic domes on the buckle sit low on the hips...}}</ref> chrome-shiny geometric jewelry and belt buckles; leather added<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin and Givenchy Showings Present a Study in Contrasts |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-08-02 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/08/02/archives/cardin-and-givenchy-showings-present-a-study-in-contrasts.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=When Cardin doesn't use vinyl, he uses leather, even to outline armholes.}}</ref> to his continued use of vinyl;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin and Givenchy Showings Present a Study in Contrasts |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-08-02 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/08/02/archives/cardin-and-givenchy-showings-present-a-study-in-contrasts.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=There is still too much vinyl in the clothes}}</ref> newly trapunto-stitched versions of his face-framing collars;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin and Givenchy Showings Present a Study in Contrasts |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-08-02 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/08/02/archives/cardin-and-givenchy-showings-present-a-study-in-contrasts.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=Cardin's calla lily collar, which rises in back to frame the head, has trapunto...}}</ref> additional trapunto detailing;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin and Givenchy Showings Present a Study in Contrasts |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-08-02 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/08/02/archives/cardin-and-givenchy-showings-present-a-study-in-contrasts.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=...dresses [with trapunto] on their high, ring collars and banded hems.}}</ref> and plush ring-hoods.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin and Givenchy Showings Present a Study in Contrasts |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-08-02 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/08/02/archives/cardin-and-givenchy-showings-present-a-study-in-contrasts.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=HIs fur hoods are shaped like rings. They don't cover the back of the head, but they make pretty face-framers.}}</ref> He adopted the long, lean, fit-and-flare look of sleek knits also favored by [[Yves Saint Laurent (designer)|Yves Saint Laurent]] at the time, with calf-length skirts, turtlenecks, skullcap-like headgear, and hip-slung belts. He also continued with his more flowing, diaphanous looks<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=The Spring and Summer Look a la Cardin, Givenchy and Gres |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-02-01 |page=18 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/02/01/archives/the-spring-and-summer-look-a-la-cardin-givenchy-and-gres.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=Dresses with scalloped layered hems, big sleeves made of organdy oval petals, pointed hemlines or easy and big flounced hems...}}</ref> like masterfully bias-cut skirts, asymmetric hems, floating panels,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=The Spring and Summer Look a la Cardin, Givenchy and Gres |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-02-01 |page=18 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/02/01/archives/the-spring-and-summer-look-a-la-cardin-givenchy-and-gres.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=...one-sleeve dresses with the loose panel over the other arm...}}</ref> and ponchos and capes,<ref>{{cite book |last1=Dubois |first1=Ruth Mary |title=The Americana Annual, 1970: An Encyclopedia of the Events of 1969 |publisher=Americana Corporation |isbn=0-7172-0200-3 |page=288 |chapter=Fashion |date=1970 |quote=...Pierre Cardin showed the full-circle cape.}}</ref> now making ponchos into skirts and dresses<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin and Givenchy Showings Present a Study in Contrasts |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-08-02 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/08/02/archives/cardin-and-givenchy-showings-present-a-study-in-contrasts.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=...[H]is dresses...looked like big, soft wool scarves, belted, with wildly uneven handkerchief hems.}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Livingston |first1=Kathryn Zahony |title=World Book Year Book 1970: A Review of the Events of 1969 |publisher=Field Enterprises Educational Corporation |location=Chicago, Illinois, USA |isbn=0-7166-0473-6 |page=342 |chapter=Fashion |date=1973 |quote=...Pierre Cardin's poncho skirts with thigh-high sides, full-length front and back.}}</ref> and adding shawls and shawl-like jackets.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin and Givenchy Showings Present a Study in Contrasts |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-08-02 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/08/02/archives/cardin-and-givenchy-showings-present-a-study-in-contrasts.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=His completely circular shawl is one of the freshest ideas in the Paris collections...}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=The Spring and Summer Look a la Cardin, Givenchy and Gres |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-02-01 |page=18 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/02/01/archives/the-spring-and-summer-look-a-la-cardin-givenchy-and-gres.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=...On a red and gray plaid suit, Cardin's jacket is a shawl with little armholes. Some spring suits have doubled-up fringe on the hems of jackets or skirts.}}</ref> He included maxiskirts among his variety of skirt lengths, believing that they had become popular because women were now used to covered legs with the ubiquity of women's trousers.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin and Givenchy Showings Present a Study in Contrasts |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-08-02 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/08/02/archives/cardin-and-givenchy-showings-present-a-study-in-contrasts.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=Pierre Cardin and Hubert de Givenchy have joined that pack of Paris couturiers who are showing lots of long skirts and long coats in their collections for winter....The maxidresses that Cardin sent out with his little minis (there were plenty of them, too) have ankle-length, bias-cut skirts and a wonderful kind of slouch to them. Some...have rows of fat fringe in leather.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Bender |first1=Marylin |title=Maxi? To Cardin, C'est Bon |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-10-14 |page=42 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/10/14/archives/maxi-to-cardin-cest-bon.html?searchResultPosition=5 |quote=Cardin is positive that the long dress is in the wind for daytime. 'The eye is ready for it, now that pants have been accepted,' he declared. Cardin sprung the maxidress with bias-cut skirt in his fall collection...}}</ref> Miniskirts were offered as well in this year when the rest of the fashion world joined his long advocacy of choice in hemlines.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin and Givenchy Showings Present a Study in Contrasts |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-08-02 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/08/02/archives/cardin-and-givenchy-showings-present-a-study-in-contrasts.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=...little minis (there were plenty of them, too)...a short dress cut like Robin Hood's jerkin...}}</ref> His long love of pleats was seen in both his futuristic styles and his more flowing garments,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=It Will Be Cardin, but a Subdued Cardin |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-05-03 |page=26 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/05/03/archives/it-will-be-cardin-but-a-subdued-cardin.html?searchResultPosition=3 |quote=The clothes, for next fall, have the...plethora of pleats...that marked the couture collection Cardin showed in Paris earlier this year...The many pleated dresses, in chiffons as well as wool crepes, certainly move.}}</ref> and his love of decolletage and Directoire lines was taken to extremes in his eveningwear of the end of the decade.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Mulvagh |first1=Jane |title=Vogue History of 20th Century Fashion |date=1988 |publisher=Viking, the Penguin Group |location=London, England |isbn=0-670-80172-0 |page=311 |chapter=1969 |quote=...[S]kirts slit thigh-high and fringed dresses with deep décolletés were all the rage in Paris this spring: Cardin's white, pailetted 'merveilleuse' dress was the most extreme example: it was cut so low that the nipples peeped out over a rounded directoire neckline.}}</ref>
In 1969, his futuristic looks were augmented by Space Age belt fastenings covered by transparent plastic domes;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin and Givenchy Showings Present a Study in Contrasts |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-08-02 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/08/02/archives/cardin-and-givenchy-showings-present-a-study-in-contrasts.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=...[B]ig belts with transparent plastic domes on the buckle sit low on the hips...}}</ref> chrome-shiny geometric jewelry and belt buckles; leather added<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin and Givenchy Showings Present a Study in Contrasts |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-08-02 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/08/02/archives/cardin-and-givenchy-showings-present-a-study-in-contrasts.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=When Cardin doesn't use vinyl, he uses leather, even to outline armholes.}}</ref> to his continued use of vinyl;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin and Givenchy Showings Present a Study in Contrasts |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-08-02 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/08/02/archives/cardin-and-givenchy-showings-present-a-study-in-contrasts.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=There is still too much vinyl in the clothes}}</ref> newly trapunto-stitched versions of his face-framing collars;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin and Givenchy Showings Present a Study in Contrasts |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-08-02 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/08/02/archives/cardin-and-givenchy-showings-present-a-study-in-contrasts.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=Cardin's calla lily collar, which rises in back to frame the head, has trapunto...}}</ref> additional trapunto detailing;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin and Givenchy Showings Present a Study in Contrasts |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-08-02 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/08/02/archives/cardin-and-givenchy-showings-present-a-study-in-contrasts.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=...dresses [with trapunto] on their high, ring collars and banded hems.}}</ref> and plush ring-hoods.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin and Givenchy Showings Present a Study in Contrasts |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-08-02 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/08/02/archives/cardin-and-givenchy-showings-present-a-study-in-contrasts.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=HIs fur hoods are shaped like rings. They don't cover the back of the head, but they make pretty face-framers.}}</ref> He adopted the long, lean, fit-and-flare look of sleek knits also favored by [[Yves Saint Laurent (designer)|Yves Saint Laurent]] at the time, with calf-length skirts, turtlenecks, skullcap-like headgear, and hip-slung belts. He also continued with his more flowing, diaphanous looks<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=The Spring and Summer Look a la Cardin, Givenchy and Gres |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-02-01 |page=18 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/02/01/archives/the-spring-and-summer-look-a-la-cardin-givenchy-and-gres.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=Dresses with scalloped layered hems, big sleeves made of organdy oval petals, pointed hemlines or easy and big flounced hems...}}</ref> like masterfully bias-cut skirts, asymmetric hems, floating panels,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=The Spring and Summer Look a la Cardin, Givenchy and Gres |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-02-01 |page=18 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/02/01/archives/the-spring-and-summer-look-a-la-cardin-givenchy-and-gres.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=...one-sleeve dresses with the loose panel over the other arm...}}</ref> and ponchos and capes,<ref>{{cite book |last1=Dubois |first1=Ruth Mary |title=The Americana Annual, 1970: An Encyclopedia of the Events of 1969 |publisher=Americana Corporation |isbn=0-7172-0200-3 |page=288 |chapter=Fashion |date=1970 |quote=...Pierre Cardin showed the full-circle cape.}}</ref> now making ponchos into skirts and dresses<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin and Givenchy Showings Present a Study in Contrasts |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-08-02 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/08/02/archives/cardin-and-givenchy-showings-present-a-study-in-contrasts.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=...[H]is dresses...looked like big, soft wool scarves, belted, with wildly uneven handkerchief hems.}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Livingston |first1=Kathryn Zahony |title=World Book Year Book 1970: A Review of the Events of 1969 |publisher=Field Enterprises Educational Corporation |location=Chicago, Illinois, USA |isbn=0-7166-0473-6 |page=342 |chapter=Fashion |date=1973 |quote=...Pierre Cardin's poncho skirts with thigh-high sides, full-length front and back.}}</ref> and adding shawls and shawl-like jackets.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin and Givenchy Showings Present a Study in Contrasts |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-08-02 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/08/02/archives/cardin-and-givenchy-showings-present-a-study-in-contrasts.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=His completely circular shawl is one of the freshest ideas in the Paris collections...}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=The Spring and Summer Look a la Cardin, Givenchy and Gres |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-02-01 |page=18 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/02/01/archives/the-spring-and-summer-look-a-la-cardin-givenchy-and-gres.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=...On a red and gray plaid suit, Cardin's jacket is a shawl with little armholes. Some spring suits have doubled-up fringe on the hems of jackets or skirts.}}</ref> He included maxiskirts among his variety of skirt lengths, believing that they had become popular because women were now used to covered legs again with the ubiquity of women's trousers.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin and Givenchy Showings Present a Study in Contrasts |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-08-02 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/08/02/archives/cardin-and-givenchy-showings-present-a-study-in-contrasts.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=Pierre Cardin and Hubert de Givenchy have joined that pack of Paris couturiers who are showing lots of long skirts and long coats in their collections for winter....The maxidresses that Cardin sent out with his little minis (there were plenty of them, too) have ankle-length, bias-cut skirts and a wonderful kind of slouch to them. Some...have rows of fat fringe in leather.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Bender |first1=Marylin |title=Maxi? To Cardin, C'est Bon |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-10-14 |page=42 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/10/14/archives/maxi-to-cardin-cest-bon.html?searchResultPosition=5 |quote=Cardin is positive that the long dress is in the wind for daytime. 'The eye is ready for it, now that pants have been accepted,' he declared. Cardin sprung the maxidress with bias-cut skirt in his fall collection...}}</ref> Miniskirts were offered as well in this year when the rest of the fashion world joined his long advocacy of choice in hemlines.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin and Givenchy Showings Present a Study in Contrasts |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-08-02 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/08/02/archives/cardin-and-givenchy-showings-present-a-study-in-contrasts.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=...little minis (there were plenty of them, too)...a short dress cut like Robin Hood's jerkin...}}</ref> His long love of pleats was seen in both his futuristic styles and his more flowing garments,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=It Will Be Cardin, but a Subdued Cardin |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-05-03 |page=26 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/05/03/archives/it-will-be-cardin-but-a-subdued-cardin.html?searchResultPosition=3 |quote=The clothes, for next fall, have the...plethora of pleats...that marked the couture collection Cardin showed in Paris earlier this year...The many pleated dresses, in chiffons as well as wool crepes, certainly move.}}</ref> and his love of decolletage and Directoire lines was taken to extremes in his eveningwear of the end of the decade.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Mulvagh |first1=Jane |title=Vogue History of 20th Century Fashion |date=1988 |publisher=Viking, the Penguin Group |location=London, England |isbn=0-670-80172-0 |page=311 |chapter=1969 |quote=...[S]kirts slit thigh-high and fringed dresses with deep décolletés were all the rage in Paris this spring: Cardin's white, pailetted 'merveilleuse' dress was the most extreme example: it was cut so low that the nipples peeped out over a rounded directoire neckline.}}</ref>


Cardin's attitude toward fashion shows varied. In the mid-sixties, he added two additional private client showings to his normal biannual couture shows,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Molli |first1=Jeanne |title=Paris Notes: The Trends for Spring |journal=The New York Times |date=1964-01-16 |page=32 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1964/01/16/archives/paris-notes-the-trends-for-spring.html?searchResultPosition=6 |quote=...Cardin...intends to do four, rather than two, collections a year. In addition to his semiannual showings to press and buyers, he will make two small private customer collections...The private collection designs will be exclusives, available only in his Faubourg St. Honoré salon.}}</ref> but he also disliked being expected to have so many shows per year<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Castillo, Cardin and Chanel Present 3 Views of Spring, 1967 |journal=The New York Times |date=1967-01-28 |page=R34 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1967/01/28/archives/castillo-cardin-and-chanel-present-3-views-of-spring-1967.html?searchResultPosition=1 |quote=Cardin has always protested against designing two collections a year, and this one used most of the brilliant details from earlier collections.}}</ref> and by the end of the decade would be known for fewer shows but with many more outfits presented than other designers, into the hundreds of pieces,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=It Will Be Cardin, but a Subdued Cardin |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-05-03 |page=26 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/05/03/archives/it-will-be-cardin-but-a-subdued-cardin.html?searchResultPosition=3 |quote=About one-third the size of the Paris collection, the American line will consist of 75 to 80 styles.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin and Givenchy Showings Present a Study in Contrasts |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-08-02 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/08/02/archives/cardin-and-givenchy-showings-present-a-study-in-contrasts.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=The Cardin show – the longest in Paris...}}</ref> resulting in very long fashion shows in which models walked very fast to save time,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Pierre Cardin: Always a Leap Ahead |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-01-29 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/01/29/archives/pierre-cardin-always-a-leap-ahead.html?searchResultPosition=27 |quote=...[G]irls...have strict instructions to race around the salon as fast as they can.}}</ref> a tendency that would continue into the seventies.
Cardin's attitude toward fashion shows varied. In the mid-sixties, he added two additional private client showings to his normal biannual couture shows,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Molli |first1=Jeanne |title=Paris Notes: The Trends for Spring |journal=The New York Times |date=1964-01-16 |page=32 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1964/01/16/archives/paris-notes-the-trends-for-spring.html?searchResultPosition=6 |quote=...Cardin...intends to do four, rather than two, collections a year. In addition to his semiannual showings to press and buyers, he will make two small private customer collections...The private collection designs will be exclusives, available only in his Faubourg St. Honoré salon.}}</ref> but he also disliked being expected to have so many shows per year<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Castillo, Cardin and Chanel Present 3 Views of Spring, 1967 |journal=The New York Times |date=1967-01-28 |page=R34 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1967/01/28/archives/castillo-cardin-and-chanel-present-3-views-of-spring-1967.html?searchResultPosition=1 |quote=Cardin has always protested against designing two collections a year, and this one used most of the brilliant details from earlier collections.}}</ref> and by the end of the decade would be known for fewer shows but with many more outfits presented than other designers, into the hundreds of pieces,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=It Will Be Cardin, but a Subdued Cardin |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-05-03 |page=26 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/05/03/archives/it-will-be-cardin-but-a-subdued-cardin.html?searchResultPosition=3 |quote=About one-third the size of the Paris collection, the American line will consist of 75 to 80 styles.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Cardin and Givenchy Showings Present a Study in Contrasts |journal=The New York Times |date=1969-08-02 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/08/02/archives/cardin-and-givenchy-showings-present-a-study-in-contrasts.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=The Cardin show – the longest in Paris...}}</ref> resulting in very long fashion shows in which models walked very fast to save time,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Pierre Cardin: Always a Leap Ahead |journal=The New York Times |date=1966-01-29 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/01/29/archives/pierre-cardin-always-a-leap-ahead.html?searchResultPosition=27 |quote=...[G]irls...have strict instructions to race around the salon as fast as they can.}}</ref> a tendency that would continue into the seventies.


