WHAT WE WORE | Charting the evolution of fashion, from gowns for aristocrats to style for everyone
In this programme Doris Langley Moore talks about how the capriciousness of fashion is demonstrated most readily in informal clothes, which are less expensive and therefore changed more frequently than formal attire. We are also shown an original example of the revolutionary Dior 'New Look' suit of 1947 alongside the boxy, utilitarian alternative favoured by the British Government, no less.
Dora Bryan, stalwart of British cinema throughout the 1940s and 1950s, appears in this programme demonstrating her batting skills in a 19th-century outfit.
The BBC's first ever series in colour explores the history of fashion.
Irrational clothes - a look at why we wear things we can't function in.
How fashion dictates body shape and facial decoration.
From christenings to funerals - how clothes signify important occasions.
Everyday wear from the last 200 years.
The Queen Mother sends her appreciation of 'Men, Women and Clothes'.
The BBC's report into what audiences thought about the first episode of 'Men, Women and Clothes'.
A graphics-laden two-part supplement to accompany the dressmaking series 'Clothes That Count'.
Viewing figures for the programme and responses from members of the public.
A no-holds-barred rejection of suggested ideas for books to accompany the TV series.