History of Best Brazilian Bikinis

"It is smaller than the world's smallest bathing suit." This is how Louis Reard, the French engineer and designer of the original Brazilian bikini, promoted his invention.

He had no name for it at first. Then, four days prior to the Paris launching of his daring innovation, the Military of the United States detonated a nuclear weapon close to quite a few tiny Marshall Islands referred as the "Bikini Atoll."

Louis Reard made public the Brazilian bikini on July 5, 1946. While Reard shortly declared that he labeled his new design as the Brazilian bikini after the Bikini Atoll islands and not the occurrence of nuclear explosion, he was apparently manipulating the sensational episode for his advantage.

The swimwear was remarkably smaller and made up of a bra top and a couple of upturned triangles of fabric attached by string. It was created out of a limited thirty-inch cloth. The inspiration came to Reard when he observed women turning up their beach apparel to develop a better, lovelier tan.

Reard's Brazilian bikini was so skimpy that no Parisian models dared to sport it on public during those times. Reard got Micheline Bernardini, who had no apprehensions wearing a Brazilian bikini. Bernardini was a strip performer at the Casino de Paris and was an everyday beauty. Yet, soon after her pictures in a lounging stance struck the media, Bernardini was famous and was flooded with mails from thousands of fans.

Those days, two piece apparels were not actually new. In 1943, the Government of the United States, as a means of Second World War apportioning, had a directive to cut back a ten percent in cloth used in ladies' swimwear. Soon naked midriffs and miniskirts became smash hits as more and more nationalistic American women performed their responsibilities.

The swimwear soon grew popular. But Portugal, Spain and Italy, known to be Roman Catholic nations prohibited the use of Brazilian bikinis. Many associations on morality and modesty also insisted that Hollywood keep the bikini out of its films.

Esther Williams, a celebrity who was perhaps observed in a two-piece swimsuit by more individuals than anybody else on earth, quoted sometime that a bikini is an inconsiderate action. Also, one writer stated that a bikini is a "two-piece bathing which discloses all things about a woman except for her mother's maiden name."

In the 1950s, Brigitte Bardot, a French actress and singer contributed greatly to Reard's bikini industry. But this piece of thing remained to be a taboo in the US. Modern Girl magazine thought it unthinkable for any modest woman to sport such a scanty bikini.

The following decade, the US was all set for latest leading edges and that includes the stripping of some flesh. In 1960, pop songster Brian Hyland pulled off at age 16 as he celebrated the bikini and the beach culture with his hit single "Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polka Dot Bikini."

Thanks to the song, the Brazilian bikini started to be accepted. However, in the course of the 1980s and beginning of 1990s, the sales for Brazilian bikini went down significantly. Today, it is lucratively making its return with size that is 2 to 3 inches smaller than its American counterpart.

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