====60s film and TV costuming====
====60s film and TV costuming====
After launching his design career doing costumes for [[Jean Cocteau]]'s 1946 film ''[[La Belle et La Bête]]'', Cardin would return to costuming in the 1960s and outfit several films, mostly those starring close friend [[Jeanne Moreau]]. These included [[Joseph Losey]]'s [[Eva (1962 film)|''Eva'']] (1962),<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Pithers |first1=Ellie |title=Jeanne Moreau's Best On-Screen Style Moments |journal=British Vogue |date=2020-10-06 |url=https://www.vogue.co.uk/gallery/jeanne-moreau-best-screen-style-moments |access-date=2025-03-06 |publisher=Condé Nast |location=London, England, U.K. |quote=Smokily seductive Moreau played a gold-digging French courtesan...Pierre Cardin...creates the costumes...}}</ref> [[Marcel Ophüls]]'s ''[[Banana Peel]]'' (1963), [[Jean-Louis Richard]]'s ''[[Mata Hari, Agent H21]]'' (1964), [[Anthony Asquith]]'s ''[[The Yellow Rolls-Royce]]'' (1964),<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Pithers |first1=Ellie |title=Jeanne Moreau's Best On-Screen Style Moments |journal=British Vogue |date=2020-10-06 |url=https://www.vogue.co.uk/gallery/jeanne-moreau-best-screen-style-moments |access-date=2025-03-06 |publisher=Condé Nast |location=London, England, U.K. |quote=...[C]ostumes by...Pierre Cardin, Edith Head and Antonio Castillo are worthy of plaudits.}}</ref> [[Louis Malle]]'s [[Long Live Maria!|''Viva Maria!'']] (1965),<ref>{{cite book |last1=Howell |first1=Georgina |title=In Vogue: Sixty Years of Celebrities and Fashion from British Vogue |date=1978 |publisher=Penguin Books Ltd. |location=Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England |isbn=0-14-00-4955-X |page=269 |chapter=1960-1969: The Revolutionary Sixties |quote=...''Viva Maria''...influenced fashion when it arrived in Britain.}}</ref> and [[François Truffaut]]'s ''[[The Bride Wore Black]]'' (1968), as well as [[Anthony Asquith]]'s ''[[The V.I.P.s (film)|The V.I.P.s]]'' (1963) and [[Anthony Mann]]'s ''[[A Dandy in Aspic]]'' (1968). For [[François Truffaut]]'s influential 1962 film [[Jules and Jim|''Jules et Jim'']],<ref>{{cite book |last1=Howell |first1=Georgina |title=In Vogue: Sixty Years of Celebrities and Fashion from British Vogue |date=1978 |publisher=Penguin Books Ltd. |location=Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England |isbn=0-14-00-4955-X |page=276 |chapter=1961-62 |quote=The Truffaut film ''Jules et Jim'' sets a fashion for grandmother spectacles with round wire frames, long mufflers, gaiters, boots, kilts, Gorblimey caps and knickerbockers....Jean Shrimpton and the ''Jules et Jim'' look: knickerbockers and Jackie Coogan cap, black leather jerkin and white cotton shirt.}}</ref> star [[Jeanne Moreau]] wore several Cardin pieces that were from her own wardrobe.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Lambert |first1=Eleanor |title=1963 Britannica Book of the Year: Events of 1962 |publisher=Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc. |pages=363 |chapter=Fashion and Dress |quote=For ''Jules et Jim'', a French art film starring Jeanne Moreau, Pierre Cardin designed bias-cut, long-jacket suits, worn with a side-slanting visored cap, and the striped cotton beach shirt which became a uniform at beaches across the world.}}</ref>
After launching his design career doing costumes for [[Jean Cocteau]]'s 1946 film ''[[La Belle et la Bête (1946 film)|La Belle et La Bête]]'', Cardin would return to costuming in the 1960s and outfit several films, mostly those starring close friend [[Jeanne Moreau]]. These included [[Joseph Losey]]'s [[Eva (1962 film)|''Eva'']] (1962),<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Pithers |first1=Ellie |title=Jeanne Moreau's Best On-Screen Style Moments |journal=British Vogue |date=2020-10-06 |url=https://www.vogue.co.uk/gallery/jeanne-moreau-best-screen-style-moments |access-date=2025-03-06 |publisher=Condé Nast |location=London, England, U.K. |quote=Smokily seductive Moreau played a gold-digging French courtesan...Pierre Cardin...creates the costumes...}}</ref> [[Marcel Ophüls]]'s ''[[Banana Peel]]'' (1963), [[Jean-Louis Richard]]'s ''[[Mata Hari, Agent H21]]'' (1964), [[Anthony Asquith]]'s ''[[The Yellow Rolls-Royce]]'' (1964),<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Pithers |first1=Ellie |title=Jeanne Moreau's Best On-Screen Style Moments |journal=British Vogue |date=2020-10-06 |url=https://www.vogue.co.uk/gallery/jeanne-moreau-best-screen-style-moments |access-date=2025-03-06 |publisher=Condé Nast |location=London, England, U.K. |quote=...[C]ostumes by...Pierre Cardin, Edith Head and Antonio Castillo are worthy of plaudits.}}</ref> [[Louis Malle]]'s [[Long Live Maria!|''Viva Maria!'']] (1965),<ref>{{cite book |last1=Howell |first1=Georgina |title=In Vogue: Sixty Years of Celebrities and Fashion from British Vogue |date=1978 |publisher=Penguin Books Ltd. |location=Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England |isbn=0-14-00-4955-X |page=269 |chapter=1960-1969: The Revolutionary Sixties |quote=...''Viva Maria''...influenced fashion when it arrived in Britain.}}</ref> and [[François Truffaut]]'s ''[[The Bride Wore Black]]'' (1968), as well as [[Anthony Asquith]]'s ''[[The V.I.P.s (film)|The V.I.P.s]]'' (1963) and [[Anthony Mann]]'s ''[[A Dandy in Aspic]]'' (1968). For [[François Truffaut]]'s influential 1962 film [[Jules and Jim|''Jules et Jim'']],<ref>{{cite book |last1=Howell |first1=Georgina |title=In Vogue: Sixty Years of Celebrities and Fashion from British Vogue |date=1978 |publisher=Penguin Books Ltd. |location=Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England |isbn=0-14-00-4955-X |page=276 |chapter=1961-62 |quote=The Truffaut film ''Jules et Jim'' sets a fashion for grandmother spectacles with round wire frames, long mufflers, gaiters, boots, kilts, Gorblimey caps and knickerbockers....Jean Shrimpton and the ''Jules et Jim'' look: knickerbockers and Jackie Coogan cap, black leather jerkin and white cotton shirt.}}</ref> star [[Jeanne Moreau]] wore several Cardin pieces that were from her own wardrobe.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Lambert |first1=Eleanor |title=1963 Britannica Book of the Year: Events of 1962 |publisher=Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc. |pages=363 |chapter=Fashion and Dress |quote=For ''Jules et Jim'', a French art film starring Jeanne Moreau, Pierre Cardin designed bias-cut, long-jacket suits, worn with a side-slanting visored cap, and the striped cotton beach shirt which became a uniform at beaches across the world.}}</ref>


Cardin also created [[Patrick MacNee]]'s costumes for season five of UK television series [[The Avengers (TV series)|''The Avengers'']], airing in 1967.
Cardin also created [[Patrick MacNee]]'s costumes for season five of UK television series [[The Avengers (TV series)|''The Avengers'']], airing in 1967.


===1970s===
===1970s===
In the first half of the 1970s, Cardin was still the most prominent menswear designer in the world, but the menswear revolution he had helped foster in the 1960s was just about over and by the mid-seventies his menswear would be more subdued. His womenswear was still in line with mainstream fashion in the earliest seventies, sometimes considered as influential as [[Yves Saint Laurent (designer)|Yves Saint Laurent]]'s,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Couture Alive, Pulse Fading |journal=The New York Times |date=1972-01-28 |page=68 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1972/01/28/archives/couture-alive-pulse-fading.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=...Pierre Cardin and Yves Saint Laurent, the trend‐setters of the last few years...}}</ref> but by the mid-seventies it would be somewhat out of step with mainstream women's fashion and would be considered eccentric,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=25 Years of Cardin: Couture to Wine |journal=The New York Times |date=1975-10-31 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1975/10/31/archives/25-years-of-cardin-couture-to-wine.html?searchResultPosition=16 |quote=In the seventies, the space clothes...began to pall a bit...}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Paris Couture Sets a Lively Pace |journal=The New York Times |date=1977-07-26 |page=34 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1977/07/26/archives/paris-couture-sets-a-lively-pace.html?searchResultPosition=24 |quote=Hardly a conventional style appeared among the 200 or so pieces.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=A Touch of Derring-Do |journal=The New York Times |date=1972-05-17 |page=36 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1972/05/17/archives/a-touch-of-derringdo.html?searchResultPosition=12 |quote=Even in Paris, Cardin is considered a wild man...[Y]ou can tell a Cardin without looking at the label.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Courageous Courreges: He Refuses to Flee to the 30's |journal=The New York Times |date=1974-02-01 |page=18 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1974/02/01/archives/courageous-courreges-he-refuses-to-flee-to-the-30s-tailored-chiffon.html?searchResultPosition=1 |quote=There are some pretty things, but they're overshadowed by the hobble‐skirt dresses, the batwing outfits, the split‐level skirts edged in feathers, the tufted‐and‐tasseled sofa effects and the colored baubles the size of a baby's head that border the cape‐back of a black dress.}}</ref> though he did reflect some of the trends of the period. He continued to produce enormous fashion shows with hundreds of outfits, so there was plenty of variety to encompass a number of looks.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Cardin Moderne, but Chanel Toujours Chanel |journal=The New York Times |date=1970-07-22 |page=66 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/07/22/archives/cardin-moderne-but-chapel-toujours-chanel.html?searchResultPosition=17 |quote=...a collection of some 300 styles...}}</ref> He became better known in the mid-seventies for licensing his name for all kinds of products.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=25 Years of Cardin: Couture to Wine |journal=The New York Times |date=1975-10-31 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1975/10/31/archives/25-years-of-cardin-couture-to-wine.html?searchResultPosition=16 |quote=In recent years, his interest has transcended fashion. His name is on chocolates and cars, sheets and towels and furniture. He owns a theater in Paris called L'Espace Cardin...The 250 products bearing his name result in a total sale of $120‐million annually at the retail level, Mr. Cardin estimates...}}</ref> Toward the end of the decade, he would regain some influence in womenswear as his interpretations of the big-shoulder-pads trend would coincide with what other designers were doing and bring him renewed attention.
As in the rest of the world, Cardin's reputation in the [[Soviet Union]] had grown since his first trip there in 1963, and during the seventies he would be known as the most prominent non-Soviet designer in the country, a favorite of celebrated figures in the arts and politics.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Kuprina |first1=Nadya |title=How Pierre Cardin Fell in Love with Soviet Russia |journal=Russia Beyond |date=2020-12-30 |url=https://www.rbth.com/arts/333239-pierre-cardin-ussr-russia |access-date=2025-06-06 |quote=In the 1970s, Cardin was considered the main Western fashion star in the USSR.}}</ref>
By the early seventies, artistic director [[Andre Oliver]] had been given responsibility for Cardin's ready-to-wear lines,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Cardin and Valentino Collections – Today and Yesteryear |journal=The New York Times |date=1971-05-12 |page=36 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1971/05/12/archives/cardin-and-valentino-collections-today-and-yesteryear.html?searchResultPosition=7 |quote=[Andre Oliver's spring 1971 ready-to-wear] collection is based on the Cardin couture clothes shown in Paris a few months ago.}}</ref> specialty lines,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=For Valentino and Cardin, Cinched Waistlines |journal=The New York Times |date=1971-12-02 |page=60 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1971/12/02/archives/for-valentino-and-cardin-cinched-waistlines.html?searchResultPosition=23 |quote=...[A] sportswear collection by Andre Oliver, Pierre Cardin's assistant,...was officially called Pierre Cardin II.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Taylor |first1=Angela |title=Winter '72: There Will Be More Fur (But Less Fun) |journal=The New York Times |date=1972-07-05 |page=44 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1972/07/05/archives/winter-72-there-will-be-more-fur-but-less-fun.html?searchResultPosition=17 |quote=The first fur collection labeled Pierre Cardin is here, designed by Andre Oliver.}}</ref> and for Cardin collections tailored to various national markets,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=The Extravagant Gowns Made to Dazzle at Night |journal=The New York Times |date=1971-10-24 |page=84 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1971/10/24/archives/the-extravagant-gowns-made-to-dazzle-at-night.html?searchResultPosition=20 |quote=Pierre Cardin's collection, one of the hits in Paris, has been 'adapted to the tempo of American women' by his assistant, Andre Oliver.}}</ref> the clothes always adaptations of Cardin's couture collections.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=It's Showtime, and Cardin Takes the Spotlight |journal=The New York Times |date=1970-10-14 |page=52 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/10/14/archives/its-showtime-and-cardin-takes-the-spotlight.html?searchResultPosition=24 |quote=His assistant, Andre Oliver, practically commutes to New York to make sure the collection here reflects the one in Paris.}}</ref>
Though no longer groundbreaking as it had been in the early 1960s and during the Mod era of the mid-sixties, Cardin's early seventies menswear was still influential and popular,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Klemesrud |first1=Judy |title=Athletes Today are Turning In Blue Jeans for Peacock Feathers |journal=The New York Times |date=1970-12-07 |page=58 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/12/07/archives/athletes-today-are-turning-in-blue-jeans-for-peacock-feathers.html?searchResultPosition=3 |quote=Rod Gilbert...the most dapper member of the New York Rangers hockey team...is a fan of Pierre Cardin, and owns about 25 of the French couturier's suits.}}</ref> characterized by high armholes, large collars, double-breasted jackets, and high closures, all of which were now widespread menswear trends that Cardin had helped establish.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Taylor |first1=Angela |title=It's for Men Only: A Mink by Cardin |journal=The New York Times |date=1970-11-13 |page=49 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/11/13/archives/its-for-men-only-a-mink-by-cardin.html?searchResultPosition=27 |quote=The designer's touches are...the fit of the armholes, the big collar and the high double‐breasting.}}</ref>
Cardin's early seventies womenswear continued in the direction he was headed in the late sixties: a variety of lengths; skirts consisting of slits, slashes,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Cardin Moderne, but Chanel Toujours Chanel |journal=The New York Times |date=1970-07-22 |page=66 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/07/22/archives/cardin-moderne-but-chapel-toujours-chanel.html?searchResultPosition=17 |quote=Pierre Cardin...slashed openings on some of the long dresses from miniskirt level to the wide hem band. The openings were in the form of circles, pears or just plain rectangles.}}</ref> panels,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=It's Showtime, and Cardin Takes the Spotlight |journal=The New York Times |date=1970-10-14 |page=52 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/10/14/archives/its-showtime-and-cardin-takes-the-spotlight.html?searchResultPosition=24 |quote=Dresses are carved up into panels when they don't have a series of portholes cut into the skirt just above the hem, and long coats have at least one split, often more.}}</ref> strips<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=7th Avenue Gets a Gallic Touch, and the Name is Pierre Cardin |journal=The New York Times |date=1970-05-06 |page=70 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/05/06/archives/7th-avenue-gets-a-gallic-touch-and-the-name-is-pierre-cardin.html?searchResultPosition=10 |quote=...[T]he models swung along in dresses whose skirts were a mass of...strips....They kicked up a storm in leather, crepe and wool.}}</ref> loops, and asymmetric hems;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Cardin and Valentino Collections – Today and Yesteryear |journal=The New York Times |date=1971-05-12 |page=36 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1971/05/12/archives/cardin-and-valentino-collections-today-and-yesteryear.html?searchResultPosition=7 |quote=Some of the skirts have pointy hemlines...}}</ref> ribknit tops;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=It's Showtime, and Cardin Takes the Spotlight |journal=The New York Times |date=1970-10-14 |page=52 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/10/14/archives/its-showtime-and-cardin-takes-the-spotlight.html?searchResultPosition=24 |quote=Separate skirts are split and curved and paired with skinny ribbed sweaters.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Cardin and Valentino Collections – Today and Yesteryear |journal=The New York Times |date=1971-05-12 |page=36 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1971/05/12/archives/cardin-and-valentino-collections-today-and-yesteryear.html?searchResultPosition=7 |quote=It all starts with a sweater — a very tight sweater...}}</ref> flaring sleeves;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Taylor |first1=Angela |title=Winter '72: There Will Be More Fur (But Less Fun) |journal=The New York Times |date=1972-07-05 |page=44 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1972/07/05/archives/winter-72-there-will-be-more-fur-but-less-fun.html?searchResultPosition=17 |quote=...recognizable Cardin touches:...sleeves that widen at the wrist and printed linings.}}</ref> capes and ponchos;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=7th Avenue Gets a Gallic Touch, and the Name is Pierre Cardin |journal=The New York Times |date=1970-05-06 |page=70 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/05/06/archives/7th-avenue-gets-a-gallic-touch-and-the-name-is-pierre-cardin.html?searchResultPosition=10 |quote=There was...a...cape...that hung from the head and ended around the ankles. The other capes had Bedouin‐like hoods that popped over the head and gave the same all-enveloping effect.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Cardin, At Least, Said Something New |journal=The New York Times |date=1972-07-29 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1972/07/29/archives/cardin-at-least-said-something-new.html?searchResultPosition=19 |quote=There was only one poncho — a short black evening dress that was sliced up the sides to the top of the panty hose the model was wearing.}}</ref> jumper dresses from mini to knee-length<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Cardin Moderne, but Chanel Toujours Chanel |journal=The New York Times |date=1970-07-22 |page=66 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/07/22/archives/cardin-moderne-but-chapel-toujours-chanel.html?searchResultPosition=17 |quote=...suede jumpers...}}</ref> worn with bodystockings or turtleneck and tights;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Cardin Moderne, but Chanel Toujours Chanel |journal=The New York Times |date=1970-07-22 |page=66 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/07/22/archives/cardin-moderne-but-chapel-toujours-chanel.html?searchResultPosition=17 |quote=The foundation for everything was a ribbed turtleneck bodystocking.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Cardin: One Foot in the Future, the Other Planted Firmly in Today |journal=The New York Times |date=1971-07-28 |page=40 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1971/07/28/archives/cardin-one-foot-in-future-the-other-planted-firmly-in-today.html?searchResultPosition=10 |quote=....[T]he body is clad in heavy ribbed tights and turtleneck sweaters, usually black.}}</ref> leather sections;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Taylor |first1=Angela |title=Winter '72: There Will Be More Fur (But Less Fun) |journal=The New York Times |date=1972-07-05 |page=44 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1972/07/05/archives/winter-72-there-will-be-more-fur-but-less-fun.html?searchResultPosition=17 |quote=...recognizable Cardin touches: keyhole pockets, leather inserts...}}</ref> geometric patch pockets;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Cardin and Valentino Collections – Today and Yesteryear |journal=The New York Times |date=1971-05-12 |page=36 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1971/05/12/archives/cardin-and-valentino-collections-today-and-yesteryear.html?searchResultPosition=7 |quote=The skirts...have a big leather pocket stitched to one side, in the same color as the waistband.}}</ref> and an expansion of the women's trousers he had first shown in 1968. He continued to design in a Space Age style,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Cardin Moderne, but Chanel Toujours Chanel |journal=The New York Times |date=1970-07-22 |page=66 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/07/22/archives/cardin-moderne-but-chapel-toujours-chanel.html?searchResultPosition=17 |quote=Pierre Cardin...made clothes that looked like the space age. There were appliqués, stitching, free‐form jewelry.}}</ref> one of just a handful of designers to do so by the early seventies,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Laroche Says 'Da' to Rus. sian Influence |journal=The New York Times |date=1970-07-23 |page=22 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/07/23/archives/laroche-says-da-to-russian-influence.html?searchResultPosition=52 |quote=...[T]he modern art school of Paris fashion...includes Cardin most of the time, Courrèges, Ungaro and, this season, Feraud. Most of them think of clothes in terms of abstract shapes and use color the way a painter does...}}</ref> using a lot of vinyl and geometric cutouts in the earliest years of the decade.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Givenchy, 1970: The Approach is Positive, the Look is Softer |journal=The New York Times |date=1970-01-31 |page=22 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/01/31/archives/givenchy-1970-the-approach-is-positive-the-look-is-softer.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=There's still too much vinyl in the Cardin collection...[O]ne long dress made of it has a snaky texture....There are still lots of cutouts at Cardin and the newest ones are over the stomach.}}</ref> Throughout the seventies, his long-favored cowl necklines,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Paris for Fall: Listless Start and Why Revive the 40's? |journal=The New York Times |date=1974-07-23 |page=42 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1974/07/23/archives/paris-for-fall-listless-start-and-why-revive-the-40s-nice-start-bad.html?searchResultPosition=6 |quote=Pierre Cardin...dress with the cowl‐draped neckline open to below the navel.}}</ref> batwing sleeves, and pleating were signature elements of his work,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=At Paris Shows, the Latest Wrinkle in Haute Couture is Pleats |journal=The New York Times |date=1977-01-25 |page=45 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1977/01/25/archives/at-paris-shows-the-latest-wrinkle-in-haute-couture-is-pleats.html?searchResultPosition=39 |quote=Pleats turn up for evening in dresses that are not only pleated but tiered.}}</ref> as were the gracefully cut chiffon skirts he had been perfecting since the early sixties.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=It's Showtime, and Cardin Takes the Spotlight |journal=The New York Times |date=1970-10-14 |page=52 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/10/14/archives/its-showtime-and-cardin-takes-the-spotlight.html?searchResultPosition=24 |quote=...fluttery‐skirt chiffons.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |title=From French Ready-to-Wear, That Well-Groomed |journal=The New York Times |date=1972-04-24 |page=30 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1972/04/24/archives/from-french-ready-to-wear-that-wellgroomed-look.html?searchResultPosition=10 |quote=Cardin had as usual, his inimitable long dresses fluttering in chiffon petals, pennants and panels.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Taylor |first1=Angela |title=Parties at Galleries had Clear Message – The Back is Back |journal=The New York Times |date=1972-05-07 |page=82 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1972/05/07/archives/parties-at-galleries-had-clear-message-the-back-is-back.html?searchResultPosition=11 |quote=...[T]here seems to be a return to the airy, ultra femininity of the printed chiffon or muslin dress, by Cardin if it's French...}}</ref> These skirts would fit into trends particularly of the middle of the decade, when their tiers and flounces would find expression in other fabrics.
In the year 1970, the fashion industry tried to reduce women's skirt choices to just midcalf-hemmed midi skirts. Cardin showed exclusively that length in his ready-to-wear collections<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=7th Avenue Gets a Gallic Touch, and the Name is Pierre Cardin |journal=The New York Times |date=1970-05-06 |page=70 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/05/06/archives/7th-avenue-gets-a-gallic-touch-and-the-name-is-pierre-cardin.html?searchResultPosition=10 |quote=Miniskirts are not what you find at Cardin,...and he wasn't planning to budge an inch....There was plenty of leg on view, but you had to peek through slits that reached at least as high as a micro mini's hem and were sometimes carved out in a graceful arc to make the viewing easier.}}</ref> but varied lengths in his couture collections,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Givenchy, 1970: The Approach is Positive, the Look is Softer |journal=The New York Times |date=1970-01-31 |page=22 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/01/31/archives/givenchy-1970-the-approach-is-positive-the-look-is-softer.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=He is a mini, midi and maxi man this season...}}</ref> from micromini<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Givenchy, 1970: The Approach is Positive, the Look is Softer |journal=The New York Times |date=1970-01-31 |page=22 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/01/31/archives/givenchy-1970-the-approach-is-positive-the-look-is-softer.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=Tiny miniskirts of vinyl streamers or doubled-up loops or arrow-shaped strips go over Cardin's sheer, striped bodystockings.}}</ref> to ankle length,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Cardin Moderne, but Chanel Toujours Chanel |journal=The New York Times |date=1970-07-22 |page=66 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/07/22/archives/cardin-moderne-but-chapel-toujours-chanel.html?searchResultPosition=17 |quote=Lengths...went all the way down to the ankle much of the time...}}</ref> while close friend and Cardin aficionado [[Jeanne Moreau]] intimated that Cardin felt that longer skirts tended to age women.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Klemesrud |first1=Judy |title=No Longer in Love with Cardin, but Faithful to His Clothes |journal=The New York Times |date=1970-10-06 |page=60 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/10/06/archives/no-longer-in-love-with-cardin-but-faithful-to-his-clothes.html?searchResultPosition=23 |quote= 'Cardin told me he doesn't like the long skirts very much,' Miss Moreau said. 'He says very few women can wear them well without aging.'....}}</ref>


