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  2. Reviewers Dish on Cocktail Dresses They Love for Women ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/cocktail-dresses-women-over-50...

    Cocktail dresses for women over 50 bring style, comfort, and sex appeal. ... then add a leather jacket and tall boots once temperatures drop. ... associate fashion editor for Cosmopolitan.

  3. 15 Stylish Cocktail Dresses for Older Women

    www.aol.com/15-stylish-cocktail-dresses-older...

    Poppy Red Blythe Dress. Here's an example of a mini that's perfectly suitable for cocktail parties. The hem ends mid-calf, but the ruffled high-neck silhouette and swingy shape makes this modest ...

  4. The 50 Most Iconic Looks of All Time - AOL

    www.aol.com/50-most-iconic-looks-time-141200377.html

    The finale dress from Lee Alexander McQueen’s Joan collection, 1998 “In his extraordinary fashion show devoted to Joan of Arc, the last model emerged wearing a red hooded catsuit within a ring ...

  5. Fashion of Audrey Hepburn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fashion_of_Audrey_Hepburn

    The numbers chosen personally by Hepburn included: a gray, Oxford-wool, double-breasted skirt suit with a scoop neck, cinched waist, and vented skirting, and a strapless white ball gown with floral organdy embroidering and a cascading train of black ruffles, as well as a black cocktail dress with a button, down, deep-v back, and flared ...

  6. Little black dress - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_black_dress

    Fashion historians ascribe the origins of the little black dress to the 1920s designs of Coco Chanel. [1] It is intended to be long-lasting, versatile, affordable, and widely accessible. Its ubiquity is such that it is often simply referred to as the "LBD". [2] [3] [4] The little black dress is considered essential to a complete wardrobe.

  7. Cocktail dress - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cocktail_dress

    As French women traveled to wealthy resort cities, the designs of their cocktail dresses spread among the American elite. While French couture relied on travel and American department stores, American designers relied on fashion magazines, such as Vogue and Vanity Fair , and the need to dress semi-formally for cocktail hour.