Hippies in the 1960's wore mostly floral outfits. They liked wearing flare pants, round sherly glasses, tattoos of peace symbols, barefeet, long hair and instruments for the males and for the females they liked wearing micro mini skirts, flowers in their hair, sandels, black or coloured tights and no bra. They even had a bra burning ceremony!
They had a free nature about them. They liked smoking acid and marijuana (sorry if spelt wrong), they crowded around places like the corner or Haight and Ashbury street which soon after became called the Haight and Ashbury District and also became the main destination for junior grade hipster or 'hippies' for short.
Hope I helped!
p.s the reason i know this much is because we are studying hippies in class! enjoy!!
the era's counterculture.
Bright tye-dyed shirts were a big thing for the Hippies.
Hippies emerged from the peaced and antiwar protest movements of youth groups during the late 1960's.
Hippies wore Bandanas.
fashion has changed over time, and the difference of todays fashion and the 1960s fashion is that today people are not as careless or expresive as the hippies were, also people started to see things different because of new advances. You also have to have in mind that people in the 1960s were from other decade and that things were not that advanced as they are now.
Please also see: What was the importance of the hippies?
No, hippies have been around a lot longer than that, back as far as the 1960s.
traditional conformists
1960s counterculture, especially the hippies, was subject to much criticism because of its divergence from traditional behavior and values. Many hippies were anti-war and open to experimentation with sex and drugs.
Hippies
no, it is too Easter Egg like. Very popular in the 1960s and with hippies.
Hippies were predominantly born in the late 1940s and throughout the 1950s, coming of age in the 1960s and early 1970s. Their cultural influence peaked during the mid to late 1960s.
Hippies and Yippies
Well it created a generation of hippies, which took over the 70s
Those who emulate the counter-culture of the "hippies" may adopt the outward appearance, e.g. drive reproduction 1960s cars, dress like 1960s, listen to 1960s music, wear their hair like 1960s. Or they may follow similar philosophies, being disenchanted with the material world and seeking various types of personal or spiritual expression. Some New Age movements share aspects with hippie-ism. Note: The "real" hippies are either dead or in their late 60s to 70s.
the era's counterculture.
The Byrds were not considered hippies, but a folk rock and psychedelic rock band that emerged in the 1960s. While they were associated with the counterculture movement of the era, particularly through their music and style, they did not fully embody the hippie lifestyle that became popular in the late 1960s.