As haute couture began to decline, [[ready-to-wear]] ('prêt-à-porter') soared as well as Cardin's designs. He was the first to combine the "[[mini skirt|mini]]" and the "[[maxi skirt|maxi]]" skirts of the 1970s by introducing a new hemline that had long pom-pom panels or fringes.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.indigobluestyle.com/post/pierre-cardin-a-trailblazer-of-fashion |title=Pierre Cardin: A Trailblazer of Fashion |website=Indigobluestyle.com |access-date=31 December 2020 |archive-date=4 December 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201204085107/https://www.indigobluestyle.com/post/pierre-cardin-a-trailblazer-of-fashion |url-status=dead }}</ref>
As haute couture began to decline, [[ready-to-wear]] ('prêt-à-porter') soared as well as Cardin's designs. He was the first to combine the "[[mini skirt|mini]]" and the "[[maxi skirt|maxi]]" skirts of the 1970s by introducing a new hemline that had long pom-pom panels or fringes.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.indigobluestyle.com/post/pierre-cardin-a-trailblazer-of-fashion |title=Pierre Cardin: A Trailblazer of Fashion |website=Indigobluestyle.com |access-date=31 December 2020 |archive-date=4 December 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201204085107/https://www.indigobluestyle.com/post/pierre-cardin-a-trailblazer-of-fashion |url-status=dead }}</ref>


Beginning in the 1970s, Cardin set another new trend: "mod chic". This trend holds true for the form or for a combination of forms, which did not exist at the time. He was the first to combine extremely short and ankle-length pieces. He made dresses with slits and batwing sleeves with novel dimensions and mixed circular movement and gypsy skirts with structured tops. These creations allowed for the geometric shapes that captivated him to be contrasted, with both circular and straight lines. Cardin became an icon for starting this popular fashion movement of the early 1970s.<ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=9gFMAQAAIAAJ&q=mod+chic|last=Längle |first=Elisabeth |date=2005 |title=Pierre Cardin: Fifty years of fashion and design |location=London |publisher=Vendome Press |isbn=9780865651661 |page=28}}</ref>
Beginning in the 1970s, Cardin set another new trend: "mod chic". This trend holds true for the form or for a combination of forms, which did not exist at the time. He was the first to combine extremely short and ankle-length pieces. He made dresses with slits and batwing sleeves with novel dimensions and mixed circular movement and gypsy skirts with structured tops. These creations allowed for the geometric shapes that captivated him to be contrasted, with both circular and straight lines. Cardin became an icon for starting this popular fashion movement of the early 1970s.<ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=9gFMAQAAIAAJ&q=mod+chic|last=Längle |first=Elisabeth |date=2005 |title=Pierre Cardin: Fifty years of fashion and design |location=London |publisher=Vendome Press |isbn=9780865651661 |page=28}}</ref>
He designed a handful of Space Age-looking nurses' uniforms in 1970 that featured skullcap- and Medieval-looking headgear and the variety of skirt lengths he was showing in his collections at the time, including ankle-length maxiskirts and loincloth-looking miniskirts worn over sometimes revealing translucent bodystockings.<ref>{{cite magazine |title=Fashion: Sexy in Surgery |magazine=Time |date=16 November 1970 |page=67 |url=https://time.com/archive/6838312/medicine-sexy-in-surgery/ |access-date=10 April 2025 |quote=To relieve the sterile monotony of nurses’ uniforms, fashion designer Pierre Cardin recently unveiled three new creations at a London showing...nunlike wimples with white maxidresses....a pastel green body stocking with a white miniskirt...}}</ref>


Inspired by space travel and exploration, Cardin visited [[NASA]] (the National Aeronautics and Space Administration) in 1970, where he tried on the original spacesuit worn by the first human to set foot on the Moon, [[Neil Armstrong]].<ref name="Längle 2005, p. 20">Längle (2005), p. 20</ref> Cardin designed spacesuits for NASA in 1970.<ref name="Längle 2005, p. 20"/>
Inspired by space travel and exploration, Cardin visited [[NASA]] (the National Aeronautics and Space Administration) in 1970, where he tried on the original spacesuit worn by the first human to set foot on the Moon, [[Neil Armstrong]].<ref name="Längle 2005, p. 20">Längle (2005), p. 20</ref> Cardin designed spacesuits for NASA in 1970.<ref name="Längle 2005, p. 20"/>
His early seventies women's trousers were often narrow and of knit fabric and included cropped versions to wear with the popular boots of the time,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Givenchy, 1970: The Approach is Positive, the Look is Softer |journal=The New York Times |date=1970-01-31 |page=22 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/01/31/archives/givenchy-1970-the-approach-is-positive-the-look-is-softer.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=Cardin's new pants are straight up and down but they sometimes are cut off at mid-calf.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Cardin Moderne, but Chanel Toujours Chanel |journal=The New York Times |date=1970-07-22 |page=66 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/07/22/archives/cardin-moderne-but-chapel-toujours-chanel.html?searchResultPosition=17 |quote=...pants in a new length—about nine inches from the floor....The reasoning for the pants seemed to be, if you wear boots, show them.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=High Marks for Dior as Fall Collections Get Underway |journal=The New York Times |date=1976-07-27 |page=34 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1976/07/27/archives/high-marks-for-dior-as-fall-collections-get-under-way.html?searchResultPosition=17 |quote=...[T]he cropped trousers Cardin showed years ago...today are everywhere.}}</ref> a period during which women were wearing knickers and gauchos for the same purpose.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Taylor |first1=Angela |title=Knickers Hold Center Stage, but Shorts are Waiting in the Wings |journal=The New York Times |date=1970-12-26 |page=70 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/12/26/archives/knickers-hold-center-stage-but-shorts-are-waiting-in-the-wings.html?searchResultPosition=32 |quote=Women...can't show off...boots under pants....[K]nickers and gauchos [are] the ideal solution.}}</ref> He continued to show jumpsuits,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=7th Avenue Gets a Gallic Touch, and the Name is Pierre Cardin |journal=The New York Times |date=1970-05-06 |page=70 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/05/06/archives/7th-avenue-gets-a-gallic-touch-and-the-name-is-pierre-cardin.html?searchResultPosition=10 |quote=There are the jumpsuits with abstract designs on the top...}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Cardin Makes Styles Look Like Fun Again |journal=The New York Times |date=1971-01-27 |page=42 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1971/01/27/archives/cardin-makes-styles-look-like-fun-again.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=To keep his franchise on the space‐age look, Cardin showed skinny jumpsuits...}}</ref> including some in skin-tight vinyl.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Emerson |first1=Gloria |title=Givenchy, 1970: The Approach is Positive, the Look is Softer |journal=The New York Times |date=1970-01-31 |page=22 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/01/31/archives/givenchy-1970-the-approach-is-positive-the-look-is-softer.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=...tight vinyl sleeveless jumpsuits that look like shiny fishnet....}}</ref> Other Cardin trousers of the early seventies featured unusual seaming.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=A Touch of Derring-Do |journal=The New York Times |date=1972-05-17 |page=36 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1972/05/17/archives/a-touch-of-derringdo.html?searchResultPosition=12 |quote=Pants with raised seams front and back as well as at the sides...give a squared shape.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Rudi Gernreich Keeps Them Laughing |journal=The New York Times |date=1972-10-18 |page=52 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1972/10/18/archives/rudi-gernreich-keeps-them-laughing.html?searchResultPosition=27 |quote=The brushed denim separates...[have] zippers all over the place and too much decorative stitching.}}</ref>
At the same time that Cardin was showing futuristic looks, he also drew from past eras<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Weinberg Enters the Sweater Sweepstakes |journal=The New York Times |date=1973-06-05 |page=32 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1973/06/05/archives/weinberg-enters-the-sweater-sweepstakes-fashion-talk.html?searchResultPosition=13 |quote=Some of Pierre Cardin's new dresses go all the way back to Paul Poiret, who flourished before World War I....Some go back to the nineteen‐fifties,...[a]nd some go back to the late nineteen‐sixties...}}</ref> and presented sheath skirts and tight-bodiced tailored jackets in silhouettes from the 1950s,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Cardin Moderne, but Chanel Toujours Chanel |journal=The New York Times |date=1970-07-22 |page=66 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/07/22/archives/cardin-moderne-but-chapel-toujours-chanel.html?searchResultPosition=17 |quote=Cardin faltered when he cast backward glances over the history of fashion: hobble skirts, snugly fitted suit jackets...}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Cardin: One Foot in the Future, the Other Planted Firmly in Today |journal=The New York Times |date=1971-07-28 |page=40 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1971/07/28/archives/cardin-one-foot-in-future-the-other-planted-firmly-in-today.html?searchResultPosition=10 |quote=...[H]e swings into such styles as the yellow coat with a tiny waistline belted in black patent leather, and a great flaring skirt. And then there are suits, shaped through the bodice with myriad vertical tucks released just below the waistline to burst into a little peplum....The same tucked‐top, full skirt routine is repeated in coats.}}</ref> though the sheath skirts differed from [[Hobble skirt#The post-hobble skirt era|1950s sheath skirts]] in being unlined and worn without slips or girdles, revealing the pantylines of the models' 1970s-style pantyhose and underwear.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=25 Years of Cardin: Couture to Wine |journal=The New York Times |date=1975-10-31 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1975/10/31/archives/25-years-of-cardin-couture-to-wine.html?searchResultPosition=16 |quote=...the pencil slim shapes did not seem particularly appropriate for women who wore panty hose, not girdles.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=They Came Seeking Inspiration and Found It in Dior '75 |journal=The New York Times |date=1975-07-29 |page=43 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1975/07/29/archives/they-came-seeking-inspiration-and-discovered-it-in-dior-75.html?searchResultPosition=6 |quote=Blue jeans are one thing. Knitted, ribbed skirts that cup the derrière and show the outline of the mannequin's underpants are another.}}</ref> Shown by Cardin from 1970 to 1976, these vaguely retro-looking skin-tight, unlined skirts did not catch on during the casual, liberated early seventies, when restricting women's movements in tight skirts was considered regressive, but unlined sheath skirts would find favor in the early 1980s, most famously in the work of [[Azzedine Alaïa]], as well as in the more slouchy tube skirts put out by London designers like [[BodyMap]] in the mid-1980s.
Many up-and-coming designers apprenticed with Cardin over the years, including [[Jean-Paul Gaultier]] in 1970.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Gross |first1=Michael |title=Gaultier: Fashion Designed to Provoke |journal=The New York Times |date=1986-10-31 |page=A32 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1986/10/31/style/gaultier-fashion-designed-to-provoke.html?searchResultPosition=40 |quote='On my 18th birthday,' [Gaultier] recalled,... 'I received a call from Cardin. He said, "When can you work?" '...Although Cardin taught him that 'everything was possible,' he recalls, he was fired a year later...}}</ref>
In 1971, Cardin put an emphasis on [[Miniskirt#1970s|miniskirts]] of different cuts than he'd been showing in recent years, many split at the sides,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Cardin Makes Styles Look Like Fun Again |journal=The New York Times |date=1971-01-27 |page=42 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1971/01/27/archives/cardin-makes-styles-look-like-fun-again.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=Cardin's minis look different from the ones that were around a year ago....Some are slippery satin dresses with bloused bodices and tiny pleated skirts. Some are flaring embroidered organdies...What makes them flare is the wide organdy bloomers underneath; the pleated skirts are over plain shorts. Not every dress bares half the thigh; the majority only show the knees. Many skirts are split up the sides like sandwich boards to show the now‐obligatory shorts underneath.}}</ref> and included short shorts with them as part of that year's hot pants trend,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Cardin Makes Styles Look Like Fun Again |journal=The New York Times |date=1971-01-27 |page=42 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1971/01/27/archives/cardin-makes-styles-look-like-fun-again.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=...[S]horts are under practically everything.}}</ref> while continuing to show longer lengths as well. Bare-armed, knee-length dresses with extended cap sleeves resembling shoulder flanges were notable, a style he would show through 1973.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Cardin Makes Styles Look Like Fun Again |journal=The New York Times |date=1971-01-27 |page=42 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1971/01/27/archives/cardin-makes-styles-look-like-fun-again.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=One of his favorite ideas was a slender mid knee‐length dress with extended shoulders. The shoulder caps left the arms bare, but gave the broadened look across the top that is much in the air here.}}</ref> Some of his early seventies minidresses were in the form of tunics. Other tunic dresses in various lengths were shown for all hours, either alone or over trousers.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Cardin and Valentino Collections – Today and Yesteryear |journal=The New York Times |date=1971-05-12 |page=36 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1971/05/12/archives/cardin-and-valentino-collections-today-and-yesteryear.html?searchResultPosition=7 |quote=...[T]he collection moves on to tunics of any length — from well above the knees for day to ankle or floor length for evening. Some are the relatively sedate knee length. Most are split at the sides, many are curved at the bottom. Under them, you can wear...shorts or skinny pants or tights or flowered shirts.}}</ref>
HIs couture collections continued to feature geometric shapes, with clothes cut to form squares, circles, or triangles when the arms were held out to the sides.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Cardin: One Foot in the Future, the Other Planted Firmly in Today |journal=The New York Times |date=1971-07-28 |page=40 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1971/07/28/archives/cardin-one-foot-in-future-the-other-planted-firmly-in-today.html?searchResultPosition=10 |quote=...[T]here are coats that form a perfect square when the arms are extended shoulder‐high, trousers that form a triangle, ponchos that curve like a parabola.}}</ref> In 1971, he adopted the motif of a circle at the end of a long, rectangular strip, a sort of geometric pendulum form that he would put at the ends of belts, sleeves, and pant legs.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Cardin Makes Styles Look Like Fun Again |journal=The New York Times |date=1971-01-27 |page=42 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1971/01/27/archives/cardin-makes-styles-look-like-fun-again.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=Some of the dresses are sashed with belts that have a pendulum effect. The pendulum motif appears on coat sleeves and pants legs, too. It's part of the designer's continuing experimentation with geometric shapes and forms.}}</ref>
He met [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] ballerina [[Maya Plisetskaya]] in 1971 at [[Festival d'Avignon|Avignon]]. She would become a friend and muse, wearing his clothes and inviting him to costume multiple productions.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Kuprina |first1=Nadya |title=How Pierre Cardin Fell in Love with Soviet Russia |journal=Russia Beyond |date=2020-12-30 |url=https://www.rbth.com/arts/333239-pierre-cardin-ussr-russia |access-date=2025-06-06 |quote=Cardin met Plisetskaya at the Avignon theater festival during her 1971 tour of France, and went on to create costumes for many productions starring the prima donna, the most famous being the Bolshoi Theater’s legendary ballet interpretation of ''Anna Karenina''. The ballerina also willingly modeled Cardin’s ensembles in everyday life.}}</ref>


[[File:Pierre Cardin et Régis Campo, Institut de France.jpg|thumb|Pierre Cardin and the French composer [[Régis Campo]], from [[Académie des Beaux-Arts|Académie des beaux-arts]], [[Institut de France]], Paris, 2017|alt=Pierre Cardin and the French composer Régis Campo, from Académie des beaux-arts, Institut de France, Paris, 2017]]
[[File:Pierre Cardin et Régis Campo, Institut de France.jpg|thumb|Pierre Cardin and the French composer [[Régis Campo]], from [[Académie des Beaux-Arts|Académie des beaux-arts]], [[Institut de France]], Paris, 2017|alt=Pierre Cardin and the French composer Régis Campo, from Académie des beaux-arts, Institut de France, Paris, 2017]]
Cardin resigned from the [[Fédération française de la couture|Chambre Syndicale]] in 1966 and began showing his collections in his own venue.<ref name="Agnauta"/> He also designed uniforms for [[Pakistan International Airlines]], which were introduced from 1966 to 1971 and became an instant hit.<ref name="Kureishi"/>


In 1971, Cardin redesigned the [[barong tagalog]], a national costume of the [[Philippines]], by opening the front, removing the cuffs that needed [[cufflink]]s, flaring the sleeves, and minimizing the embroidery. It was also tapered to the body, in contrast with the traditional loose-fitting design, and it also had a thicker collar with sharp and pointed cuffs. A straight-cut design was favored by [[President of the Philippines|President]] [[Ferdinand Marcos]].<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=IBdpE-aUchkC&q=pierre+cardin+ferdinand+marcos&pg=PA31 |title=The Politics of Dress in Asia and the Americas |page=31 |editor-last=Edwards |editor-first=Louise |editor2-last=Roces |editor2-first=Mina |publisher=Sussex Academic Press |year=2010 |isbn=9781845193997 }}{{Dead link|date=February 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref>
In 1971, Cardin redesigned the [[barong tagalog]], a national costume of the [[Philippines]], by opening the front, removing the cuffs that needed [[cufflink]]s, flaring the sleeves, and minimizing the embroidery. It was also tapered to the body, in contrast with the traditional loose-fitting design, and it also had a thicker collar with sharp and pointed cuffs. A straight-cut design was favored by [[President of the Philippines|President]] [[Ferdinand Marcos]].<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=IBdpE-aUchkC&q=pierre+cardin+ferdinand+marcos&pg=PA31 |title=The Politics of Dress in Asia and the Americas |page=31 |editor-last=Edwards |editor-first=Louise |editor2-last=Roces |editor2-first=Mina |publisher=Sussex Academic Press |year=2010 |isbn=9781845193997 }}{{Dead link|date=February 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref>
Other Cardin womenswear from 1971 was made with high, tight, constraining waistbands, some cinched, even on jeans, which was very out of step with the times.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=For Valentino and Cardin, Cinched Waistlines |journal=The New York Times |date=1971-12-02 |page=60 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1971/12/02/archives/for-valentino-and-cardin-cinched-waistlines.html?searchResultPosition=23 |quote=Everywhere you looked, there were tight, high waistlines. On trousers and skirts. In jersey and denim.}}</ref> Another indulgence of his that was considered anachronistic in the early to mid-seventies was big ballgowns, which Cardin produced from 1971 onward in taffetas and other traditionally dressy fabrics.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Cardin: One Foot in the Future, the Other Planted Firmly in Today |journal=The New York Times |date=1971-07-28 |page=40 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1971/07/28/archives/cardin-one-foot-in-future-the-other-planted-firmly-in-today.html?searchResultPosition=10 |quote=...black velvet with starched white organdy sleeves...Cardin's ballgowns have tiny waistlines and big, romantic skirts...}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Fashion Lapses: The Paris Shows Had Their Share |journal=The New York Times |date=1973-08-08 |page=42 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1973/08/08/archives/fashion-lapses-the-paris-shows-had-their-share.html?searchResultPosition=19 |quote=Pierre Cardin, who used to do space‐age clothes, retreated to the age of gathers, drapes and ruffles.}}</ref> Fellow former Space Age designer [[André Courrèges]] also iconoclastically produced big ballgowns at the time,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Anyway, the Courreges Show Wasn't Dull |journal=The New York Times |date=1972-01-26 |page=42 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1972/01/26/archives/anyway-the-courreges-show-wasnt-dull.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=The unmistakable [Courrèges] evening dresses had the biggest skirts since Scarlett O'Hara's and were reportedly held out by ruffles sewn underneath.}}</ref> a very casual period during which women might wear jeans and t-shirts even for important events.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Livingston |first1=Kathryn Zahony |title=World Book Year Book 1973: A Review of the Events of 1972 |publisher=Field Enterprises Educational Corporation |location=Chicago, Illinois, USA |isbn=0-7166-0473-6 |page=338 |chapter=Fashion |date=1973 |quote=An important aspect of being fashionable in 1972 was not to look as if one had spent either too much time or money on clothes....Female delegates at the Democratic National Convention in Miami...turned up in everything – floor-length dresses; tailored, short separates; faded blue jeans.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Evans |first1=Eli N. |title=The Emperor's Fall Clothes |journal=The New York Times |date=24 August 1975|page=213 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1975/08/24/archives/the-emperors-fall-clothes-the-layered-look-looked-hotter-than-a.html |access-date=4 April 2022|quote=...[J]eans have invaded ballet, theater and gallery openings with such assertion that everyone else feels overdressed.}}</ref> Grand ballgowns of this type wouldn't return to mainstream fashion until the end of the seventies.
Some of Cardin's skirts starting in 1972, including miniskirts, had hoops, ranging from two or three widely separated hoops in the skirt of a minidress to multiple hoops very close together near the hem of an evening gown that moved up and down as the wearer walked. The point of these hoops seemed to be a particular kind of movement.<ref>{{cite journal |title=From French Ready-to-Wear, That Well-Groomed |journal=The New York Times |date=1972-04-24 |page=30 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1972/04/24/archives/from-french-ready-to-wear-that-wellgroomed-look.html?searchResultPosition=10 |quote=Cardin...has a dress all his own, with a hoop that jiggles...}}</ref> They were largely not the big, silhouette-enlarging hoops seen in the 1860s but hoops that stood out only a little from the slim lines of the skirt. Like his sheath skirts from the same time period, these never caught on among the comfort-conscious seventies public and they were confined to Cardin's runways, but he would continue to play with the idea into the 1980s, when designer [[Vivienne Westwood]] would receive attention for her wire-framed mid-eighties crinoline miniskirts.
Cardin's fashion shows, both couture and ready-to-wear, continued to contain many more garments than other designers' shows. As ready-to-wear came to outshine haute couture during the 1970s, Cardin was one of several designers who considered doing away with open couture shows entirely, nearly doing so in 1972 when he, [[Yves Saint Laurent (designer)|Yves Saint Laurent]], and a few others declared that they would stop presenting separate public couture shows for spring and instead show their couture lines with their ready-to-wear collections and then changed their minds.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Couture Alive, Pulse Fading |journal=The New York Times |date=1972-01-28 |page=68 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1972/01/28/archives/couture-alive-pulse-fading.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=...Pierre Cardin and Yves Saint Laurent... decided to boycott the traditional January couture shows. They agreed to present their collections in April, when the ready‐to‐wear houses show their lines.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Cardin, At Least, Said Something New |journal=The New York Times |date=1972-07-29 |page=16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1972/07/29/archives/cardin-at-least-said-something-new.html?searchResultPosition=19 |quote=Three concerns tried to throw in their lot with ready to‐wear, but Robert Ricci, Pierre Cardin and Yves Saint Laurent reneged. When it came couture time, they ran up a few more styles and held couture shows.}}</ref>
In 1973, Cardin's backdrop at the [[The Battle of Versailles Fashion Show|joint French-US fashion show]] held at Versailles was a spaceship, while other designers chose bucolic or nostalgic scenes.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Nemy |first1=Enid |title=Fashion at Versailles: French Were Good, Americans Were Great |journal=The New York Times |date=1973-11-30 |page=26 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1973/11/30/archives/fashion-at-versailles-french-were-good-americans-were-great-caps.html?searchResultPosition=29 |quote=Each designer's segment was...augmented by a float, generally in the shape of a carriage as pastoral as the background scenery (the Saint Laurent float was an elongated, old‐fashioned car; Cardin's background, a spaceship...)...}}</ref> He continued with some Space Age womenswear styles into 1974. By that date, the main vestiges of his Space Age looks were his jumper dresses over turtleneck-and-tights or bodystocking, a very versatile, serviceable way of dressing that fit the practical mood of the period.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=At the Paris Shows, Lots of Smoke but Not Much Fire |journal=The New York Times |date=1973-04-03 |page=38 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1973/04/03/archives/at-the-paris-shows-lots-of-smoke-but-not-much-fire.html?searchResultPosition=7 |quote=...Pierre Cardin's familiar space‐age look, with its spare jumpers and tunics tossed over ribbed black sweaters and tights, seemed absolutely refreshing.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Weinberg Enters the Sweater Sweepstakes |journal=The New York Times |date=1973-06-05 |page=32 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1973/06/05/archives/weinberg-enters-the-sweater-sweepstakes-fashion-talk.html?searchResultPosition=13 |quote=...[H]is most successful things...go back...to Cardin in his space‐age period: turtleneck sweaters under jumpers, good coats, little caps extending over the shoulders on sleeveless pullovers, big zippers down the front.}}</ref>
By 1973, the larger fashion industry had moved toward exclusively below-knee skirts, with calf lengths preferred. Cardin also featured skirts of that length,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Paris for Fall: Listless Start and Why Revive the 40's? |journal=The New York Times |date=1974-07-23 |page=42 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1974/07/23/archives/paris-for-fall-listless-start-and-why-revive-the-40s-nice-start-bad.html?searchResultPosition=6 |quote=Pierre Cardin...started off...with ankle‐length skirts paired with skinny ribbed knitted tops.}}</ref> but he would also be one of very few designers, [[André Courrèges|Courrèges]] most notably, to carry on including [[Miniskirt#1970s|miniskirts]] in his collections even during their mid-seventies nadir.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Cardin Joins Miniskirt Parade |journal=The New York Times |date=1976-10-29 |page=46 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1976/10/29/archives/cardin-joins-miniskirt-parade.html?searchResultPosition=8 |quote=The clothes...are of the mini variety...crisp tutu-like skirts...When they aren't flaring out all around the body, the skirts tend to dip in handkerchief points...Often, it's tied up on one shoulder like a tiny toga. Ponchos with a hole for the head are another version....They're in such fabrics as eyelet, warp-printed cotton or chintz.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=At Paris Shows, the Latest Wrinkle in Haute Couture is Pleats |journal=The New York Times |date=1977-01-25 |page=45 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1977/01/25/archives/at-paris-shows-the-latest-wrinkle-in-haute-couture-is-pleats.html?searchResultPosition=39 |quote=The first hundred models at Pierre Cardin...danced around in minidresses....[H]is minidresses look a bit like abbreviated togas or Greek togas....[M]any end in handkerchief points.}}</ref>
In other designs, he did conform to some of the trends of the time, including more natural fibers; layering;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=A Touch of Derring-Do |journal=The New York Times |date=1972-05-17 |page=36 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1972/05/17/archives/a-touch-of-derringdo.html?searchResultPosition=12 |quote=Coat sleeves rolled up to the elbow to show the tight-ribbed sleeves of the sweater beneath. Jacket sleeves roll up this way too.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=At Paris Shows, the Latest Wrinkle in Haute Couture is Pleats |journal=The New York Times |date=1977-01-25 |page=45 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1977/01/25/archives/at-paris-shows-the-latest-wrinkle-in-haute-couture-is-pleats.html?searchResultPosition=39 |quote=His more serious daytime clothes run to wool sleeveless vests over striped blouses and full skirts.}}</ref> fuller cuts;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Paris Couture Sets a Lively Pace |journal=The New York Times |date=1977-07-26 |page=34 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1977/07/26/archives/paris-couture-sets-a-lively-pace.html?searchResultPosition=24 |quote=Everything was rather free and loose...}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Fashion: Paris is Alive and Well, but Different |journal=The New York Times |date=1976-01-27 |page=46 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1976/01/27/archives/fashion-paris-is-alive-and-well-but-different.html?searchResultPosition=1 |quote=Pierre Cardin's...loose jackets with the front ends folded back in a rippling, ruffled effect...}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=At Paris Shows, the Latest Wrinkle in Haute Couture is Pleats |journal=The New York Times |date=1977-01-25 |page=45 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1977/01/25/archives/at-paris-shows-the-latest-wrinkle-in-haute-couture-is-pleats.html?searchResultPosition=39 |quote=Other suits have bloused jackets ending in wide hip bands.}}</ref> full, flounced, below-knee skirts of light fabrics;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Paris Couture Sets a Lively Pace |journal=The New York Times |date=1977-07-26 |page=34 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1977/07/26/archives/paris-couture-sets-a-lively-pace.html?searchResultPosition=24 |quote=The bottoms were...dirndl skirts...}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Paris Openings: A Different Audience, New Emphasis |journal=The New York Times |date=1978-01-24 |page=36 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1978/01/24/archives/paris-openings-a-different-audience-new-emphasis-still-some-frills.html?searchResultPosition=2 |quote=...[T]here were...dresses, loosely fitted and shaped...There...[were] a few made of billowing tiers.}}</ref> harem pants, harem skirts, and harem tops;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Fashion: Paris is Alive and Well, but Different |journal=The New York Times |date=1976-01-27 |page=46 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1976/01/27/archives/fashion-paris-is-alive-and-well-but-different.html?searchResultPosition=1 |quote=...lots of bubble‐shaped tunics. Skirts are gathered under in a harem effect...[T]here are jumpsuits, elasticized at the ankles.}}</ref> and a variety of full trousers<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Fashion: Paris is Alive and Well, but Different |journal=The New York Times |date=1976-01-27 |page=46 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1976/01/27/archives/fashion-paris-is-alive-and-well-but-different.html?searchResultPosition=1 |quote=Pierre Cardin's...overalls, culottes or pantaloons...}}</ref> and tapered trousers;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Paris Couture Sets a Lively Pace |journal=The New York Times |date=1977-07-26 |page=34 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1977/07/26/archives/paris-couture-sets-a-lively-pace.html?searchResultPosition=24 |quote=The bottoms were loose but tapered pants...}}</ref> plus athletic gear like jogging outfits and tenniswear.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Kifner |first1=John |title=Thump...Thump...Gasp...Sound of Joggers Increases in the Land |journal=The New York Times |date=1975-06-10 |page=24 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1975/06/10/archives/thump-thump-gaspsound-of-joggers-increases-in-the-land.html?searchResultPosition=3 |quote=...Pierre Cardin is now merchandising a running suit.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=At the Paris Shows, Lots of Smoke but Not Much Fire |journal=The New York Times |date=1973-04-03 |page=38 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1973/04/03/archives/at-the-paris-shows-lots-of-smoke-but-not-much-fire.html?searchResultPosition=7 |quote=Pierre Cardin's...collection...included...tennis dresses...}}</ref> Cardin's penchant for deep sleeve cuts,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=High Marks for Dior as Fall Collections Get Underway |journal=The New York Times |date=1976-07-27 |page=34 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1976/07/27/archives/high-marks-for-dior-as-fall-collections-get-under-way.html?searchResultPosition=17 |quote=Pierre Cardin...had a fondness for deep armholes...}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=A Touch of Derring-Do |journal=The New York Times |date=1972-05-17 |page=36 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1972/05/17/archives/a-touch-of-derringdo.html?searchResultPosition=12 |quote=The sweater...with deep dolman sleeves and a high turtleneck that sticks out of collars.}}</ref> capes, and ponchos adapted well to the mid-seventies [[1970s in fashion#The Big Look or Soft Look|Big Look]] period, aside from some cape tops that immobilized the upper arms.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Paris Couture Sets a Lively Pace |journal=The New York Times |date=1977-07-26 |page=34 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1977/07/26/archives/paris-couture-sets-a-lively-pace.html?searchResultPosition=24 |quote=...the cape tops that pinioned the arms to the sides.}}</ref> The voluminous shapes of mid-seventies high fashion included an emphasis on versatility, with designers producing dresses and other garments that could be wrapped, knotted, and tied in a variety of ways, tendencies Cardin also indulged in at the time.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Paris Couture Sets a Lively Pace |journal=The New York Times |date=1977-07-26 |page=34 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1977/07/26/archives/paris-couture-sets-a-lively-pace.html?searchResultPosition=24 |quote=Big capes were wrapped and belted to become coats; small capes were tucked into belts or the edges were knotted....A long rectangle with a slot for the head was the kind of cape‐poncho that worked exceedingly well as the topping for dirndl skirts.}}</ref> He brought out innovative pieces that contained one pants leg and the rest of the garment a skirt, as well as overgarments that had a sleeve on one side and a cape on the other side that could be tied on the opposite shoulder over the single sleeve.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=High Marks for Dior as Fall Collections Get Underway |journal=The New York Times |date=1976-07-27 |page=34 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1976/07/27/archives/high-marks-for-dior-as-fall-collections-get-under-way.html?searchResultPosition=17 |quote=Pierre Cardin showed some dresses with one pants leg...[H]is one-armed coats...tie on the opposite side of his one-sleeved capes. }}</ref> He used his preferred ribknit for convertible necklines during this period.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=High Marks for Dior as Fall Collections Get Underway |journal=The New York Times |date=1976-07-27 |page=34 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1976/07/27/archives/high-marks-for-dior-as-fall-collections-get-under-way.html?searchResultPosition=17 |quote=Evening dresses with rib‐knitted tops that can be pulled off the shoulder or made to cover one shoulder have possibilities.}}</ref>
He put his name on a line of infants' clothes in 1975.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Taylor |first1=Angela |title=Cardin for the Younger Set |journal=The New York Times |date=1975-08-13 |page=23 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1975/08/13/archives/cardin-for-the-younger-set.html?searchResultPosition=9 |quote=Piccolino, the children's house that is the French couturier's newest licensee, displayed the first American collection bearing the Cardin Enfant label. Meaning that mothers who are crazy to have the PC logo plastered all over their offspring will be able to outfit them completely—from sunglasses to belt buckles to booties (with the logo knitted into the soles) locally.}}</ref>


In 1975, Cardin opened his first furniture boutique on the [[Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré]].<ref name="bio_cardin"/> In 1977, 1979, and 1983, he was awarded the Cartier Golden Thimble by French haute couture for the most creative collection of the season.<ref>Längle (2005), pp. 199–200</ref> He was a member of the Chambre Syndicale de la Haute Couture et du Prêt-à-Porter from 1953 to 1993.<ref name="fashionheritage">{{cite web|title=Daring Geniuses: Pierre Cardin |url= https://fashionheritage.eu/daring-geniuses-pierre-cardin/ |date=28 August 2018 |access-date=9 April 2021 |website=fashionheritage.eu}}</ref>
In 1975, Cardin opened his first furniture boutique on the [[Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré]].<ref name="bio_cardin"/> In 1977, 1979, and 1983, he was awarded the Cartier Golden Thimble by French haute couture for the most creative collection of the season.<ref>Längle (2005), pp. 199–200</ref> He was a member of the Chambre Syndicale de la Haute Couture et du Prêt-à-Porter from 1953 to 1993.<ref name="fashionheritage">{{cite web|title=Daring Geniuses: Pierre Cardin |url= https://fashionheritage.eu/daring-geniuses-pierre-cardin/ |date=28 August 2018 |access-date=9 April 2021 |website=fashionheritage.eu}}</ref>
In 1976, Cardin's position as most influential menswear designer began to be eclipsed by [[Giorgio Armani]], who was just becoming a name among the fashion cognoscenti.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=La Ferla |first1=Ruth |title=Fashion: Sizing Up Giorgio Armani |journal=The New York Times |date=1990-10-21 |page=55 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1990/10/21/magazine/fashion-sizing-up-giorgio-armani.html |access-date=2021-12-10 |quote=[Armani's] career has been punctuated by a series of radical gestures, beginning with the unconstructed blazer of the mid-1970's – his epochal creation.}}</ref> Cardin's clothes by that time had followed the trends of the period and become more sedate. He was beginning to shorten his men's jackets, narrow lapels slightly, and broaden the shoulders, a direction that would continue until it became an industry trend at the end of the decade.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Men's Styles are Changing – But Revolution May Be Quiet |journal=The New York Times |date=1975-01-25 |page=42 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1975/01/25/archives/fashion-talk-teens-styles-are-changing-but-revolution-may-be-quiet.html?searchResultPosition=1 |quote=...Pierre Cardin...has given up his space‐age look. Once his clothes were as full of zippers as an aviator's and seemed ready for a walk on the moon. The current crop could be worn by an insurance salesman to a meeting with a corporate executive....[T]he suits themselves are not alarming. The lapels are even somewhat reduced from the flaring ones that passed for mod....[T]he jackets are a smidgen shorter and they rarely have vents...}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=For Today's Designers, Fashion Isn't Enough |journal=The New York Times |date=1973-10-26 |page=48 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1973/10/26/archives/for-todays-designers-fashion-isnt-enough.html?searchResultPosition=26 |quote=And now? Square shoulders, short jackets and not necessarily a shirt and tie — or even a T-shirt...}}</ref>


Cardin's first American-made, mass-produced home furnishing collection came in 1977 when Cardin partnered with Dillingham Manufacturing Company, Scandinavian Folklore Carpets of Denmark for Ege Rya Inc., and the [[Laurel Lamp Company]].<ref>{{Cite news |last=Reif |first=Rita |date=1977-10-06 |title=Cardin's Furniture Debut Shimmering Chic |language=en-US |work=The New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1977/10/06/archives/westchester-opinion-cardins-furniture-debut-shimmering-chic.html |access-date=2023-02-09 |issn=0362-4331}}</ref>
Cardin's first American-made, mass-produced home furnishing collection came in 1977 when Cardin partnered with Dillingham Manufacturing Company, Scandinavian Folklore Carpets of Denmark for Ege Rya Inc., and the [[Laurel Lamp Company]].<ref>{{Cite news |last=Reif |first=Rita |date=1977-10-06 |title=Cardin's Furniture Debut Shimmering Chic |language=en-US |work=The New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1977/10/06/archives/westchester-opinion-cardins-furniture-debut-shimmering-chic.html |access-date=2023-02-09 |issn=0362-4331}}</ref>
In 1977, Cardin simplified and made more accessible the haute couture process by introducing "prêt-couture," off-the-rack hand-made clothes that customers could acquire with only one fitting and a price intermediate between his ready-to-wear and couture lines.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Mulvagh |first1=Jane |title=Vogue History of 20th Century Fashion |date=1988 |publisher=Viking, the Penguin Group |location=London, England |isbn=0-670-80172-0 |page=359 |chapter=1977 |quote=Cardin promoted a new idea this autumn, the 'prêt-couture,' a collection of hand-made clothes made in standard sizes. Potential customers had to pay to see them, but alterations, within reason, were on the house.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Paris Couture Sets a Lively Pace |journal=The New York Times |date=1977-07-26 |page=34 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1977/07/26/archives/paris-couture-sets-a-lively-pace.html?searchResultPosition=24 |quote=Cardin also introduced a new concept of clothes. He calls it pret‐a‐couture, which represents a marriage of pret‐a-porter (ready‐to‐wear) and couture or made‐to‐order clothes. The new order is a simplification of the couture. Instead of five or six fittings, there will be only one. Prices will also be simplified. Instead of S1,500 to $4,000, they will run $360 to $1,000.}}</ref>
For fall of 1978, much of the fashion industry moved away from voluminous, unconstructed, versatile shapes in womenswear and toward prominently [[Shoulder pad (fashion)#Fall 1978|padded shoulders]] and [[1970s in fashion#Shoulder pads|more tailored clothing]] in styles that were often derived from the 1940s, a tendency that was referred to as retro at the time. The retro emphasis included ideas of futuristic dress from the 1930s, '40s, and '50s, with [[Flash Gordon]] and [[Buck Rogers]] frequently mentioned,  most famously in the work of [[Thierry Mugler]] and [[Claude Montana]].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Duka |first1=John |title=Paris is Yesterday |journal=New York |date=1978-11-13 |volume=11 |issue=46 |pages=111–112 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-OACAAAAMBAJ&dq=%22france+andrevie%22+1978&pg=PA111 |access-date=2021-12-11 |quote=On the Flash Gordon side of French ready-to-wear Retro are such designers as Claude Montana, Thierry Mugler, and France Andrevie....At Montana, it took the form of...Italian fascist gone science-fiction fantasy....At Mugler,...a big-shouldered Flash Gordon jacket...}}</ref> This was not the minimalistic, intellectual Space Age look influenced by modern art that had prevailed in the 1960s in the work of Cardin and others but something older, consisting of shoulder flanges and trapunto-stitched jumpsuits. Some of Cardin's work from this big-shoulders period would contribute to this retro-futuristic mode.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Fraser |first1=John |title=Comrade Chic |journal=Washington Post |date=1979-03-20 |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/1979/03/20/comrade-chic/e237b052-6ac9-43b0-a477-2d07897329b0/ |access-date=2022-05-07 |quote=...[Pierre Cardin's] space-age shoulder pads...}}</ref> His tailoring expertise and preference for bold silhouettes fit into the renewed emphasis on structure and he received increased press attention for his clothes, his shoulders some of the broadest in Paris and his suits some of the most severely tailored.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Hyde |first1=Nina S. |title=Pierre Cardin |journal=The New York Times |date=1978-09-10 |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/1978/09/11/pierre-cardin/34d98f09-548d-4292-bc89-1fb5cd3eb259/ |quote=Suddenly he is out of his chair and starts 'designing' a dress on a visitor. He slides an ashtray under the shoulder to show a changed shape...}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Larkin |first1=Kathy |title=1979 Collier's Yearbook Covering the Year 1978 |date=1979 |publisher=Crowell-Collier Publishing Company |page=250 |chapter=Fashion |quote=...[A] wide-shouldered coat by Pierre Cardin, being cinched tight...by the designer himself, to emphasize that shapelessness had become quite passé.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Paris Couture Opens with Bow to Past |journal=The New York Times |date=1978-07-25 |page=C2 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1978/07/25/archives/paris-couture-opens-with-bow-to-the-past-a-narrow-silhouette.html?searchResultPosition=23 |quote=Cardin padded some of his shoulders so sharply they looked as if they could cut...}}</ref>


In 1979, Cardin was appointed a consultant to [[China]]'s agency for trade in textiles,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Prial |first1=Frank J. |author-link=Frank J. Prial |title=China Names Cardin as Fashion Consultant |journal=The New York Times |date=1979-01-08 |page=D2 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1979/01/08/archives/business-people-china-names-cardin-as-fashion-consultant-pattison.html |access-date=2023-11-14 |quote=Pierre Cardin...said in Paris that the Chinese Government had named him as a consultant to its textile‐trade agency. Under the agreement with Peking, Mr. Cardin will advise the Chinese on how to style their textile products to make them more marketable in the West.}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Hendelson |first1=Marion |title=Funk & Wagnalls New Encyclopedia 1980 Yearbook: Events of 1979 |publisher=Funk & Wagnalls, Inc. |location=New York, USA |isbn=0-8343-0034-6 |page=166 |chapter=Fashion |date=1980 |quote=Pierre Cardin of Paris was made fashion advisor to the Chinese government in 1979.}}</ref> and in March of that year, he became the first Western designer to present a fashion show in China in many decades.<ref>{{cite journal |title=Cardin Shows Haute Couture Designs in China |journal=The New York Times |date=1979-03-19 |page=C5 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1979/03/20/archives/cardin-shows-haute-couture-designs-in-china.html |access-date=2023-11-14 |quote=Pierre Cardin today gave the Chinese their first taste of haute couture in decades when he showed off his collections of spring and summer fashions for women and fall clothes for men.}}</ref>
In 1979, Cardin was appointed a consultant to [[China]]'s agency for trade in textiles,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Prial |first1=Frank J. |author-link=Frank J. Prial |title=China Names Cardin as Fashion Consultant |journal=The New York Times |date=1979-01-08 |page=D2 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1979/01/08/archives/business-people-china-names-cardin-as-fashion-consultant-pattison.html |access-date=2023-11-14 |quote=Pierre Cardin...said in Paris that the Chinese Government had named him as a consultant to its textile‐trade agency. Under the agreement with Peking, Mr. Cardin will advise the Chinese on how to style their textile products to make them more marketable in the West.}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Hendelson |first1=Marion |title=Funk & Wagnalls New Encyclopedia 1980 Yearbook: Events of 1979 |publisher=Funk & Wagnalls, Inc. |location=New York, USA |isbn=0-8343-0034-6 |page=166 |chapter=Fashion |date=1980 |quote=Pierre Cardin of Paris was made fashion advisor to the Chinese government in 1979.}}</ref> and in March of that year, he became the first Western designer to present a fashion show in China in many decades.<ref>{{cite journal |title=Cardin Shows Haute Couture Designs in China |journal=The New York Times |date=1979-03-19 |page=C5 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1979/03/20/archives/cardin-shows-haute-couture-designs-in-china.html |access-date=2023-11-14 |quote=Pierre Cardin today gave the Chinese their first taste of haute couture in decades when he showed off his collections of spring and summer fashions for women and fall clothes for men.}}</ref>
In early 1979, Cardin contributed pagoda shoulders to the fashion lexicon.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Paris Couture Enhances the Past |journal=The New York Times |date=1979-02-06 |page=C5 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1979/02/06/archives/paris-couture-enhances-the-past-couture-has-the-right-a-chinese.html?searchResultPosition=10 |quote=Pierre Cardin turns up the outer edges of his padded shoulders in a pagoda-like flip...}}</ref> These may have been influenced by his increased trips to China over the previous year.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Schiro |first1=Anne-Marie |title=Notes on Fashion |journal=The New York Times |date=1985-03-12 |page=A28 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1985/03/12/style/notes-on-fashion.html |quote=The idea came, he said, from a trip to China. 'I saw the roofs that go up at the ends rather than down,' he said...}}</ref> The look would influence other designers for fall of 1979, as many sharpened the edges of their shoulder pads and sometimes turned them up,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Paris Fashions Unveiled in Super Bowl Style |journal=The New York Times |date=1979-04-09 |page=D8 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1979/04/09/archives/paris-fashions-unveiled-in-super-bowl-style.html?searchResultPosition=16 |quote=What the shows also had in common was an emphasis on extended, pinched‐up shoulders somewhat like the pagoda line Pierre Cardin showed in his last couture collection and took to China recently.}}</ref> most notably [[Claude Montana]].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Taylor |first1=Angela |title=Claude Montana's Space-Age Styles Touch Down on West 54th Street |journal=The New York Times |date=1979-09-07 |page=A16 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1979/09/07/archives/claude-montanas-spaceage-styles-touch-down-on-west-54th-street.html |access-date=2021-12-18 |quote=[Montana's] shoulders...turned up at the ends, like pagoda roofs.}}</ref> Like Montana,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=In Paris, High Fashion's Latest Trip is to Outer Space |journal=The New York Times |date=15 October 1979 |page=B14 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1979/10/15/archives/in-paris-high-fashions-latest-trip-is-to-outer-space-a-fashionable.html |access-date=17 May 2023 |quote=Claude Montana...shoulders extended half a foot on each side by padding and huge shelflike sleeves...}}</ref> Cardin would present some of the largest shoulders in the industry into the mid-1980s,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Couture Forecasts Shape of Clothes to Come |journal=The New York Times |date=1979-07-31 |page=C5 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1979/07/31/archives/couture-forecasts-shape-of-clothes-to-come-chemise-is-the.html?searchResultPosition=30 |quote=Pierre Cardin probably has the widest, squarest shoulders in town.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |title=Cardin Shows Haute Couture Designs in China |journal=The New York Times |date=1979-03-20 |page=C5 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1979/03/20/archives/cardin-shows-haute-couture-designs-in-china.html |access-date=2023-11-14 |quote=...[Viewers] stared in amazement at the oversized shoulders on Cardin's new creations. 'These styles are Superman styles,' Cardin said of the big, wide shoulders...}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Couture Comes Alive as Fall Showings Open |journal=The New York Times |date=1979-07-24 |page=C10 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1979/07/24/archives/couture-comes-alive-as-fall-showings-open-princess-caroline.html?searchResultPosition=18 |quote=Pierre Cardin's...shoulders can be monstrous...}}</ref> but Cardin only focused on pagoda shoulders for a brief period in 1979,<ref>{{cite news |last1=Hyde |first1=Nina S. |author-link=Nina Hyde |title=Fashion From Paris |newspaper=The Washington Post |date=1979-10-21 |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/1979/10/21/fashion-from-paris/ccf4fb87-660d-403b-82c4-30fecc17b63b/ |access-date=2021-12-19 |quote=...[B]ig pagoda shoulders...were [Cardin's] favorite silhouette...last March.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Couture Comes Alive as Fall Showings Open |journal=The New York Times |date=1979-07-24 |page=C10 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1979/07/24/archives/couture-comes-alive-as-fall-showings-open-princess-caroline.html?searchResultPosition=18 |quote=Pierre Cardin's upturned pagoda shoulders of last season have now acquired a squared‐off shape....His squared-off shoulders often top squared‐off sleeves, box-shaped instead of rounded...}}</ref> when he put them in his menswear as well as his womenswear.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Machalaba |first1=Nick |title=Exclusive Archival Images from DNR [Daily News Record]: European Menswear |url=https://wwd.com/fashion-news/fashion-features/gallery/exclusive-archival-images-from-dnr-european-menswear-featuring-gianni-versace-and-more-1234899651/dnr-european-menswear-31/ |website=Women's Wear Daily |date=17 August 2021 |publisher=Fairchild Media |access-date=2021-12-18 |quote=A model poses in Pierre Cardin’s double-breasted suit with pagoda shoulders during the French men’s wear designer fashion show in New York on Oct. 8, 1979.}}</ref> Despite their brief tenure and limited public adoption, pagoda shoulders would be one of Cardin's most referenced styles in later decades.
His women's collections continued to include the pleats<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Paris Couture: A Backward Glance at the Silver Screen |journal=The New York Times |date=1979-01-30 |page=C4 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1979/01/30/archives/paris-couture-a-backward-glance-at-the-silver-screen-some-names.html?searchResultPosition=8 |quote=A lot of his things are pleated.}}</ref> and asymmetric hemlines<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Couture Comes Alive as Fall Showings Open |journal=The New York Times |date=1979-07-24 |page=C10 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1979/07/24/archives/couture-comes-alive-as-fall-showings-open-princess-caroline.html?searchResultPosition=18 |quote=...the slanted hemlines have a certain charm and his use of pleats is inventive.}}</ref> that Cardin had loved for well over a decade. Particularly well received were full, knee-length tent-chemise dresses in ruffled taffeta for evening, as they were both in line with the renewed emphasis on glamor and comfortably wearable.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Paris Couture Opens with Bow to Past |journal=The Washington Post |date=1978-07-25 |page=C2 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1978/07/25/archives/paris-couture-opens-with-bow-to-the-past-a-narrow-silhouette.html?searchResultPosition=23 |quote=He used taffeta in enormous evening smocks...}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Paris Couture: A Backward Glance at the Silver Screen |journal=The New York Times |date=1979-01-30 |page=C4 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1979/01/30/archives/paris-couture-a-backward-glance-at-the-silver-screen-some-names.html?searchResultPosition=8 |quote=The shoulders mark the return of the suit, but far more effective are the strapless play dresses and party dresses that just billow around the body.}}</ref> He would show these into the early eighties. The ballgowns and mini lengths from Cardin<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=Couture Comes Alive as Fall Showings Open |journal=The New York Times |date=1979-07-24 |page=C10 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1979/07/24/archives/couture-comes-alive-as-fall-showings-open-princess-caroline.html?searchResultPosition=18 |quote=Pierre Cardin's...mini‐dresses...}}</ref> that had been out of style in the broader fashion world for most of the seventies came back in with designers in 1979,<ref>{{cite book |last1=Mulvagh |first1=Jane |title=Vogue History of 20th Century Fashion |date=1988 |publisher=Viking, the Penguin Group |location=London, England |isbn=0-670-80172-0 |page=368 |chapter=1979 |quote=...[T]he bell or bouffant ball dress was high fashion...}}</ref> with miniskirts presented in a variety of shapes and styles, including sixties-revival looks.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Morris |first1=Bernadine |title=French Ready-to-Wear: The Ever-Changing Message |journal=The New York Times |date=1979-04-13 |page=A12 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1979/04/13/archives/french-readytowear-the-everchanging-message.html |access-date=2023-05-17 |quote=Ready‐to-wear designers...are busily repeating such successes of the 1960s as the knitted shift and the miniskirt.}}</ref> Cardin's enormous fashion presentations encompassed a number of variable styles.
His menswear of the last two years of the seventies reached the apogee of the increased-shoulder-width direction he was already headed in the mid-seventies, with shoulders broadened with padding, narrower lapels to increase the impression of shoulder width, and tapered jacket shapes.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Alexander |first1=Ron |title=Putting Men's Fashion Back on the Soft and Narrow |journal=The New York Times |date=1978-02-11 |page=18 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1978/02/11/archives/putting-mens-fashions-back-on-the-soft-and-narrow-drape-comes-back.html?searchResultPosition=4 |quote=...a 'triangular look': the shoulders are broad, though they now roll off gently, and the jacket is shaped with a lot of drape. In addition, Cardin has reduced the width of his jacket lapels from four inches to three and one‐half inches.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Alexander |first1=Ron |title=Shoulder It, Men: Padding is Back |journal=The New York Times |date=1979-09-16 |page=CN21 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1979/09/16/archives/connecticut-weekly-shoulder-it-men-padding-is-back-american.html?searchResultPosition=29 |access-date=2022-04-04 |quote=Pierre Cardin refers to his new suit silhouette as 'an upside‐down triangle.' He also calls it 'The Concorde.' What this all means is that he is designing clothes with broader shoulders and cutting back lapel widths to make the shoulders more pronounced on single-breasted and double‐breasted jackets. The lapels taper as they approach the waistline and the jacket bottoms are close‐fitting.}}</ref> Cardin would present this broad-shouldered men's silhouette through much of the following decade.


===1980s and later===
===1980s and later===
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A documentary on Cardin's life and career, ''[[House of Cardin]]'' directed by [[P. David Ebersole]] and [[Todd Hughes]] premiered to a standing ovation on 6 September 2019 at the [[76th Venice International Film Festival]] in the [[Giornate degli Autori]] section, with Mr. Cardin in attendance.<ref>{{cite news|last=Zargani|first=Luisa |date=6 September 2019 |title=Pierre Cardin Documentary Screened at Venice Film Festival |language=en-US |newspaper=Women's Wear Daily|url= https://wwd.com/eye/people/pierre-cardin-documentary-screened-venice-film-festival-1203258400/ |access-date=9 October 2022}}</ref>
A documentary on Cardin's life and career, ''[[House of Cardin]]'' directed by [[P. David Ebersole]] and [[Todd Hughes]] premiered to a standing ovation on 6 September 2019 at the [[76th Venice International Film Festival]] in the [[Giornate degli Autori]] section, with Mr. Cardin in attendance.<ref>{{cite news|last=Zargani|first=Luisa |date=6 September 2019 |title=Pierre Cardin Documentary Screened at Venice Film Festival |language=en-US |newspaper=Women's Wear Daily|url= https://wwd.com/eye/people/pierre-cardin-documentary-screened-venice-film-festival-1203258400/ |access-date=9 October 2022}}</ref>
== Muses ==
Cardin had several muses who inspired his designs over the years, including model [[Hiroko Matsumoto]], actress [[Jeanne Moreau]], cosmonaut [[Valentina Tereshkova]], and ballerina [[Maya Plisetskaya]].


== Eponymous brand ==
== Eponymous brand ==

Revision as of 05:24, 18 June 2025

Template:Short description Script error: No such module "For". Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox fashion designer

Pierre CardinTemplate:Efn (born Pietro Costante Cardin;Template:Efn 2 July 1922 – 29 December 2020)[1] was an Italian-born naturalised-French fashion designer.[2][3] He is known for what were his avant-garde style and Space Age designs. He preferred geometric shapes and motifs, often ignoring the female form. He advanced into unisex fashions, sometimes experimental, and not always practical. He founded his fashion house in 1950 and introduced the "bubble dress" in 1954.

Though he is remembered today mostly for his Space Age late '60s womenswear, during the 1960s and first half of the '70s he was better known as the top menswear designer of the time,[4] the man who had reintroduced shaped, fitted suits to the public after a long period of looser fit in men's clothes.[5][6][7] Retailers noted that Cardin's popularity had taught men to associate a designer's name with their clothing the way women had long done.[8][9] Cardin was often said to have been the main non-British leader of the Peacock Revolution that had begun in the UK.[10][11] His menswear collection from the year 1960[12] was so influential that the Beatles' tailor Dougie Millings copied its collarless suits for the group in 1963.[13]

Cardin was designated a UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador in 1991,[3] and a United Nations FAO Goodwill Ambassador in 2009.[14]

Career

Cardin was born near Treviso in northern Italy, the son of Maria Montagner and Alessandro Cardin.[15] His parents were wealthy wine merchants, but lost their fortune in World War I.[16] To escape the blackshirts they left Italy and settled in Saint-Étienne, France in 1924 along with his ten siblings.[16][17][18] His father wanted him to study architecture, but from childhood he was interested in dressmaking[19] and at age fourteen apprenticed with Saint-Étienne tailor Louis Bompuis.[20]

Template:Stack Cardin moved to Paris in 1945 after World War II. There, he studied architecture, briefly pursued an acting career,[21] and met Jean Cocteau, who employed him to do costumes for his 1946 film Beauty and the Beast/La Belle et la Bête.[22] He worked with the fashion house of Paquin, then Elsa Schiaparelli, until Jean Cocteau and Christian Berard introduced him to Christian Dior and Dior made him head of his tailleure atelier in 1947,[23] but he was denied work at Balenciaga.[24] While at Dior, he contributed the popular Bar suit to Dior's inaugural 1947 "Corolle" collection, already displaying the deft tailoring that he would be known for in later years.[25][26]

1950s

Cardin founded his own fashion house in 1950.[27] His early designs fit well into the fashion world of the time,[28] especially his suits, which quickly attracted notice in Paris.[29] His career was launched when he designed about 30 of the costumes for a masquerade ball in Venice, hosted by Carlos de Beistegui in 1951. The same year, Andre Oliver joined Cardin as an assistant, eventually becoming associate designer and artistic director.[30][31] Cardin inaugurated his haute couture output in 1953 with his first collection of women's clothing and became a member of the Chambre Syndicale, a French association of haute couture designers.[32] The following year he opened his first boutique, Eve,[32] and introduced the "bubble dress", which is a short-skirted, bubble-shaped dress made by bias-cutting over a stiffened base.[33][34]

For spring of 1957, he presented a more extensive couture collection than he had before and it brought him widespread international attention for the first time.[35][36][37] The collection focused on two dress silhouettes, a long, lean, unwaisted chemise dress[38] and one that featured what he called a "Navette" line, a high waist with fullness over the hips tapering down to a drawn-in knee.[39] A navette is a weaving shuttle, so the skirts were vaguely spindle-shaped. Observers compared the skirt shape to an egg standing on its narrow end or to an amphora.[40] Skirts of similar form were a rising trend among designers in France, Italy, and Spain. The Navette line also extended to coats.[41] His tailoring ability was expressed in three different suit styles, all high-waisted.[42] In February of that year, just after the collection debuted, Christian Dior suggested publicly that Cardin could easily become French couture's leading light,[43][44] and after Dior's death that October, the fashion press considered Cardin to be one of three young designers who might rise to a position equivalent to Dior's.[45][46]

Also in 1957, he opened his Adam boutique for men.[47] By that time, alone among Paris couturiers, he had already established a name for himself in menswear,[48] particularly for a line of small, squared-off bowties in unusual fabrics.[49] His entry into the field paralleled the beginnings of a renaissance in creative menswear occurring in the UK, which would inspire Cardin during the following decade.

Cardin was the first couturier to turn to Japan as a high fashion market when he travelled there in 1957,[27] and it was in Japan that he would discover one of his favorite models and muses, Hiroko Matsumoto, known professionally as Hiroko, whom the public would associate with Cardin through much of the 1960s.[50][51][52]

After his breakthrough 1957 couture collections, Cardin's womenswear shows would be regularly covered in the world's fashion press. He continued to be recognized as a top tailor,[53] and his late 1950s collections were noted for their accomplished presentations of a number of trends of the time:[54] waistless dresses, geometric seaming, large collars, large buttons, shoulder interest, knee-length skirts, large tall hats, and bouffant hairstyles.[55] These styles were accepted in Europe but considered avant-garde in the US,[56] where Americans preferred the kind of figure-revealing forms established by Dior in 1947 and rejected the new shapes out of Europe.[57]

Cardin also began to display at this time design elements that would become characteristic of his work for years to come. His love of pleats,[58] cowl necklines,[59] and batwing sleeves,[60] for instance, already evident in the late fifties, would still be notable in his output in the 1980s. Large, upturned bowl hats set on the back of the head were also favored by him in these years and would continue to be seen in his collections into the mid-1960s.[61]

In 1958, he showed knee-length puffball skirts,[62] coats with similar turned-under hems,[63] and bouffant wig hats consisting of silk flowers for the spring,[64] and, for the fall, large, innovative collar treatments,[65][66] high waists,[67] bouffant millinery,[68] and slim, somewhat Directoire eveningwear,[69] all contributing to what he called a mushroom silhouette.[70] His 1959 work focused on a lowered and extended shoulderline achieved via tucked sleeves;[71] continued collar interest;[72] dresses that were either chemises or softly bloused about a belted waist;[73] puff-hemmed balloon skirts for evening[74] somewhat similar to Balenciaga's of 1950;[75] and continued large hats[76] and bouffant hairdos.

He also presented his first women's ready-to-wear collection in 1959.[77]

1960s

In early 1960, Cardin showed a full menswear line for the first time.[78] This 1960 menswear collection attracted international attention with its narrow "Cylinder" silhouette (called by some a "cigarette" shape),[79] natural shoulders, center-vented suit jackets, foulard shirts, prominent belts, and, above all, high-buttoning, collarless suits,[12] famously copied by the Beatles' tailor three years later.[13]

Cardin's women's collections in the early 1960s often concentrated on more flowing lines than previously,[80] lines that were sometimes said to be influenced by the 1930s.[81] To his favorite pleats,[82][83][84][85] batwing sleeves,[86][87] cowl necklines,[88] and bowl hats[89] he added side closures,[90][91] open backs,[92][93] deep decolletage,[94][95] capelet collars, scarf tops,[96] floating panels,[97][98] bias cuts,[99][100] and extensive chiffon.[101][102][103][104] In the earliest sixties, he showed close-fitting, helmet-like cloche hats that looked like they were straight out of the late 1920s or early 1930s.[105][106] In 1961, he showed sou'wester hats with almost no front rim and a back rim so exaggerated it resembled a bill. His hems stayed mostly at the knee for daywear but were lengthened by several inches for fall of 1962, giving an even more thirties-like appearance.[107] This fluid thirties-ish look would extend into 1965 with handkerchief hems and scalloped skirts.[108]

Though Cardin's womenswear of the early sixties hadn't reached the Dior levels of prestige predicted for him in the late fifties,[109] his work continued to be well received in Europe. In the US, however, his women's clothes were still considered overly avant-garde and sales remained low.[110][111][112]

Cardin traveled to the Soviet Union for the first time in 1963, two years after the country had first sent cosmonauts into orbit and the year Valentina Tereshkova became the first woman to enter outer space. Cardin was directly inspired by seeing Tereshkova in her cosmonaut jumpsuit and helmet and would soon begin introducing into his work elements of Space Age styles.[113]

Possible first signs of Space Age influence appeared in fall of 1963, when Cardin joined other designers in showing a more youthful silhouette consisting at base of hip-length blouson-like tops/jackets over narrow skirts hitting at the top of the knee worn with muffled collars, helmet-like or hood-like hats and caps, tights, and flat boots,[114] with Cardin's boots reaching the knee.[115] It was in this collection that he would first present the geometric cutouts that would become widespread by 1966. Cardin's 1963 cutouts were applied to tunics worn over slim dresses.[116][117]

In 1964, he showed low-slung waists and tights that matched upper garments,[118] including patterned tights matching patterned tops,[119] a characteristic trend of the mid-sixties,[120] and he began adding simple, top-of-the-knee A-line shift dresses emblazoned with large geometric shapes such as targets,[121] as Paris picked up on London's Mod boutique culture of the early 1960s.[122]

Perhaps surprisingly for a designer considered avant-garde, Cardin resisted and even denounced pants for women as they rose in popularity in the mid-sixties after André Courrèges promoted them for everyday wear in 1964,[123] a stance Cardin would maintain until 1968.[124][125]

Cardin launched a men's ready-to-wear line in 1964 that included numerous turtlenecks, a garment that would become a mainstay of men's fashion during the decade. By 1965, his men's suits had evolved into a more shaped, fitted style, usually three-piece, sometimes double-breasted, featuring longer jackets with marked waists, deeper vents, and wider lapels on both jackets and vests; and slim pants with a slight flare below the knee.[126][127] Ties were wider. Shirts were colored or striped and had more prominent collars. Footwear was often an ankle-high boot style that came to be associated with Cardin, designed to maintain a clean line while concealing the socks.[128] This silhouette was inspired by the Mod menswear trends of the UK.[129]

By 1966, Cardin favored an even closer fit for his menswear; slightly wider, more squared shoulders on longer jackets; two-piece or three-piece suits, the vests now sans lapels; a single inverted pleat for jackets instead of vents; higher shirt collars; larger tie knots on even wider ties; and flared pants.[130] Turtlenecks were now presented even for evening, a trend that would become characteristic of the second half of the decade.[131] More casual clothes were also slim, even tight, and featured turtlenecks, jackets with zippers closing fronts and pockets, trousers with stripes along the outer seam, and prominent belts,[132] with summer clothes more colorful and including striped shirts worn open enough to expose the chest and flared pants with colorful side stripes.[133] All of this became very influential and popular, including in the US.

Cardin resigned from the Chambre Syndicale in 1966 and began showing his collections in his own venue.[32] He also designed uniforms for Pakistan International Airlines, which were introduced from 1966 to 1971 and became an instant hit.[134]

Cardin had entered his Space Age phase by 1966, as had much of the rest of the fashion world following the launch of the Soviet Union's space program, André Courrèges's landmark 1964 and '65 collections, and the widespread influence of Britain's Mod culture.[135][136] His menswear collections now also included a Cosmonaut or Cosmocorps line characterized by jumpsuits, hip-belted tunics, and tights-like or flared trousers, all with prominent, often ring-pulled zippers and ultra-modern boots that sometimes rose to the knee.[137][138]

His Space Age-period womenswear of 1966 featured mini lengths,[139] extensive cutouts, geometric necklines, rolled hems and collars, and cutaway shoulders.[140] He was the leading advocate of cutouts[141] and prominent zippers[142][143] as those details peaked among designers in 1966. His cutouts included bare midriffs overlain with geometric shapes.[144] He liked geometric diamond forms,[145] jackets that fell to a low triangular peak at the bottom of the front closure,[146][147] T-bar cutout necklines,[148] metal neck rings anchoring shift dresses,[149] and the large-scale targets, circles, and triangles that were popular at the time across simple A-line shift minidresses.[150] That year, he showed tights and shoes that matched his miniskirts, often having them all exactly the same color, a combination he felt made mini lengths more wearable for women of various ages.[151][152] He also introduced the combination of jumper minidress over a bodystocking or over turtleneck and tights, a functional dress scheme also favored by other designers of the period and one that Cardin would continue to show well into the seventies. His jumper minidresses of 1966 often featured deeply cutaway shoulders, geometric cutouts, and suspender-like straps somewhat reminiscent of the suspender minis Courrèges had shown in 1965. Colors were vivid and graphic.[153] Shoes were flat and square-toed in the dominant style of the time.[154] Cardin's 1966 Space Age look was completed by dome-shaped hats and flaring, helmet-like, geometric headwear that covered the entire head except for the eyes and resembled similar styles shown by Rudi Gernreich in 1964.[155] He made his penchant for scalloped edges fit the new geometric mode by making the scallops prominent and oversized on the hem or the leading edge of asymmetric jacket closures that often fastened on the far side, as Cardin had long preferred, but now were closed with tabs.[156][157] Fabrics were often the substantial double-faced ones of the period also favored by Courrèges.[158][159] In 1966, he became one of the first designers to include purses in a couture show, his made by Gucci.[160]

It was during this period that he began to be known for capes and ponchos, having shown capelet collars for a long time. He made them look futuristic via geometric circular or square armholes[161][162] and precisely curvilinear arches cut into the sides for the arms.[163] Cape and poncho sleeves were also shown.[164][165] He adapted his love of asymmetric hems, earlier a part of his 1930s look, to the new Space Age period by showing hemlines that were shorter on one side than the other, sometimes called a tilted hem, seen especially on evening dresses;[166] miniskirts longer in the front than in the back;[167] skirts consisting of strips, panels, and loops of fabric of various lengths and widths,[168] some petal-like;[169] pleated skirts with fluted hems that curled up and down;[170][171][172] and other unusual forms. These trends became particularly notable beginning in 1967, and the skirts of strips, loops, and panels would be shown through 1970.[173]

Interest in Space Age looks would peak in mainstream fashion during 1966 and part of 1967 and then most designers would move into other areas.[174] Cardin was one of a small group of designers who remained enamored of futuristic Space Age looks for several more years. The best known of these designers were André Courrèges, Rudi Gernreich, Emanuel Ungaro, and Paco Rabanne, all of whom tied their ideas of the future to mini lengths.[175] Cardin's work was noted for including a variety of lengths from 1967 on, particularly his characteristic asymmetric hems, while keeping it all futuristic-looking.[176]

His 1967 women's collections continued with zippers,[177] pleating, side closures,[178] scallops,[179] jumper minidresses,[180] one-shouldered evening dresses,[181] geometric necklines,[182] sculptural metal collars,[183] rolled hems and edges,[184] and other familiar Cardin features and added diagonal closures,[185] a greater variety of geometric pockets,[186] and metal or metal-looking plastic used for tab closures,[187] wide belts,[188] ring collars, and hem bands.[189] For fall, he included deeply flaring, Medieval-looking sleeves.[190][191] frog closings,[192] large collars that framed the head from the back,[193] complexly gored skirts,[194] front lacing on jackets and coats,[195] coats with big, colored circles on them with matching deep hems of fox dyed to match the circles,[196] completely sunburst-pleated capes,[197] and more black than usual.[198] Many of his silhouettes were in the flared trapeze/A-line/conical shapes widespread at the time.[199]

His Space Age womenswear during these few years was in line with the mood of the design world and became very influential,[200] even in the US, where new Cardin women's boutiques opened in prominent department stores.[201] By 1967, some of his adult styles for both men and women were also offered in juniors'[202] and children's sizes.[203]

HIs menswear from the last three years of the decade enjoyed a mass audience, still outselling his womenswear by a large margin.[204][205] He continued with his shaped, fitted, wide-lapelled, wide-tied, flared-leg suits, plus lots of zippers and turtlenecks for more casual clothes.[206][207] His Cosmonaut outfits grew in popularity,[208] consisting of fitted, belted, often sleeveless tunics over slim, often flared trousers in various fabrics, paired with turtlenecks and boots.[209]

Pierre Cardin dress, heat-moulded Dynel, 1968
Pierre Cardin dress, made from heat-moulded Dynel, 1968

Cardin continued with his futuristic womenswear in 1968, showing synthetic outfits of molded Cardine fabric whose surfaces stood out in geometric forms, garments that formed stark geometric shapes when the arms were held out to the sides, metallic silver leather, phosphorescent fabrics (also shown by Paco Rabanne),[210] light-up electric dresses (also shown by Diana Dew),[211] increased use of metal,[212] and extensive use of cutouts, sometimes directly over each breast.[213] He used vinyl and other forms of plastic liberally.[214] He and fellow futurist André Courrèges favored a basic, versatile dress scheme of ribknit bodystocking or turtleneck and tights under various forms of jumper minidresses[215][216] or microminiskirts.[217][218] Cardin also showed the thigh- or hip-high leather or vinyl stretch boots that were popular with designers at the end of the sixties,[219] Cardin's often paired with matching geometric bonnet-hats and his Space Age-looking geometric minidresses and turtlenecks.[220]

He finally showed women's trousers in 1968, initially as part of his unisex clothes, an important trend of this enlightened era. He produced identical tunics, turtlenecks, flared trousers, hip belts, and boots for both sexes,[221][222] and also made ribknit jumpsuits/bodystockings and ribknit trousers for women that extended into a thickened flare over the top of the foot.[223] He now applied his favorite batwing sleeves to jumpsuits that formed a geometric triangle shape when the arms were extended to the sides.

Also in 1968, Cardin opened a furniture and interior decor store called Environnement.[224]

In 1969, his futuristic looks were augmented by Space Age belt fastenings covered by transparent plastic domes;[225] chrome-shiny geometric jewelry and belt buckles; leather added[226] to his continued use of vinyl;[227] newly trapunto-stitched versions of his face-framing collars;[228] additional trapunto detailing;[229] and plush ring-hoods.[230] He adopted the long, lean, fit-and-flare look of sleek knits also favored by Yves Saint Laurent at the time, with calf-length skirts, turtlenecks, skullcap-like headgear, and hip-slung belts. He also continued with his more flowing, diaphanous looks[231] like masterfully bias-cut skirts, asymmetric hems, floating panels,[232] and ponchos and capes,[233] now making ponchos into skirts and dresses[234][235] and adding shawls and shawl-like jackets.[236][237] He included maxiskirts among his variety of skirt lengths, believing that they had become popular because women were now used to covered legs again with the ubiquity of women's trousers.[238][239] Miniskirts were offered as well in this year when the rest of the fashion world joined his long advocacy of choice in hemlines.[240] His long love of pleats was seen in both his futuristic styles and his more flowing garments,[241] and his love of decolletage and Directoire lines was taken to extremes in his eveningwear of the end of the decade.[242]

Cardin's attitude toward fashion shows varied. In the mid-sixties, he added two additional private client showings to his normal biannual couture shows,[243] but he also disliked being expected to have so many shows per year[244] and by the end of the decade would be known for fewer shows but with many more outfits presented than other designers, into the hundreds of pieces,[245][246] resulting in very long fashion shows in which models walked very fast to save time,[247] a tendency that would continue into the seventies.

60s film and TV costuming

After launching his design career doing costumes for Jean Cocteau's 1946 film La Belle et La Bête, Cardin would return to costuming in the 1960s and outfit several films, mostly those starring close friend Jeanne Moreau. These included Joseph Losey's Eva (1962),[248] Marcel Ophüls's Banana Peel (1963), Jean-Louis Richard's Mata Hari, Agent H21 (1964), Anthony Asquith's The Yellow Rolls-Royce (1964),[249] Louis Malle's Viva Maria! (1965),[250] and François Truffaut's The Bride Wore Black (1968), as well as Anthony Asquith's The V.I.P.s (1963) and Anthony Mann's A Dandy in Aspic (1968). For François Truffaut's influential 1962 film Jules et Jim,[251] star Jeanne Moreau wore several Cardin pieces that were from her own wardrobe.[252]

Cardin also created Patrick MacNee's costumes for season five of UK television series The Avengers, airing in 1967.

1970s

In the first half of the 1970s, Cardin was still the most prominent menswear designer in the world, but the menswear revolution he had helped foster in the 1960s was just about over and by the mid-seventies his menswear would be more subdued. His womenswear was still in line with mainstream fashion in the earliest seventies, sometimes considered as influential as Yves Saint Laurent's,[253] but by the mid-seventies it would be somewhat out of step with mainstream women's fashion and would be considered eccentric,[254][255][256][257] though he did reflect some of the trends of the period. He continued to produce enormous fashion shows with hundreds of outfits, so there was plenty of variety to encompass a number of looks.[258] He became better known in the mid-seventies for licensing his name for all kinds of products.[259] Toward the end of the decade, he would regain some influence in womenswear as his interpretations of the big-shoulder-pads trend would coincide with what other designers were doing and bring him renewed attention.

As in the rest of the world, Cardin's reputation in the Soviet Union had grown since his first trip there in 1963, and during the seventies he would be known as the most prominent non-Soviet designer in the country, a favorite of celebrated figures in the arts and politics.[260]

By the early seventies, artistic director Andre Oliver had been given responsibility for Cardin's ready-to-wear lines,[261] specialty lines,[262][263] and for Cardin collections tailored to various national markets,[264] the clothes always adaptations of Cardin's couture collections.[265]

Though no longer groundbreaking as it had been in the early 1960s and during the Mod era of the mid-sixties, Cardin's early seventies menswear was still influential and popular,[266] characterized by high armholes, large collars, double-breasted jackets, and high closures, all of which were now widespread menswear trends that Cardin had helped establish.[267]

Cardin's early seventies womenswear continued in the direction he was headed in the late sixties: a variety of lengths; skirts consisting of slits, slashes,[268] panels,[269] strips[270] loops, and asymmetric hems;[271] ribknit tops;[272][273] flaring sleeves;[274] capes and ponchos;[275][276] jumper dresses from mini to knee-length[277] worn with bodystockings or turtleneck and tights;[278][279] leather sections;[280] geometric patch pockets;[281] and an expansion of the women's trousers he had first shown in 1968. He continued to design in a Space Age style,[282] one of just a handful of designers to do so by the early seventies,[283] using a lot of vinyl and geometric cutouts in the earliest years of the decade.[284] Throughout the seventies, his long-favored cowl necklines,[285] batwing sleeves, and pleating were signature elements of his work,[286] as were the gracefully cut chiffon skirts he had been perfecting since the early sixties.[287][288][289] These skirts would fit into trends particularly of the middle of the decade, when their tiers and flounces would find expression in other fabrics.

In the year 1970, the fashion industry tried to reduce women's skirt choices to just midcalf-hemmed midi skirts. Cardin showed exclusively that length in his ready-to-wear collections[290] but varied lengths in his couture collections,[291] from micromini[292] to ankle length,[293] while close friend and Cardin aficionado Jeanne Moreau intimated that Cardin felt that longer skirts tended to age women.[294]

As haute couture began to decline, ready-to-wear ('prêt-à-porter') soared as well as Cardin's designs. He was the first to combine the "mini" and the "maxi" skirts of the 1970s by introducing a new hemline that had long pom-pom panels or fringes.[295]

Beginning in the 1970s, Cardin set another new trend: "mod chic". This trend holds true for the form or for a combination of forms, which did not exist at the time. He was the first to combine extremely short and ankle-length pieces. He made dresses with slits and batwing sleeves with novel dimensions and mixed circular movement and gypsy skirts with structured tops. These creations allowed for the geometric shapes that captivated him to be contrasted, with both circular and straight lines. Cardin became an icon for starting this popular fashion movement of the early 1970s.[296]

He designed a handful of Space Age-looking nurses' uniforms in 1970 that featured skullcap- and Medieval-looking headgear and the variety of skirt lengths he was showing in his collections at the time, including ankle-length maxiskirts and loincloth-looking miniskirts worn over sometimes revealing translucent bodystockings.[297]

Inspired by space travel and exploration, Cardin visited NASA (the National Aeronautics and Space Administration) in 1970, where he tried on the original spacesuit worn by the first human to set foot on the Moon, Neil Armstrong.[298] Cardin designed spacesuits for NASA in 1970.[298]

His early seventies women's trousers were often narrow and of knit fabric and included cropped versions to wear with the popular boots of the time,[299][300][301] a period during which women were wearing knickers and gauchos for the same purpose.[302] He continued to show jumpsuits,[303][304] including some in skin-tight vinyl.[305] Other Cardin trousers of the early seventies featured unusual seaming.[306][307]

At the same time that Cardin was showing futuristic looks, he also drew from past eras[308] and presented sheath skirts and tight-bodiced tailored jackets in silhouettes from the 1950s,[309][310] though the sheath skirts differed from 1950s sheath skirts in being unlined and worn without slips or girdles, revealing the pantylines of the models' 1970s-style pantyhose and underwear.[311][312] Shown by Cardin from 1970 to 1976, these vaguely retro-looking skin-tight, unlined skirts did not catch on during the casual, liberated early seventies, when restricting women's movements in tight skirts was considered regressive, but unlined sheath skirts would find favor in the early 1980s, most famously in the work of Azzedine Alaïa, as well as in the more slouchy tube skirts put out by London designers like BodyMap in the mid-1980s.

Many up-and-coming designers apprenticed with Cardin over the years, including Jean-Paul Gaultier in 1970.[313]

In 1971, Cardin put an emphasis on miniskirts of different cuts than he'd been showing in recent years, many split at the sides,[314] and included short shorts with them as part of that year's hot pants trend,[315] while continuing to show longer lengths as well. Bare-armed, knee-length dresses with extended cap sleeves resembling shoulder flanges were notable, a style he would show through 1973.[316] Some of his early seventies minidresses were in the form of tunics. Other tunic dresses in various lengths were shown for all hours, either alone or over trousers.[317]

HIs couture collections continued to feature geometric shapes, with clothes cut to form squares, circles, or triangles when the arms were held out to the sides.[318] In 1971, he adopted the motif of a circle at the end of a long, rectangular strip, a sort of geometric pendulum form that he would put at the ends of belts, sleeves, and pant legs.[319]

He met Soviet ballerina Maya Plisetskaya in 1971 at Avignon. She would become a friend and muse, wearing his clothes and inviting him to costume multiple productions.[320]

Pierre Cardin and the French composer Régis Campo, from Académie des beaux-arts, Institut de France, Paris, 2017
Pierre Cardin and the French composer Régis Campo, from Académie des beaux-arts, Institut de France, Paris, 2017

In 1971, Cardin redesigned the barong tagalog, a national costume of the Philippines, by opening the front, removing the cuffs that needed cufflinks, flaring the sleeves, and minimizing the embroidery. It was also tapered to the body, in contrast with the traditional loose-fitting design, and it also had a thicker collar with sharp and pointed cuffs. A straight-cut design was favored by President Ferdinand Marcos.[321]

Other Cardin womenswear from 1971 was made with high, tight, constraining waistbands, some cinched, even on jeans, which was very out of step with the times.[322] Another indulgence of his that was considered anachronistic in the early to mid-seventies was big ballgowns, which Cardin produced from 1971 onward in taffetas and other traditionally dressy fabrics.[323][324] Fellow former Space Age designer André Courrèges also iconoclastically produced big ballgowns at the time,[325] a very casual period during which women might wear jeans and t-shirts even for important events.[326][327] Grand ballgowns of this type wouldn't return to mainstream fashion until the end of the seventies.

Some of Cardin's skirts starting in 1972, including miniskirts, had hoops, ranging from two or three widely separated hoops in the skirt of a minidress to multiple hoops very close together near the hem of an evening gown that moved up and down as the wearer walked. The point of these hoops seemed to be a particular kind of movement.[328] They were largely not the big, silhouette-enlarging hoops seen in the 1860s but hoops that stood out only a little from the slim lines of the skirt. Like his sheath skirts from the same time period, these never caught on among the comfort-conscious seventies public and they were confined to Cardin's runways, but he would continue to play with the idea into the 1980s, when designer Vivienne Westwood would receive attention for her wire-framed mid-eighties crinoline miniskirts.

Cardin's fashion shows, both couture and ready-to-wear, continued to contain many more garments than other designers' shows. As ready-to-wear came to outshine haute couture during the 1970s, Cardin was one of several designers who considered doing away with open couture shows entirely, nearly doing so in 1972 when he, Yves Saint Laurent, and a few others declared that they would stop presenting separate public couture shows for spring and instead show their couture lines with their ready-to-wear collections and then changed their minds.[329][330]

In 1973, Cardin's backdrop at the joint French-US fashion show held at Versailles was a spaceship, while other designers chose bucolic or nostalgic scenes.[331] He continued with some Space Age womenswear styles into 1974. By that date, the main vestiges of his Space Age looks were his jumper dresses over turtleneck-and-tights or bodystocking, a very versatile, serviceable way of dressing that fit the practical mood of the period.[332][333]

By 1973, the larger fashion industry had moved toward exclusively below-knee skirts, with calf lengths preferred. Cardin also featured skirts of that length,[334] but he would also be one of very few designers, Courrèges most notably, to carry on including miniskirts in his collections even during their mid-seventies nadir.[335][336]

In other designs, he did conform to some of the trends of the time, including more natural fibers; layering;[337][338] fuller cuts;[339][340][341] full, flounced, below-knee skirts of light fabrics;[342][343] harem pants, harem skirts, and harem tops;[344] and a variety of full trousers[345] and tapered trousers;[346] plus athletic gear like jogging outfits and tenniswear.[347][348] Cardin's penchant for deep sleeve cuts,[349][350] capes, and ponchos adapted well to the mid-seventies Big Look period, aside from some cape tops that immobilized the upper arms.[351] The voluminous shapes of mid-seventies high fashion included an emphasis on versatility, with designers producing dresses and other garments that could be wrapped, knotted, and tied in a variety of ways, tendencies Cardin also indulged in at the time.[352] He brought out innovative pieces that contained one pants leg and the rest of the garment a skirt, as well as overgarments that had a sleeve on one side and a cape on the other side that could be tied on the opposite shoulder over the single sleeve.[353] He used his preferred ribknit for convertible necklines during this period.[354]

He put his name on a line of infants' clothes in 1975.[355]

In 1975, Cardin opened his first furniture boutique on the Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré.[356] In 1977, 1979, and 1983, he was awarded the Cartier Golden Thimble by French haute couture for the most creative collection of the season.[357] He was a member of the Chambre Syndicale de la Haute Couture et du Prêt-à-Porter from 1953 to 1993.[358]

In 1976, Cardin's position as most influential menswear designer began to be eclipsed by Giorgio Armani, who was just becoming a name among the fashion cognoscenti.[359] Cardin's clothes by that time had followed the trends of the period and become more sedate. He was beginning to shorten his men's jackets, narrow lapels slightly, and broaden the shoulders, a direction that would continue until it became an industry trend at the end of the decade.[360][361]

Cardin's first American-made, mass-produced home furnishing collection came in 1977 when Cardin partnered with Dillingham Manufacturing Company, Scandinavian Folklore Carpets of Denmark for Ege Rya Inc., and the Laurel Lamp Company.[362]

In 1977, Cardin simplified and made more accessible the haute couture process by introducing "prêt-couture," off-the-rack hand-made clothes that customers could acquire with only one fitting and a price intermediate between his ready-to-wear and couture lines.[363][364]

For fall of 1978, much of the fashion industry moved away from voluminous, unconstructed, versatile shapes in womenswear and toward prominently padded shoulders and more tailored clothing in styles that were often derived from the 1940s, a tendency that was referred to as retro at the time. The retro emphasis included ideas of futuristic dress from the 1930s, '40s, and '50s, with Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers frequently mentioned,  most famously in the work of Thierry Mugler and Claude Montana.[365] This was not the minimalistic, intellectual Space Age look influenced by modern art that had prevailed in the 1960s in the work of Cardin and others but something older, consisting of shoulder flanges and trapunto-stitched jumpsuits. Some of Cardin's work from this big-shoulders period would contribute to this retro-futuristic mode.[366] His tailoring expertise and preference for bold silhouettes fit into the renewed emphasis on structure and he received increased press attention for his clothes, his shoulders some of the broadest in Paris and his suits some of the most severely tailored.[367][368][369]

In 1979, Cardin was appointed a consultant to China's agency for trade in textiles,[370][371] and in March of that year, he became the first Western designer to present a fashion show in China in many decades.[372]

In early 1979, Cardin contributed pagoda shoulders to the fashion lexicon.[373] These may have been influenced by his increased trips to China over the previous year.[374] The look would influence other designers for fall of 1979, as many sharpened the edges of their shoulder pads and sometimes turned them up,[375] most notably Claude Montana.[376] Like Montana,[377] Cardin would present some of the largest shoulders in the industry into the mid-1980s,[378][379][380] but Cardin only focused on pagoda shoulders for a brief period in 1979,[381][382] when he put them in his menswear as well as his womenswear.[383] Despite their brief tenure and limited public adoption, pagoda shoulders would be one of Cardin's most referenced styles in later decades.

His women's collections continued to include the pleats[384] and asymmetric hemlines[385] that Cardin had loved for well over a decade. Particularly well received were full, knee-length tent-chemise dresses in ruffled taffeta for evening, as they were both in line with the renewed emphasis on glamor and comfortably wearable.[386][387] He would show these into the early eighties. The ballgowns and mini lengths from Cardin[388] that had been out of style in the broader fashion world for most of the seventies came back in with designers in 1979,[389] with miniskirts presented in a variety of shapes and styles, including sixties-revival looks.[390] Cardin's enormous fashion presentations encompassed a number of variable styles.

His menswear of the last two years of the seventies reached the apogee of the increased-shoulder-width direction he was already headed in the mid-seventies, with shoulders broadened with padding, narrower lapels to increase the impression of shoulder width, and tapered jacket shapes.[391][392] Cardin would present this broad-shouldered men's silhouette through much of the following decade.

1980s and later

In 1981, Cardin acquired Maxim's.[393][394] He introduced Maxim's to Beijing in 1983, where it was among the first international brands to operate in mainland China and became an enduring cultural landmark.[395]

Like many other designers today, Cardin decided in 1994 to show his collection only to a small circle of selected clients and journalists. After a break of 15 years, he showed a new collection to a group of 150 journalists at his bubble home in Cannes.[358]

A biography titled Pierre Cardin, his fabulous destiny was written by Sylvana Lorenz.[396]

A documentary on Cardin's life and career, House of Cardin directed by P. David Ebersole and Todd Hughes premiered to a standing ovation on 6 September 2019 at the 76th Venice International Film Festival in the Giornate degli Autori section, with Mr. Cardin in attendance.[397]

Muses

Cardin had several muses who inspired his designs over the years, including model Hiroko Matsumoto, actress Jeanne Moreau, cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova, and ballerina Maya Plisetskaya.

Eponymous brand

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Pierre Cardin used his name as a brand, initially a prestigious fashion brand, then in the 1960s extended successfully into perfumes and cosmetics, added furniture and home decor in 1968,[398] and acquired new products for licensure rapidly during the 1970s.[399] By the late 1970s, his name could be found on over 2,000 products, ranging from bicycle accessories to wine to cookware to home furnishings to heaters to blow dryers.[400] He would continue to add licensees during the following decade.[401][402] From about 1988 the brand was licensed extensively, and appeared on "wildly nonadjacent products such as baseball caps and cigarettes".[403]

Pierre Cardin-branded pen
Pierre Cardin-branded pen

A 2005 article in the Harvard Business Review commented that the extension into perfumes and cosmetics was successful as the premium nature of the Pierre Cardin brand transferred well into these new, adjacent categories, but that the owners of the brand mistakenly attributed this to the brand's strength rather than to its fit with the new product categories.[403] The extensive licensing eroded the high-end perception of the brand, but was lucrative; in 1986 Women's Wear Daily (WWD) estimated Cardin's annual income at over US$10 million.

In 1995, quotes from WWD included "Pierre Cardin—he has sold his name for toilet paper. At what point do you lose your identity?" and "Cardin's cachet crashed when his name appeared on everything from key chains to pencil holders". However, the Cardin name was still very profitable, although the indiscriminate licensing approach was considered a failure.[403][404]

In 2011, Cardin tried to sell his business, valuing it at €1 billion, although the Wall Street Journal considered it to be worth about a fifth of that amount. Ultimately he did not sell the brand.[404]

Automobiles

Cardin interior in a 1972 AMC Javelin
Cardin interior in a 1972 AMC Javelin

Cardin entered industrial design by developing thirteen basic design "themes" that would be applied to various products, each consistently recognizable and carrying his name and logo. He expanded into new markets that "to most Paris fashion designers ... is rank heresy."[405]

The business initiatives included a contract with American Motors Corporation (AMC).[405] Following the success of the Aldo Gucci designed Hornet Sportabout station wagon interiors, the automaker incorporated Cardin's theme on the AMC Javelin starting in mid-1972.[406] This was one of the first American cars to offer a special trim package created by a famous French fashion designer. It was daring and outlandish design "with some of the wildest fabrics and patterns ever seen in any American car".[407]

The original sales estimate by AMC was for 2,500 haute couture "pony" and muscle cars.[408] The special interior option was continued on the 1973 model year Javelins.[409] During the two model years, a total of 4,152 AMC Javelins received this bold mirrored, multi-colored pleated stripe pattern in tones of Chinese red, plum, white, and silver that were set against a black background.[410] The Cardin Javelins also came with the designer's emblems on the front fenders and had a limited selection of exterior colors (Trans Am Red, Snow White, Stardust Silver, Diamond Blue, and Wild Plum) to coordinate with the special interiors.[411] However, 12 Cardin optioned cars were special ordered in Midnight Black paint.[410]

Prior to working with AMC, Cardin collaborated with French automaker Simca to produce a Cardin edition of the Simca 1100, released in 1969 for the 1970 model year.[412]

Other interests

Pierre Cardin with the sculptures Cobra Table and chair, 2012
Pierre Cardin with the "utilitarian sculptures" Cobra Table and chair, 2012

Cardin owned a palazzo in Venice named Ca' Bragadin.[413] Although he claimed that this house was once owned by Giacomo Casanova, some scholars have argued that it was owned by another branch of the Bragadin family, and that its usage by Casanova was "somewhat unlikely".[414]

Personal life

Cardin self-identified as being mostly gay,[415] but in the 1960s he had a four-year relationship with actress Jeanne Moreau.[416] His long-term business partner and life partner was fellow French fashion designer André Oliver, who died in 1993.[417][418]

Death

Cardin died on 29 December 2020,[419] at the American Hospital of Paris, in Neuilly-sur-Seine, at the age of 98.[420] No cause of death was given.[421]

Distinctions

Notes

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References

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Further reading

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